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008 220909b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9783540736158
037 _cTextbook
040 _aCSL
_beng
_cCSL
041 _aeng
084 _aB7 P9 TC
_qCSL
100 _aStrauch, Dieter
_9862413
245 0 _aClassical mechanics:an introduction
260 _aBerlin,
_bSpringer:
_c2009.
300 _axxi, 405p.
_b: ill.
500 _aReferences 389-390p.; Index 391-405p.
520 _aOn this Textbook This book has evolved from the series of lecture notes that I had handed out to the physics students at the University of Regensburg in Bavaria,Germany. Overtheyears,variousbitsandpieceshadbeenaddedtothecontentsofthese lecture notes, and others had to be left out for reasons of time limitations. These notes di?ered from the common textbooks, and as the students seemed to like them, I have collected all those pieces in this book. The Scope of this Book The scope of this book is twofold. The reader can learn that alternative sets of the very few principles of Classical Mechanics carry on very far. Thus, the book contains an amount of applications of varying degrees of sophistication. Also, di?erent physical problems require di?erent methods for their solutions with varying degrees of mathematical sophistication. The Organization of this Book In order not to blur the physics with mathematical intricacies, the necessary mathematical techniques are transferred to appendices. The largest di?erence of this textbook from other books on Classical - chanics may be that I have tried to make a particularly strong separation between axioms and fundamental experiences, on the one hand, and between claims, their proofs, various comments, on the other, rather than telling a more or less continuous story. Also, frequent references are made to other parts of the book or to other physical disciplines. If needed, the reader can skip proofs, comments, applications, and footnotes and thus follow only the main ideas.
650 _aMechanics
_9862414
650 _aPhysics
_9862415
700 _aStrauch, Dieter
_9862413
942 _hB7 P9 TC
_cTB
_2CC
_n0
999 _c29057
_d29057