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Ectrodynamique classique / John David Jackson
Titre : Ectrodynamique classique : cours et exercices d'électromagn©tisme Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : John David Jackson, ; Christian Jeanmougin, ; Jean-Pol Vigneron, Importance : 1 vol. (XXIV-851 p.) Présentation : ill., tabl., graph., couv. ill. en coul. Format : 25 cm. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-2-10-077807-2 Prix : [79 EUR] Langues : Français (fre) Langues originales : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [Thesaurus]Sciences et Techniques:Sciences:Physique:Electrodynamique Index. décimale : 537.6 Electrodynamique (courants électriques) et thermoélectricité Résumé : La 4e de couverture indique : "L'©lectrodynamique classique (ou ©lectromagn©tisme) est l'un des domaines incontournables de la physique. Ses d©veloppements sont aussi bien th©oriques (comme l'©lectrodynamique quantique) que techniques (tels les nouveaux mat©riaux)." Ectrodynamique classique : cours et exercices d'électromagn©tisme [texte imprimé] / John David Jackson, ; Christian Jeanmougin, ; Jean-Pol Vigneron, . - [s.d.] . - 1 vol. (XXIV-851 p.) : ill., tabl., graph., couv. ill. en coul. ; 25 cm.
ISBN : 978-2-10-077807-2 : [79 EUR]
Langues : Français (fre) Langues originales : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : [Thesaurus]Sciences et Techniques:Sciences:Physique:Electrodynamique Index. décimale : 537.6 Electrodynamique (courants électriques) et thermoélectricité Résumé : La 4e de couverture indique : "L'©lectrodynamique classique (ou ©lectromagn©tisme) est l'un des domaines incontournables de la physique. Ses d©veloppements sont aussi bien th©oriques (comme l'©lectrodynamique quantique) que techniques (tels les nouveaux mat©riaux)." Exemplaires
Cote Section Localisation Code-barres Disponibilité Numero_inventaire 537.6 JAC Nouv. Physique Biblio-FSO 000002713405 Disponible s37906 537.6 JAC Physique Biblio-FSO 000002713205 Disponible s37907 537.6 JAC Physique Biblio-FSO 000002713305 Disponible s37908 Introduction to electrodynamics / David J. Griffiths
Titre : Introduction to electrodynamics Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : David J. Griffiths Mention d'édition : Fourth edition. Importance : pages cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-10-842041-9 Catégories : [Thesaurus]Sciences et Techniques:Sciences:Physique:Electrodynamique Index. décimale : 537.6 Electrodynamique (courants électriques) et thermoélectricité Résumé : "WHAT IS ELECTRODYNAMICS, AND HOW DOES IT FIT INTO THE GENERAL SCHEME OF PHYSICS? Four Realms of Mechanics In the diagram below, I have sketched out the four great realms of mechanics: Classical Mechanics Quantum Mechanics (Newton) (Bohr, Heisenberg, SchrLodinger, et al.) Special Relativity Quantum Field Theory (Einstein) (Dirac, Pauli, Feynman, Schwinger, et al.) Newtonian mechanics is adequate for most purposes in "everyday life," but for objects moving at high speeds (near the speed of light) it is incorrect, and must be replaced by special relativity (introduced by Einstein in 1905); for objects that are extremely small (near the size of atoms) it fails for different reasons, and is superseded by quantum mechanics (developed by Bohr, SchrLodinger, Heisenberg, and many others, in the 1920's, mostly). For objects that are both very fast and very small (as is common in modern particle physics), a mechanics that combines relativity and quantum principles is in order; this relativistic quantum mechanics is known as quantum field theory--it was worked out in the thirties and forties, but even today it cannot claim to be a completely satisfactory system. In this book, save for the last chapter, we shall work exclusively in the domain of classical mechanics, although electrodynamics extends with unique simplicity to the other three realms. (In fact, the theory is in most respects automatically consistent with special relativity, for which it was, historically, the main stimulus.)"-- Introduction to electrodynamics [texte imprimé] / David J. Griffiths . - Fourth edition. . - [s.d.] . - pages cm.
ISBN : 978-1-10-842041-9
Catégories : [Thesaurus]Sciences et Techniques:Sciences:Physique:Electrodynamique Index. décimale : 537.6 Electrodynamique (courants électriques) et thermoélectricité Résumé : "WHAT IS ELECTRODYNAMICS, AND HOW DOES IT FIT INTO THE GENERAL SCHEME OF PHYSICS? Four Realms of Mechanics In the diagram below, I have sketched out the four great realms of mechanics: Classical Mechanics Quantum Mechanics (Newton) (Bohr, Heisenberg, SchrLodinger, et al.) Special Relativity Quantum Field Theory (Einstein) (Dirac, Pauli, Feynman, Schwinger, et al.) Newtonian mechanics is adequate for most purposes in "everyday life," but for objects moving at high speeds (near the speed of light) it is incorrect, and must be replaced by special relativity (introduced by Einstein in 1905); for objects that are extremely small (near the size of atoms) it fails for different reasons, and is superseded by quantum mechanics (developed by Bohr, SchrLodinger, Heisenberg, and many others, in the 1920's, mostly). For objects that are both very fast and very small (as is common in modern particle physics), a mechanics that combines relativity and quantum principles is in order; this relativistic quantum mechanics is known as quantum field theory--it was worked out in the thirties and forties, but even today it cannot claim to be a completely satisfactory system. In this book, save for the last chapter, we shall work exclusively in the domain of classical mechanics, although electrodynamics extends with unique simplicity to the other three realms. (In fact, the theory is in most respects automatically consistent with special relativity, for which it was, historically, the main stimulus.)"-- Exemplaires
Cote Section Localisation Code-barres Disponibilité Numero_inventaire 537.6 GRI Etudiants Biblio-FSO 000002663905 Disponible s38003