Concepts in Thermal Physics

by Stephen Blundell and Katherine Blundell

4.5/5.0 (2)

An understanding of thermal physics is crucial to much of modern physics, chemistry and engineering. This book provides a modern introduction to the main principles that are foundational to thermal physics, thermodynamics and statistical mechanics. The key concepts are carefully presented in a clear way, and new ideas are illustrated with copious worked examples as well as a description of the historical background to their discovery. Applications are presented to subjects as diverse as stellar astrophysics, information and communication theory, condensed matter physics and climate change. Each chapter concludes with detailed exercises. The second edition of this popular textbook maintains the structure and lively style of the first edition but extends its coverage of thermodynamics and statistical mechanics to include several new topics, including osmosis, diffusion problems, Bayes theorem, radiative transfer, the Ising model and Monte Carlo methods. New examples and exercises have been added throughout.

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Reviews



rushilshah2

4/5

The book is a great resource especially for undergraduate thermodynamics. It explains every aspect of thermodynamics in mathematical detail. However, it is a bit too advanced for olympiad thermodynamics, but definitely worth a read if you want to have a concrete understanding of thermodynamics and statistical physics.

BucketofJava

5/5

Greatest book of all time anyone who says differently is dead to me.