Mondayman
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Good to know. When I start my UG in the Fall of 2017 I'll be sure to order ALL my textbooks through it!Greg Bernhardt said:Yes :)
Good to know. When I start my UG in the Fall of 2017 I'll be sure to order ALL my textbooks through it!Greg Bernhardt said:Yes :)
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/support-pf-buy-on-amazon-com-from-here.473931/Mondayman said:Good to know. When I start my UG in the Fall of 2017 I'll be sure to order ALL my textbooks through it!
ProfuselyQuarky said:This thread scares me.
And I thought going into law was bad...
I'm in the same boat. However, when I consider which books I have used often in my work in industry as an electrical engineer, the number is closer to a dozen or so. Probably the top two arevanhees71 said:I'm a book addict. It's too much work to type in all the titles of the book, I've on my shelf at home ;-)).
I can barely cover a few pages of a something within a week, if I'm expected to read and understand a collection this extensive...Cruz Martinez said:What's scary about it?![]()
How did you use these books? cover to cover or as references?vanhees71 said:Well, my alltime favorites are
General (theory) textbooks
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Sommerfeld, Lectures on Theoretical Physics (6 vols.)
W. Pauli, Lectures on theoretical physics (6 vols.)
The Feynman Lectures (3 vols.)
Landau, Lifshitz, Course on Theoretical Physics (mostly vols. 2, VI, VIII-X)
Bartelmann et al Theoretische Physik (in German)
Quantum Mechanics
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J. J. Sakurai, Modern Quantum Mechanics
P. A. M. Dirac, The Principles of Quantum Mechanics
S. Weinberg, Lectures on Quantum Mechanics
J. Schwinger, Quantum Mechanics - Symbolism of atomic measurements
Messiah, Quantum Mechanics
Ballentine, Quantum Mechanics
QFT (in vacuo)
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M. Schwartz, Quantum field theory and the standard model
S. Weinberg, The quantum theory of fields (3 Vols.)
Bailin&Love, Gauge theories
J. C. Taylor, Gauge theories of weak interactions
Collins, Renormalisation
QFT (many body)
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C. Gale, J. Kapusta, Finite temperature field theory
M. LeBellac, Thermal field theory
Stat. Phys. & Kinetic theory
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H. Callen, Thermodynamics and an introduction to thermostatistics
F. Reif, Fundamentals of statistical and thermal physics
de Groot et al, Relativistic kinetic theory
Cercignani, The relativistic Boltzmann equation
Risken, The Fokker-Planck equation
bacte2013 said:^
I like Moore&Mertens book; although it is not really a learning source, it is very comprehensive on the computability. How is "Basic Algebra I&II" compared to books like Lang, Hungerford, and Birkhoff/MacLane?

That's an impressive collection! Are the yellow books part of a series? I noticed they're all very similar.George Jones said:When this thread started, I had already started cataloging my books, and was about 40% done. I had intended to complete the process little-by-little over the next few weeks, but I have accelerated the process, and I should be done tomorrow. I have attached a picture of me taken exactly 10 years ago, with some of the books I then had, e.g., many of the quantum books I then had are not in view. I now am less heavy, greyer, and have many more books.
MexChemE said:That's an impressive collection! Are the yellow books part of a series? I noticed they're all very similar.
ProfuselyQuarky said:This thread scares me.
And I thought going into law was bad...
Congratulations. Few things are more satisfying than obtaining a copy of a book that has gone out of print a long time ago.MexChemE said:Just got two great additions to my collection!
I hope the same for you.MexChemE said:Hope you're all doing great!
Indeed, it is. That's Ingeniero Antonio M. Amor refinery in Salamanca, Guanajuato, operated by PEMEX.Krylov said:Incidentally, is the picture in your avatar a refinery? It reminds me a lot of the refineries in Pernis (The Netherlands), not far from where I live. They are beautiful at night and I love the smell, when the wind is right.

Me too. I have much more books than I will ever be able to read.vanhees71 said:I'm a book addict.
Which one?Stephen Tashi said:but on them he kept only one book.
He was a math professor, but I suspect that it was neither math book nor science book. A person with only one book must be a very practical person, so it must have been some very practical book. Perhaps a phone book or the air condition manual?vanhees71 said:I'm pretty sure it must have been a physics book, because if you have only one book to live with it must be a really interesting one, which leads to the conclusion that it must be one about QFT.