Featuring state-of-the-art computer based technology throughout, this comprehensive book on classical mechanics bridges the gap between introductory physics and quantum mechanics, statistical mechanics and opticsΠ²Πβgiving readers a strong basis for their work in applied and pure sciences.Introduces
Introduction to CLASSICAL MECHANICS
β Scribed by A. P. French, M. G. Ebison (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 317
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book is, in essence, an updated and revised version of an earlier textbook, Newtonian Mechanics, written about fifteen years ago by one of us (APF) and published in 1971. The book has been significantly changed in emphasis as well as length. Our aim has been to produce a mechanics text, suitable for use at beginning university level, for students who have a background typified by the British sixth-form level in physics and mathematics. We hope, however, that the book will also be found useful in the teaching of mechanics at the upper levels of the secondary schools themselves. Calculus is freely used from the outset. In making the present revision we have drastically cut down on the amount of historical and more discursive material. Nevertheless, our goal has been to present classical mechanics as physics, not as applied mathematics. Although we begin at the beginning, we have aimed at developing the basic principles and their applications as rapidly as seemed reasonable, so that by the end of the book students will be able to feel that they have achieved a good working knowledge of the subject and can tackle fairly sophisticated problems. To help with this process, each chapter is followed by a good number of exercises, some of them fairly challenging. We shall be very grateful to receive comments and corrections from those who use this book.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Space, time and motion....Pages 1-24
Forces....Pages 25-43
Using Newtonβs laws....Pages 44-69
Universal gravitation....Pages 70-94
Collisions and conservation laws....Pages 95-123
Energy conservation in dynamics; vibrational motions....Pages 124-151
Conservative forces and motion in space....Pages 152-192
Inertial forces and non-inertial frames....Pages 193-222
Motion under central forces....Pages 223-254
Extended systems and rotational dynamics....Pages 255-299
Back Matter....Pages 300-310
β¦ Subjects
Mechanics;Mechanical Engineering;Characterization and Evaluation of Materials
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><span>This textbook aims to provide a clear and concise set of lectures that take one from the introduction and application of Newton's laws up to Hamilton's principle of stationary action and the lagrangian mechanics of continuous systems. An extensive set of accessible problems enhances and ext
<p><span>This textbook aims to provide a clear and concise set of lectures that take one from the introduction and application of Newton's laws up to Hamilton's principle of stationary action and the lagrangian mechanics of continuous systems. An extensive set of accessible problems enhances and ext
<span>Previously published as "Newtonian Mechanics", this book is a condensed version aimed at the undergraduate. The text presents ideas in both classical and modern physics, starting from basic observations about space, time and motion and ending with an elementary treatment of some problems in ro