Combinatorial Mathematics – Vilenkin

In this post we will see Combinatorial Mathematics by N. Vilenkin.

642746913469901870870608-5496031-215_300

In the present book, the aim has been to set forth a variety of combinatorial problems in popular form and understandable language. At the same time, an attempt is made to present some rather involved combinatorial problems and to give the reader an idea of the methods of recurrence relations and generating functions.  The first chapter is devoted to the general rules of combinatorics, the rules of sum and product. In the second chapter we investigate permutations and combinations. This traditionally grade-school material is accompanied by an analysis of some amusing examples. In the third chapter, a study is made of combinatorial problems in which certain restrictions are imposed on the combinations. Chapter IV considers problems involving partitions of numbers into integers and- contains a description of certain geometrical methods in combinatorics. Chapter V is devoted to random-walk problems and to a variety of modifications of the arithmetic triangle. Chapter VI takes up recurrence relations, and Chapter VII discusses generating functions and, in particular, the binomial formula. The last section of the book is devoted to combinatorial problems of which there are over 400.  This material has been taken from a variety of sources, including Whitworth’s Choice and Chance (London, 1901), John Riordan’s An Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis (New York, 1958), an interesting book by A. M. Yaglom and I. M. Yaglom entitled Nonelementary Problems in an Elementary Exposition (Moscow, 1954), and various collections of problems given at mathematical Olympiads in the USSR.

This book was translated from the Russian by George Yankovsky. The   book was published by first Mir Publishers in 1972.

All credits to the original uploader.

Thanks for Test1  for providing this link

DJVU | 3.8 MB | Pages: 205 | OCR

You can get the book here. and here
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Nikolsky A Course of Mathematical Analysis Vol. 2

In this post we will see the second part of Course in Mathematical
Analysis by S. M. Nikolsky.

p0001

The major part of this two-volume textbook stems from the
course in mathematical analysis given by the author for many
years at the Moscow Physico-technical Institute.

The first volume consisting of eleven chapters includes an
introduction (Chapter 1)which treats offundamental notions of
mathematical analysis using an intuitive concept ofa limit. With
the aid of visual interpretation and some considerations of a
physical character it establishes the relationship between the
derivative and the integral and gives some elements of differentiation
and integration techniques necessary to those readers
who are simultaneously studying physics.

The notion of a real number is interpreted in the first volume
(Chapter 2) on the basis of its representation as an infinite decimal.
Chapters 3-11 contain the following topics: Limit of Sequence,
Limit of Function, Functions of One Variable, Functions
of Several Variables, Indefinite Integral, Definite Integral,
Some Applications of Integrals, Series.

This book was translated from the Russian by V. M. Volosov. The
book was published by first Mir Publishers in 1977 with reprints in
1981, 1985 and 1987. The copy below is from the 1987 print.

All credits to the original uploader.

Update 18 December 2021: New post with new links to both volumes here.

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Theory of Probability – Gnedenko

We will now see Theory of Probability by B. V. Gnedenko.

the theory of probability

This book aims to give an exposition of the fundamentals of the
theory of probability, a mathematical science that treats of the
regularities of random phenomena.

This book was translated from the Russian by George Yankovsky. The
book was published by first Mir Publishers in 1969, with reprints in
1973, 1976 and 1978. The book below is from the 1978 reprint.

All credits to the original uploader.

DJVU | OCR | 15.1 MB | Pages: 390 |
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Fock – Fundamentals of Quantum Mechanics

We now come to Fundamental of Quantum Mechanics by V. A. Fock.

Fock-FCVladimir Aleksandrovich Fock was one of the group of brilliant physics theoreticians whose work built the magnificent edifice of the quantum theory.

From the vast subject of the quantum theory the author has chosen material limited in two respects. First, the book considers none but the main principles and simplest applications of quantum mechanics, It concerns itself exclusively with the one-body problem. It does not deal with the many-body problem or the Pauli exclusion principle, basic to that problem. Second, the author has sought to confine himself to that part of the theory that is’ considered proved, that is, quantum mechanics proper. He has not examined quantum electrodynamics since this theory has yet to be fully elaborated.

The author’s main purpose is to introduce the reader to a new set of ideas differing greatly from the classical theory. He has endeavoured to avoid using images from the classical theory as being inapplicable to quantum physics. Rather, he has attempted to familiarize the reader with the basic concepts underlying a quantum description of the states of atomic systems.

