The Elements of Relativity

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AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
NOTE EDITORE
Relativity has much to offer for a well-rounded education. Yet books on relativity either assume a strong background in physics and math, aimed at advanced physics students, or, alternatively, offer a broad description with little intellectual challenge. This book bridges the gap. It aims at readers with essentially no physics or math background, who still find it rewarding to think rigorously. The book takes a "thinking tools" approach, by first making readers comfortable with a new thinking tool and then applying it to learn more about how nature works. By the end of the book, readers will have collected a versatile toolbox and will be comfortable using the tools to think about and really understand the intriguing phenomena they may have only heard about, including the twin paradox, black holes, and time travel. End-of-chapter exercises span a range of difficulty, allowing adventurous readers to stretch their understanding further as desired. Students who have studied, or are studying, relativity at a more mathematical level will also find the book useful for a more conceptual understanding.

SOMMARIO
1 - A First Look at Relativity2 - Acceleration and Force3 - Galilean Relativity4 - Reasoning with Frames and Spacetime Diagrams5 - The Speed of Light6 - Time Slow7 - Time Dilation and Length Contraction8 - Special Relativity: Putting it All Together9 - Doppler Effect and Velocity Addition Law10 - The Twin Paradox11 - Spacetime Geometry12 - Energy and Momentum13 - The Equivalence Principle14 - Gravity Reframed15 - Potential16 - Newtonian Gravity17 - Orbits18 - General Relativity and teh Schwarzschild Metric19 - Beyond the Schwarschild Metric20 - Black Holes

AUTORE
David M. Wittman is a professor at the University of California, Davis. He has discovered millions of galaxies as co-PI of the Deep Lens Survey, which was awarded over 100 nights on 4-m telescopes to study a representative sample of the universe. But discovering millions of galaxies was just the easy part. He analyzed the galaxies' shapes to reveal subtle distortions caused by the gravitational fields of foreground masses, an effect called weak gravitational lensing. He was the first to detect cosmic shear, or weak lensing by the large-scale structure of the universe. He was also the first to detect a cluster of galaxies through its gravitational effects alone, and the first to combine source redshift information with lensing to probe structure in three dimensions (tomography).

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780199658640
  • Dimensioni: 248 x 16.0 x 189 mm Ø 708 gr
  • Formato: Brossura
  • Illustration Notes: 180 BW and 21 color line figures, and 2 BW and 4 color halftones
  • Pagine Arabe: 324