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  • Cited by 14
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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      05 June 2012
      17 February 2011
      ISBN:
      9780511778506
      9780521761147
      Dimensions:
      (246 x 189 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      1.95kg, 843 Pages
      Dimensions:
      Weight & Pages:

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    Book description

    The mathematical methods that physical scientists need for solving substantial problems in their fields of study are set out clearly and simply in this tutorial-style textbook. Students will develop problem-solving skills through hundreds of worked examples, self-test questions and homework problems. Each chapter concludes with a summary of the main procedures and results and all assumed prior knowledge is summarized in one of the appendices. Over 300 worked examples show how to use the techniques and around 100 self-test questions in the footnotes act as checkpoints to build student confidence. Nearly 400 end-of-chapter problems combine ideas from the chapter to reinforce the concepts. Hints and outline answers to the odd-numbered problems are given at the end of each chapter, with fully-worked solutions to these problems given in the accompanying Student Solutions Manual. Fully-worked solutions to all problems, password-protected for instructors, are available at www.cambridge.org/essential.

    Reviews

    'Problem solving skills can only be developed by solving problems, and here students can gorge on many stimulating problems … this book can be recommended as [a] thorough, readable, mathematical methods textbook for undergraduates on a par with the book of Boas. As Paul Dirac said ‘God used beautiful mathematics in creating the world’, and students will not go far wrong by beginning their journey into mathematical physics here.'

    C. A. Downing Source: Contemporary Physics

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    Contents

    • 1 - Matrices and vector spaces
      pp 1-86

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