Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Morgan Kaufmann's audience includes the research and development communities, information technology (IS/IT) managers, and students in professional degree programs. The company was founded in 1984 by publishers Michael B. Morgan and William Kaufmann and computer scientist Nils Nilsson .
Joe Celko's SQL Programming Style (Morgan-Kaufmann, 2005) ISBN 978-0-12-088797-2 Joe Celko's SQL Puzzles and Answers (2nd edition, Morgan-Kaufmann 2006) ISBN 978-0-12-373596-6 Joe Celko's Trees and Hierarchies in SQL for Smarties, 2nd Edition (Morgan-Kaufmann, 2012) ISBN 978-0-12-387733-8
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.).
S. R. De Groot, P. Mazur (2011) Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics, Dover Books on Physics, ISBN 978-0486647418. Van Vliet, Carolyne M. (2008). Equilibrium and Non-equilibrium Statistical Mechanics .
The books in this series, like the other Springer-Verlag mathematics series, are small yellow books of a standard size. The books in this series tend to be written at a more elementary level than the similar Graduate Texts in Mathematics series, although there is a fair amount of overlap between the two series in terms of material covered and ...
Another notable textbook is Classical Electromagnetism in a Nutshell by Anupam Garg published in 2012, which has been also praised by physicists like Anthony Zee, Ramamurti Shankar, Jainendra Jain, John Belcher. [45] Here is the list of some important textbooks that discuss generic physical areas of electromagnetism.
Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice is a textbook written by James D. Foley, Andries van Dam, Steven K. Feiner, John Hughes, Morgan McGuire, David F. Sklar, and Kurt Akeley and published by Addison–Wesley.
One of the six 2-rep-tiles in the plane (can be tiled by two copies of itself, of equal size). [13] [14] 1.26: Hénon map: The canonical Hénon map (with parameters a = 1.4 and b = 0.3) has Hausdorff dimension 1.261 ± 0.003. Different parameters yield different dimension values. 1.2619: Triflake