Moore | Six Ideas That Shaped Physics: Unit Q - Particles Behave Like Waves | Buch | 978-0-07-760094-5 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 304 Seiten, Format (B × H): 217 mm x 278 mm, Gewicht: 560 g

Reihe: WCB Physics

Moore

Six Ideas That Shaped Physics: Unit Q - Particles Behave Like Waves


3 ed
ISBN: 978-0-07-760094-5
Verlag: McGraw-Hill Education - Europe

Buch, Englisch, 304 Seiten, Format (B × H): 217 mm x 278 mm, Gewicht: 560 g

Reihe: WCB Physics

ISBN: 978-0-07-760094-5
Verlag: McGraw-Hill Education - Europe


Six Ideas That Shaped Physics is the 21st Century's alternative to traditional, encyclopedic textbooks. Thomas Moore designed this textbook to teach students the following: (1) To apply basic physical principles to realistic situations (2) To solve realistic problems (3) To resolve contradictions between their preconceptions and the laws of physics (4) To organize the ideas of physics into an integrated hierarchy.McGraw-Hill's Connect, is also available as an optional, add on item. Connect is the only integrated learning system that empowers students by continuously adapting to deliver precisely what they need, when they need it, how they need it, so that class time is more effective. Connect allows the professor to assign homework, quizzes, and tests easily and automatically grades and records the scores of the student's work. Problems are randomized to prevent sharing of answers an may also have a "multi-step solution" which helps move the students' learning along if they experience difficulty.

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Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


Q1) Wave ModelsQ2) Standing Waves and ResonanceQ3) Interference and DiffractionQ4) The Particle Nature of LightQ5) The Wave Nature of ParticlesQ6) SpinQ7) The Rules of Quantum MechanicsQ8) Quantum WeirdnessQ9) The WavefunctionQ10) Simple Quantum ModelsQ11) SpectraQ12) The Schrodinger EquationQ13) Introduction to NucleiQ14) Nuclear StabilityQ15) Nuclear TechnologyAppendix QA - Complex Numbers


Moore, Thomas
Thomas A. Moore graduated from Carleton College (magna cum laude with Distinction in Physics) in 1976. He won a Danforth Fellowship that year that supported his graduate education at Yale University, where he earned a Ph.D. in 1981. He taught at Carleton College and Luther College before taking his current position at Pomona College in 1987, where he won a Wig Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1991. He served as an active member of the steering committee for the national Introductory University Physics Project (IUPP) from 1987 through 1995. This textbook grew out of a model curriculum that he developed for that project in 1989, which was one of only four selected for further development and testing by IUPP.
He has published a number of articles about astrophysical sources of gravitational waves, detection of gravitational waves, and new approaches to teaching physics, as well as a book on general relativity entitled A General Relativity Workbook (University Science Books, 2013). He has also served as a reviewer and as an associate editor for American Journal of Physics. He currently lives in Claremont, California, with his wife Joyce, a retired pastor. When he is not teaching, doing research, or writing, he enjoys reading, hiking, calling contradances, and playing Irish traditional music.



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