If you're only getting one QM book, Griffiths is the one, but if you can, check out a few others from your library for when you get stuck between steps. Pieces of humor are thrown into the mix, and there are plenty of excercises to keep you busy. You'll do at least a page or two of your own work for each page of his, but in doing so, you'll get an excellent grasp on the subject. As you go through the text, you'll need to use that paper and pen to work out how he got from one equation to the next, or from one statement to the next the jumps aren't always intuitive, but with some of your own work, you'll get it. The reason the text is relatively thin is because intermediate steps have been left out in equations and reasoning. page 13, Problem 1.18(b), line 2, rst inequality: h. I especially thank Kenny Scott and Alain Thys for catching many of these errors. by David Griths Cumulative errata for the print versioncorrected in the current electronic version. This text can easily provide a full year of quantum for undergraduates, but you'll need to buy a couple of notebooks and some pens with it. Introduction to Quantum Mechanics, 2nd ed. Changes and additions to the new edition of this classic textbook include a new chapter on symmetries, new problems and examples, improved explanations, more numerical problems to be worked on a computer, new applications to solid state physics. Griffiths gives you all you need to understand introductory quantum mechanics. Introduction to Quantum Mechanics by David J.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |