Find Books for Classical Physics Beginners

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
14 replies · 4K views
redon
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Hi everyone , can you find some books for classical physics for begginers pls ? thnx
 
Physics news on Phys.org
We'll need more info on your educational background. Do you have calculus?
 
Daverz said:
We'll need more info on your educational background. Do you have calculus?

Im in first year on high school , i understand math well , so what can you suggest me ?
 
redon said:
Im in first year on high school , i understand math well , so what can you suggest me ?

51V9nAGI2CL._SL500_AA300_.jpg
 
redon said:
Im in first year on high school , i understand math well , so what can you suggest me ?

Could you actually say what mathematics you know please.
 
How about Conceptual Physics by Hewitt?
 
hitmeoff said:
How about Conceptual Physics by Hewitt?

thnx you :)
 
Daverz said:
51V9nAGI2CL._SL500_AA300_.jpg

thank you Darverz
 
qspeechc said:
Could you actually say what mathematics you know please.

well arithmetics ,geometry , algebra , that's all :(
 
redon said:
well arithmetics ,geometry , algebra , that's all :(

That should be all you need to get something out of the Conceptual Physics book (probably the Asimov book as well). This is fine, I actually think you will absorb harder books better later on if you get yourself a good basic understanding of how physics works, without having to worry to much about the math.

Once you learn some trigonometry, then "College Physics" by Serway would do you well. The Feynman Lectures also work very well, but I do believe that requires some elementary calculus.
 
hitmeoff said:
That should be all you need to get something out of the Conceptual Physics book (probably the Asimov book as well). This is fine, I actually think you will absorb harder books better later on if you get yourself a good basic understanding of how physics works, without having to worry to much about the math.

Once you learn some trigonometry, then "College Physics" by Serway would do you well. The Feynman Lectures also work very well, but I do believe that requires some elementary calculus.[/QUOTE

First thank youu , for the books you suggests me.
Can you tell me what calculus need to learn for study physics ?thank you
 
Generally you need all the basics of calculus for some intro physics course in university..
Usually those calculus-based physics textbooks will give some explanations on math needed..

For calculus-bases physics, I have used 2 text:

-Physics for Scientist and Engineers by Serway/Jewett: it got nice problems. but personally I do not like the explanations

-Fundamentals of Physics by HRW: better explanations, sometimes can be a bit wordy

My advice, if you are still in High School, try to get your fundamentals correct, especially math
 
Ashuron said:
Generally you need all the basics of calculus for some intro physics course in university..
Usually those calculus-based physics textbooks will give some explanations on math needed..

For calculus-bases physics, I have used 2 text:

-Physics for Scientist and Engineers by Serway/Jewett: it got nice problems. but personally I do not like the explanations

-Fundamentals of Physics by HRW: better explanations, sometimes can be a bit wordy

My advice, if you are still in High School, try to get your fundamentals correct, especially math

Thank you , i will try :))