The second edition of this book, unlike the first, devotes a separate chapter to the nonrelativistic theory of the electron spin (Pauli’s theory of the electron) and contains a chapter on the many-electron problem of quantum mechanics. In addition, some of the author’s findings have been incorporated as separate sections. Otherwise, the subject matter of the book (both the mathematical theory and its physical interpretation) remains the same, except for certain new formulations of an epistemological character (the concepts of relativity with respect to the means of observation and of potential possibility), which has necessitated changing the expression “the statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics” to “the probabilistic interpretation”. The new formulations are more precise than the previous ones.

The title of the book speaks for itself. The word “fundamentals” can be understood as “basic principles” or as “introductory facts”.

About the author:
Vladimir Aleksandrovich Fock was one of the group of brilliant physics theoreticians whose work built the magnificent edifice of the quantum theory. A contemporary of Niels Bohr, Lev landau, Werner Heisenberg, and Paul Dirac, he contributed much to practically all fields of theoretical and mathematical physics. His books The Theory of Space, Time and Gravitation, and Electromagnetic Diffraction and Propagation Problems have been translated into English (Pergamon Press). In 1936 Vladimir Fock merited the Mendeleev prize for his work in quantum theory of atoms, in 1946 the State prize for his work in the propagation of radio waves, and in 1960 the Lenin prize for his work in quantum field theory. In 1932 Vladimir Fock became a Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences and in 1939 a Full Member.

The book was translated from the Russian by Eugene Yankovsky and was published by Mir in 1978, 1982 and 1986. The present scan is from the 1986 print.

PDF | Cover | OCR | Bookmarked | 600 dpi

The Internet Archive Link

and here

Edit: Removed, old, dead links. Added a link to a fresh scan and a new cover. 19 September 2018.

Contents

Foreword 5
Preface to the Second Russian Edition 7
Preface to the First Russian Edition 8

PART I BASIC CONCEPTS OF QUANTUM MECHANICS

Chapter I. The physical and epistemological bases of quantum mechanics 13

I. The need for new methods and concepts in describing atomic phenomena 13
2. The classical description of phenomena 13
3. Range of application of the classical way of describing phenomena
Heisenberg’s and Bohr’s uncertainty relations 15
4. Relativity with respect to the means of observation as the basis for the quantum way of describing phenomena 17
5. Potential possibility in quantum mechanics 19
Chapter II. The mathematical apparatus of quantum mechanics 22
1. Quantum mechanics and the linear-operator problems 22
2. The operator concept and examples 23
3. Hermitian conjugate. Hermiticity 24
4. Operator and matrix multiplication 27
5. Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions 30
6. The Stieltjes integral and the operator corresponding to multiplication into the independent variable 32
7. Orthogonality of eigenfunctions and normalization 34
8. Expansion in eigenfunctions. Completeness property of eigenfunctions 37

Chapter III. Quantum mechanical operators 41

1. Interpretation of the eigenvalues of an operator 41
2. Poisson brackets 42
3. Position and momentum operators 45
4. Eigenfunctions and eigenvalues of the momentum operator 48
5. Quantum description of systems 51
6. Commutativity of operators 52
7. Angular momentum 54
8. The energy operator 57
9. Canonical transformation 59
10. An example of canonical transformation 63
11. Canonical. transformation as an operator 64
12. Unitary invariants 66
13. Time evolution of systems. Time dependence of operators 69
14. Heisenberg’s matrices 73
15. Semiclassical approximation 75
16. Relation between canonical transformation and the contact transformation of classical mechanics 80

Chapter IV. The probabilistic interpretation of quantum mechanics 85

1. Mathematical expectation in the probability theory 85
2. Mathematical expectation in quantum mechanics 86
3. The probability formula 88
4. Time dependence of mathematical expectation 90
5. Correspondence between the theory of linear operators and the quantum theory 92
6. The concept of statistical, ensemble in quantum mechanics 93
PART II SCHRODINGER’S THEORY

Chapter I. The Schrodinger equation. The harmonic oscillator 96

I. Equations of motion and the wave equation 96
2. Constants of the motion 98
3. The Schrodinger equation for the harmonic oscillator 99
4. The one-dimensional harmonic oscillator 100
5. Hermite polynomials 103
6. Canonical transformation a; illustrated by the harmonic-oscillator problem 106
7. Heisenberg’s uncertainty relations 110
8. The time dependence of matrices. A comparison with the classical theory 112
9. An elementary criterion for the applicability of the formulas of classical mechanics I15

