Quantum Mechanics / Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Bernard Diu, Franck Laloë ; translated from the French by Susan Reid Hemley, Nicole Ostrowsky, Dan Ostrowsky.
Material type: TextPublication details: New York : Wiley, c1977.Description: 2 v. (xv, 1524 p.) : ill. ; 25 cmISBN:- 0471164321 (v. 1)
- 047116433X (v. 1 : pbk.)
- Mecanique quantique. English
- QC174.12 .C6313 1977
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Library First Floor | QC174.12 .C6313 1977 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 8518 |
Translation of Mecanique quantique.
"A Wiley-Interscience publication."
Includes index.
Waves and Particles. Introduction to the Fundamental Concepts of Quantum Mechanics. The Mathematical Tools of Quantum Mechanics. The Postulates of Quantum Mechanics. Application of the Postulates to Simple Cases: Two Level Systems and Spin 1/2 Systems. The One Dimensional Harmonic Oscillator. General Properties of Angular Momentum in Quantum Mechanics. Particles in a Central Potential. The Hydrogen Atom.
Beginning students of quantum mechanics frequently experience difficulties separating essential underlying principles from the specific examples to which these principles have been historically applied. Nobel-Prize-winner Claude Cohen-Tannoudji and his colleagues have written this book to eliminate precisely these difficulties. Fourteen chapters provide a clarity of organization, careful attention to pedagogical details, and a wealth of topics and examples which make this work a textbook as well as a timeless reference, allowing to tailor courses to meet students' specific needs. Each chapter starts with a clear exposition of the problem which is then treated, and logically develops the physical and mathematical concept. These chapters emphasize the underlying principles of the material, undiluted by extensive references to applications and practical examples which are put into complementary sections. The book begins with a qualitative introduction to quantum mechanical ideas using simple optical analogies and continues with a systematic and thorough presentation of the mathematical tools and postulates of quantum mechanics as well as a discussion of their physical content. Applications follow, starting with the simplest ones like e.g. the harmonic oscillator, and becoming gradually more complicated (the hydrogen atom, approximation methods, etc.). The complementary sections each expand this basic knowledge, supplying a wide range of applications and related topics as well as detailed expositions of a large number of special problems and more advanced topics, integrated as an essential portion of the text.
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