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Books > Science & Mathematics > Physics > Relativity physics
The Golden Oldies series of the journal General Relativity and
Gravitation reprints important papers in general relativity theory
that were published 30 or more years ago and are either hard to get
hold of, or were originally printed in a language other than
English. They play a key part in making these important papers
readily accessible today, in the language that has now become the
lingua franca of scientific publication. The value of this
reprinting is enhanced by an accompanying editorial note for each
paper, which briefly explains the significance of the work and
where it has subsequently led to, together with a biographical note
about the author or authors. This volume presents a selection of 14
rarities among the Golden Oldies grouped in the three categories
"Basic results in differential geometry and general relativity,"
"Discussion of physical effects" and "Basic exact solutions and
their interpretation." Researchers in the field will appreciate
having these important papers collected in one book for the first
time. Reprinted from the journal General Relativity and
Gravitation.
Special and General Relativity are concisely developed together
with essential aspects of nuclear and particle physics. Problem
sets are provided for many chapters, making the book ideal for a
course on the physics of white dwarf and neutron star interiors.
Norman K. Glendenning is Senior Scientist Emeritus at the Nuclear
Science Division, Institute for Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics,
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at the University of
California, Berkeley. He is the author of numerous books.
'Dark energy' is the name given to the unknown cause of the
Universe's accelerating expansion, which is one of the most
significant and surprising discoveries in recent cosmology.
Understanding this enigmatic ingredient of the Universe and its
gravitational effects is a very active, and growing, field of
research. In this volume, twelve world-leading authorities on the
subject present the basic theoretical models that could explain
dark energy, and the observational and experimental techniques
employed to measure it. Covering the topic from its origin, through
recent developments, to its future perspectives, this book provides
a complete and comprehensive introduction to dark energy for a
range of readers. It is ideal for physics graduate students who
have just entered the field and researchers seeking an
authoritative reference on the topic.
This detailed account of the controversy surrounding the
publication of Albert Einstein's theory of relativity explores the
ferocious popular and academic opposition which at one time
encircled one of the most important scientific breakthroughs of the
twentieth century. Based on extensive archival research, this
fascinating discourse includes a compelling and entertaining
examination of the contemporary literature created by Einstein's
detractors. Exploring the arguments and strategies, social
contexts, and motivations of Einstein's detractors, and providing
unique insights into the dynamics of scientific controversies, this
book is ideal for anyone interested in the history and philosophy
of physics, popular science, and the public understanding of
science.
In this book, leading theorists present new contributions and
reviews addressing longstanding challenges and ongoing progress in
spacetime physics. In the anniversary year of Einstein's General
Theory of Relativity, developed 100 years ago, this collection
reflects the subsequent and continuing fruitful development of
spacetime theories. The volume is published in honour of Carl Brans
on the occasion of his 80th birthday. Carl H. Brans, who also
contributes personally, is a creative and independent researcher
and one of the founders of the scalar-tensor theory, also known as
Jordan-Brans-Dicke theory. In the present book, much space is
devoted to scalar-tensor theories. Since the beginning of the
1990s, Brans has worked on new models of spacetime, collectively
known as exotic smoothness, a field largely established by him. In
this Festschrift, one finds an outstanding and unique collection of
articles about exotic smoothness. Also featured are Bell's
inequality and Mach's principle. Personal memories and historical
aspects round off the collection.
This contributed volume explores the renaissance of general
relativity after World War II, when it transformed from a marginal
theory into a cornerstone of modern physics. Chapters explore key
historical processes related to the theory of general relativity,
in addition to presenting a thorough treatment of the relevant
science behind these episodes. A broad historiographical framework
is introduced first, thus providing the broad context in which the
given computational approaches and case studies occurred. Written
by an international and interdisciplinary group of expert authors,
these chapters will bring readers to a more complete understanding
of Einstein's theory. Specific topics include: Social and citation
networks The Fock-Infeld dispute Wheeler's turn to gravitation
theory The position of general relativity in theories of
fundamental interactions The pursuit of a quantum theory of gravity
The emergence of dark matter in relation to cosmological models
Institutional frameworks for gravitational wave search in Europe
The Renaissance of General Relativity in Context is ideal for
historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science. Students and
researchers in physics will also be interested in the topics
explored.
