Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barletta, Antonio
Format: Preprint
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/1201.4234
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866914472679964672
author Barletta, Antonio
author_facet Barletta, Antonio
contents There is a huge number of excellent and comprehensive textbooks on quantum mechanics. They mainly differ for the approach, more or less oriented to the formalism rather than to the phenomenology, as well as for the topics covered. These lectures have been based mainly on the classical textbook by Gasiorowicz (1974). I must confess that the main reason for my choice of Gasiorowicz (1974) is affective, as it was the textbook where I first learned the basic principles of quantum mechanics. Beyond my personal taste, I now recognize that Gasiorowicz (1974) is still a very good textbook on quantum mechanics, with a rigorous theoretical approach accompanied by a wide collection of applications. If the textbook by Gasiorowicz was my main basis, I have taken much also from other textbooks such as Phillips (2003), as well as from the excellent classical textbook by Dirac (1981). In order to avoid complications in the mathematics and in the notation, the topic is presented in these notes with reference to one-dimensional systems, with just a few marginal extensions to the three-dimensional formulation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_1201_4234
institution arXiv
publishDate 2012
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle An Introduction to Quantum Mechanics ... for those who dwell in the macroscopic world
Barletta, Antonio
Quantum Physics
Physics Education
There is a huge number of excellent and comprehensive textbooks on quantum mechanics. They mainly differ for the approach, more or less oriented to the formalism rather than to the phenomenology, as well as for the topics covered. These lectures have been based mainly on the classical textbook by Gasiorowicz (1974). I must confess that the main reason for my choice of Gasiorowicz (1974) is affective, as it was the textbook where I first learned the basic principles of quantum mechanics. Beyond my personal taste, I now recognize that Gasiorowicz (1974) is still a very good textbook on quantum mechanics, with a rigorous theoretical approach accompanied by a wide collection of applications. If the textbook by Gasiorowicz was my main basis, I have taken much also from other textbooks such as Phillips (2003), as well as from the excellent classical textbook by Dirac (1981). In order to avoid complications in the mathematics and in the notation, the topic is presented in these notes with reference to one-dimensional systems, with just a few marginal extensions to the three-dimensional formulation.
title An Introduction to Quantum Mechanics ... for those who dwell in the macroscopic world
topic Quantum Physics
Physics Education
url https://arxiv.org/abs/1201.4234