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Einstein's general theory of relativity - currently our best theory
of gravity - is important not only to specialists, but to a much
wider group of physicists. This short textbook on general
relativity and gravitation offers students glimpses of the vast
landscape of science connected to general relativity. It
incorporates some of the latest research in the field. The book is
aimed at readers with a broad range of interests in physics, from
cosmology, to gravitational radiation, to high energy physics, to
condensed matter theory. The pedagogical approach is "physics
first": readers move very quickly to the calculation of
observational predictions, and only return to the mathematical
foundations after the physics is established. In addition to the
"standard" topics covered by most introductory textbooks, it
contains short introductions to more advanced topics: for instance,
why field equations are second order, how to treat gravitational
energy, and what is required for a Hamiltonian formulation of
general relativity. A concluding chapter discusses directions for
further study, from mathematical relativity, to experimental tests,
to quantum gravity. This is an introductory text, but it has also
been written as a jumping-off point for readers who plan to study
more specialized topics.
This timely volume provides a broad survey of (2+1)-dimensional
quantum gravity. It emphasises the 'quantum cosmology' of closed
universes and the quantum mechanics of the (2+1)-dimensional black
hole. It compares and contrasts a variety of approaches, and
examines what they imply for a realistic theory of quantum gravity.
General relativity in three spacetime dimensions has become a
popular arena in which to explore the ramifications of quantum
gravity. As a diffeomorphism-invariant theory of spacetime
structure, this model shares many of the conceptual problems of
realistic quantum gravity. But it is also simple enough that many
programs of quantization can be carried out explicitly. After
analysing the space of classical solutions, this book introduces
some fifteen approaches to quantum gravity - from canonical
quantization in York's 'extrinsic time' to Chern-Simons
quantization, from the loop representation to covariant path
integration to lattice methods. Relationships among quantizations
are explored, as well as implications for such issues as topology
change and the 'problem of time'. This book is an invaluable
resource for all graduate students and researchers working in
quantum gravity.
Einstein's general theory of relativity - currently our best theory
of gravity - is important not only to specialists, but to a much
wider group of physicists. This short textbook on general
relativity and gravitation offers students glimpses of the vast
landscape of science connected to general relativity. It
incorporates some of the latest research in the field. The book is
aimed at readers with a broad range of interests in physics, from
cosmology, to gravitational radiation, to high energy physics, to
condensed matter theory. The pedagogical approach is "physics
first": readers move very quickly to the calculation of
observational predictions, and only return to the mathematical
foundations after the physics is established. In addition to the
"standard" topics covered by most introductory textbooks, it
contains short introductions to more advanced topics: for instance,
why field equations are second order, how to treat gravitational
energy, and what is required for a Hamiltonian formulation of
general relativity. A concluding chapter discusses directions for
further study, from mathematical relativity, to experimental tests,
to quantum gravity. This is an introductory text, but it has also
been written as a jumping-off point for readers who plan to study
more specialized topics.
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