E-Book, Englisch, 345 Seiten, eBook
van Putten Introduction to Methods of Approximation in Physics and Astronomy
1. Auflage 2017
ISBN: 978-981-10-2932-5
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 345 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Undergraduate Lecture Notes in Physics
ISBN: 978-981-10-2932-5
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
This textbook provides students with a solid introduction to the techniques of approximation commonly used in data analysis across physics and astronomy. The choice of methods included is based on their usefulness and educational value, their applicability to a broad range of problems and their utility in highlighting key mathematical concepts. Modern astronomy reveals an evolving universe rife with transient sources, mostly discovered - few predicted - in multi-wavelength observations. Our window of observations now includes electromagnetic radiation, gravitational waves and neutrinos. For the practicing astronomer, these are highly interdisciplinary developments that pose a novel challenge to be well-versed in astroparticle physics and data-analysis.
The book is organized to be largely self-contained, starting from basic concepts and techniques in the formulation of problems and methods of approximation commonly used in computation and numerical analysis. This includes root finding, integration, signal detection algorithms involving the Fourier transform and examples of numerical integration of ordinary differential equations and some illustrative aspects of modern computational implementation. Some of the topics highlighted introduce the reader to selected problems with comments on numerical methods and implementation on modern platforms including CPU-GPU computing.
Developed from lectures on mathematical physics in astronomy to advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students, this book will be a valuable guide for students and a useful reference for practicing researchers. To aid understanding, exercises are included at the end of each chapter. Furthermore, some of the exercises are tailored to introduce modern symbolic computation.
Zielgruppe
Upper undergraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface
Part I Preliminaries
1. Complex numbers
1.1 Quotients of complex numbers
1.2 Roots of complex numbers
1.3 Sequences and Euler's constant
1.4 Power series and radius of convergence
1.5 Minkowski spacetime
1.6 The logarithm and winding number
1.7 Branch cuts for z
1.8 Branch cuts for z 1/p
1.9 Exercises
2. Complex function theory
2.1 Analytic functions2.2 Cauchy's Integral Formula
2.3 Evaluation of a real integral
2.4 Residue theorem2.5 Morera's theorem
2.6 Liouville's theorem
2.7 Poisson kernel
2.8 Flux and circulation
2.9 Examples of potential flows2.10Exercises
3. Vectors and linear algebra
3.1 Introduction3.2 Inner and outer products
3.3 Angular momentum vector
3.4 Elementary transformations in the plane
3.5 Matrix algebra
3.6 Eigenvalue problems
3.7 Unitary matrices and invariants
3.8 Hermitian structure of Minkowski spacetime
3.9 Eigenvectors of Hermitian matrices3.10QR factorization
3.11Exercises
4. Linear partial differential equations
4.1 Hyperbolic equations
4.2 Diffusion equation
4.3 Elliptic equations
4.4 Characteristic of hyperbolic systems
4.5 Weyl equation
4.6 Exercises
Part II Methods of approximation
5. Projections and minimal distances
5.1 Vectors and distances
5.2 Projections of vectors
5.3 Snell’s law and Fermat’s principle
5.4 Fitting data by least squares
5.5 Gauss-Legendre quadrature
5.6 Exercises
6. Spectral methods and signal analysis
6.1 Basis functions
6.2 Expansion in Legendre polynomials 6.3 Fourier expansion
6.4 The Fourier transform
6.5 Fourier series
6.6 Chebychev polynomials
6.7 Weierstrass approximation theorem
6.8 Detector signals in the presence of noise
6.9 Signal detection by FFT using Maxima
6.10GPU-Butterfly filter in (f, f)6.11Exercises
7. Root finding
7.1 Solving for v2 and p
7.2 Convergence in Newton's method
7.3 Contraction mapping
7.4 Newton's method in two dimensions
7.5 Basins of attraction
7.6 Root finding in higher dimensions
7.7 Exercises
8. Finite differencing: differentiation and integration
8.1 Vector fields8.2 Gradient operator
8.3 Integration of ODE’s
8.4 Numerical integration of ODE's
8.5 Examples of ordinary differential equations
8.6 Exercises
9. Perturbation theory, scaling and turbulence
9.1 Roots of a cubic equation
9.2 Damped pendulum9.3 Orbital motion
9.4 Inertial and viscous fluid motion
9.5 Kolmogorov scaling of homogeneous turbulence
9.6 Exercises
Part III Selected topics
10. Thermodynamics of N-body systems
10.1 The action principle
10.2 Momentum in Euler-Lagragne equations
10.3 Legendre transformation
10.4 Hamiltonian formulation
10.5 Globular clusters
10.6 Coefficients of relaxation
10.7 Exercises
11. Accretion flows onto black holes
11.1 Bondi accretioin
11.2 Hoyle-Lyttleton accretion
11.3 Accretion disks
11.4 Gravitational wave emission
11.5 Mass transfer in binaries
11.6 Exercises
12. Rindler observers in astrophysics and cosmology
12.1 The moving mirror problem12.2 Implications for dark matter
12.3 Exercises
A. Some units and constant
B. ?(z) and ?(z) functions




