Introduction to General Relativity

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on resources for studying General Relativity, highlighting key materials such as Sean Carroll's tutorial from the University of Chicago and various free lecture notes. Essential topics covered include tensors, differential forms, and singularity theorems. Notable links include the PDF version of Carroll's work and other tutorials on relativity, although some resources have become outdated. The conversation emphasizes the importance of foundational knowledge in tensors for understanding General Relativity.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of tensors and their applications in physics
  • Familiarity with differential forms in the context of General Relativity
  • Knowledge of singularity theorems and their implications
  • Basic concepts of asymptotic flatness in spacetime
NEXT STEPS
  • Study Sean Carroll's General Relativity tutorial from the University of Chicago
  • Explore advanced topics in General Relativity through free lecture notes available online
  • Learn about index-free calculations with vectors and tensors
  • Investigate the implications of singularity theorems in modern physics
USEFUL FOR

Students of physics, educators in higher education, and researchers interested in the theoretical aspects of General Relativity will benefit from this discussion.

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Other tutorials about relativity

Other tutorials about relativity

General Relativity
http://freescience.info/books.php?id=24

Special Relativity
http://freescience.info/books.php?id=180
 
Lectures on Advanced General Relativity

http://sites.google.com/site/winitzki/

contains [among other things] is a set of free lecture notes on advanced stuff like index-free calculations with vectors and tensors, differential forms, null surfaces, asymptotic flatness, singularity theorems, tetrad formalism, and spinors in GR. This is a free book in the sense of http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html" .
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Dx, your link is to an empty page - fancy writing it ?
 


Edgardo said:
The website
Relativity on the World Wide Web
by Chris Hillman

contains a large collection of links to relativity websites and lecture notes
on the level of introductory as well as advanced.

Sadly, this page has since been withdrawn:

"RelWWW has existed for approximately 15 years, but in the past 5 years it has become clear that I lack the time and inclination to properly maintain this website. More seriously, the World Wide Web has not developed in the way I hopefully anticipated back in 1992. Consequently, I have concluded that the site is no longer useful for the hypothetical "serious student" whom I envisioned as the target audience. Therefore, I have deleted it.

- Chris Hillman, June 2007"
explain said:
http://www.theorie.physik.uni-muenchen.de/~serge/T7/" .

This particular link no longer works, BUT it shuttles you to his main page, where he now has extensive links to material on many topics (scroll down to bottom third of page):

http://homepages.physik.uni-muenchen.de/~Winitzki/
 
Last edited by a moderator:

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