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Harvey Gould uses molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo methods to study glasses, the dynamics of first-order phase transitions, and other problems in statistical mechanics. His work involves the application of computer simulation algorithms as well as renormalization group and cluster methods. Gould recently co-authored the second edition of an undergraduate level text on computer simulation in physics. He can "foresee the day when physics students take a required computational science curriculum comparable in scope to the present day mathematics curriculum."
Gould is a native of California and received his B.A. and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. He did postdoctoral work at the National Bureau of Standards and taught at the University of Michigan before coming to Clark University in 1971. His leisure time is spent with his family and listening to music, especially jazz.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
very good introductory computational physics book,
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This review is from: An Introduction to Computer Simulation Methods: Applications to Physical System (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)
This was my first comp. physics book and it was easy and
very instructive. I can assure your money is well spent. If you find this book too easy, then you should move on to Thijssen's Computational Physics which is intended for the `graduate' level readers. Only 4 stars (not 5) because I don't think that the codes provided in the book are that useful. Everyone has different coding style. What really matters is the physical concepts and not the numerical receipes.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty good introductory book,
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This review is from: An Introduction to Computer Simulation Methods: Applications to Physical System (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)
Good introductory book on Computational Physics.
Projects proposed cover different difficulties so it can be used for college students at all levels.Concepts are well explainded. Introduces areas including linear and nonlinear systems, normal modes and waves, and electrodynamics. This second edition offers expanded material on chaos, complexity, and quantum mechanics, programs with more use of graphics, and appendices on Fortran and C.
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Makes Physics a pleasure,
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This review is from: An Introduction to Computer Simulation Methods: Applications to Physical System (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)
Excellent, outstanding book for clarity, elegance, writing style and level of detail. This book won't leave you alone on the intricacies of marrying physics and computer programming and will make your programming activity more intereesting if you are more of a programmer and you physical studies more rewarding and less"pen-and-paperlike" if you are an aspiring physicist. In fact I highly recommend this book to anyone that has an interest in how nature works and in playing with computers. The extreme clarity of this book makes it accessible to junior colege students and even to advanced, motivated high school students or for self study. I would have preferred to see the example code in the book in C or better C++ but using BASIC has the advantage of making the book more esy to read and is just sligtly annoying for the C++ or Java programmer. ( Are there any other kind of real programmers? ;) Just make sure you master your language enough to make calculations, use functions, and are able to produce at least some basic graphics (using C++ and openGL or DirectX would rock). Judge by yourself, but I would buy without a thought a book whose first chapter is on the "Coffe Cooling Problem".
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