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General Relativity (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series)
Nicholas Woodhouse
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Description for General Relativity (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series)
Paperback. Based on a course taught for years at Oxford, this book offers an exposition of the central ideas of general relativity. It focuses on the chain of reasoning that leads to the relativistic theory from the analysis of distance and time measurements in the presence of gravity, rather than on the underlying mathematical structure. Series: Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series. Num Pages: 220 pages, 33 black & white illustrations, biography. BIC Classification: PHR. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational; (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly; (UU) Undergraduate. Dimension: 254 x 163 x 17. Weight in Grams: 416.
Based on a course taught for years at Oxford, this book offers a concise exposition of the central ideas of general relativity. The focus is on the chain of reasoning that leads to the relativistic theory from the analysis of distance and time measurements in the presence of gravity, rather than on the underlying mathematical structure. Includes links to recent developments, including theoretical work and observational evidence, to encourage further study.
Product Details
Series
Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series
Place of Publication
England, United Kingdom
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
About Nicholas Woodhouse
Nick Woodhouse is an experienced researcher in GR with an international reputation.
Reviews for General Relativity (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series)
From the reviews: This book introduces General Relativity at students level, especially intended for final year mathematics students. Different from other books with the same title, it really goes into the geometric details and tries to explain the given formulae ... . The appendices present exercises and hints to their solutions. (Philosophy, Religion and Science ... Read moreBook Reviews, bookinspections.wordpress.com, May, 2014) I have the opportunity to comment on General Relativity ... . I am happy to recommend ... for an advanced undergraduate course on relativity or for self-study. ... marvelous faithfulness to historical developments ... characterizes the entire treatment. ... In fact, the whole book is distinguished by this high quality of exposition. ... It's a fine book, beautifully written and clear, and I highly recommend it. (Michael Berg, MathDL, January, 2007) MAA Reviews: In December, 2003 I had the pleasure of reviewing the admirable book Special Relativity, by N.M.J. Woodhouse, and now I have the opportunity to comment on General Relativity by the same author. I am happy to recommend not just this sequel, but the indicated pair, for an advanced undergraduate course on relativity or for self-study. One particularly noteworthy feature of General Relativity is that woodhouse seeks to present the subject neither as a branch of differential geometry nor as the kind of physics mathematicians like me find unapproachable (and I'm afraid this doesn't particularly narrow the field). When just a rookie I dabbled in relativity largely from popularizations and biographical writings, and when I tried to learn some real general relativity in graduate school - for cultural reasons, I guess - it simply didn't take. But my interest in the subject, both specially and generally, has never flagged and Woodhouse's books are tailor-made for even my lingering ambitions. In other words, for any slacker who feels he should have learned this beautiful material in his mathematical youth, but didn't, and is now secretly (or not so secretly) desirous of doing it right, this is the book, or, more correctly, these are the books to read. Furthermore, as I already hinted, as far as teaching courses on these important subjects is concerned, obviously these books fit that bill very well too, given Woodhouse's specific pedagogical intent. When it comes to the specific style and presentation of general relativity chosen by Woodhouse, marvellous faithfulness to historical developments, in particular Einstein's own writings, characterizes the entire treatment. On p.7, already, the weak and strong equivalence principles are presented and analysed in a succinct and historically rooted fashion. The former, going back to Galileo's pendulums (Woodhouse correctly says pendula, of course) and famously connected with Eoetvoes' experiment, entails that inertial mass and gravitational mass are the same; and the latter says that there are no obvservable differences between the local effects of gravity and acceleration. Woodhouse's brief discussion of these observable differences between the local effects of gravity and acceleration. Woodhouse's brief discussion of these incomparable axioms underlying Einstein's revolution is a gem of exposition, covering the historical sweep of the attendant experiments (he even mentions a planned space experiment, STEP, which will test the latter principle to within one part in 1018) and conveying what is to come as a result of these stipulations. Finally, I want to draw special attention to pp.23-27, where Woodhouse does a phenomenally good job of explicating the subject of tensors in Minkowski space, a subject which has always been a bit unsettling to me who was raised to visit tensor products in their homological algebraic home and I cannot resist mentioning Problem 1.5 on p.13, dealing with Einstein's birthday present. It's a fine book, beautifully written and clear, and I highly recommend it. [Reviewed by Michael Berg, 20.1.2007] Woodhouse ... lets the physical intuition behind relativity inform every step of its logical development, making his treatment as digestible as any in print. He does introduce ab ovo what differential geometry he needs, and he takes the whole theory far enough to develop general relativity's most exciting predictions, black holes and gravity waves, all in less than half the number of pages one might expect. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals. (D. V. Feldman, CHOICE, Vol. 44 (11), July, 2007) The book is an outgrowth of a lecture course given over many years by the author and his colleagues to final-year applied mathematicians at the Mathematical Institute in Oxford, UK. The book is well-written and easy to follow because the author constructs the necessary apparatus layer-by-layer, from the bottom up, carefully motivating and justifying every new concept. Exercises are given at the end of every chapter ... and numerous examples appear throughout the text. ... its expository style is very appealing. (David A. Burton, General Relativity and Gravitation, Vol. 39, 2007) Show Less