Chapter II. Perturbation theory 119
1. Statement of the problem 119
2. Solution of the nonhomogeneous equation 120
3. Nondegenerate eigenvalues 123
4. Degenerate eigenvalues. Expansion in powers of the smallness parameter 125
5. The eigenfunctions in the zeroth-order approximation 126
6. The first and higher approximations 129
7. The case of adjacent eigenvalues 131
8. The anharmonic oscillator 133

Chapter III. Radiation, the theory of dispersion, and the law of decay 137

1. Classical formulas 137
2. Charge density and current density 139
3. Frequencies and intensities 143
4. Intensities in a continuous spectrum 146
5. Perturbation of an atom by a light wave 148
6. The dispersion formula 150
7. Penetration of a potential barrier by a particle 153
8. The law of decay of a quasi-stationary state 156

Chapter IV. An electron In a central field 160

1. General remarks 160
2. Conservation of angular momentum 161
3. Operators in spherical coordinates. Separation of variables 164
4. Solution of the differential equation for spherical harmonics 166
5. Some properties of spherical harmonics 170
6. Normalized spherical harmonics 173
7. The radial functions. A general survey 175
8. Description of the states of a valence electron. Quantum numbers 179
9. The selection rule 181

Chapter V. The Coulomb field 188

1. General remarks 188
2. The radial equation for the hydrogen atom. Atomic units 188
3. Solution of an auxiliary problem 190
4. Some properties of generalized Laguerre polynomials 193
5. Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the auxiliary problem 197
6. Energy levels and radial functions for the discrete hydrogen spectrum 198
7. Solution of the differential equation for the continuous spectrum in the form of a definite integral 201
8. Derivation of the asymptotic expression 204
9. Radial functions for the continuous hydrogen spectrum 207
10. Intensities in the hydrogen spectrum 211
11. The Stark effect. General remarks 215
12. The Schrodinger equation in parabolic coordinates 216
13. Splitting of energy levels in an electric field 219
14. Scattering of a.-particles. Statement of the problem 221
15. Solution of equations 223
16. The Rutherford scattering law 225
17. The virial theorem in classical and in quantum mechanics 226
18. Some remarks concerning the superposition principle and the probabilistic interpretation of the wave function 229
PART III PAULl’S THEORY OF THE ELECTRON
1. The electron angular momentum 232
2. The operators of total angular momentum in spherical coordinates 236
3. Spherical harmonics with spin 239
4. Some properties of spherical harmonics with spin 243
5. The Pauli wave equation 245
6. Operator P in spherical and cylindrical coordinates and its relation to .A 248
7. An electron in a magnetic field 254
PART IV THE MANY-ELECTRON PROBLEM OF QUANTUM MECHANICS
AND THE STRUCTURE OF ATOMS
1. Symmetry properties of the wave function 257
2. The Hamiltonian and its symmetry 262
3. The self-consistent field method 263
4. The equation for the valence electron and the operator of quantum
exchange 269
5. The self-consistent field method in the theory of atoms 271
6. The symmetry of the Hamiltonian of a hydrogen like atom 276

PART V DIRAC’S THEORY OF THE ELECTRON

Chapter I. The Dirac equation 281
1. Quantum mechanics and the theory of relativity 281
2. Classical equations of motion 281
3. Derivation of the wave equation 283
4. The Dirac matrices 284
5. The Dirac equation for a free electron 288
6. Lorentz transformations 291
7. Form of matrix S for spatial rotations of axes and for Lorentz transformations 293
8. Current density 297
9. The Dirac equation in the case of a field. Equations of motion 298
10. Angular momentum and the spin vector in Dirac’s theory 301
11. The kinetic energy of an electron 304
12. The second intrinsic degree of freedom of the electron 305
13. Second-order equations 308

Chapter II. The use of the Dirac equation In physical problems 312

1. The free electron 312
2. An electron in a homogeneous magnetic field 316
3. Constants of the motion in the problem with spherical symmetry 320
4. Generalized spherical harmonics 322
5. The radial equation 325
6. Comparison with the Schrodinger equation 327
7. General investigation of the radial equations 329
8. Quantum numbers 334
9. Heisenberg’s matrices and the selection rule 336
10. Alternative derivation of the selection rule 340
11. The hydrogen atom. Radial functions 343
12. Fine-structure levels of hydrogen 347
13. The Zeeman effect. Statement of the problem 350
14. Calculation of the perturbation matrix 352
15. Splitting of energy levels in a magnetic field 355
Chapter III. On the theory of positrons 359

1. Charge conjugation 359
2. Basic ideas of positron theory 360
3. Positrons as unfilled states 361
Index 362

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Prilepko – Problem Book In High School Mathematics

We now come to Problem Book In High School Mathematics edited by A. I. Prilepko.

