Malaysia-based online bookstore - 15 million titles - quick local delivery with tracking number
MAY 2025 - BROWSE 4000 BOOK CATEGORIES - HERE IN MALAYSIA
Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals
Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals - Emended Editon
by Feynman, Richard P. , Hibbs, Albert R. , Styer, Daniel F.
Paperback - English

From astrophysics to condensed matter theory, nearly all of modern physics employs the path integral technique. In this presentation, the developer of path integrals and one of the best-known scientists of all time, Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard P. Feynman, presents unique insights into this method and its applications. Avoiding dense, complicated descriptions, Feynman articulates his celebrated theory in a clear, concise manner, maintaining a perfect balance between mathematics and physics.
This emended edition of the original 1965 publication corrects hundreds of typographical errors and recasts many equations for clearer comprehension. It retains the original's verve and spirit, and it is approved and endorsed by the Feynman family. The opening chapters explore the fundamental concepts of quantum mechanics and introduce path integrals. Subsequent chapters cover more advanced topics, including the perturbation method, quantum electrodynamics, and the relation of path integrals to statistical mechanics. In addition to its merit as a text for graduate courses in physics, this volume serves as an excellent resource for professionals.

RM 177.28
RM 159.37
We're here in Malaysia - Local courier delivery with tracking number

SCHOOL & CORPORATE ORDERS
AVAILABLE
Usually delivered within 7-12 working days.
(5 copies available)

ADDITIONAL INFO

Edition Number
Emended Editon
ISBN
0486477223
EAN
9780486477220
Publisher
Publication Date
21 Jul 2010
Pages
384
Weight (kg)
0.43
Dimensions (cm)
22.6 x 15.0 x 2.0
About Author
Richard P. Feynman was born in 1918 and grew up in Far Rockaway, New York. At the age of seventeen he entered MIT and in 1939 went to Princeton, then to Los Alamos, where he joined in the effort to build the atomic bomb. Following World War II he joined the physics faculty at Cornell, then went on to Caltech in 1951, where he taught until his death in 1988. He shared the Nobel Prize for physics in 1965, and served with distinction on the Shuttle Commission in 1986. A commemorative stamp in his name was issued by the U.S. Postal Service in 2005.
Categories
×

Add to My List

List