9783540100904-3540100903-Essential Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological (Texts and Monographs in Physics)

Essential Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological (Texts and Monographs in Physics)

ISBN-13: 9783540100904
ISBN-10: 3540100903
Edition: 2nd
Author: Wolfgang Rindler
Publication date: 1980
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Format: Paperback 301 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9783540100904
ISBN-10: 3540100903
Edition: 2nd
Author: Wolfgang Rindler
Publication date: 1980
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Format: Paperback 301 pages

Summary

Essential Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological (Texts and Monographs in Physics) (ISBN-13: 9783540100904 and ISBN-10: 3540100903), written by authors Wolfgang Rindler, was published by Springer-Verlag in 1980. With an overall rating of 3.6 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Essential Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological (Texts and Monographs in Physics) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.37.

Description

In retrospect, the first edition of this book now seems like a mere sketch for a book. The present version is, if not the final product, at least a closer approximation to it. The table of contents may show little change. But that is simply because the original organization of the material has been found satisfactory. Also the basic purpose of the book remains the same, and that is to make relativity come alive conceptually. I have always felt much sym pathy with Richard Courant's maxim (as reported and exemplified by Pascual Jordan) that, ideally, proofs should be reached by comprehension rather than computation. Where computations are necessary, I have tried to make them as transparent as possible, so as not to hinder the progress of comprehension. Among the more obvious changes, this edition contains a new section on Kruskal space, another on the plane gravitational wave, and a third on linearized general relativity; it also contains many new exercises, and two appendices: one listing the curvature components for the diagonal metric (in a little more generality than the old" Dingle formulas "), and one syn thesizing Maxwell's theory in tensor form. But the most significant changes and additions have occurred throughout the text. Many sections have been completely rewritten, many arguments tightened, many "asides" added, and, of course, recent developments taken into account.
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