000 01742 a2200181 4500
999 _c1003
_d1003
005 20210208114719.0
008 210208b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a189138922X
020 _a9781891389221
082 _a531
_bTAY
100 _aTaylor, John R
245 _aClassical Mechanics
_cJohn R Taylor
260 _aMill Valley, California :
_bUniversity Science Books,
_c©2005.
300 _axiv, 786 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c26 cm
505 _aClassical Mechanics is intended for students who have studied some mechanics in an introductory physics course, such as "freshman physics." ... the book covers most of the topics normally found in books at this level, including conservation laws, oscillations, Lagrangian mechanics, two-body problems, non-inertial frames, rigid bodies, normal modes, chaos theory, Hamiltonian mechanics, and continuum mechanics. A particular highlight is the chapter on chaos, which focuses on a few simple systems, to give a truly comprehensible introduction to the concepts that we hear so much about. At the end of each chapter is a large selection of interesting problems for the student, 744 in all, classified by topic and approximate difficulty, and ranging for simple exercises to challenging computer projects.
_tEssentials. Newton's laws of motion
_tProjectiles and charged particles
_tMomentum and angular momentum
_tEnergy
_tOscillations
_tCalculus of variations
_tLagrange's equations
_tTwo-body central force problems
_tMechanics in noninertial frames
_tMotion of rigid bodies
_tCoupled oscillators and normal modes --
_tNonlinear mechanics and chaos
_tHamiltonian mechanics
_tCollision theory
_tSpecial relativity
_tContinuum mechanics --
650 _aMechanics
942 _2ddc
_cBK