Search
 
Home| Join Our Mailing List| New Reviews| New Titles
Editor's Choice| Bestsellers| Textbooks| Book Series| Study Guides| E-Catalogues
  PHYSICS
  Accelerator Physics/
Experimental Physics

Applied Physics
Astrophysics/ Astronomy/
Cosmology

Atomic Physics/ Molecular
Physics

Biophysics
Classical Mechanics/
Electrodynamics

Computational Physics
Condensed Matter Physics
General Physics
Geophysics
High Energy Physics/ Particle
Physics

Laser Physics/ Optical Physics
Mathematical Physics/
Theoretical Physics

Nuclear Physics/ Plasma
Physics

Quantum Physics
Statistical Physics
New Titles
August Bestsellers
Editor's Choice
Nobel Lectures in Physics
Textbooks
Recent Reviews
Book Series
Related Journals
  • Biophysical Reviews and Letters (BRL)
  • International Journal of Quantum Information (IJQI)
  • Modern Physics Letters A (MPLA)
  • Request for related catalogues
     
      PRODUCTS
      Journals
    eBooks
    Journals Archives
    eProceedings
     
      RESOURCES
      Print flyer
  • Full Version
  • Condensed Version
  • Recommend title
    For Librarians
    For Authors
    For Booksellers
    For Translation Rights About Us
    Contact Us
    How to Order News
    Inspection Copy
     
    CLASSICAL MECHANICS
    (5th Edition)

    by Tom W B Kibble (Imperial College London, UK) & Frank H Berkshire (Imperial College London, UK)

    Table of Contents (70k)
    Preface (49k)
    Chapter 1: Introduction (183k)

    Tom Kibble is Senior Research Fellow and Emeritus Professor of Theoretical Physics at Imperial College London, and a Fellow of the Royal Society. He has published many articles on theoretical particle physics and cosmology. Frank Berkshire is also at Imperial College London. He is Senior Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of Mathematics, and has published on dynamical systems, waves and fluids. He was elected as Imperial College Teaching Fellow in 1996. Both authors have long experience of lecturing to physics and applied mathematics students.
     

    Tom Kibble is Senior Research Fellow and Emeritus Professor of Theoretical Physics at Imperial College London, and a Fellow of the Royal Society. He has published many articles on theoretical particle physics and cosmology. Frank Berkshire is also at Imperial College London. He is Senior Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of Mathematics, and has published on dynamical systems, waves and fluids. He was elected as Imperial College Teaching Fellow in 1996.
     

    This is the fifth edition of a well-established textbook. It is intended to provide a thorough coverage of the fundamental principles and techniques of classical mechanics, an old subject that is at the base of all of physics, but in which there has also in recent years been rapid development. The book is aimed at undergraduate students of physics and applied mathematics. It emphasizes the basic principles, and aims to progress rapidly to the point of being able to handle physically and mathematically interesting problems, without getting bogged down in excessive formalism. Lagrangian methods are introduced at a relatively early stage, to get students to appreciate their use in simple contexts. Later chapters use Lagrangian and Hamiltonian methods extensively, but in a way that aims to be accessible to undergraduates, while including modern developments at the appropriate level of detail. The subject has been developed considerably recently while retaining a truly central role for all students of physics and applied mathematics.

    This edition retains all the main features of the fourth edition, including the two chapters on geometry of dynamical systems and on order and chaos, and the new appendices on conics and on dynamical systems near a critical point. The material has been somewhat expanded, in particular to contrast continuous and discrete behaviours. A further appendix has been added on routes to chaos (period-doubling) and related discrete maps. The new edition has also been revised to give more emphasis to specific examples worked out in detail.

    Classical Mechanics is written for undergraduate students of physics or applied mathematics. It assumes some basic prior knowledge of the fundamental concepts and reasonable familiarity with elementary differential and integral calculus.

     
    Contents:
    • Linear Motion
    • Energy and Angular Momentum
    • Central Conservative Forces
    • Rotating Frames
    • Potential Theory
    • The Two-Body Problem
    • Many-Body Systems
    • Rigid Bodies
    • Lagrangian Mechanics
    • Small Oscillations and Normal Modes
    • Hamiltonian Mechanics
    • Dynamical Systems and Their Geometry
    • Order and Chaos in Hamiltonian Systems
    • Appendices:
      • Vectors
      • Conics
      • Phase Plane Analysis Near Critical Points
      • Discrete Dynamical Systems — Maps
     
    Readership: Undergraduates in physics and applied mathematics.
     
    “Classical Mechanics by T Kibble and F Berkshire is tailor-made for budding theoreticians. It lays the groundwork for relativity and quantum theory, quickly progressing beyond Newtonian mechanics to the alternative formulations of Joseph Lagrange and William Hamilton.”
    New Scientist

     
    “… the student who requires a good book on the older aspects of Classical Mechanics together with a brief introduction to newer ideas will find the third edition useful.”
    Contemporary Physics
     
    “This volume, by Kibble and Berkshire, has proved to be a successful book … the written content and presentation are all excellent.”
    European Journal of Physics
     
    500pp    Pub. date: Jun 2004  
    ISBN:   978-1-86094-424-6
    1-86094-424-8
       US$86 / £52

     


    500pp    Pub. date: Jun 2004  
    ISBN:   978-1-86094-435-2(pbk)
    1-86094-435-3(pbk)
       US$33 / £22

     


     

    Imperial College Press  |  Global Publishing  |  Asia-Pacific Biotech News  |  Innovation Magazine
    Labcreations Co  |  Meeting Matters  |  National Academies Press

    Copyright © 2010 World Scientific Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
    Updated on 9 February 2010