Many Worlds in One: The Search for Other Universes
Author(s) -
Andrei Linde
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
physics today
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.594
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1945-0699
pISSN - 0031-9228
DOI - 10.1063/1.2743129
Subject(s) - possible world , parallel universe , amazon rainforest , theoretical physics , physics , philosophy , epistemology , quantum mechanics , biology , ecology
www.physicstoday.org on many of the topics in the text; his experience is reflected in the interesting and cohesive perspectives related to the different subjects discussed and in the adaptation of calculations from his own work to new, substantial, and intriguing problems. Each chapter has two short introductions: one to outline its contents and the other to discuss the exercises at the end of the chapter. The introductions are most useful for providing context, and they help the flow of the presentation. The one choice made by the author with which I disagree is that he did not provide literature recommendations when he did not cover a topic in depth. A highlight of the book is the broad array of thoughtful exercises; an answer key to most of them is available to instructors on request. That sensible policy is a tremendous boon to timecrunched instructors who want to make up problem sets that take an appropriate amount of time for students to complete. Sethna asks that instructors do not post the answers to the exercises on the Web or distribute them electronically. The exercises include a substantial number of computational problems; software for several of them can be downloaded from the author’s website. Some of the software is prewritten so that students can easily download and run simulations. When I was writing this review, some of the canned exercises did not work on Macintosh OS X. I hope the problem is remedied by the time this review is published. Some of the exercises in the book guide students to write their own simulations. They are encouraged to program in Python, a computer language that runs on all standard platforms and is relatively easy to learn. Some of the exercises would take a long time to grade, so it is best to assign them in a course only when the class is small or considerable grading assistance is available. Sethna’s book provides an important service to students who want to learn modern statistical mechanics. The text teaches students how to work out problems by guiding them through the exercises rather than by presenting them with worked-out examples. Overall, Statistical Mechanics is probably more appropriate as a textbook than a selfstudy guide. Instructors can point out to students which material is core and central to understanding following chapters, and which is cultural and not required to comprehend later topics. Susan Coppersmith University of Wisconsin–Madison Many Worlds in One
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