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Scott J. Muller - Asymmetry - 9783642089329 - V9783642089329
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Asymmetry

€ 66.95
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Description for Asymmetry Paperback. Series: The Frontiers Collection. Num Pages: 173 pages, 2 black & white tables, biography. BIC Classification: PBG; PBKS; PBW; UYAM. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 234 x 156 x 9. Weight in Grams: 278.

As individual needs have arisen in the fields of physics, electrical engineering and computational science, each has created its own theories of information to serve as conceptual instruments for advancing developments. This book provides a coherent consolidation of information theories from these different fields. The author gives a survey of current theories and then introduces the underlying notion of symmetry, showing how information is related to the capacity of a system to distinguish itself. A formal methodology using group theory is employed and leads to the application of Burnside's Lemma to count distinguishable states. This provides a versatile tool for ... Read more

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Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG Germany
Number of pages
173
Condition
New
Series
The Frontiers Collection
Number of Pages
165
Place of Publication
Berlin, Germany
ISBN
9783642089329
SKU
V9783642089329
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15

About Scott J. Muller
Scott Muller graduated from the University of Queensland in Chemical Engineering specialising in biotechnology. He worked in Australia and Italy in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries. In 2004 he received his doctorate from the University of Newcastle (Australia) where he studied the foundations of information and conducted research into the nature of "emergence". Recently he has worked on automated reasoning ... Read more

Reviews for Asymmetry
From the reviews: "The author is concerned with the meaning of the term ‘information’. He discusses theories of information that arise in thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, communication theory, and in complexity theory. … The book is more a contribution to epistemology … ." (L. L. Campbell, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2008 k)

Goodreads reviews for Asymmetry


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