PRILEPKO

The present problem book is meant for high-school students
who intend to enter technical colleges. I t contains more than
two thousand problems and examples covering all divisions
of high-school mathematics.

The main aim of the book is to help students to revise their
school knowledge of mathematics and develop a technique
in solving a variety of problems.

The book consists of nine chapters divided into sections,
each of which deals with a certain theme. The problems on
a definite theme are arranged in the order of increasing
difficulty, which makes it possible for a student to gradually
acquire the necessary techniques and experience in problem
solving. Thus, the problems are classified as far as possible.
Most of the problems were given at the entrance examinations
in various colleges to the USSR in recent years. All the
problems are supplied with answers, and some of them with
solutions or instructions. The words “Solution” and “Hint”
are replaced by the signs A and. respectively. The list of
designations makes the use of the book more convenient.
All the contributors to the book have a long experience
as lecturers at preparatory courses of colleges, as teachers
at high schools specializing in physics and mathematics and
as examiners in mathematics.

This book was translated from the Russian by I. A. Aleksanova. The
book was published by first Mir Publishers in 1985.

All credits to the original uploader.

DJVU | 4 MB | Pages: 280 | Cover

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300,000 + and Counting!

On the last day on 2012, we have crossed 300,000 mark for views.

Thanks to all those who made it possible, and special thanks to Desperadomar for making the posts in the end.

We may have some long awaited releases in the next year, till then

Have a great new year in 2013!

 

 

 

 

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Computational Mathematics – Demidovich, Maron

We now come to Computational Mathematics by B. P. Demidovich,
  I. A. Maron.

computational mathematics

The basic aim of this book is to give as far as possible a
systematic and modern presentation of the most important methods and  techniques of computational mathematics on the basis of the general  course of higher mathematics taught in higher technical schools. The  book has been arranged so that the basic portion constitutes a  manual for the first cycle of studies in approximate computations  for higher technical colleges. The text contains supplementary  material which goes beyond the scope of the ordinary college course,  but the reader can select those sections which interest him and omit  any extra material without loss of continuity. The chapters and  sections which may be dropped out in a first reading are marked with an asterisk.

For a full comprehension of the contents of this book, the reader
should have a background of linear algebra and the theory of linear
vector spaces. With the aim of making the text as self-contained as
possible, the authors have included all the necessary starting
material in these subjects. The appropriate chapter are completely
independent of the basic text and can be omitted by readers who have  already studied these sections.

A few words about the contents of the book. In the main it is
devoted to the following problems: operations involving approximate  numbers, computation of functions by means of series and iterative  processes, approximate and numerical solution of algebraic and  transcendental equations, computational methods of linear algebra,  interpolation of functions, numerical differentiation and  integration of functions, and the Monte Carlo method.

This book was translated from the Russian by George Yankovsky. The book was  published by first Mir Publishers in 1973, with reprints in 1976,
and 1981. The book below is from the 1981 reprint.

All credits to the original uploader.

DJVU | OCR | 17.1 MB | Pages: 688 |
You can get the book here

and here
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4-shared link here

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Pogorelov – Analytical Geometry

We now come to Analytical Geometry by A. V. Pogorelov.

analytical geometry

  Analytical geometry has no strictly defined contents. It is the   method but not the subject under investigation, that constitutes the   leading feature of this branch of geometry.   The essence of this method consists in that geometric objects are   associated in some standard way with equations (or systems of   equations) so that geometric relations of figures are expressed   through properties of their equations.   For instance, in case of Cartesian coordinates any straight line in   the plane is uniquely associated with a linear equation ax+by+ c =   0.   The intersection of three straight, lines at one point is     expressed by the condition of compatibility of a system of three     equations which specify these lines.

Due to a multi purpose approach to solving various problems, the     method of analytic geometry has become the leading method in     geometric investigations and is widely applied in other fields of     exact natural sciences, such as mechanics and physics.     Analytical geometry joined geometry with algebra and analysis –     the fact which has told fruitfully on further development of     these three subject of mathematics.     The principal ideas of analytical geometry are traced back to the     French mathematician, Rene Descartes (1595-1650), who in 1637     described the fundamentals of its method in his famous work     “Geometric”.

