James H. Luscombe

#General
#Relativity
#Physics
#Mathematics
#Space
#Gravity
#Lorentz
This book provides an accessible, yet thorough, introduction to special and general relativity, crafted and class-tested over many years of teaching. Suitable for advanced undergraduate and graduate students, this book provides clear descriptions of how to approach the mathematics and physics involved. It is also contains the latest exciting developments in the field, including dark energy, gravitational waves, and frame dragging.
The table of contents has been carefully developed in consultation with a large number of instructors teaching courses worldwide, to ensure its wide applicability to modules on relativity and gravitation.
Features:
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1: Relativity: A theory of space, time, and gravity
CHAPTER 2: Basic special relativity
CHAPTER 3: Lorentz transformation, I
CHAPTER 4: Geometry of Lorentz invariance
CHAPTER 5: Tensors on flat spaces
CHAPTER 6: Lorentz transformation, II
CHAPTER 7: Particle dynamics
CHAPTER 8: Covariant electrodynamics
CHAPTER 9: Energy-momentum of fields
CHAPTER 10: Relativistic hydrodynamics
CHAPTER 11: Equivalence of local gravity and acceleration
CHAPTER 12: Acceleration in special relativity
CHAPTER 13: Tensors on manifolds
CHAPTER 14: Differential geometry
CHAPTER 15: General relativity
CHAPTER 16: The Schwarzschild metric
CHAPTER 17: Physical effects of Schwarzschild spacetime
CHAPTER 18: Linearized gravity
CHAPTER 19: Relativistic cosmology
APPENDIX A: Invariance of the wave equation
APPENDIX B: Invariance of the wave equation
APPENDIX C: Topics in linear algebra
APPENDIX D: Topics in classical mechanics
APPENDIX E: Photon and particle orbits
"In my view, this is a very readable text and very student-friendly. The presentation of the content is clear and there are lots of detailed illustrative examples (which are absent in many other GR texts). You might be aware that there is a strong interest on General Relativity course nowadays due to recent detection of gravitational wave and black imaging. This particular text will have potential to be well-like by students."
― Prof. Kenneth Hong Chong Ming, National University of Singapore
James H. Luscombe is Professor of Physics at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. He received his PhD in Physics from the University of Chicago in 1983. After post-doctoral positions at the University of Toronto and Iowa State University, he joined the Research Laboratory of Texas Instruments, where he worked on the development of nanoelectronic devices, before joining the Naval Postgraduate School in 1994. He was Chair of the Department of Physics between 2003 and 2009. He teaches a wide variety of topics, including general relativity, statistical mechanics, mathematical methods, and quantum computation. He has published more than 60 research articles, has given more than 100 conference presentations, holds 2 patents, and is the author of Thermodynamics - an introductorytextbook published by CRC Press.









