Simple Harmonic Oscillation
Massona
Spring
Simple Harmonic Oscillator Equation
LC Circuits
Simple Pendula
Compound Pendula
Damped and Driven Harmonic Oscillation
Damped
Harmonic Oscillation
Quality Factor
LCR Circuits
Driven Damped Harmonic Oscillation
Driven LCR Circuits
Transient Oscillator Response
Coupled Oscillations
Two Spring-Coupled Masses
Two Coupled LC Circuits
Three Spring-Coupled Masses
Transverse Standing Waves
Normal Modes of a Beaded
String
Normal Modes of a Uniform String
General Time Evolution of a Uniform String
Longitudinal Standing Waves
Spring-Coupled Masses
Longitudinal Waves on a Thin Elastic Rod
Sound Waves in an Ideal Gas
Fourier Analysis
Traveling Waves
Standing Waves in a Finite Continuous
Medium
Traveling Waves in an Infinite Continuous Medium
Wave Interference
Energy Conservation
Transmission Lines
Normal Reflection and Transmission at Interfaces
Electromagnetic Waves
Doppler Effect
Wave Propagation in Inhomogeneous Media
Multi-Dimensional Waves
Plane Waves
Three-Dimensional Wave Equation
Cylindrical Waves
Spherical Waves
Oscillation of an Elastic Sheet
Polarization of Electromagnetic Waves
Laws of Geometric Optics
Fresnel Relations
Total Internal Reflection
Sound Waves in Fluids
Wave Pulses
Fourier Transforms
General Solution of One-Dimensional Wave Equation
Bandwidth
Dispersive Waves
Pulse Propagation
Electromagnetic Waves in Unmagnetized Plasmas
Faraday Rotation
Electromagnetic Wave Propagation in Conductors
Waveguides
Pulse Propagation in Two Dimensions
Gravity Waves
Wave Dragon Ships
Ship Wakes
Capillary Waves
Wave Optics
Introduction
Two-Slit Interference
Coherence
Multi-Slit Interference
Thin Film Interference
One-Dimensional Fourier Optics
Single-Slit Diffraction
Multi-Slit Diffraction
Two-Dimensional Fourier Optics
Wave Mechanics
Introduction
Photoelectric Effect
Electron Diffraction
Representation of Waves via Complex Numbers
Schrödinger’s Equation
Probability Interpretation of Wavefunction
Wave Packets
Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle
Wavefunction Collapse
Stationary States
Three-Dimensional Wave Mechanics
Particle in Finite Square Potential Well
Square Potential Barrier
Appendix A: Physical Constants
Appendix B: Useful Mathematics
Appendix C: Electromagnetic Theory
Bibliography
Index
Exercises appear at the end of each chapter.
Richard Fitzpatrick is a professor of physics at the University of Texas at Austin, where he has been a faculty member since 1994. He is a member of the Royal Astronomical Society, a fellow of the American Physical Society, and the author of Maxwell’s Equations and the Principles of Electromagnetism and An Introduction to Celestial Mechanics. He earned a Master’s degree in physics from the University of Cambridge and a DPhil in astronomy from the University of Sussex.
Oscillations and waves are ubiquitous in many physical situations.
Universities now realise that instead of discussing these phenomena
in different branches of physics, it is much more productive to
have a core physics undergraduate course which encapsulates the
reach physical phenomena such as advection, dispersion,
diffraction, as well as non-linearity (solitons, shocks and chaos)
in a single, generic course that encompasses the relevant elements
of fluid dynamics, mechanics, optics, plasmas and quantum
mechanics. There are surprisingly few good and more importantly
recent, up-to-date textbooks available on the subject of
Oscillations and Waves. Richard Fitzpatrick's Oscillations and
Waves: An Introduction is an excellent addition to the existing
literature on the subject. The book provides a clear, systematic,
comprehensive and yet concise treatment of the subject. The
emphasis is placed on physical interpretation rather than
mathematical rigour, although the author certainly presents the
material at the right mathematical level, commensurate with an
advanced undergraduate course. The book will be equally useful for
physics and engineering students, as well as mathematics students
who want to get physical insight beyond the mathematical equations.
The book benefits from very useful exercises which are accompanied
by a solutions manual. As a physics educator, I would recommend
this book without a reservation to both lecturers as excellent
teaching material and to students as a learning resource which will
guide them through the exciting world of waves, oscillations and
patterns that are all around us.
—David Tsiklauri, Senior Lecturer in Astronomy, School of Physics
and Astronomy, Queen Mary University of London, UK "… The treatment
is thorough … An unusual approach of the book is to postpone any
use of complex representations until they are needed under the
topic of quantum mechanics. The author argues that this allows the
text to stress physical interpretations over mathematical
solutions. Each chapter includes homework problems. Summing Up:
Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates.
—E. Kincanon, Gonzaga University, in CHOICE Magazine, June 2013
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