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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.
This tutorial-style textbook develops the basic mathematical tools
needed by first and second year undergraduates to solve problems in
the physical sciences. Students gain hands-on experience through
hundreds of worked examples, self-test questions and homework
problems. Each chapter includes a summary of the main results,
definitions and formulae. Over 270 worked examples show how to put
the tools into practice. Around 170 self-test questions in the
footnotes and 300 end-of-section exercises give students an instant
check of their understanding. More than 450 end-of-chapter problems
allow students to put what they have just learned into practice.
Hints and outline answers to the odd-numbered problems are given at
the end of each chapter. Complete solutions to these problems can
be found in the accompanying Student Solutions Manual. Fully-worked
solutions to all problems, password-protected for instructors, are
available at www.cambridge.org/foundation.
General Relativity: An Introduction for Physicists provides a clear
mathematical introduction to Einstein's theory of general
relativity. It presents a wide range of applications of the theory,
concentrating on its physical consequences. After reviewing the
basic concepts, the authors present a clear and intuitive
discussion of the mathematical background, including the necessary
tools of tensor calculus and differential geometry. These tools are
then used to develop the topic of special relativity and to discuss
electromagnetism in Minkowski spacetime. Gravitation as spacetime
curvature is then introduced and the field equations of general
relativity derived. After applying the theory to a wide range of
physical situations, the book concludes with a brief discussion of
classical field theory and the derivation of general relativity
from a variational principle. Written for advanced undergraduate
and graduate students, this approachable textbook contains over 300
exercises to illuminate and extend the discussion in the text.
The mathematical methods that physical scientists need for solving
substantial problems in their fields of study are set out clearly
and simply in this tutorial-style textbook. Students will develop
problem-solving skills through hundreds of worked examples,
self-test questions and homework problems. Each chapter concludes
with a summary of the main procedures and results and all assumed
prior knowledge is summarized in one of the appendices. Over 300
worked examples show how to use the techniques and around 100
self-test questions in the footnotes act as checkpoints to build
student confidence. Nearly 400 end-of-chapter problems combine
ideas from the chapter to reinforce the concepts. Hints and outline
answers to the odd-numbered problems are given at the end of each
chapter, with fully-worked solutions to these problems given in the
accompanying Student Solutions Manual. Fully-worked solutions to
all problems, password-protected for instructors, are available at
www.cambridge.org/essential.
This Student Solution Manual provides complete solutions to all the
odd-numbered problems in Foundation Mathematics for the Physical
Sciences. It takes students through each problem step-by-step, so
they can clearly see how the solution is reached, and understand
any mistakes in their own working. Students will learn by example
how to arrive at the correct answer and improve their
problem-solving skills.
Mathematical Methods for Physics and Engineering, Third Edition is
a highly acclaimed undergraduate textbook that teaches 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. This solutions manual accompanies the third edition of
Mathematical Methods for Physics and Engineering. It contains
complete worked solutions to over 400 exercises in the main
textbook, the odd-numbered exercises, that are provided with hints
and answers. The even-numbered exercises have no hints, answers or
worked solutions and are intended for unaided homework problems;
full solutions are available to instructors on a password-protected
web site, www.cambridge.org/9780521679718.
This Student Solution Manual provides complete solutions to all the
odd-numbered problems in Essential Mathematical Methods for the
Physical Sciences. It takes students through each problem
step-by-step, so they can clearly see how the solution is reached,
and understand any mistakes in their own working. Students will
learn by example how to select an appropriate method, improving
their problem-solving skills.
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