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Symmetry: A Very Short Introduction

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Very short introductions, 353Publication details: Oxford Oxford University Press 2013Description: xii, 144 pages : illustrations ; 18 cmISBN:
  • 9780199651986
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 516.1 STE-S
Contents:
What is symmetry? -- Origins of symmetry -- Types of symmetry -- Structure of groups -- Groups and games -- Nature's patterns -- Nature's laws -- Atoms of symmetry.
Summary: In the 1800s mathematicians introduced a formal theory of symmetry: group theory. Now a branch of abstract algebra, this subject first arose in the theory of equations. Symmetry is an immensely important concept in mathematics and throughout the sciences, and its applications range across the entire subject. Symmetry governs the structure of crystals, innumerable types of pattern formation, how systems change their state as parameters vary; and fundamental physics is governed by symmetries in the laws of nature.It is highly visual, with applications that include animal markings, locomotion, evolutionary biology, elastic buckling, waves, the shape of the Earth, and the form of galaxies. In this Very Short Introduction, Ian Stewart demonstrates its deep implications, and shows how it plays a major role in the current search to unify relativity and quantum theory.
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Book Book Dept. of Computational Biology and Bioinformatics Processing Center Dept. of Computational Biology and Bioinformatics 516.1 STE-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available DCB2332

What is symmetry? -- Origins of symmetry -- Types of symmetry -- Structure of groups -- Groups and games -- Nature's patterns -- Nature's laws -- Atoms of symmetry.

In the 1800s mathematicians introduced a formal theory of symmetry: group theory. Now a branch of abstract algebra, this subject first arose in the theory of equations. Symmetry is an immensely important concept in mathematics and throughout the sciences, and its applications range across the entire subject. Symmetry governs the structure of crystals, innumerable types of pattern formation, how systems change their state as parameters vary; and fundamental physics is governed by symmetries in the laws of nature.It is highly visual, with applications that include animal markings, locomotion, evolutionary biology, elastic buckling, waves, the shape of the Earth, and the form of galaxies. In this Very Short Introduction, Ian Stewart demonstrates its deep implications, and shows how it plays a major role in the current search to unify relativity and quantum theory.

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