Physics
Conceptual Physics
Author: Paul G. Hewitt
Publisher: Addison Wesley, 2009, 816pp, 11th ed.
Conceptual Physics helps readers connect physics to their everyday experiences and the world around them with additional help on solving mathematical problems. Hewitt's introductory textbook is famous for engaging readers with analogies and imagery from real-world situations that build a strong conceptual understanding of physical principles ranging from classical mechanics to modern physics.
Physics
Video Lectures - Great Ideas of Classical Physics
Author: Steven Pollock
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 24pp, 1st ed.
There is a hidden order in the ceaselessly changing world around us. It's called classical physics, and it's about how the world is put together. Classical physics is about how things move, why they move, and how they work. It's about making sense of motion, gravity, light, heat, sound, electricity, and magnetism, and seeing how these phenomena interweave to create the rich tapestry of everyday experience. Sound complicated? It's not—you already know more physics than you think, says award-winning science educator Steven Pollock.
Physics
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Brooks Cole, 2007, 1504pp, 7th ed.
Serway's college textbook Physics for Scientists and Engineers reveals the beauty and simplicity of physics while highlighting its essential role in other disciplines, from engineering to medicine. This proven textbook features the Serway hallmarks of concise writing, carefully thought-out problem sets, world class worked examples, and leading-edge educational pedagogy.
Physics
University Physics with Modern Physics
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: Addison Wesley, 2007, 1632pp, 12th ed.
Refining the most widely adopted and enduring physics textbook available, University Physics with Modern Physics, Twelfth Edition continues an unmatched history of innovation and careful execution that was established by the best selling Eleventh Edition. Assimilating the best ideas from education research, this textbook provides enhanced problem-solving instruction, pioneering visual and conceptual pedagogy, the first systematically enhanced problems, and the most pedagogically proven and widely used homework and tutorial system available.
Physics
Video Lectures - Physics in Your Life
Author: Richard Wolfson
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 36pp, 1st ed.
Physics in Your Life is more than a course in physics and more than a laundry list of "how things work." In fact, it combines the two, offering a back-and-forth interplay between everyday applications of physics and the concepts needed to understand them. "My approach is entirely qualitative," says Professor Wolfson. "I believe you can understand physics, and understand it deeply, without using mathematics."
Physics
Video Lectures - Understanding the Universe: An Introduction to Astronomy
Author: Alex Filippenko
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 96pp, 2nd ed.
This course is an unrivaled opportunity to experience a full-year introductory college course on astronomy, delivered by a five-time winner of "Best Professor" on campus at the University of California, Berkeley, who himself is a leading participant in some of the groundbreaking discoveries at the forefront of the field.
Physics
Video Lectures - Einstein's Relativity and the Quantum Revolution: Modern Physics for Non-Scientists
Author: Richard Wolfson
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 24pp, 2nd ed.
"It doesn't take an Einstein to understand modern physics," says Professor Richard Wolfson at the outset of this course on what may be the most important subject in the universe. Relativity and quantum physics touch the very basis of physical reality, altering our commonsense notions of space and time, cause and effect. Both have reputations for complexity. But the basic ideas behind relativity and quantum physics are, in fact, simple and comprehensible by anyone.
Physics
Video Lectures - Quantum Mechanics
Author: Benjamin Schumacher
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2009, 24pp, 1st ed.
One day in 1900, German physicist Max Planck told his son that he had made a breakthrough as important as Isaac Newton's discovery of the workings of the universe. Planck had reached the surprising conclusion that light behaves as if it is packaged in discrete amounts, or quanta, a seemingly simple observation that would lead to a powerful new field of physics called quantum mechanics.
In the following decades, a series of great physicists built on Planck's discovery, developing quantum mechanics into the most successful physical theory ever devised—the general framework that underlies our understanding of nature at its most fundamental level.
Physics
Video Lectures - Chaos
Author: Steven Strogatz
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2009, 24pp, 1st ed.
It has been called the third great revolution of 20th-century physics, after relativity and quantum theory. But how can something called chaos theory help you understand an orderly world? What practical things might it be good for? What, in fact, is chaos theory? "Chaos theory," according to Dr. Steven Strogatz, Director of the Center for Applied Mathematics at Cornell University, "is the science of how things change." It describes the behavior of any system whose state evolves over time and whose behavior is sensitive to small changes in its initial conditions.
Physics
Foundations of Astronomy
Author: Michael A. A. Seeds
Publisher: Cengage, 2007, 736pp, 10th ed.
This newly revised and updated edition of Foundations of Astronomy shows students their place in the universe — not just their location, but also their role as planet dwellers in an evolving universe. Fascinating and engaging, the textbook illustrates how science works, and how scientists depend on evidence to test hypotheses. Seeds provides not just a series of facts, but also a conceptual framework for understanding the logic of astronomical knowledge. ??
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The textbook conveys the author's love of the subject, shows students how the universe can be described by a small set of physical laws, and illustrates how they can comprehend their place in the universe by understanding these laws, not through memorization of facts.