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Books on Statistical mechanics |
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| Aug18-08, 09:48 AM | #1 |
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Books on Statistical mechanics
Dear all,
I'm reading "Equilibrium Statistical Mechanics" by Atlee Jackson (Dover) which is very good. What could be a next step? In the web everybody speaks highly of "Introcution to modern statistical physics" by Chandler. What about the books by Hill (Dover) or Principles of Statistical Mechanics by Tolman (again, Dover)? Any help is welcomed! Thanks. Goldbeetle |
| Aug19-08, 07:01 AM | #2 |
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Tolman's book is excellent. and I highly recommend it.
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| Aug19-08, 07:21 AM | #3 |
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Thanks. But why ist so good? The thing that puzzles me is that it was published in the mid-30's. Am I going to learn outdated methods and notations etc?
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| Aug19-08, 07:43 AM | #4 |
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Books on Statistical mechanics
I had a look at it in Google books. It is really a "principles" kind of book. It even contains an extensive section on QM proving results etc
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| Aug19-08, 07:37 PM | #5 |
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Kerson Huang's book is good.
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| Aug28-08, 09:10 AM | #6 |
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A good introduction to the subject, approached entirely from statistical mechanics is Reif's "Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics". A book I like very much is Kardar's "Statistical Mechanics of Particles". The first chapter is a beautiful introduction to thermodynamics without statistical mechanics. You get to see the astonishing translation into equations of everyday concepts like "Heat cannot be converted completely into work." There is also a great chapter on probability with a nice presentation of the notion of information. The remaining chapters are about statistical mechanics. Throughout the book the presentation is always extremely logical, lucid and succinct. |
| Aug28-08, 01:59 PM | #7 |
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What would you use first the Chandler or Kardar??? |
| Aug28-08, 11:17 PM | #8 |
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If you are looking for the "standard" Stat. Mech. text, Donald McQuarrie's Statistical Mechanics, is what you are looking for. It assumes; however, that you have some mastery of quantum mechanics, classical mechanics (Goldstein level helps), basic thermodynamics, and some E&M background, although you can get by most of the text without needing hardly any E&M except for a few scattered problems (and if you reference his first chapter you'll do just fine).
If you are looking for a thermodynamics text, there are plenty to choose from, but I haven't, yet, stumbled upon anything great; though, McQuarrie's P.Chem text does get cover perhaps all of the equilibrium thermo. you'll ever need. If you pick up McQuarrie, make sure you read the first 12 chapter very closely, after that the rest of his text is more of a selected set of topics ending with Time-Correlation formalism, which is incredibly powerful. |
| Aug29-08, 03:26 AM | #9 |
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Recognitions:
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Lectures On Phase Transitions And The Renormalization Group". |
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