search for books and compare prices
space time mathematics matches 9 work(s)
displaying 1 to 9 | at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Cover for 9780691087771 Cover for 9780691632551 Cover for 9780691603155 Cover for 9781633217706 Cover for 9780199205677 Cover for 9780199656158 Cover for 9781608767816 Cover for 9780306818769 Cover for 9780306817588 Cover for 9783540257790 Cover for 9780198512912 Cover for 9780198503705 Cover for 9780198520504
cover image for 9780691632551

Hardcover:

9780691632551 | Princeton Univ Pr, April 19, 2016, cover price $235.00
9780691087771 | Princeton Univ Pr, February 1, 1994, cover price $97.50

Paperback:

9780691603155 | Princeton Univ Pr, July 14, 2014, cover price $94.00

cover image for 9780199656158

Hardcover:

9780199205677 | Oxford Univ Pr on Demand, June 16, 2008, cover price $125.00

Paperback:

9780199656158 | Reprint edition (Oxford Univ Pr, September 7, 2012), cover price $75.00

cover image for 9781608767816

Hardcover:

9781608767816 | Nova Science Pub Inc, September 30, 2010, cover price $98.00

cover image for 9780306818769

Paperback:

9780306818769, titled "Why Does E=mc2?: And Why Should We Care?" | Da Capo Pr, July 13, 2010, cover price $15.95

cover image for 9780306817588

Hardcover:

9780306817588 | Da Capo Pr, July 14, 2009, cover price $24.00

cover image for 9783540257790
Product Description: Spurred by the current development of numerous large-scale projects for detecting gravitational radiation, with the aim to open a completely new window to the observable Universe, numerical relativity has become a major field of research over the past years...read more

Hardcover:

9783540257790 | Springer Verlag, August 31, 2005, cover price $74.95 | About this edition: Spurred by the current development of numerous large-scale projects for detecting gravitational radiation, with the aim to open a completely new window to the observable Universe, numerical relativity has become a major field of research over the past years.

cover image for 9780198503705
In 1935, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar challenged the prevailing theory of the day by suggesting that not all stars die the same death. He proposed that stars with more than 1.4 times the mass of the sun were compressed by their own gravitational forces into dense, dark objects. Winner of the 1983 Nobel Prize for Physics, Chandrasekhar here describes in exhaustive detail how a rotating black hole reacts to gravitational and electromagnetic waves--the forces associated with an infalling star. The author provides background material with a survey of the analytical methods necessary for the study of solutions that describe a rotating black hole, a derivation of the Schwartzschild metric of essential space-time features, and an account of how gravitational waves are scattered and absorbed. This is followed by a discussion of the Reisner-Nordstrom solution which predicts external and internal horizons and prepares the reader for the author's thorough treatment of the Kerr family of solutions. Beginning with the derivations of the Kerr metric, Chandrasekhar goes on to describe space-time in a Newman-Penrose formulation. He investigates such elements of the Kerr solution as geodesics and space-time--including the possibility of extracting energy from a rotating black hole, perturbations of the black hole with Maxwell's equations and the propagation of electromagnetic waves, gravitational perturbations, fields of spin-1/2 both massive and massless. His analysis shows that all relevant equations of mathematical physics allow explicit solutions in Kerr geometry. In the last chapter, Chandrasekhar deals with two other classes of solutions: axisymetric black hole solutions which are static but not asymptotically flat, and solutions which provide for an arbitrary number of isolated black holes, the relativistic analogue of the static equilibrium arrangement of Newtonian gravitational theory. This unique work encompasses not only the complete range of what is currently known about the properties of black holes, but the directions of future research.

Hardcover:

9780198512912 | Oxford Univ Pr on Demand, April 28, 1983, cover price $135.00

Paperback:

9780198503705 | Clarendon Pr, November 5, 1998, cover price $85.00
9780198520504 | Reprint edition (Oxford Univ Pr, January 1, 1993), cover price $60.00 | About this edition: In 1935, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar challenged the prevailing theory of the day by suggesting that not all stars die the same death.

displaying 1 to 9 | at end