

Full description not available
A**Y
A big red book
Well, what can I say? I bought the book for my son who is a 2nd year Masters degree student studying Physics at Manchester University, and while this book is way beyond me,he reckons it is just what he needs and can't do without it.It is cheaper at Amazon that the specialist bookshops too! so he's really happy with it.(Update 23 Oct 2014) Well, as the person using this book got a 1st and has gone on to start his Doctorate in Nuclear Physics, so the content has served him well.
P**I
Great Quality Purchase
The book itself is very good, first chapter builds the mathematical preliminaries, the next two chapters motivated quantum mechanics (from a historical context), this is where I am at. As for the book itself it arrived within a week of ordering in VERY good condition, like new really. I am very happy with this purchase.
L**M
A definite recommend
One of the best textbooks I have ever read. While I have yet to complete the book, the explanations are very detailed and the contents go way beyond what my uni teaches (at least for a 3rd year physics undergrad).The mathematics is rather rigorous and the author's writing style is easy to understand. Love it.
R**R
Kindle version is not searchable.
Functions only to turn pages, goto page numbers, return to reading page or beginning. Scrolling/page-turning difficult to control. Seems to sync devices and +/- size ok.Chat rep tried to be helpful and will refer to techs. Refunded and resold to no avail. Looked like just a load of page scans. Not hopeful so just refunded and spent money on a pdf from Springer. Shame to treat a good reference book like this.
W**E
A must have for any learner of quantum mechanics
Extremely well written. You will need to be grounded in classical mechanics and have a reasonable grounding in undergrad mathematics to benefit from the book, it is aimed at "all" levels but clearly requires you to come prepared. All the necessary mathematics is covered in this book, as well as revision of key concepts from classical mechanics (Hamiltonian etc.).
Y**E
an excellent introduction to a fascinating subject
As someone with a post graduate in Mathematics I wanted a technical book to teach the basics of QM. This book is just that; an excellent introduction to a fascinating subject.
C**M
But I loved Shankars Vol I
Not yet arrived. But I loved Shankars Vol I,II on the fundamentals. So I give this 5* on the complete confidence Shankar won't let me down.
D**K
Unreadable on Kindle
This is completly unreadable on my Kindle. The text looks like a very bad photocopy. I have asked for a refund.
K**Y
Versão para Kindle não funciona
O texto não fica legível em nenhuma configuração do Kindle, tem que dar Oom e fica pessima a experiência de leitura.
C**R
Excellent Printing and Binding
1. One of the best books to learn QM.2. Excellent printing and binding quality. (Printed in the Netherlands)3. Authentic hard-cover binding with pages stitched together.4. This edition is printed in normal paper unlike the older editions which were printed in glossy paper.5. The only issue that still remains from the previous prints is the font-size. Some times, the equations are printed with very small fonts.
R**O
Great book
This book advanced my understanding of QM, but drained my bank. Too bad textbooks are so expensive, may just have to skip meals for the next few months, to make up for the expense. Worth it, though.
M**A
One of the best QM books!
If you are beggining to study QM, it may be a little hard getting used with concepts and ideas. This book has helped me to clarify my conceptual doubts on the subject, thanks to the well-defined structure of the information (mathematical review and classical mechanics first, in contrast with many other text that mix those ideas with the common problems in QM). The delivering took place 3 days before the expectation date, which was fantastic!
J**Y
Fantastic book if you're not sure what maths you need.
This book is pretty much as described. The thing which attracted me to it is that its introductory chapter is 73 pages of the mathematics you'll need. For years I have been looking for something like this, not wanting to teach myself all pure and applied mathematics up to graduate level just to make sure I had what was needed for quantum mechanics (and special relativity, but that, as the saying goes, is a different story). So I put off teaching myself the quantum mechanics I had been wanting to learn since high school but didn't because I didn't continue my maths/science degree. Now I'm confident I have what I need. The specialist maths (math to Americans) is not much beyond first year linear algebra with complex vector spaces. It would have been nice to know just how little maths you really need decades ago, but I'm happy now.My only complaint is the small number of worked out solutions to the problems in the appendix. It is quite an old book, for those to whom such trivialities are deal breakers, but then you don't have to be at the cutting edge to treat the basics, do you?Highly recommended to anyone who, like me, wants to learn only so much maths as is absolutely necessary, and not one bit more. Life is too short to learn everything, but understanding quantum mechanics, or understanding you don't understand more clearly than a popular science book can communicate, is surely worth the effort.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago