<p>In a rapidly evolving field such as computational physics, six years is an eternity. Even though many of the elementary techniques described here are of venerable age, their assembly into sophisticated combined methods and their intensive application to ever new problems is an ongoing and excitin
Computational Physics: An Introduction
โ Scribed by Franz J. Vesely (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 277
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Front Matter....Pages 1-6
Finite Differences....Pages 7-22
Linear Algebra....Pages 23-49
Stochastics....Pages 51-92
Front Matter....Pages 93-96
Ordinary Differential Equations....Pages 97-135
Partial Differential Equations....Pages 137-170
Front Matter....Pages 171-173
Simulation and Statistical Mechanics....Pages 175-206
Quantum Mechanical Simulation....Pages 207-228
Hydrodynamics....Pages 229-251
Back Matter....Pages 253-276
โฆ Subjects
Numerical and Computational Physics;Physical Chemistry;Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Author Franz J. Vesely offers students an introductory text on computational physics, providing them with the important basic numerical/computational techniques. His unique text sets itself apart from others by focusing on specific problems of computational physics. The author also provides a select
This book is fairly well written. It is the first edition and is a little out of date when it comes to certain aspects, such as the input method in FORTRAN. The material is fairly well covered and honestly I preferred this edition to the second edition.
Thoroughly updated and revised for its second edition, this advanced textbook provides an introduction to the basic methods of computational physics, and an overview of recent progress in several areas of scientific computing. Tao Pang presents many step-by-step examples, including program listings
This book is fairly well written. It is the first edition and is a little out of date when it comes to certain aspects, such as the input method in FORTRAN. The material is fairly well covered and honestly I preferred this edition to the second edition.