Bazsites.com Classical Mechanics
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On the Web
- Classical Mechanics on Wikipedia - Free online encyclopedia with description of the theory and history of classical mechanics.
- Classical Mechanics - The class notes from a graduate course by H.C. Rosu in classical mechanics. Free for download in Postscript and PDF formats.
- An introduction to physics - Mechanics - An introduction to classical mechanics. Suitable for students who are beginning the subject.
- Classical Dynamics - A Cambridge University course with lecture notes, focussing on the Lagrangian and Hamiltonian approaches to classical mechanics.
- Analytical Mechanics I - A course on classical mechanics with online lecture notes.
- Classical Mechanics on About.com - Articles with practical advice and solutions for lots of topical problems.
- Chaotic Systems - A brief overview of chaos theory and applications in classical mechanics.
- Physical Problems - Student resource containing problems from Goldstein's Classical Mechanics and solutions for them.
- Freshman Problems in Mechanics - Links to various problem sets relating to 1 and 2 dimensional kinematics. Easy mechanics problems and solutions.
- Mechanics and Special Relativity - Introduction to Lagrangian mechanics, Noether's theorem, special relativity, collisions and scattering, rotational motion, angular momentum, torque, the moment of inertia tensor, oscillators damped and driven, gravitation, planetary motion, and introduction to cosmology
Wikipedia Articles
- Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics - Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics (SICM) is a classical mechanics textbook written by Gerald Jay Sussman and Jack Wisdom with Meinhard E. Mayer.
- Hamiltonian mechanics - Hamiltonian mechanics is a re-formulation of classical mechanics that was invented in 1833 by Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton. It arose from Lagrangian mechanics, another re-formulation of classical mechanics, introduced by Joseph Louis Lagrange in 1788.
- Classical mechanics - Classical mechanics (commonly confused with Newtonian mechanics, which is a subfield thereof) is used for describing the motion of macroscopic objects, from projectiles to parts of machinery, as well as astronomical objects, such as spacecraft, planets, stars, and galaxies. It produces very accurate results within these domains, and is ...
- Timeline of classical mechanics - Timeline of classical mechanics
- List of equations in classical mechanics - This page gives a summary of important equations in classical mechanics.