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This is a list of noteworthy publications in physics, organized by type. General audience. List of books on popular physics concepts; Textbooks List of textbooks on ...
Abraham, R.; Marsden, J. E. (2008). Foundations of Mechanics: A Mathematical Exposition of Classical Mechanics with an Introduction to the Qualitative Theory of Dynamical Systems (2nd ed.).
This is a list of books which talk about things related to current day physics or physics as it would be in the future. There a number of books that have been penned about specific physics concepts, e.g. quantum mechanics or kinematics, and many other books which discuss physics in general, i.e. not focussing on a single topic. There are also ...
As a result, some physics students find the lectures more valuable after they have obtained a good grasp of physics by studying more traditional texts, and the books are sometimes seen as more helpful for teachers than for students. [5]
B. Bad Science (Taubes book) The Beginning of Infinity; Beyond Star Trek; Big Bang (Singh book) The Big Picture (Carroll book) The Biggest Ideas in the Universe
Supplemented by Larry Gonick and Art Huffman's The Cartoon Guide to Physics, this is a primer on the wonders of physics." [3] A review by Kirkus commented, "Physics made easy this is not. Physics for the sophisticated but nontechnical, maybe. Krauss is a theoretical physicist who teaches one of those physics-for-poets courses at Yale.
The Trouble with Physics, webpage maintained by the publisher, Houghton Mifflin. Joseph Polchinski (2007) "All Strung Out?" a review of The Trouble with Physics and Not Even Wrong, American Scientist 95(1):1. Smolin's comment and Polchinsky's reply. Mindmap of the fundamental concepts described in the book. Lee Smolin, Brian Greene (August 18 ...
Writing for the Wall Street Journal, Julian Baggini said that the book is an "informed and entertaining guide to what science can and cannot tell us" and that while Hossenfelder may be "too opinionated" at points, the reader "will quickly forgive her" since trying to combine the "concerns of the human world and the baffling complexities of physics" has given her the right to be so. [2]