Differential Geometry and General Relativity: Volume 1 (Graduate Texts in Physics) - Hardcover

Book 121 of 126: Graduate Texts in Physics

Liang, Canbin; Zhou, Bin

 
9789819900213: Differential Geometry and General Relativity: Volume 1 (Graduate Texts in Physics)

Synopsis

This book, the first in a three-volume set, explains general relativity using the mathematical tool of differential geometry. The book consists of ten chapters, the first five of which introduce differential geometry, which is widely applicable even outside the field of relativity. Chapter 6 analyzes special relativity using geometric language. In turn, the last four chapters introduce readers to the fundamentals of general relativity. Intended for beginners, this volume includes numerous exercises and worked-out example in each chapter to facilitate the learning experience. Chiefly written for graduate-level courses, the book’s content will also benefit upper-level undergraduate students, and can be used as a reference guide for practicing theoretical physicists.

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About the Author

Canbin Liang (1938-2022) was a professor at Beijing Normal University, China. His main research area was general relativity. He received “The First National Outstanding Teaching Achievement Award” in 1989 and his book Electromagnetism was honored with the “Excellent Textbook Award” in 1988. He has published more than 50 research articles and 7 monographs.

Bin Zhou is an associate professor at Beijing Normal University, China. His research mainly focuses on general relativity and mathematical physics. He has published 27 research articles.

Weizhen Jia, the English translator of the book, is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA. He conducts research in the field of high energy physics.

From the Back Cover

This book, the first in a three-volume set, explains general relativity using the mathematical tool of differential geometry. The book consists of ten chapters, the first five of which introduce differential geometry, which is widely applicable even outside the field of relativity. Chapter 6 analyzes special relativity using geometric language. In turn, the last four chapters introduce readers to the fundamentals of general relativity. Intended for beginners, this volume includes numerous exercises and worked-out example in each chapter to facilitate the learning experience. Chiefly written for graduate-level courses, the book’s content will also benefit upper-level undergraduate students, and can be used as a reference guide for practicing theoretical physicists.


"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.