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Relativity

Relativity

Relativity

An Introduction to Special and General Relativity
3rd Edition
Hans Stephani, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, Jena, Germany
February 2004
Available
Paperback
9780521010696
£75.99
GBP
Paperback
USD
eBook

    Thoroughly revised and updated, this textbook provides a pedagogical introduction to relativity. It is self-contained, but the reader is expected to have a basic knowledge of theoretical mechanics and electrodynamics. It covers the most important features of both special and general relativity, as well as touching on more difficult topics, such as the field of charged pole-dipole particles, the Petrov classification, groups of motions, gravitational lenses, exact solutions and the structure of infinity. The necessary mathematical tools (tensor calculus, Riemannian geometry) are provided, most of the derivations are given in full, and exercises are included where appropriate. Written as a textbook for undergraduate and introductory graduate courses, it will also be of use to researchers working in the field. The bibliography gives the original papers and directs the reader to useful monographs and review papers.

    • Thoroughly revised and updated edition, now including a large section on special relativity
    • Clear, self-contained and concise textbook, suitable for undergraduate and beginning graduate courses
    • Author is well known for his important research in the field

    Reviews & endorsements

    'All in all this is an impressive range of topics to cover in an introductory survey which starts more or less from scratch … The mathematical treatment is rigorous but perfectly accessible to physics and applied mathematics students in their third or fourth years. … It can be recommended, not only to students of relativity but to astrophysicists, cosmologists and particle physicists. It would also be of great use to physicists from other fields, at all levels, not attending a formal course, but rather interested in getting to grips with the subject by private study.' Contemporary Physics

    '… the book is well written and contains a fair selection of topics for a beginning student of general relativity … Besides being a textbook, because of its standard notation and clear style it can also be used as a reference … Hans Stephani has produced a fine textbook of general relativity in the classical tradition.' General Relativity and Gravitation

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    Product details

    February 2004
    Paperback
    9780521010696
    420 pages
    228 × 152 × 24 mm
    0.752kg
    3 tables 102 exercises
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Notation
    • Part I. Special Relativity:
    • 1. Introduction: inertial systems and Galilei invariance of classical mechanics
    • 2. Light propagation in moving coordinate systems and Lorentz transformations
    • 3. Our world as a Minkowski space
    • 4. Mechanics of special relativity
    • 5. Optics of plane waves
    • 6. Four-dimensional vectors and tensors
    • 7. Electrodynamics in vacuo
    • 8. Transformation properties of electromagnetic fields: examples
    • 9. Null vectors and the algebraic properties of electromagnetic field tensors
    • 10. Charged point particles and their field
    • 11. Pole-dipole particles and their field
    • 12. Electrodynamics in media
    • 13. Perfect fluids and other physical theories
    • Part II. Riemannian Geometry:
    • 14. Introduction: the force-free motion of particles in Newtonian mechanics
    • 15. Why Riemannian geometry?
    • 16. Riemannian space
    • 17. Tensor algebra
    • 18. The covariant derivative and parallel transport
    • 19. The curvature tensor
    • 20. Differential operators, integrals and integral laws
    • 21. Fundamental laws of physics in Riemannian spaces
    • Part III. Foundations of Einstein's Theory of Gravitation:
    • 22. The fundamental equations of Einstein's theory of gravitation
    • 23. The Schwarzschild solution
    • 24. Experiments to verify the Schwarzschild metric
    • 25. Gravitational lenses
    • 26. The interior Schwarzschild solution
    • Part IV. Linearized Theory of Gravitation, Far Fields and Gravitational Waves:
    • 27. The linearized Einstein theory of gravity
    • 28. Far fields due to arbitrary matter distributions and balance equations for momentum and angular momentum
    • 29. Gravitational waves
    • 30. The Cauchy problem for the Einstein field equations
    • Part V. Invariant Characterization of Exact Solutions:
    • 31. Preferred vector fields and their properties
    • 32. The Petrov classification
    • 33. Killing vectors and groups of motion
    • 34. A survey of some selected classes of exact solutions
    • Part VI. Gravitational Collapse and Black Holes:
    • 35. The Schwarzschild singularity
    • 36. Gravitational collapse - the possible life history of a spherically symmetric star
    • 37. Rotating black holes
    • 38. Black holes are not black - relativity theory and quantum theory
    • 39. The conformal structure of infinity
    • Part VII. Cosmology:
    • 40. Robertson-Walker metrics and their properties
    • 41. The dynamics of Robertson-Walker metrics and the Friedmann universes
    • 42. Our Universe as a Friedmann model
    • 43. General cosmological models
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Hans Stephani , Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, Jena, Germany