Advanced Visual Quantum Mechanics Volume 141 || Quantum Information Theory
β Scribed by ,
- Book ID
- 111948765
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 455 KB
- Edition
- 2005
- Category
- Article
- ISBN-13
- 9780387207773
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Advanced Visual Quantum Mechanics Is A Systematic Effort To Investigate And To Teach Quantum Mechanics With The Aid Of Computer-generated Animations. It Is A Self-contained Textbook That Combines Selected Topics From Atomic Physics (spherical Symmetry, The Hydrogen Atom, And Particles With Spin) With An Introduction To Quantum Information Theory (qubits, Epr Paradox, Teleportation, Quantum Computers). It Explores Relativistic Quantum Mechanics And The Strange Behavior Of Dirac Equation Solutions. A Series Of Appendices Covers Important Topics From Perturbation And Scattering Theory. The Book Places An Emphasis On Ideas And Concepts, With A Fair To Moderate Amount Of Mathematical Rigor. Though This Book Stands Alone, It Can Also Be Paired With Thaller Visual Quantum Mechanics To Form A Comprehensive Course In Quantum Mechanics. The Software For The First Book Earned The European Academic Software Award 2000 For Outstanding Innovation In Its Field. Spherical Symmetry -- Coulomb Problem -- Particles With Spin -- Qubits -- Composite Systems -- Quantum Information Theory -- Relativistic Systems In One Dimension -- The Dirac Equation. Bernd Thaller. Includes Bibliographical References (p. 491) And Index.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Starting from basic principles, the book covers a wide variety of topics, ranging from Heisenberg, Schroedinger, second quantization, density matrix and path integral formulations of quantum mechanics, to applications that are (or will be) corner stones of present and future technologies.Β The empha
242 solved problems of several degrees of difficulty in nonrelativistic Quantum Mechanics, ranging from the themes of the crisis of classical physics, through the achievements in the framework of modern atomic physics, down to the still alive, more intriguing aspects connected e.g. with the EPR para
This text on the electrical, optical, magnetic, and thermal properties of materials stresses concepts rather than mathematical formalism. Suitable for advanced undergraduates, it is intended for materials and electrical engineers who want to gain a fundamental understanding of alloys, semiconductor