PHYS 3101
Spring semester 2019
  • Syllabus
  • Calendar
    • HW01
    • HW02
    • HW03
    • HW04
    • HW05
    • HW06
    • HW07
    • HW08
    • HW09
    • Homework guidelines
    • Homework grades
  • Downloads
    • Midterm 1
    • Midterm 2
    • Final exam
    • Exam grades

Classical mechanics online

Lecture notes

  • David Tong, Lectures on Classical Dynamics, University of Cambridge, 2015

  • James Nearing, Classical Mechanics, University of Miami, 2013

  • Richard Fitzpatrick, Newtonian Dynamics, University of Texas at Austin, 2011

  • Iain Stewart, MIT Classical mechanics III, MIT 8.09, 2014


      Lecture notes 2016

  • Peter Dourmashkin, MIT Classical mechanics I, MIT 8.01, 2016


      Lecture notes 2017

  • Michael Fowler, Graduate Classical Mechanics, University of Virginia, 2015

    "In the present lectures, we provide fuller explanations [of the subject covered in Landau and Lifshitz Mechanics] to make the material (we hope) easier to follow on a first reading"

  • Martin Cederwall, Per Salomonson, An introduction to analytical mechanics, Chalmers University of Technology, 2010

  • Sunil Golwala, Lecture Notes on Classical Mechanics, Caltech, 2007

  • H. Georgi, Mechanics and Special Relativity, Harvard University

    "Newtonian mechanics and special relativity for students with good preparation in physics and mathematics ... Topics include oscillators damped and driven and resonance ... an introduction to Lagrangian mechanics and optimization, symmetries and Noether's theorem, special relativity, collisions and scattering, rotational motion, angular momentum, torque, the moment of inertia tensor, gravitation, planetary motion and a little glimpse of quantum mechanics"

  • K. Likharev, Essential Graduate Physics, Stony Brook University, 2013-2020

Books

  • L. D. Landau, E. M. Lifshitz, Mechanics, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1976

  • E. T. Whittaker, A treatise on the analytical dynamics of particles and rigid bodies, Cambridge University Press, 1917

  • Cornelius Lanczos, Variational principles of mechanics, University of Toronto Press, 1949

  • Douglas Cline, Variational Principles in Classical Mechanics, University of Rochester, 2018

  • John Taylor, Classical Mechanics, University Science Books, 2005

Lorem Ipsum

Etiam porta sem malesuada magna mollis euismod rendered as bold text. Cras mattis consectetur purus sit amet fermentum le syndrome du clandestin. A clear, authoritative judicial holding on the meaning of a particular

\[ \begin{align} \frac{d}{d t} \frac{\partial {\mathcal L}}{\partial \dot{q}} & = \frac{\partial {\mathcal L}}{\partial q} \\ H & = \frac{\partial {\mathcal L}}{\partial \dot{q}}\dot{q}-{\mathcal L}\\ -\frac{\partial S}{\partial t} & = H\left(q, \frac{\partial S}{\partial q}, t\right) \end{align} \]

provision should not be cast in doubt and subjected to challenge whenever a related though not utterly inconsistent provision is adopted in the same statute or even in an affiliated statute, the two authors wrote

Resources

  1. Classical mechanics
  2. Numerical computing
  3. Dimensional analysis
  4. Mathematical methods
  5. Latex
  6. Julia

Course Archives

  1. Mechanics I, Fall 2010
  2. Mechanics II, Spring 2014
  3. Math Methods, Spring 2017

Links

  1. UConn AnyWare
  2. UConn GitLab
  3. UConn VPN
  4. UConn large file sharing
  5. UConn software
  6. Babbidge Library (free) laptop rentals

General

  1. Academic Calendar, Spring 2019
  2. UConn Physics Department
  3. Dean of students
  4. 2019 Calendar of Religious Holidays
  5. Educational Rights and Privacy
  6. Office of the Provost's policies links

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