Theory of gravitational interactions (Q1931706)

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Theory of gravitational interactions
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    Theory of gravitational interactions (English)
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    16 January 2013
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    This book is essentially a translation from the Italian original by the author [Lezioni di relativita generale e teoria della gravitazione. Milano: Springer (2010; Zbl 1189.83001)]. Unfortunately, this fact is not mentioned in the present edition. New in the present book (besides three new references in the reference list) is Appendix B about higher-dimensional gravity, containing two sections: one about Kaluza-Klein gravity, the other about brane-world gravity. Publisher's description: ``This reference textbook is an up-to-date and self-contained introduction to the theory of gravitational interactions. The first part of the book follows the traditional presentation of general relativity as a geometric theory of the macroscopic gravitational field. A second, advanced part then discusses the deep analogies (and differences) between a geometric theory of gravity and the gauge theories of the other fundamental interactions. This fills a gap which is present in the context of the traditional approach to general relativity, and which usually makes students puzzled about the role of gravity. The necessary notions of differential geometry are reduced to the minimum, leaving more room for those aspects of gravitational physics of current phenomenological and theoretical interest, such as the properties of gravitational waves, the gravitational interactions of spinors, and the supersymmetric and higher-dimensional generalization of the Einstein equations. Theory of Gravitational Interactions will be of particular value to undergraduate students pursuing a theoretical or astroparticle curriculum. It can also be used by those teaching related subjects, by PhD students and young researchers working in different scientific sectors but wishing to enlarge their spectrum of interests, and, in general, by all scholars interested in the modern aspects and problems of gravitational interaction.''
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    Kaluza-Klein gravity
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    brane-world gravity
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    tensor calculus
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    Riemannian geometry
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    Maxwell equations
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    Curvature
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    geodetic deviation
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    Einstein field equation
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    linearized Einstein equation
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    gravitational waves
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    spinor fields
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    supergravity
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