Selected Product: | Introduction to Cosmology Hardcover Author: Barbara Ryden Publisher: Benjamin Cummings Release Date: 2002-10-18 ISBN-10: 0805389121 ISBN-13: 9780805389128 List Price: $72.80 Average Customer Rating: | | Cosmology ISBN-10: 0198526822 ISBN-13: 9780198526827 List Price:$90.00 The First Three Minutes: A Modern View Of The Origin Of The Universe ISBN-10: 0465024378 ISBN-13: 9780465024377 List Price:$16.95 Introduction to Modern Astrophysics, An (2nd Edition) ISBN-10: 0805304029 ISBN-13: 9780805304022 List Price:$160.40 An Introduction to Modern Cosmology ISBN-10: 0470848359 ISBN-13: 9780470848357 List Price:$40.00 Modern Cosmology ISBN-10: 0122191412 ISBN-13: 9780122191411 List Price:$82.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Introduction to Cosmology by Barbara Ryden (ISBN-10: 0805389121, ISBN-13: 9780805389128). At this time we have not yet written a review for Introduction to Cosmology by Barbara Ryden (ISBN-10: 0805389121, ISBN-13: 9780805389128). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Introduction to Cosmology provides a rare combination of a solid foundation of the core physical concepts of cosmology and the most recent astronomical observations. The book is designed for advanced undergraduates or beginning graduate students and assumes no prior knowledge of general relativity. An emphasis is placed on developing the readers' physical insight rather than losing them with complex math. An approachable writing style and wealth of fresh and imaginative analogies from "everyday" physics are used to make the concepts of cosmology more accessible. The book is unique in that it not only includes recent major developments in cosmology, like the cosmological constant and accelerating universe, but also anticipates key developments expected in the next few years, such as detailed results on the cosmic microwave background. For anyone interested in cosmology or astronomy. Worthless | Customer Rating: | | This book describes almost nothing whatsoever, and throws a few poorly-explained equations at you. I could have gleaned most of what I learned from this book from a two- or three-page summary of cosmology - that is, enough to spark interest and raise questions, and very little else. The author did attempt to delve into the heart of cosmology, but topics are dealt with so coarsely that it would be difficult for an uninitiated student to get a full understanding of the the details. No matter how low of a price you may find this book for, don't be tempted; you could undoubtedly find better explanations on the Internet. | Hard Cover not perfect | Customer Rating: | | The book arrived to me in Italy 20-15 days before the standard international shipping's time. I expected a glossy (i think this is the word) hard cover, but it was ruined, like if it was scraped hundreds of times. The book is otherwise perfect. | Excellent Choice for beginners | Customer Rating: | | I highly recommend this book for people wanting to study cosmology and understand its vocabulary at an introductory level. You won't get the indepth treatment you would get from a book like Cosmology by peebles... you'll understand cosmology at the surface level, and very broadly as well. I'd say the ideal audiencce for this book are undergraduate sophmores and juniors. | Ease your way into cosmology | Customer Rating: | As an undergraduate studying particle physics, I have found Ryden to be an excellent first-book in cosmology for self-study. The text requires no previous knowledge of general relativity (though this certainly helps, perhaps at the level of Carroll's text) or astrophysics, which is refreshing for those who would rather not wade through the astrophysics part of an astrophysics-cosmology course.
Ryden's explanations are clear and carefully thought out, and she really makes an effort to hold one's hand through many topics. The book is straightforward and well-organized enough for more advanced students to skim quickly through chapters they are familiar with while also being able to slow down at certain points for a careful derivation here and there.
Overall, the topics are somewhat rudimentary (this text is definitely geared towards undergraduates)--i.e. don't expect to be calculating dark matter relic densities or studying cosmic strings--but combined with her suggested references for further reading and the text's ground-up style, this is a fantastic book at this level that provides a solid foundation for students who wish to move on to more advanced texts such as Kolb and Turner or Dodelson.
Addison Wesley should also be commended for their excellent typesetting (continuing a string of very well typeset books including Carroll's Spacetime Geometry and Goldstein's Classical Mechanics, 3rd. ed). Formulae are clear and easy to read, sections are well divided, and there is a wonderfully large margin for readers to write notes in.
The only lament I can agree with on this book is that it does not contain WMAP data, which would be a delight for a modern cosmology book. | Very well written | Customer Rating: | It seems lately people have been writing very good textbooks, for example "Gravity: from the ground up", "String theory: First Course" and "Spacetime and Geometry" etc, and this is among the best. As has been mentioned, there are no tensors in this book. General relativity is introduced with equivalence principle and the metric and by investigating different kind of curvatures and corresponding metrics. Clarity is outstanding in almost every chapter.
After introducing the Friedmann, fluid and acceleration equations etc, the chapters include single-component universes, multiple-component universes, measuring cosmological parameters. dark matter, cosmic microwave background, nucleosynthesis and the early universe, inflation and the very early universe + formation of structure. I think one of the positives of this book is that the chapters are quite short and the whole book itself is quite short at 250 pages. I think this is a good thing because its much easier to stay focused/motivated when you know it wont take 10 years to reach the end. And as has been mentioned, the writing style is very understandable and not too terse. I think this book is a perfect example on how to write physics tetxbooks. |
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