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From the bestselling author of The Theoretical Minimum, a DIY introduction to the math and science of quantum mechanics.
First he taught you classical mechanics. Now, physicist Leonard Susskind has teamed up with data engineer Art Friedman to present the theory and associated mathematics of the strange world of quantum mechanics.
In this follow-up to the New York Times best-selling The Theoretical Minimum, Susskind and Friedman provide a lively introduction to this famously difficult field, which attempts to understand the behavior of sub-atomic objects through mathematical abstractions. Unlike other popularizations that shy away from quantum mechanics' weirdness, Quantum Mechanics embraces the utter strangeness of quantum logic. The authors offer crystal-clear explanations of the principles of quantum states, uncertainty and time dependence, entanglement, and particle and wave states, among other topics, and each chapter includes exercises to ensure mastery of each area. Like The Theoretical Minimum, this volume runs parallel to Susskind's eponymous Stanford University-hosted continuing education course.
An approachable yet rigorous introduction to a famously difficult topic, Quantum Mechanics provides a tool kit for amateur scientists to learn physics at their own pace.
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The Theoretical Minimum Series
A master teacher presents the ultimate introduction to classical mechanics for people who are serious about learning physics. The latest volume in the New York Times–bestselling physics series explains Einstein’s masterpiece: the general theory of relativity Using their typical brand of real math, enlightening drawings, and humor, Susskind and Friedman walk us through the complexities of waves, forces, and particles by exploring special relativity and electromagnetism.
Publisher : Basic Books (May 12, 2015)
Language : English
Paperback : 384 pages
ISBN-10 : 0465062903
ISBN-13 : 978-0465062904
Item Weight : 13.4 ounces
Dimensions : 5.45 x 1.2 x 8.2 inches
Reviewer: Malcolm Cameron
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A Mind Tingling Challenge â Learn Quantum Mechanics
Review: Physics lectures are of three types according to this anecdote of Niels Bohr:âA young man was sent by his own village to a neighboring town to hear a great Rabbi. He was to bring back a report in which all could share. When he returned he told his eagerly awaiting fellow citizens: âThe Rabbi spoke three times. The first was brilliant; clear and simple. I understood every word. The second was even better, deep and subtle. I didnât understand much, but the Rabbi understood it all. The third was by far the finest; a great and unforgettable experience. I understood nothing and the Rabbi himself didnât understand much either.âProfessor Susskind (1) of Stanford University is far ahead of Bohrâs Rabbi â he understands it all. To Susskind âEverything is easy in Quantum mechanicsâ (2). So easy that he always âdestroys his lecture notes to prevent his lectures being the same next timeâ (3). âGiven enough time, with no distractions, you could use [his book (4)] to eventually master Quantum Mechanicsâ (5). An attractive challenge as the book is only 350 pages.Only 350 pages perhaps, but it assumes you are versed in Classical Mechanics (which you arenât). Realistically, you need Susskindâs first book (6) plus a preliminary YouTube series of 9 x 1.5 hour lectures on Quantum Entanglement (7). Plus you will need assistance from 10 x 1.5 hour YouTube lectures (8) in parallel with the book. Still a realistic challenge given the results (9).According to Susskind, Quantum Mechanics is much more fundamental that classical physics. âAs far as we know quantum mechanics provides an exact description of every physical systemâ (10). Moreover, âthe logic of classical mechanics of Newton is incorrect, the underlying structure is inadequateâ (11). Not only should we logically learn quantum mechanics first, it is technically much easier than classical mechanics (12).Susskind lives in a Quantum Mechanical world, the real world, deploring our choice of units that makes Avogadroâs Number (13) and the speed of light (14) ridiculously large and Planckâs Constant (15) ridiculously small. He blames historical chemists who measured things by comparison to the size of their hands. Choosing units appropriate to the sub-atomic scale, such as making Planckâs constant = 1, would make his world feel normal.For those who enjoyed science and mathematics to a reasonable level (16) but who had to follow a career to survive in the world, this is more an opportunity than a challenge. Not that it is not a challenge! It is a mind tingling challenge. A way of familiarizing with the real subject with the actual equations - not a popularization.The fascinating history of Archimedes, Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton fitting an ellipse to the Mars orbit and concluding