AxiomOfChoice
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Can someone please tell me what the best book for learning calculus of variations is?
Landau said:At what level, for what purposes? The physical, computational way, or the mathematically rigorous way?
For the computational approach I would say Goldstein has a pretty clear explanation.AxiomOfChoice said:I first encountered calculus of variations in my graduate mechanics class, and we did a few problems with it, but I never really understood it completely. (I understand that it's one way to derive the Euler-Lagrange equations.)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0486414485/?tag=pfamazon01-20 is a great classic text (Dover, cheap), see Google books to browse through it. It is theoretical, but with a lot of physics applications (and a clear lay out of Noethers theorem, which I couldn't really follow in one of my physics classes).Is there a text, adequate for self-study, that lays out the rigorous mathematical framework and then goes on to apply the theory to physical problems, like deriving the Euler-Lagrange equations or showing that the shortest path between two points in the plane is a straight line?
Cantab Morgan said:I learned to love the subject from Gelfand and Fomin.