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  2. University Physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_Physics

    University Physics, informally known as the Sears & Zemansky, is the name of a two-volume physics textbook written by Hugh Young and Roger Freedman. The first edition of University Physics was published by Mark Zemansky and Francis Sears in 1949. [2] [3] Hugh Young became a coauthor with Sears

  3. Berkeley Physics Course - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_Physics_Course

    The legal status of the original editions has been befogged in the case of the renowned second volume by the fact that Cambridge University Press has made it effectively impossible to obtain the royalty-free license promised under the original government contract. [4] There was a parallel series of laboratory courses developed by Alan Portis. [5]

  4. Course of Theoretical Physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Course_of_Theoretical_Physics

    The Course of Theoretical Physics is a ten-volume series of books covering theoretical physics that was initiated by Lev Landau and written in collaboration with his student Evgeny Lifshitz starting in the late 1930s.

  5. Augustus Edward Hough Love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus_Edward_Hough_Love

    Augustus Edward Hough Love FRS [1] (17 April 1863, Weston-super-Mare – 5 June 1940, Oxford), often known as A. E. H. Love, was a mathematician famous for his work on the mathematical theory of elasticity.

  6. OpenStax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Openstax

    OpenStax textbooks follow a traditional peer review process aimed at ensuring they meet a high quality standard before publication. Textbooks are developed and peer-reviewed by educators in an attempt to ensure they are readable and accurate, meet the scope and sequence requirements of each course, are supported by instructor ancillaries, and are available with the latest technology-based ...

  7. Intensive and extensive properties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intensive_and_extensive...

    By contrast, an extensive property or extensive quantity is one whose magnitude is additive for subsystems. [4] Examples include mass, volume and Gibbs energy. [5] Not all properties of matter fall into these two categories. For example, the square root of the volume is neither intensive nor extensive. [1]

  8. PDF/A - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDF/A

    PDF is a standard for encoding documents in an "as printed" form that is portable between systems. However, the suitability of a PDF file for archival preservation depends on options chosen when the PDF is created: most notably, whether to embed the necessary fonts for rendering the document; whether to use encryption; and whether to preserve additional information from the original document ...

  9. The Tao of Physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tao_of_Physics

    According to the preface of the first edition, reprinted in subsequent editions, Capra struggled to reconcile theoretical physics and Eastern mysticism and was at first "helped on my way by 'power plants'" or psychedelics, with the first experience "so overwhelming that I burst into tears, at the same time, not unlike Castaneda, pouring out my impressions to a piece of paper".