with the Law of Gravity is only the half of it. Understand how the mathematics of vectors and matrices are fitted to the real world being Quantum Mechanics. Like Archimedes the French mathematicians Joseph-Louis Lagrange, Siméon Poisson, and the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton were nice enough to magically or inadvertently provide the mathematics a long time prior to make it possible. Why this mathematical physics works no one knows, neither Susskind nor the Rabbi.One moment you feel like like Niels Bohrâs student in his third lecture then you are stunned when Professor Susskind commences a short summing-up by saying, in a matter-of-fact way, that an equation derived in the lecture is called Schrödingerâs equation (17)! Or that the postulates he has been talking about are Diracâs postulates of Quantum Mechanics formulated in the 1930âs which have never needed to be replaced (18). Or, early on, describes a vector and says that it is Diracâs notation (19).Finally, Susskind is to be applauded. If this can be done with Quantum Mechanics, it can be done in any subject of Physics or Mathematics or any other area of study. There must be a value in doing this (other than ex-auto workers retraining themselves for jobs at CERN) as the work will inevitably not continue to be publically funded unless tax-payers have some idea what it is.PS: The advantage of a career outside Physics is to know âyou always write the minutes before the meetingâ. Bohrâs student may finally have understood so little that he was not game to return to his village. As a precaution I have written this travelogue well before completing the trip.(1) Leonard Susskind is the Professor of Theoretical Physics at Stanford University, and director of the Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics. His Wikipedia entry is a good read in itself.(2) Lecture 9, Quantum Entanglements(3) Lecture 9, Quantum Entanglements(4) Quantum Mechanics â The Theoretical Minimum by Leonard Susskind & Art Friedman. The âminimumâ means just what you need to know to proceed to the next level.(5) Science News: quote from back cover of Susskindâs book.(6) The Theoretical Minimum â What you Need to Know to start doing Physics Leonard Susskind and George Hrabovsky.(7) Quantum Entanglements, Susskind, Stanford University, YouTube. It seems that the old unadorned lecture format has stood the test of time with only the whiteboard and marker (when it works) replacing the blackboard and chalk.(8) Modern Physics, Quantum Mechanics, Susskind, Stanford University, YouTube.(9) Well, you did not expect to read 350 pages straight cover to cover and then know Quantum Mechanics, did you? This is a 6 to12 month project â reading, watching YouTube lectures, frantic note taking hoping you might understand it later (the iPad pause button being a luxury unavailable in university lectures), revision, pushing forward, retreating, then finally with your newfound knowledge applying for a job at CERN.(10) Page xix.(11) Lecture 1, Quantum Mechanics(12) Page xx.(13) Avogadro's number, number of units in one mole of any substance (being its molecular weight in grams) â 6Ã1023.(14) Speed of Light: c â 3Ã108 m/s.(15) Planckâs Constant: The energy contained in a photon, the smallest possible âpacketâ of energy in an electromagnetic wave â 6.6x10-34 joule-seconds.(16) Realistically, for those who think they know classical Newtonian Physics and remember studying vectors and matrices, exponentials such as eiθ = cosθ + isinθ and who once knew the expansion of sin(θ + Φ).(17) Lecture 9, Quantum Entanglements(18) Lecture 4, Quantum Mechanics(19) Page 11, Quantum Mechanics â The Theoretical MinimumMalcolm Cameron8 May 2016
Reviewer: J. Canada
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: THEE quantum book + Solutions available online
Review: I've been working through this book. I learned quantum in my undergrad years from the Tannoudji book. It was very dry and I spend most my time trying to figure out what he (Tannoudji) was trying to say, THEN figure out whether I can prove it, etc. Funny how really smart people can create creatively new ways to make stuff more difficult through weird explanations.This is not so with Susskind. Susskind writes like Feynman: clear explanations on complex topics. I assume he's a native english speaker, as his tone is very colloquial and uninimtidating. He assumes the reader knows nothing of quantum and explains things in bit-sized pieces which are easy to digest. He rarely says things like "well OBVIOUSLY this flows from this" (when the things are so obvious).Anyways, the book is a bit unorthodox. It starts off talking about spin states and vector spaces. This is different than the typical quantum books that start off with talking about solving the Schrodinger equation. Which, now that I think about it, isn't really a great place to start. It's a wave equation that's only once-piece of the bigger picture.The result is a book that has a very gradual learning