Declare Containing Books داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده

Title:داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده
Author:Jim Baggott
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 452 pages
Published:May 5th 2015 by شرکت سهامی انتشار (first published February 24th 2011)
Categories:Science. Physics. Nonfiction. History. History Of Science
Download Books Online داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده
داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده Paperback | Pages: 452 pages
Rating: 3.99 | 599 Users | 52 Reviews

Representaion In Favor Of Books داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده

‫تقريباً هر چيزي که ما امروز به گمان خود درباره‌ی سرشت عالم مي‌دانيم از يک نظريه‌ی فيزيکي برآمده است. اين نظريه در سي سال نخست قرن بيستم ايجاد گرديد و تا موفق‌ترين نظريه فيزيکي‌اي که تاکنون ابداع شده پيش رفت. مفاهيم آن قسمت اعظم فناوري‌ قرن بیست و یکم را پی‌ریزی می‌کند؛ فناوری‌اي که آموخته‌ايم آن را مسلم فرض کنيم. «آلبرت اینشتين» با امتناع از پذيرش عناصر عدم قطعيت و شانس مورد اشاره توسط اين نظريه‌ی جديد اظهار داشت: «خدا تاس نمي‌ريزد»، نيلز بوهر ادعا کرد که «هرکس از اين نظريه شگفت‌زده نشده باشد، آن را درک نکرده است». فیزیکدان تاثیرگذار آمریکایی، ریچارد فاینمن، پیش‌تر رفت و ادعا کرد که «هیچ‌کس آن را نمی‌فهمد». برای هر کسی که در زبان و منطق فیزیک کلاسیک درس خوانده باشد، این نظریه حداقل برای یک بار به لحاظ ریاضی چالش برانگیز، به طور نامانوسی دیوانه‌کننده و به گونه‌ی نفس‌گیری زیبا است. این نظریه‌ی کوانتوم است، و این کتاب سرگذشت آن را نقل می‌کند.

Describe Books Concering داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده

Edition Language: Persian URL http://goo.gl/jj6l45


Rating Containing Books داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده
Ratings: 3.99 From 599 Users | 52 Reviews

Commentary Containing Books داستان کوانتوم: سرگذشتی در چهل پرده
Many readers have given this book 2 stars because they were expecting a book that explains the math and science of quantum physics. This book doesn't do that. The purpose of the book is to zero in on the fascinating historical and social episodes of the growth of quantum physics from 1900 - near present. To fully appreciate and enjoy the book, some background knowledge is needed. I find the appropriate audience to be those who have knowledge congruent with courses in modern, quantum, and

This book helped me understand how bad my physics professors were in my undergraduate degree. They never really tried to show any historical context, or connect between the difference subjects. Just equations and theory in the very narrowest sense.

Excellent book. Loved it. Already put a hold on his book Origins. I'm actually rereading the chapter on the Standard Model right now... The book covers the shift from classical, Newtonian physics to a focus on quantum systems. Max Planck kicked off this quantum revolution with his work on cavity radiation and the discovery of the constant attached to his name. But Einstein figured out that this constant also applied to measuring the energy of photons (light). Then Bohr figured out that it

I paid for this book, therefore I felt compelled to read it till the last page. If it was a library borrow I would had returned it. I was expecting a plain and simple explanation of Quantum theory for the non-physicist but this book goes into a lot of detail that a physics student could benefit from. In total honesty, I couldnt wait for it to be over but Im glad I made it to the last page the same way as running 0.2 miles after running 26 miles before for the whole 26.2 of a marathon.

An excellent account of 40 of the most important developments in Quantum Physics. While not written for the layman, it is still possible to understand what Baggott is talking about. That's what Wikipedia is for in my opinion.It covers everything from the Black Body Radiation of Max Planck to the "Particle Zoo" of the 1960s and 70s to the ideas underlying Quantum Gravity and Hawking Radiation. Of course, there are some things that still need to be sorted out in terms of the Theory, but it is a

A (very) robust and interesting history on discoveries in quantum mechanics and particle physics, and the physicists involved. Starting with Planck's work with black body radiation, and moving through general relativity, the wave function, field theory, chromodynamics, and ending in contemporary work in string theory and loop quantum gravity, the book really mixes a heaping helping of the science itself with the historical narrative - sometimes a little too much. I'm reasonably well versed in

The audience for this book might be the second or third year physics student. The book's detail obscures the story for those who need an introduction.This book begins by describing rival theories of physics in the early 1900s between the atomists and those who saw a continuous and harmonious flow of energy in the cosmos. The rest of the book is a blow-by-blow account of how quantum physics has brought these two theories closer together. Toward the end of the book, the author writes about "closed

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