The De Gruyter Studies in Mathematical Physics are devoted to the
publication of monographs and high-level texts in mathematical
physics. They cover topics and methods in fields of current
interest, with an emphasis on didactical presentation. The series
will enable readers to understand, apply and develop further, with
sufficient rigor, mathematical methods to given problems in
physics. For this reason, works with a few authors are preferred
over edited volumes. The works in this series are aimed at advanced
students and researchers in mathematical and theoretical physics.
They can also serve as secondary reading for lectures and seminars
at advanced levels.
This book is an elaboration of lecture notes for the graduate
course on General Rela tivity given by the author at Boston
University in the spring semester of 1972. It is an introduction to
the subject only, as the time available for the course was limited.
The author of an introduction to General Relativity is faced from
the beginning with the difficult task of choosing which material to
include. A general criterion as sisting in this choice is provided
by the didactic character of the book: Those chapters have to be
included in priority, which will be most useful to the reader in
enabling him to understand the methods used in General Relativity,
the results obtained so far and possibly the problems still to be
solved. This criterion is not sufficient to ensure a unique choice.
General Relativity has developed to such a degree, that it is
impossible to include in an introductory textbook of a reasonable
length even a very condensed treatment of all important problems
which have been discussed until now and the author is obliged to
decide, in a more or less subjective manner, which of the more
recent developments to omit. The following lines indicate by means
of some examples the kind of choice made in this book."
Our esteemed colleague C. V. Vishveshwara, popularly known as
Vishu, turned sixty on 6th March 1998. His colleagues and well
wishers felt that it would be appropriate to celebrate the occasion
by bringing out a volume in his honour. Those of us who have had
the good fortune to know Vishu, know that he is unique, in a class
by himself. Having been given the privilege to be the volume's
editors, we felt that we should attempt something different in this
endeavour. Vishu is one of the well known relativists from India
whose pioneer ing contributions to the studies of black holes is
universally recognised. He was a student of Charles Misner. His Ph.
D. thesis on the stability of the Schwarzschild black hole,
coordinate invariant characterisation of the sta tionary limit and
event horizon for Kerr black holes and subsequent seminal work on
quasi-normal modes of black holes have passed on to become the
starting points for detailed mathematical investigations on the
nature of black holes. He later worked on other aspects related to
black holes and compact objects. Many of these topics have matured
over the last thirty years. New facets have also developed and
become current areas of vigorous research interest. No longer are
black holes, ultracompact objects or event horizons mere
idealisations of mathematical physicists but concrete entities that
astrophysicists detect, measure and look for. Astrophysical
evidence is mounting up steadily for black holes."
This book deals with underlying basic concepts in relativity. The
fundamental work of Stueckelberg, who formulated a consistent
relativistic classical and quantum dynamics, generalized for
application to many-body systems by Horwitz and Piron (SHP theory),
is explained with emphasis on its conceptual content. The two-body
bound state and scattering theory are also discussed. The ideas are
involved in the Lindner experiment showing interference in time and
the proposed experiment of Palacios et al. searching for the
persistence of entanglement at unequal times is discussed. The
meaning of the Newton-Wigner position operator and the
Landau-Peierls construction in terms of relativistic dynamics is
given. Finally, the embedding of the SHP theory into the framework
of general relativity, providing a canonical structure with
particle coordinates and momenta, is studied, carrying with it new
concepts in relativistic dynamics.
This book evolved out of some one hundred lectures given by twenty
experts at a special instructional conference sponsored by the
University Grants Commis sion, India. It is pedagogical in style
and self-contained in several interrelated areas of physics which
have become extremely important in present-day theoretical
research. The articles begin with an introduction to general
relativity and cosmology as well as particle physics and quantum
field theory. This is followed by reviews of the standard gauge
models of high-energy physics, renormalization group and grand
unified theories. The concluding parts of the book comprise
discussions in current research topics such as problems of the
early universe, quantum cosmology and the new directions towards a
unification of gravitation with other forces. In addition, special
concise treatments of mathematical topics of direct relevance are
also included. The content of the book was carefully worked out for
the mutual education of students and research workers in general
relativity and particle physics. This ambitious programe
consequently necessitated the involvement of a number of different
authors. However, care has been taken to ensure that the material
meshes into a unified, cogent and readable book. We hope that the
book will serve to initiate and guide a student in these different
areas of investigation starting from first principles and leading
to the exciting current research problems of an interdisciplinary
nature in the context of the origin and structure of the universe."
