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Library | Materyal Türü | Barkod | Yer Numarası | Durum |
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Searching... Pamukkale Merkez Kütüphanesi | Kitap | 0039670 | QA300.R495 2007 | Searching... Unknown |
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The third edition of this highly acclaimed undergraduate textbook is suitable for teaching all the mathematics for an undergraduate course in any of the physical sciences. As well as lucid descriptions of all the topics and many worked examples, it contains over 800 exercises. New stand-alone chapters give a systematic account of the 'special functions' of physical science, cover an extended range of practical applications of complex variables, and give an introduction to quantum operators. Further tabulations, of relevance in statistics and numerical integration, have been added. In this edition, half of the exercises are provided with hints and answers and, in a separate manual available to both students and their teachers, complete worked solutions. The remaining exercises have no hints, answers or worked solutions and can be used for unaided homework; full solutions are available to instructors on a password-protected web site, www.cambridge.org/9780521679718.
Reviews (1)
Choice Review
Riley is a physicist and senior tutor at Clare College, Cambridge, UK; Hobson is an astrophysicist and university reader at the Cavendish Laboratory, UK; and Bence is a postdoctoral researcher at the Cavendish Laboratory. Their new edition (1st ed., CH, Sep'98, 36-0386; 2nd ed., 2002) is a compendium of undergraduate mathematics for students of physics and engineering. It includes algebra, calculus, linear algebra, differential equations, complex variables, tensors, numerical methods, group theory, probability, and statistics. Each of these topics could easily require a separate course and book of several hundred pages. Although this book is more than 1,300 pages long, the authors attempt to cover so much material that the presentation is necessarily simplified. In places, the mathematics is oversimplified to the point that it is arguably incorrect. For example, in a discussion of the method of Lagrange multipliers for constrained optimization problems, the authors fail to note the need for constraint qualification in problems with multiple constraints. Similarly, in their discussion of the LU factorization, the authors fail to mention the need for partial pivoting. Although some readers might find this to be an accessible resource, most readers would be better served by other works. ^BSumming Up: Not recommended. B. Borchers New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
Table of Contents
| 1 Preliminary algebra |
| 2 Preliminary calculus |
| 3 Complex numbers and hyperbolic functions |
| 4 Series and limits |
| 5 Partial differentiation |
| 6 Multiple integrals |
| 7 Vector algebra |
| 8 Matrices and vector spaces |
| 9 Normal modes 10. Vector calculus |
| 11 Line, surface and volume integrals |
| 12 Fourier series |
| 13 Integral transforms |
| 14 First-order ordinary differential equations |
| 15 Higher ordinary differential equations |
| 16 Series solutions of ordinary differential equations |
| 17 Eigenfunction methods for differential equations |
| 18 Partial differential equations: general and particular |
| 19 Partial differential equations: separation of variables and other methods |
| 20 Complex variables |
| 21 Tensors |
| 22 Calculus of variations |
| 23 Integral equations |
| 24 Group theory |
| 25 Representation theory |
| 26 Probability |
| 27 Statistics |
| 28 Numerical methods |
| Appendix |
| Index |
