What to Read After the Theoretical Minimum

Books similar to Quantum Mechanics: The Theoretical Minimum (Theoretical Minimum #2)

From the bestselling author of The Theoretical Minimum, a DIY introduction to the math and science of quantum physics

Showtime he taught y'all classical mechanics. Now, physicist Leonard Susskind has teamed…

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No twentieth-century American scientist is improve known to a wider spectrum of people than Richard P. Feynman (1918–1988)—physicist, teacher, author, and cultural icon. His autobiographies and biograp…
This book first teaches learners how to "exercise" quantum mechanics, and so provides them with a more insightful discussion of what it "means." Primal principles are covered, quantum theory presente…
The revised edition of Feynman'south legendary lectures includes all-encompassing corrections and updates collated past Feynman and his colleagues. A new foreword by Kip Thorne, the electric current Richard Feynman Profess…
Originally published in 1963, the three-volume Feynman lectures on physics set remains a archetype text. This edition, which was prepared by Kip S. Thorne (Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics at Ca…
This work offers accesible coverage of the fundamentals of electrodynamics, enhanced with with discussion points, examples and exercises.
Our Mathematical Universe is a journey to explore the mysteries uncovered past cosmology and to discover the nature of reality. Our Big Bang, our distant future, parallel worlds, the sub-atomic and inte…
In this extraordinarily accessible and enormously witty volume, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Leon Lederman guides u.s.a. on a fascinating tour of the history of particle physics. The book takes us from…
Spacetime and Geometry: An Introduction to General Relativity provides a lucid and thoroughly modernistic introduction to general relativity. With an attainable and lively writing mode, it introduces mode…
Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its About Vivid Teacher is a publishing first. This set couples a book containing the half dozen easiest chapters from Richard P. Feynman's landmark wor…
Information technology is so shocking that Einstein could not bring himself to have information technology. Information technology is then important that it provides the fundamental underpinning of all modernistic sciences. Without it, we'd have no nuclear power or…
Gita, curt for Bhagavad Gita, 'the Divine Song', is a philosophical dialogue in the Mahabharata. The setting is the kickoff of the dandy war between cousins, the Kauravas and Pandavas. Arjuna, the Pand…
In his awe-inspiring 1687 piece of work Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, known familiarly as the Principia, Isaac Newton laid out in mathematical terms the principles of fourth dimension, force, and motion that …
In 1996, Alan Sokal published an essay in the hip intellectual mag Social Text parodying the scientific but bulletproof lingo of gimmicky theorists. Here, Sokal teams up with Jean Bricmont t…
Without calculus, we wouldn't have jail cell phones, Television set, GPS, or ultrasound. We wouldn't have unraveled DNA or discovered Neptune or figured out how to put 5,000 songs in your pocket.

Though many of us we…

In this thrilling journeying into the mysteries of our cosmos, bestselling author Michio Kaku takes us on a dizzying ride to explore black holes and fourth dimension machines, multidimensional space and, most tantal…
Likewise frequently math gets a bad rap, characterized every bit dry and difficult. Simply, Alex Bellos says, "math can be inspiring and brilliantly creative. Mathematical thought is one of the swell achievements of the …
A Nobel Prize-winning physicist explains what happened at the very kickoff of the universe, and how nosotros know, in this popular science archetype.

Our universe has been growing for nearly 14 billion years…

Galileo, Copernicus, Newton, Niels Bohr, Einstein. Their insights shook our perception of who we are and where we stand in the earth, and in their wake have left an uneasy coexistence: science vs. rel…
John Taylor has brought to his new book, Classical Mechanics, all of the clarity and insight that fabricated his introduction to Fault Assay a best-selling text.

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