Many people know that Einstein invented the theory of relativity, but only few have more than a superficial idea of its content. This book aims to explain the basic features of relativity in detail, emphasising the geometrical aspects by using a large number of diagrams, and assuming no knowledge of higher level mathematics.
Thermal noise from optical coatings is a growing area of concern
and overcoming limits to the sensitivity of high precision
measurements by thermal noise is one of the greatest challenges
faced by experimental physicists. In this timely book,
internationally renowned scientists and engineers examine our
current theoretical and experimental understanding. Beginning with
the theory of thermal noise in mirrors and substrates, subsequent
chapters discuss the technology of depositing coatings and
state-of-the-art dielectric coating techniques used in precision
measurement. Applications and remedies for noise reduction are also
covered. Individual chapters are dedicated to specific fields where
coating thermal noise is a particular concern, including the areas
of quantum optics/optomechanics, gravitational wave detection,
precision timing, high-precision laser stabilisation via optical
cavities and cavity quantum electrodynamics. While providing full
mathematical detail, the text avoids field-specific jargon, making
it a valuable resource for readers with varied backgrounds in
modern optics.
Cosmology has become a very active research field in the last
decades thanks to the impressing improvement of our observational
techniques which have led to landmark discoveries such as the
accelerated expansion of the universe, and have put physicists in
front of new mysteries to unveil, such as the quest after the
nature of dark matter and dark energy. These notes offer an
approach to cosmology, covering fundamental topics in the field:
the expansion of the universe, the thermal history, the evolution
of small cosmological perturbations and the anisotropies in the
cosmic microwave background radiation. Some extra topics are
presented in the penultimate chapter and some standard results of
physics and mathematics are available in the last chapter in order
to provide a self-contained treatment. These notes offer an
in-depth account of the above-mentioned topics and are aimed to
graduate students who want to build an expertise in cosmology.
This book serves as a textbook for senior undergraduate students
who are learning the subject of general relativity and
gravitational waves for the first time. Both authors have been
teaching the course in various forms for a few decades and have
designed the book as a one stop book at basic level including
derivations and exercises. A spectacular prediction of general
relativity is gravitational waves. Gravitational waves were first
detected by the LIGO detectors in 2015, hundred years after their
prediction. Both authors are part of the LIGO Science Collaboration
and were authors on the discovery paper. Therefore, a strong
motivation for this book is to provide the essential concepts of
general relativity theory and gravitational waves with their modern
applications to students and to researchers who are new to the
multi-disciplinary field of gravitational wave astronomy. One of
the advanced topics covered in this book is the fundamentals of
gravitational wave data analysis, filling a gap in textbooks on
general relativity. The topic blends smoothly with other chapters
in the book not only because of the common area of research, but it
uses similar differential geometric and algebraic tools that are
used in general relativity.
This book focuses on the equation of state (EoS) of compact stars,
particularly the intriguing possibility of the "quark star model."
The EoS of compact stars is the subject of ongoing debates among
astrophysicists and particle physicists, due to the
non-perturbative property of strong interaction at low energy
scales. The book investigates the tidal deformability and maximum
mass of rotating quark stars and triaxially rotating quark stars,
and compares them with those of neutron stars to reveal significant
differences. Lastly, by combining the latest observations of
GW170817, the book suggests potential ways to distinguish between
the neutron star and quark star models.
'Everything you wanted to know about physics but were afraid to
ask' Priyamvada Natarajan, author of Mapping the Heavens
__________________________ When leading theoretical physicist
Professor Michael Dine was asked where you could find an accessible
book that would teach you about the Big Bang, Dark Matter, the
Higgs boson and the cutting edge of physics now, he had nothing he
could recommend. So he wrote it himself. In This Way to the
Universe, Dine takes us on a fascinating tour through the history
of modern physics - from Newtonian mechanics to quantum, from
particle to nuclear physics - delving into the wonders of our
universe at its largest, smallest, and within our daily lives. If
you are looking for the one book to help you understand physics,
written in language anyone can follow, this is it.
