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Title: Quantum Mechanics (Physics and Its Applications) by P. C. W. Davies, David S. Betts, Paul C.W. Davies, D. S. Betts ISBN: 0-412-57900-6 Publisher: Kluwer Academic Publishers Pub. Date: 15 January, 1994 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $42.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.67 (3 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: The most readable QM book
Comment: This is the best QM I have. I would recommend it to any undergraduate student studying this subject. The book is very small and pleasant to read. It's great to use as a complement to a more comercial book like Gasiorowicz's one which I also recommend. It's the most compact book on the subject and the author looses no time with numerical examples. A must have.
Rating: 2
Summary: The price is too high
Comment: I reviewed the manuscript for the first edition of Davies's book for Routledge & Kegan Paul and recommended it fairly enthusiastically. The book was limited, but what it did it did relatively well. It was brief but clear, well-written, did not introduce too much of the usual mythology in discussing 'wave-particle duality' (I liked the discussion of the two-slit experiment), and went on to present the introductory ideas and mathematics of quantum mechanics in an attractive way. I used it in the spring of 1998 to prepare several lectures for my junior-level modern physics class, and recommended that my students read sections of it.
I can not recommend this new edition. At $42.95 the cost is probably about four times that of the original edition. For a book of this size and limitation, a bargain at $10, $40 is ridiculously overpriced. At $42.95 there are too many attractive alternatives.
Rating: 4
Summary: A fresh approach in a crowded field
Comment: I have used this textbook at a for upper-division undergraduate quantum mechanics for 2 years.
This book covers the basics and discusses more physics than mathematical tricks. At approximately 100 pages, it still provides excellent discussions on scattering, perturbation theory and symmetry. I would hope that such a text as this one marks the beginning of a shift in physics textbooks - from the overly verbose with reams of algebra and calculus to the essentials - to one which concentraits on physics.
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