Mathematics for Natural Scientists II

£69.99

Mathematics for Natural Scientists II

Advanced Methods

Mathematical physics Quantum and theoretical chemistry Maths for engineers

Author: Lev Kantorovich

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Collection: Undergraduate Lecture Notes in Physics

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 23 March 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9783031463204


Introduction

This textbook, the second in a series (the first covered fundamentals and basics), seeks to make its material accessible to physics students. Physics/engineering can be greatly enhanced by knowledge of advanced mathematical techniques, but the math-specific jargon and laborious proofs can be off-putting to students not well versed in abstract math. This book uses examples and proofs designed to be clear and convincing from the context of physics, as well as providing a large number of both solved and unsolved problems in each chapter.

This is the second edition, and it has been significantly revised and enlarged, with Chapters 1 (on linear algebra) and 2 (on the calculus of complex numbers and functions) having been particularly expanded.

Enhanced Topics

The enhanced topics throughout the book include: vector spaces, general (non-Hermitian, including normal and defective) matrices and their right/left eigenvectors/values, Jordan form, pseudoinverse, linear systems of differential equations, Gaussian elimination, fundamental theorem of algebra, convergence of a Fourier series and Gibbs-Wilbraham phenomenon, careful derivation of the Fourier integral and of the inverse Laplace transform.

New material has been added on many physics topics meant to illustrate the maths, such as 3D rotation, properties of the free electron gas, van Hove singularities, and methods for both solving PDEs with a Fourier transform and calculating the width of a domain wall in a ferromagnet, to mention just a few.

This textbook should prove invaluable to all of those with an interest in physics/engineering who have previously experienced difficulty processing the math involved.

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