__________________________ 'An extraordinary journey into what we
know, what we hope to know, and what we don't know, about the
universe and the laws that govern it' Leonard Susskind, author of
The Theoretical Minimum series 'This book is a rare event . . .
presented by someone who is a true master' Sean Carroll, author of
From Eternity to Here 'Dine's enthusiastic storytelling makes the
read worth it for those who want to finally wrap their mind around
string theory or the Higgs boson' Tess Joosse, Scientific American
Measuring the masses of galaxies as a function of redshift is perhaps one of the most challenging open issues in current astronomical research. The evolution of the baryonic and dark matter components of galaxies is not only a critical test of the hierarchical formation paradigm, but ultimately also provides new clues on the complex interplay between star formation, the cooling and heating of gas and galaxy merging processes.This book reviews current techniques to measure the baryonic (stellar) and dark masses of nearby galaxies, and focusses on ongoing attempts to measure these same quantities in galaxies at higher and higher redshifts. It also gives room to future perspectives, with special emphasis on new survey projects and satellite missions.
By his theory of relativity, Albert Einstein has provked a
revolution of thought in physical science. The aim of this book is
to give an account of Einstein's work without introducing anything
very technical in the way of mathematics, physics, or philosophy.
The Physical World offers a grand vision of the essential unity of
physics that will enable the reader to see the world through the
eyes of a physicist and understand their thinking. The text follows
Einstein's dictum that 'explanations should be made as simple as
possible, but no simpler', to give an honest account of how modern
physicists understand their subject, including the shortcomings of
current theory. The result is an up-to-date and engaging portrait
of physics that contains concise derivations of the important
results in a style where every step in a derivation is clearly
explained, so that anyone with the appropriate mathematical skills
will find the text easy to digest. It is over half a century since
The Feynman Lectures in Physics were published. A new authoritative
account of fundamental physics covering all branches of the subject
is now well overdue. The Physical World has been written to satisfy
this need. The book concentrates on the conceptual principles of
each branch of physics and shows how they fit together to form a
coherent whole. Emphasis is placed on the use of variational
principles in physics, and in particular the principle of least
action, an approach that lies at the heart of modern theoretical
physics, but has been neglected in most introductory accounts of
the subject.
The theory of relativity describes the laws of physics in a given
space-time. However, a physical theory must provide observational
predictions expressed in terms of measurements, which are the
outcome of practical experiments and observations. Ideal for
readers with a mathematical background and a basic knowledge of
relativity, this book will help readers understand the physics
behind the mathematical formalism of the theory of relativity. It
explores the informative power of the theory of relativity, and
highlights its uses in space physics, astrophysics and cosmology.
Readers are given the tools to pick out from the mathematical
formalism those quantities that have physical meaning and which can
therefore be the result of a measurement. The book considers the
complications that arise through the interpretation of a
measurement, which is dependent on the observer who performs it.
Specific examples of this are given to highlight the awkwardness of
the problem.
Dark energy, the mysterious cause of the accelerating expansion of
the universe, is one of the most important fields of research in
astrophysics and cosmology today. Introducing the theoretical
ideas, observational methods and results, this textbook is ideally
suited to graduate courses on dark energy, and will also supplement
advanced cosmology courses. Providing a thorough introduction to
this exciting field, the textbook covers the cosmological constant,
quintessence, k-essence, perfect fluid models, extra-dimensional
models, and modified gravity. Observational research is reviewed,
from the cosmic microwave background to baryon acoustic
oscillations, weak lensing and cluster abundances. Every chapter
ends with problems, with full solutions provided, and any
calculations are worked through step-by-step.
In this thesis we discuss the construction of an effective field
theory (EFT) for non-relativistic Majorana fermions, show how to
use it to calculate observables in a thermal medium, and derive the
effects of these thermal particles on the CP asymmetry. The methods
described in this thesis allow a systematic and effective
description of the non-relativistic dynamics of a heavy Majorana
fermion at finite temperature. The CP asymmetry is studied for
hierarchical and nearly degenerate heavy-neutrino masses and the
analysis includes the treatment of lepton-flavor effects. Heavy
Majorana neutrinos are involved in many scenarios of physics beyond
the standard model and, in the leptogenesis framework, they are at
the root of the baryon asymmetry in the Universe. Besides
simplifying exist in g results, the EFT approach provides useful
tools for addressing even more involved observables. Indeed, taken
together, the approach and the material presented here represent an
important step toward a systematic improvement of our knowledge of
the CP asymmetry in heavy-neutrino decays at finite temperature.
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