curve.That said, readers still need a bit of math background if they want to get through this book. I'd say at least a decent understanding of complex numbers and matrix algebra are a prerequisite. Both those subjects are thoroughly explained in places online (Khan Academy) for free.SOLUTIONS:I read another reviewer rate the book low because there is a lack of worked out solutions. That I disagree with.Google search "Quantum theoretical minimum solutions" and they will pop up. There are several unofficial sites out there that have answers to the solutions. For instance, google search "the uncertain biscuit quantum" or "chris brittain quantum". The solutions are out there.Also, on that note, the problems in this book are few..but concise and great. Very on-point.Regarding the reviewers who are rating this book low b/c it's too difficult. That's not really a good reason to rate a QUANTUM book low. For two reasons (1) it's a quantum book for christsakes. it is by far the most math-friendly book written on the subject. reading about quantum mechanics without math is not "doing" physics..it's just cataloging knowledge (e.g. stamp collecting), (2) how can you rate a book low if you don't understand it? What are your reviewing parameters?If you have a little complex number knowledge and rudimentary matrix operations (e.g. matrix multiplication, etc.) under your belt, you'll be fine.The Kindle version is fine. That's what I bought (I have a paper copy too). I prefer the kindle version because I can read it on my phone while waiting in line, etc. The equations come out fine (I'm not sure what the other revieweres were complaining about, I'm reading it on my iPhone 5s just fine.)If you know nothing of quantum and want to learn, I highly HIGHLY recommend this book.
Reviewer: Antibunching
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Very entertaining - brilliant mind
Review: Very entertaining book - like every single lecture Prof. Susskind has posted on youtube. It gives an excellent conceptual overview particularly for first time learners, or non-physics students who want to understand what QM is all about, without investing years of study. I very much like the entire series - and recommend to first read the mechanics book by Susskind. The QM book only requires very little linear algebra knowledge, thus making it accessible to a broad audience. Just donât expect you are able to carry out analytical QM to solve problems towards a BS or MS degree. For that there is probably no way around âfull sizeâ intro to QM textbooks like those by R. Liboff or J.J. Sakurai (or B. Zwiebach youtube lecture series). In any case Susskindâs book series is unique, simplistic but deep, and a must read for any physicist, upcoming quantum engineers, or in fact anyone who likes to listen to and get inspired by brilliant minds.
Reviewer: Trantor
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: El gramaje del papel es bajo, la portada es delgada, creo que podria mejorarse la calidad un poco en cuanto al material, la calidad de impresión es buena y por el tamaño de letra es facil de leer, tuve mala suerte y no venia emplayado entonces llego con manchas de suciedad por la manipulación que le dieron
Reviewer: LM
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: The book begins with simple and accessible language and increases in difficulty according to the theme, without ever losing clarity. In it, many scholars find new themes of mathematics and physics to be studied. The book together with the course that Professor Leonard Susskind and Stanford University make available for free on YouTube (in English) is enough to begin to understand the immensity of this theme that is applied to everything we use in our day to day, both in electronics as in medicine. Anyone who thinks that Quantum Mechanics is only theoretical is wrong. So, don't think twice, buy the book and watch the 10 classes of 2 hours each on YouTube for free and start understanding more advanced books on the subject.
Reviewer: Stefano
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Eccezionale esposizione della meccanica quantistica, senza sconti ma essenziale
Reviewer: Ives
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: For a novice, this book provided a good introduction to my journey into the fascinating world of Quantum Mechanics.
Reviewer: Binnur Genç
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: TeÅekkür ederim ðð»ââï¸
Customers say
Customers find the book provides a comprehensive introduction to quantum physics with an excellent conceptual overview for first-time learners or non-physicists. They appreciate the clear writing style and conversational approach that makes the material more understandable. Readers find the content interesting and entertaining. The visual quality is described as good, clear, and subtle. However, some customers feel the difficulty level is difficult, ranging from easy to hard.
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