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Gravitation

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This landmark text offers a rigorous full-year graduate level course on gravitation physics, teaching students
• Grasp the laws of physics in flat spacetime
• Predict orders of magnitude
• Calculate using the principal tools of modern geometry
• Predict all levels of precision
• Understand Einstein's geometric framework for physics
• Explore applications, including pulsars and neutron stars, cosmology, the Schwarzschild geometry and gravitational collapse, and gravitational waves
• Probe experimental tests of Einstein's theory
• Tackle advanced topics such as superspace and quantum geometrodynamics

The book offers a unique, alternating two-track pathway through the
• In many chapters, material focusing on basic physical ideas is designated as
Track 1 . These sections together make an appropriate one-term advanced/graduate level course (mathematical vector analysis and simple partial-differential equations). The book is printed to make it easy for readers to identify these sections.
• The remaining Track 2 material provides a wealth of advanced topics instructors can draw from to flesh out a two-term course, with Track 1 sections serving as prerequisites.

1279 pages, Paperback

First published September 15, 1973

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About the author

Charles W. Misner

3 books8 followers

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5 stars
834 (58%)
4 stars
360 (25%)
3 stars
168 (11%)
2 stars
40 (2%)
1 star
20 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews
Profile Image for Manny.
Author 34 books14.9k followers
September 23, 2014
Look. I don't want to whine or anything, but how come the evolutionary biologists get all the attention when the religious right express opinions on science? Why isn't there a massive campaign to make sure that books like this one get sold with a prominent sticker on the front saying "Gravitation's Just A Theory"? It is, you know. Most schoolchildren don't as much as get told that Intelligent Falling exists, let alone giving it equal air time. And, unless I'm greatly mistaken, there's hardly anyone even trying to address the problem.

The rest of this review is available elsewhere (the location cannot be given for Goodreads policy reasons)

Profile Image for G.R. Reader.
Author 1 book187 followers
November 11, 2013
I read this when I was twelve and made my own models of tensors out of egg boxes. My mother says she still has them up in the loft.
Profile Image for Casey.
4 reviews6 followers
May 27, 2009
This shit is a long-ass beautiful poem.
1 review1 follower
April 18, 2008
This is high up on my list of favorite general relativity books, very possibly number one. The book is thick enough to make its own substantial dent in spacetime, but you'd look in vain for a wasted page. It offers two interwoven tracks: One holds your hand through a carefully detailed development of GR and related mathematics, covering all the points necessary for an understanding the later advanced, topical chapters. The other skims the waves, covering only what you need for a quick course in GR. Either track is both readable and thorough, sprinkled liberally with optional sections that offer more mathematical detail, and occasional sidebars on history, people, and other points of interest. For anyone who wants to learn GR, it is impossible to recommend this book to highly.
Profile Image for Nick Black.
Author 2 books820 followers
June 25, 2020
finally ordered a copy. i figure if i'm stuck in texas for another 9 months, i might as well learn why i hit the ground when i pass out.
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This is supposedly The Book regarding that tricky fourth force and the framework of General Relativity, and thus I need to man-up and read it at some point. Beyond it lies...?
1 review
March 14, 2012
This is my favorite book from years now. I've pondered pregeometry as a basic idea ever since with or without metric as topological source of partition categories and fabric of possibilities to exist. We should build QM and GR on pregeometry of multiverse.

It's all about measuring on manifoulds and curvature forms, purely mathematical and strongly physical. The book is highly intuitive, easy to learn and worth of reading even several times.

If the book will be rewritten to morrow, it should be equipped with fourth layer of reading with modern computer animations. Then it would be a General relativity cookbook from teens to 80-teens.

