Mathematical Physics: Modern Introduction To Its Foundations
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Características principales
Título del libro | Mathematical Physics: A Modern Introduction to Its Foundations |
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Autor | Hassani,Sadri |
Idioma | Inglés |
Editorial del libro | Springer Nature |
Edición del libro | 2.0 |
Tapa del libro | Dura |
Con índice | Sí |
Año de publicación | 2013 |
Otras características
Cantidad de páginas: 1214
Altura: 26 cm
Ancho: 18.5 cm
Peso: 2300 g
Con páginas para colorear: No
Con realidad aumentada: No
Género del libro: Cienciass Puras
Tipo de narración: Manual
Tamaño del libro: Grande
Accesorios incluidos: No
Edad mínima recomendada: 18 años
Edad máxima recomendada: 99 años
Escrito en imprenta mayúscula: No
Cantidad de libros por set: 1
ISBN: 9783319011943
Descripción
LIBRERÍA LEA+
The goal of this book is to expose the reader to the indispensable role that mathematics---often very abstract---plays in modern physics. Starting with the notion of vector spaces, the first half of the book develops topics as diverse as algebras, classical orthogonal polynomials, Fourier analysis, complex analysis, differential and integral equations, operator theory, and multi-dimensional Green's functions. The second half of the book introduces groups, manifolds, Lie groups and their representations, Clifford algebras and their representations, and fiber bundles and their applications to differential geometry and gauge theories.
This second edition is a substantial revision of the first one with a complete rewriting of many chapters and the addition of new ones, including chapters on algebras, representation of Clifford algebras and spinors, fiber bundles, and gauge theories. The spirit of the first edition, namely the balance between rigor and physical application, has been maintained, as is the abundance of historical notes and worked out examples that demonstrate the "unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics" in modern physics.
Einstein has famously said, "The most incomprehensible thing about nature is that it is comprehensible." What he had in mind was reiterated in another one of his famous quotes concerning the question of how " ... mathematics, being after all a product of human thought, is so admirably appropriate to the objects of reality." It is a question that comes to everyone's mind when encountering the highly abstract mathematics required for a deep understanding of modern physics. It is the experience that Eugene Wigner so profoundly described as "the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences."
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