Semi-Riemannian Geometry with Applications to Relativity: Volume 103
O'Neill, Barrett
- 出版商: Academic Press
- 出版日期: 1983-06-01
- 售價: $2,680
- 貴賓價: 9.5 折 $2,546
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 468
- 裝訂: Hardcover - also called cloth, retail trade, or trade
- ISBN: 0125267401
- ISBN-13: 9780125267403
-
相關分類:
微積分 Calculus
海外代購書籍(需單獨結帳)
買這商品的人也買了...
-
Quantum Field Theory : A Modern Perspective (Hardcover)$1,350$1,323 -
Topology and Geometry for Physicists (Paperback)$880$836 -
Quantum Field Theory for the Gifted Amateur (Paperback)$2,490$2,366 -
Path Integrals and Quantum Processes (Paperback)$880$862 -
The Quantum Mechanics of Many-Body Systems, 2/e (Paperback)$940$893 -
Mathematics for Physicists (Paperback)$670$657 -
Holographic Duality in Condensed Matter Physics (Hardcover)$1,400$1,372 -
Holographic Entanglement Entropy (Lecture Notes in Physics)$2,790$2,651 -
The Theory of Quantum Information (Hardcover)$1,680$1,646 -
Foundations of Differentiable Manifolds and Lie Groups$2,850$2,708 -
Differential Forms with Applications to the Physical Sciences$810$770 -
What Is a Quantum Field Theory? (Hardcover)$1,650$1,617 -
Gauge Theory and Variational Principles$740$703 -
Black Hole Physics: From Collapse to Evaporation (Graduate Texts in Physics) 1st ed. 2022 Edition$2,790$2,651 -
Representations of Linear Groups: An Introduction Based on Examples from Physics and Number Theory (Paperback)$2,980$2,831 -
Quantum Geometry, Matrix Theory, and Gravity (Hardcover)$1,780$1,744 -
Field Theory: A Modern Primer$1,980$1,881
相關主題
商品描述
This book is an exposition of semi-Riemannian geometry (also called pseudo-Riemannian geometry)--the study of a smooth manifold furnished with a metric tensor of arbitrary signature. The principal special cases are Riemannian geometry, where the metric is positive definite, and Lorentz geometry. For many years these two geometries have developed almost independently: Riemannian geometry reformulated in coordinate-free fashion and directed toward global problems, Lorentz geometry in classical tensor notation devoted to general relativity. More recently, this divergence has been reversed as physicists, turning increasingly toward invariant methods, have produced results of compelling mathematical interest.