Princeton Problems in Physics with Solutions
By (Author) Nathan Newbury
By (author) Mark Newman
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
1st May 1991
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
530.076
Paperback
336
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
454g
Aimed at helping the physics student to develop a solid grasp of basic graduate-level material, this book presents worked solutions to a wide range of informative problems. These problems have been culled from the preliminary and general examinations created by the physics department at Princeton University for its graduate program. The authors, all students who have successfully completed the examinations, selected these problems on the basis of usefulness, interest, and originality, and have provided highly detailed solutions to each one. Their book will be a valuable resource not only to other students but to college physics teachers as well. The first four chapters pose problems in the areas of mechanics, electricity and magnetism, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, thereby serving as a review of material typically covered in undergraduate courses. Later chapters deal with material new to most first-year graduate students, challenging them on such topics as condensed matter, relativity and astrophysics, nuclear physics, elementary particles, and atomic and general physics.
"A glance at the problems shows that they have been carefully selected to cover a wide range of different topics... What is most surprising about these problems is the incredible range and depth of subject matter."--American Journal of Physics