Exploring Black Holes: Introduction to General Relativity
โ Scribed by Edwin F. Taylor, John Archibald Wheeler
- Publisher
- Addison Wesley Longman
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 345
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A book I really wouldn't have thought could have been written. There are a lot of books on general relativity at the superficial level, call these books 'mathless.' There are monumental tomes aimed at the graduate student level, call these books 'tensor calculus.' Here is a book exquisitely positioned between these others. The student will need to have had differential calculus, and perhaps a bit of basic physics, and with these he will get a pretty good, introductory understanding of General Relativity.
The real key to this book is that it explains a lot, but then it open up a bunch of other questions, questions that we really haven't answered yet -- things like dark matter, dark energy, accelerating expansion of the universe, and more.
The book ends with: 'How can physics live up to its true greatness except by a new revolution in outlook which dwarfs all past revolutions? And when it comes, will we not say to each other, Oh, how beautiful and simple it all is! How could we ever have missed it so long.'
That's just the awe, the vision, that we want new and budding physicists to have.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Fixed errata until november 2021, number lines "hidden"
<P> <B> </B>A concise, direct examination of general relativity and black holes, <I>Exploring Black Holes</I> provides tools that motivate tools that motivate readers to become active participants in carrying out their own investigations about curved spacetime near earth and black holes. The authors
Authored by Oersted Medal winner Edwin Taylor and foremost relativist John Archibald Wheeler, this unique book offers a concise, directed examination of general relativity and black holes. Its goal is to provide tools that motivate students to become active participants in carrying out their own inv
Makes a quick, directed thrust through general relativity and black holes. Brings preliminary insights concerning the history and structure of the Cosmos. DLC: General relativity (Physics)