The present book, which is a course of lectures, treats the
fundamentals of the method of analytic geometry as applied to the
simplest geometric objects. It is designed for the university
students majoring in physics and mathematics,

This book was translated from the Russian by Leonid Levant and
was first published by Mir Publishers in 1980.

Thanks 0kelvin for providing this earler link. The current copy is a cleaned version from the earlier one with cover added.

DJVU | 3.1 MB | Pages: 239 | dpi |
You can get the book  here.

and here

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Travel To Distant Worlds – Gilzin

We now come to Travel to Distant Worlds by Karl Gilzin. This is a   very optimistic book about future, written at just the beginning of   space age.

travel to distant worlds

The youth throughout the world have been manifesting a great   interest in the problem of space travel. This interest has long   since ceased to be a question of idle curiosity: “Is space travel   possible?” Every pupil now knows the answer to this question. The   interest of our young people in the problem of space travel has   assumed quite concrete form. They want to know what interplanetary   flights are possible today, at the present level of scientific and   technical develop- ment, they want to know what achievements have   been attained in the de- velopment of remarkable reaction engines,   which will be the vital part of any interplanetary vessel. These   young people question the astronomers about the routes of future   cosmic flights. They question the doctors about the specific effects   of space travel on the human organism. They are interest- ed in the   possibility of a collision between a space ship and meteors, in the   possibility of using artificial satellites of the Earth and in many   other things.

In a few words, our youth are keenly interested in   all the problems covered by the science of space travel. This   science has already developed to such an extent, especially during   the past decade, that it is impossible even to attempt any detailed   account of its achievements in any one book.  If this publication   succeeds in replying to some of the questions put by our young   readers, if it arouses their greater interest and curiosity, its aim   will have been achieved.

This book was translated from the Russian by Pauline Rose and   illustrated by N. Kolchitsky and designed by G. Dauman. The book was   published by Foreign Languages Publishing House in 1957.

All credits to the Osmania University for releasing this book in
public domain and thanks to the Internet Archive for storing this book.

You can get the book here

A completely new and clean scan here.

PDF | OCR | 12.9 MB | Pages: 272 |

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Higher Algebra – Kurosh

In this post we see Higher Algebra by A. Kurosh.

kurosh_higher_algebra

The education of the mathematics major begins with the
study of three basic disciplines: mathematical analysis, analytic
geometry and higher algebra. These disciplines have a number of
points of contact, some of which overlap; together they constitute
the foundation upon which rests the whole edifice of modern
mathematical science.

Higher algebra – the subject of this text – is a far-reaching and
natural generalization of the basic school course of elementary
algebra. Central to elementary algebra is without doubt the problem
of solving equations. The study of equations begins with the very
simple case of one equation of the first degree in one unknown. From
there on, the development proceeds in two directions: to systems of
two and three equations of the first degree in two and, respectively,
three unknowns, and to a single quadratic equation in one unknown and
also to a few special types of higher-degree equations which readily
reduce to quadratic equations (quartic equations, for example). Both
trends are further developed in the course of higher algebra, thus
determining its two large areas of study. One – the foundations of
linear algebra – starts with the study of arbitrary systems of
equations of the first degree (linear equations). When the number of
equations equals the number of unknowns, solutions of such systems
are obtained by means of the theory of determinants.

The second half of the course of higher algebra, called the algebra
of polynomials, is devoted to the study of a single equation in one
unknown but of arbitrary degree. Since there is a formula for solving
quadratic equations, it was natural to seek similar formulas for
higher-degree equations. That is precisely how this division of
algebra developed historically. Formulas for solving equations of
third and fourth degree were found in the sixteenth century. The
search was then on for formulas capable of expressing the roots of
equations of fifth and higher degree in terms -of the coefficients of
the equations by means of radicals, even radicals within radicals. It
was futile, though it continued up to the beginning of the nineteenth
century, when it was proved that no such formulas exist and that for
all degrees beyond the fourth there even exist specific examples of
equations with integral coefficients whose roots cannot be written
down by means of radicals.

This book was translated from the Russian by George Yankovsky. The  book was published by first Mir Publishers in 1972, with reprints in  1975, 1980 and 1984. The book below is from the 1984 reprint.

All credits to the original uploader.

You can get the book here.

and here

Update 3 June 2021: added The Internet Archive Link

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