Bookbot

Graduate Texts in Mathematics - 130: Tensor Geometry

The Geometric Viewpoint and Its Uses - Second Edition

En savoir plus sur le livre

This treatment of differential geometry and the mathematics required for general relativity makes the subject matter accessible for the first time to anyone familiar with elementary calculus in one variable and with a knowledge of some vector algebra. The emphasis throughout is on the geometry of the mathematics, which is greatly enhanced by the many illustrations presenting figures of three and more dimensions as closely as book form will allow.To maintain the flow of exposition and to develop experience in the reader, the technicalities of many proofs are in the form of carefully programmed exercises rather than endless pages of displayed equations. In this way, the reader is guided through actually doing computations instead of being allowed to skim over a page of ready worked examples.The imaginative text is a major contribution to expounding the subject of differential geometry as applied to studies in relativity, and will prove of interest to a large number of mathematicians and physicists.

Achat du livre

Graduate Texts in Mathematics - 130: Tensor Geometry, Christopher T. J. Dodson, Timothy Poston

Langue
Année de publication
1997
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(rigide),
État du livre
Bon
Prix
63,99 €

Modes de paiement

Personne n'a encore évalué .Évaluer

Titre
Graduate Texts in Mathematics - 130: Tensor Geometry
Sous-titre
The Geometric Viewpoint and Its Uses - Second Edition
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
Springer
Publié
1997
Format
rigide
Pages
432
ISBN10
354052018X
ISBN13
9783540520184
Séries
Description
This treatment of differential geometry and the mathematics required for general relativity makes the subject matter accessible for the first time to anyone familiar with elementary calculus in one variable and with a knowledge of some vector algebra. The emphasis throughout is on the geometry of the mathematics, which is greatly enhanced by the many illustrations presenting figures of three and more dimensions as closely as book form will allow.To maintain the flow of exposition and to develop experience in the reader, the technicalities of many proofs are in the form of carefully programmed exercises rather than endless pages of displayed equations. In this way, the reader is guided through actually doing computations instead of being allowed to skim over a page of ready worked examples.The imaginative text is a major contribution to expounding the subject of differential geometry as applied to studies in relativity, and will prove of interest to a large number of mathematicians and physicists.