- #1
Florian Geyer
- 95
- 25
Hello respected member
To those who reached by this message, I hope it finds you all well.
When I was wandering and skimming some textbooks -as I usually do to get some insight and plan my future studying- I came across a textbook which made some very strange claims, its called the physics of waves by Elmore and Heald, well first of all it seems to me an excellent textbook because of some thing upon which I have judged it.
- It contains everything about waves as far as I know.
- It has a lot of problems, and most importantly they are give after each section, not like some other textbooks which prefer to give you miscellaneous problems on all the sections of the chapter at the end of it, which may confuse the reader (In my humble opinion).
- I think it is very well organized.
... etc
However, at the preface the textbook claimed that the textbook requires only one year of calculus as math. prerequisite, but when I skimmed the textbook I have found that the textbook do use appallingly more math that it claimed, based on my skimming I have found the following math used in it:
- ODEs.
- PDEs.
- Special functions (like Bessel).
- linear algebra (or matrix operations I don't know the difference between the two by the way).
- Complex variables.
- Tensors.
- Fourier series.
- Vector analysis.
- WKB approximation (I am not sure if this is a math of not, I included it since it came many time when I skimmed math methods textbooks).
- Frensel integrals.
- Fourier transform.
Well, but this is based only on a quick skimming, maybe I will find much more if I studied it.
So my question is how can the authors make such a claim?!! and if anyone can make these claims, then well, shall we take their words seriously?
Thank you.
To those who reached by this message, I hope it finds you all well.
When I was wandering and skimming some textbooks -as I usually do to get some insight and plan my future studying- I came across a textbook which made some very strange claims, its called the physics of waves by Elmore and Heald, well first of all it seems to me an excellent textbook because of some thing upon which I have judged it.
- It contains everything about waves as far as I know.
- It has a lot of problems, and most importantly they are give after each section, not like some other textbooks which prefer to give you miscellaneous problems on all the sections of the chapter at the end of it, which may confuse the reader (In my humble opinion).
- I think it is very well organized.
... etc
However, at the preface the textbook claimed that the textbook requires only one year of calculus as math. prerequisite, but when I skimmed the textbook I have found that the textbook do use appallingly more math that it claimed, based on my skimming I have found the following math used in it:
- ODEs.
- PDEs.
- Special functions (like Bessel).
- linear algebra (or matrix operations I don't know the difference between the two by the way).
- Complex variables.
- Tensors.
- Fourier series.
- Vector analysis.
- WKB approximation (I am not sure if this is a math of not, I included it since it came many time when I skimmed math methods textbooks).
- Frensel integrals.
- Fourier transform.
Well, but this is based only on a quick skimming, maybe I will find much more if I studied it.
So my question is how can the authors make such a claim?!! and if anyone can make these claims, then well, shall we take their words seriously?
Thank you.