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| Tags: einsteins, equation, solutions |
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#1
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Anyone know of a book that focuses on the solutions of Einstein's equation,
rather than the derivation of those solutions? I'm a high school student that has read up on the minkowski and schwarzchild solutions, and understand some of their meaning in the context of solving physical problems. But, I'd like a book that dives into the other solutions, without analyzing the tensor calculus involved in their derivations. So far I've came across the excellent arxiv gr-qc/0004016 article "The role of exact solutions of Einstein's equations in the developments of general relativity". That's good, but does anyone know of something else like it... preferrably in book form? - Michael Sabino |
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#2
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"Michael S." wrote in message news:SFAtb.163194$9E1.827228@attbi_s52... Anyone know of a book that focuses on the solutions of Einstein's equation, rather than the derivation of those solutions? I'm a high school student that has read up on the minkowski and schwarzchild solutions, and understand some of their meaning in the context of solving physical problems. But, I'd like a book that dives into the other solutions, without analyzing the tensor calculus involved in their derivations. So far I've came across the excellent arxiv gr-qc/0004016 article "The role of exact solutions of Einstein's equations in the developments of general relativity". That's good, but does anyone know of something else like it... preferrably in book form? - Michael Sabino Take a look at "Exact Solutions to Einstein's Field Equations" 2nd Edition by Hans Stephanie, etc published by Cambridge |
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#4
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John Anderson wrote:
wrote: Michael S. wrote: Anyone know of a book that focuses on the solutions of Einstein's equation, rather than the derivation of those solutions? Has Stephani et al., _Exact Solutions to Einstein's Field Equations_, Second Edition (Cambridge University Press, 2003). The first edition has been out of print for a while, but if your library can get that, it should do fine. There's also an online database at http://www.maths.soton.ac.uk/staff/d...erno/database/ but this may require too much starting knowledge. Just out of curiosity, do these works also present some kindof interpretation of what these solutions physically would represent? Mostly not, though there's a little discussion in a few examples in Stephani et al. Steve Carlip |
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