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Geometrical Vectors [Paperback]

Gabriel Weinreich
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Book Description

July 6 1998 Chicago Lectures in Physics
Every advanced undergraduate and graduate student of physics must master the concepts of vectors and vector analysis. Yet most books cover this topic by merely repeating the introductory-level treatment based on a limited algebraic or analytic view of the subject.

Geometrical Vectors introduces a more sophisticated approach, which not only brings together many loose ends of the traditional treatment, but also leads directly into the practical use of vectors in general curvilinear coordinates by carefully separating those relationships which are topologically invariant from those which are not. Based on the essentially geometric nature of the subject, this approach builds consistently on students' prior knowledge and geometrical intuition.

Written in an informal and personal style, Geometrical Vectors provides a handy guide for any student of vector analysis. Clear, carefully constructed line drawings illustrate key points in the text, and problem sets as well as physical examples are provided.


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First Sentence
We live in a three-dimensional flat space, or at least that is the way we usually think about it. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Invaluable -- Div, Grad Curl ++ Mar 15 2004
Format:Paperback
I actually have a few complaints about this book, but the core material is so helpful and instructive that they don't much matter.

This book explains vector and the beginnings of tensor analysis with new visual metaphors for vectors: lines, sheaves, thumbtacks, stacks. The dot and cross products can be visualized with these metaphors, and the various forms of Stokes/Gauss theorems proven visually.

This is great stuff for anyone going beyond the basics in vector analysis -- which would be anyone in pure math or physics, and some engineers.

You do need to use this as an adjuct to a conventional text or course.

This is the more sophisticated and general version of "Div, Grad, Curl and All That".

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5.0 out of 5 stars A great companion to math and physics July 25 2003
Format:Paperback
This book is deep! While lacking the formal rigor of vector analysis or exterior calculus this book attempts to remedy the lack of intuition that often accompanies such treatments (read the preface of the book).

In this book the author sneaks in clifford algebra, forms and applications to physics, he gives us a method of calculation that opens up the vector calculus you already knew and gives a great way to 'draw' many phenomenon in physics.

The author has an important agenda in this volume and that is to distinguish between objects that naturally behave differently. It has been the legacy of Gibbs and Heaviside for us to flounder in the 3-d application/misapplication of Hamiliton's quaternions. The reader is led to realize that identifying everything with contravariant vectors (arrows) is wrong and damaging to our intuition of phenomenon.

I highly recommend this book. It may seem hokey at first with odd names like thumbtack and swarm but it portrays deep mathematics in a beautiful manner. Work hard on it, apply it to physics and mathematics and be surprised at what you find! This sort of geometrical analysis is hard to find (try Gravitation by MTW or Applied Differential Geometry by Burke) at this level.

Remember it is meant to be an affordable companion to courses on vector and tensor analysis, and what a companion it is!

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4.0 out of 5 stars new visual metaphors July 4 2003
Format:Paperback
New visual metaphors for different kinds of vectors in 3-space: arrows, stacks, thumbtacks, and sheaves (corresponding to contravariant, covariant, and two forms of tensor). Visual and helpful proofs of Gauss's theorem, and Stoke's theorem, and div, grad and curl. I suspect the book would have been better had he included tensors explicitly. Very valuable for anyone doing vector analysis.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Book too bad the tensor one never got here
This book is one of the best books on vectors that I have ever read, and believe me I have read many. It was one of the easiest reads that I have ever encountered in a math book. Read more
Published on Mar 31 2003
2.0 out of 5 stars A very strange book
i have read very good books on vector analysis and i know how a
good book look like ...i am very sorry to all the reviewers
that calimed good about this book but it is... Read more
Published on Nov 29 2002 by Ahmed Morsi
5.0 out of 5 stars Mathematical Treat
A fresh look at what can be a dusty subject, demonstrates simple yet powerful unifying concepts. This book is a treat.
Published on May 22 2001
3.0 out of 5 stars NOTICE! Errata on previous review.
I was wrong, wrong, Wrong to fault the first set of equations in this book. These equations are CORRECT -- they are the true determinants of the 3x3 matrix represented by the... Read more
Published on Mar 28 2001 by Mike Varela
5.0 out of 5 stars An enlightening text
Weinreich takes a somewhat unorthadox approach to the description the vector calculus in this text. His geometrical derivations, however, provide wonderful insight into the true... Read more
Published on Dec 23 1999 by nkhanson@midway.uchicago.edu
5.0 out of 5 stars A Short, Fascinating Book. Buy This One.
I hardly need to add another Highly Recommended to the list of reviews. However, Professor Weinreich has assembled from his lectures an exceptionally interesting and intriguing... Read more
Published on Nov 28 1999 by Michael Wischmeyer
5.0 out of 5 stars favorable
Until I looked at this and Schouten's book I didn't have a visual feel for the different types of vectors;unlike Schouten he is comprehensible to someone with a limited math... Read more
Published on July 29 1999 by William Warren
5.0 out of 5 stars Lucid, breathtaking, dazzling
I cannot sufficiently express my amazement at the geometry that is expressed in this book. The unification of seemingly bizarre sets of concepts into a geometrical "whole" is... Read more
Published on Nov 23 1998
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