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Gravitation and Modern Cosmology The Cosmological Constants Problem
Titre:
Gravitation and Modern Cosmology The Cosmological Constants Problem
ISBN (Numéro international normalisé des livres):
9781489906205
Edition:
1st ed. 1991.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1991.
Description physique:
XIV, 228 p. online resource.
Collections:
Ettore Majorana International Science Series, Physical Sciences ; 56
Table des matières:
My Life -- Effective Action Model for the Cosmological Constant Revisited -- Could Final States of Stellar Evolution Proceed Towards Naked Singularities? -- Torsion, Quantum Effects and the Problem of Cosmological Constant -- Variations of Constants and Exact Solutions in Multidimensional Gravity -- Larger Scale Structure in The Lyman-Alpha Absorption Lines -- Null Surface Canonical Formalism -- Qualitative Cosmology -- Third Quantization of Gravity and the Cosmological Constant Problem -- Cosmological Constant, Quantum Cosmology and Anthropic Principle -- On the Gravitational Field of an Arbitrary Axisymmetric Mass with a Magnetic Dipole Moment -- Twistors as Spin 3/2 Charges -- Experimental Search of Gravitational Waves -- A Simple Model Of the Universe without Singularities -- String Theory and the Quantization of Gravity -- Projective Unified Field Theory in Context with the Cosmological Term and the Variability of the Gravitational Constant -- The Introduction of the Cosmological Constant -- Pre-Post-History of Tolman's Cosmos -- Some Ideas on the Cosmological Constant Problem -- Velocity of Propagation of Gravitational Radiation, Mass of the Graviton, Range of the Gravitational Force, and the Cosmological Constant -- Contributors.
Extrait:
Peter Gabriel Bergmann started his work on general relativity in 1936 when he moved from Prague to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Bergmann collaborated with Einstein in an attempt to provide a geometrical unified field theory of gravitation and electromagnetism. Within this program they wrote two articles together: A. Einstein and P. G. Bergmann, Ann. Math. 39, 685 (1938) ; and A. Einstein, V. Bargmann and P. G. Bergmann, Th. von Karman Anniversary Volume 212 (1941). The search for such a theory was intense in the ten years following the birth of general relativity. In recent years, some of the geometrical ideas proposed in these publications have proved essential in contemporary attempts towards the unification of all interactions including gravity, Kaluza-Klein type theories and supergravity theories. In 1942, Bergmann published the book "Introduction to the Theory of Relativity" which included a foreword by Albert Einstein. This book is a reference for the subject, either as a textbook for classroom use or for individual study. A second corrected and enlarged edition of the book was published in 1976. Einstein said in his foreword to the first edition: "Bergmann's book seems to me to satisfy a definite need. . . Much effort has gone into making this book logically and pedagogically satisfactory and Bergmann has spent many hours with me which were devoted to this end.
Auteur collectif ajouté:
Langue:
Anglais