Profile Image for David.
25 reviews20 followers
December 28, 2019
I'm a little bit uncomfortable saying that I have read this book when you could be your entire life reading it... (I haven't read all the chapters and boxes with the same intensity). It's a masterpiece, that's for sure. You can learn a lot from it. The explanations of the math are very "physics oriented", which it is good, at least from my point of view. Curiously, it has a dated part: the area theorems of black holes; it does not have the more recent Hawking's results that combine GR with QM. Overall, it's really recomendable if you are serious about learning GR.
Profile Image for Brian Powell.
175 reviews32 followers
March 16, 2021
This book is maddening. It's got fantastic visual pedagogy that helps illustrate formal geometric concepts like covariant derivatives, affine connections, and curvature. The tone is often refreshingly casual and the authors take their time. The trouble is you can’t fit the fucker in the trunk of your car let alone a backpack. You seriously cannot lift this fucking thing.
4 reviews
March 12, 2008
I learned a lot - it's sort of like General Relativity for Dummies in the sense that it actually gives examples... most texts don't. I also learned why they call this tome "The Phonebook"; it's big.
Profile Image for Bradley Brock.
7 reviews1 follower
Want to read
August 2, 2011
From http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/sci...

"In 1973, Dr. Wheeler and two former students, Dr. Misner and Kip Thorne, of the California Institute of Technology, published “Gravitation,” a 1,279-page book whose witty style and accessibility — it is chockablock with sidebars and personality sketches of physicists — belies its heft and weighty subject. It has never been out of print."
Profile Image for Ronald Lett.
219 reviews52 followers
May 13, 2011
The jewel of texts on classical relativity. It is massive, it is a common joke among physics students that it "illustrates its topic by its weight." It is also the authoritative text on the classical topic; most modern texts take examples and expositions directly from it. Every student of relativity loves this text for its clarity and completeness.
Profile Image for Jonathan Hockey.
Author 2 books19 followers
January 29, 2023
A daunting looking book, but once you break it down into appropriate sections it makes for a very understandable presentation of general relativity, and motivates it well. The question lingers as to how much this theoretical scaffolding is really open to empirical testing, given that general relativity basically defines geodesic motion in such a way as to make departures from it hard to even countenance. Yet, as a practical tool for measurements and as a theoretical system, it is actually motivated all by quite a simple principle that can be enunciated in just a sentence or two, namely that: We presume local Lorentzian flatness to space and time and measure geodesic deviation relative to this to establish a more accurate geodesic globally throughout the manifold based on the distorting effects of gravitation.

The book has plenty of mathematics in it, but it also has plenty of informative diagrams and boxes which often repeat over the information. Also, for every section basically, the motivation for the relevant equations and the outcome of them is also explained in plain words. There is a great account of the historical development hidden amongst it also, with some relevant quotes from pivotal figures along the way, such as Newton, Einstein, Penrose, Hawking and Dicke. I found this to be a slightly easier to follow, logical development than I found in Penrose, Road to Reality, although I now have extra appreciation for that also, and will probably revisit that book. The basic operational significance and use of general relativity is more in plain sight, rather than hidden behind some slight mystifications around entities such as complex numbers.
4 reviews
November 27, 2023
The grade given is mainly based on my experience as a bachelor and Phd student.

I really don't understand why someone should choose this book as a reference when there are a lot of better alternatives on the market.

Do you want a good, simple and very clear introduction to the subject? Choose Carroll.

Do you want a formal, precise and exaustive book with well written and understandable (for a physicist) mathematical review of GR? Choose Wald.

Do you want a hard yet enlighting overview? Choose Weinberg.

Do you want all three? Buy them all, you will still spend less than buying Gravitation.

The review is based on my vision of the book. I deeply respect the authors and I know very well that I will never be a physicist like them even if I lived a thousand years. Despite this, I wouldn't recommend it to anyone.
Profile Image for Joseph Carrabis.
Author 40 books107 followers
July 30, 2017
I originally read Gravitation shortly after it came out. It was a good read and primer then although I think it might be a bit dated now (more recent research/discoveries). However, as a read for someone considering the field and not afraid of a little work, a good read.
December 17, 2022
Great Book, a must read for anyone interested in anything relativity! Got it signed by Thorne himself at a Caltech Pizza Course!
1 review6 followers
July 21, 2008
The authority on relativity and projective geometry. Provides all the proofs you ever needed in an easy to follow format.
Profile Image for Ian Durham.
266 reviews6 followers
Read
August 3, 2011
Not a great teaching book, but a classic that should be on everyone's bookshelf as a reference.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews

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