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In this new edition of the standard undergraduate textbook on
electricity and magnetism, David Griffiths provides expanded
discussions on topics such as the nature of field lines, the
crystal ambiguity, eddy currents, and the Thomson kink model. Ideal
for junior and senior undergraduate students from physics and
electrical engineering, the book now includes many new examples and
problems, including numerical applications (in Mathematica) to
reflect the increasing importance of computational techniques in
contemporary physics. Many figures have been redrawn, while updated
references to recent research articles not only emphasize that new
discoveries are constantly made in this field, but also help to
expand readers' understanding of the topic and of its importance in
current physics research.
This well-known undergraduate electrodynamics textbook is now
available in a more affordable printing from Cambridge University
Press. The Fourth Edition provides a rigorous, yet clear and
accessible treatment of the fundamentals of electromagnetic theory
and offers a sound platform for explorations of related
applications (AC circuits, antennas, transmission lines, plasmas,
optics and more). Written keeping in mind the conceptual hurdles
typically faced by undergraduate students, this textbook
illustrates the theoretical steps with well-chosen examples and
careful illustrations. It balances text and equations, allowing the
physics to shine through without compromising the rigour of the
math, and includes numerous problems, varying from straightforward
to elaborate, so that students can be assigned some problems to
build their confidence and others to stretch their minds. A
Solutions Manual is available to instructors teaching from the
book; access can be requested from the resources section at
www.cambridge.org/electrodynamics.
Changes and additions to the new edition of this classic textbook
include a new chapter on symmetries, new problems and examples,
improved explanations, more numerical problems to be worked on a
computer, new applications to solid state physics, and consolidated
treatment of time-dependent potentials.
Sidney Coleman (1937-2007) earned his doctorate at Caltech under
Murray Gell-Mann. Before completing his thesis, he was hired by
Harvard and remained there his entire career. A celebrated particle
theorist, he is perhaps best known for his brilliant lectures,
given at Harvard and in a series of summer school courses at Erice,
Sicily. Three times in the 1960s he taught a graduate course on
Special and General Relativity; this book is based on lecture notes
taken by three of his students and compiled by the Editors.
The conceptual changes brought by modern physics are important,
radical and fascinating, yet they are only vaguely understood by
people working outside the field. Exploring the four pillars of
modern physics - relativity, quantum mechanics, elementary
particles and cosmology - this clear and lively account will
interest anyone who has wondered what Einstein, Bohr, Schroedinger
and Heisenberg were really talking about. The book discusses quarks
and leptons, antiparticles and Feynman diagrams, curved space-time,
the Big Bang and the expanding Universe. Suitable for undergraduate
students in non-science as well as science subjects, it uses
problems and worked examples to help readers develop an
understanding of what recent advances in physics actually mean.
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