Revolutions in Twentieth Century Physics

By: David J GriffithsMaterial type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: New York Cambridge University Press 2015Description: x,173p. PBISBN: 9781107602175Subject(s): PhysicsDDC classification: 530 Summary: The conceptual changes brought by modern physics are important, radical and fascinating, yet they are only vaguely understood by people working outside the field. Exploring the four pillars of modern physics – relativity, quantum mechanics, elementary particles and cosmology – this clear and lively account will interest anyone who has wondered what Einstein, Bohr, Schrödinger and Heisenberg were really talking about. The book discusses quarks and leptons, antiparticles and Feynman diagrams, curved space-time, the Big Bang and the expanding Universe. Suitable for undergraduate students in non-science as well as science subjects, it uses problems and worked examples to help readers develop an understanding of what recent advances in physics actually mean.
List(s) this item appears in: PG New Arrivals - July -Aug 2022 | PG New Arrivals- December 2022
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Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book St Aloysius College PG Library
Physics 530 GRIR (Browse shelf) Available PG023979
Total holds: 0

The conceptual changes brought by modern physics are important, radical and fascinating, yet they are only vaguely understood by people working outside the field. Exploring the four pillars of modern physics – relativity, quantum mechanics, elementary particles and cosmology – this clear and lively account will interest anyone who has wondered what Einstein, Bohr, Schrödinger and Heisenberg were really talking about. The book discusses quarks and leptons, antiparticles and Feynman diagrams, curved space-time, the Big Bang and the expanding Universe. Suitable for undergraduate students in non-science as well as science subjects, it uses problems and worked examples to help readers develop an understanding of what recent advances in physics actually mean.

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