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The Geometry of Minkowski Spacetime : An Introduction to the Mathematics of the Special Theory of Relativity / by Gregory L. Naber
(Applied Mathematical Sciences. ISSN:2196968X ; 92)

Edition 2nd ed. 2012.
Publisher New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer
Year 2012
Language English
Size XVI, 324 p : online resource
Authors *Naber, Gregory L author
SpringerLink (Online service)
Subjects LCSH:Manifolds (Mathematics)
LCSH:Gravitation
LCSH:Mathematical physics
FREE:Manifolds and Cell Complexes
FREE:Classical and Quantum Gravity
FREE:Mathematical Methods in Physics
Notes   This book offers a presentation of the special theory of relativity that is mathematically rigorous and yet spells out in considerable detail the physical significance of the mathematics.  It treats, in addition to the usual menu of topics one is accustomed to finding in introductions to special relativity, a wide variety of results of more contemporary origin. These include Zeeman’s characterization of the causal automorphisms of Minkowski spacetime, the Penrose theorem on the apparent shape of a relativistically moving sphere, a detailed introduction to the theory of spinors, a Petrov-type classification of electromagnetic fields in both tensor and spinor form, a topology for Minkowski spacetime whose homeomorphism group is essentially the Lorentz group, and a careful discussion of Dirac’s famous Scissors Problem and its relation to the notion of a two-valued representation of the Lorentz group.  This second edition includes a new chapter on the de Sitter universe which is intended to serve two purposes. The first is to provide a gentle prologue to the steps one must take to move beyond special relativity and adapt  to the presence of gravitational fields that cannot be considered  negligible. The second is to understand some of the basic features of  a model of the empty universe that differs markedly from Minkowski spacetime, but may be recommended by recent astronomical observations suggesting that the expansion of our own universe is accelerating rather than slowing down. The treatment presumes only a knowledge of linear algebra in the first three chapters, a bit of real analysis in the fourth and, in two appendices, some elementary point-set topology.   The first edition of the book received the 1993 CHOICE award for Outstanding Academic Title.   Reviews of first edition:    “… a valuable contribution to the pedagogical literature which will be enjoyed by all who delight in precisemathematics and physics.” (American Mathematical Society, 1993)    “Where many physics texts explain physical phenomena by means of mathematical models, here a rigorous and detailed mathematical development is accompanied by precise physical interpretations.” (CHOICE, 1993)  “… his talent in choosing the most significant results and ordering them within the book can’t be denied. The reading of the book is, really, a pleasure.” (Dutch Mathematical Society, 1993)    
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-7838-7
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Material Type E-Book
Classification LCC:QA613-613.8
DC23:514.34
ID 4000118733
ISBN 9781441978387

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