TENSORS made easy with SOLVED PROBLEMS
J**Z
The Best Introduction to Tensors
I’ve meant to write a review for this book for a while now, but didn’t get around to doing it until now. I’m currently about to enter physics graduate school and I’ve been trying to understand tensors for a long time now. I’ve looked at dozens of sources that claim to teach the necessary mathematics to understand general relativity, but I’ve always come out disappointed until now. In short, this book is an introductory masterpiece for anyone who seeks to understand tensors. This together with the fact that the book comes with problems and solutions to them means that it is hands down the ideal book for self-study.The biggest strength of this book is the level at which the material is presented and the order in which it is presented. It never feels like you are missing vital details or like it is oversimplifying. At the same time you don’t get bogged down in so many details that you lose understanding. If you manage to work through it you will gain great insight into tensors. This insight will help you understand all those other books that before might have been incomprehensible, and therefore your mastery of the mathematics surrounding relativity will grow exponentially.This book isn’t without its flaws, but its pros far outweigh any of them. One reviewer for example mentioned that it uses “broken English,” but this is in fact misleading. Yes, sometimes the English is a bit incorrect, but it’s still completely understandable. The most common mistake I saw was the author using words ending in “-ing” instead of “-ed” or vice versa. Any English speaker would have no trouble understanding what he meant. I believe the reason for the mistakes is that it’s a translation from Italian. (Also, note I actually have the previous edition. This means that at least some of these errors might have already been corrected in the newer edition.)In any case, this book is a gem, and the author’s systematic step-by-step build up of tensors starting with vectors and covectors is at just the right level for an introduction. And his model for visualizing vectors, covectors, and tensors is not bad either. His model basically reminded me of how Lego blocks connect together. It’s especially useful for beginners. If you continue using the book eventually you won’t need the visuals, but you can still refer to them to clarify stuff. It’s quite a useful model that he presents. It reminds me of Penrose’s diagrammatic tensor notation, but simpler.I think that a good supplement for section 4.6 of this book, which is the section on contravariant and covariant tensors, is chapter 4 of the book A Student's Guide to Vectors and Tensors. It’s not necessary to do this, but visually it will lead you to a geometric understanding of what it means for something to be covariant or contravariant. I think if you want to become an expert it’s well worth it to read the chapter just before or right after that section 4.6. That book by itself, although highly rated, I think has problems, because it refers to rank-2 tensors as matrices, which can potentially be confusing. However, that chapter is still worth reading as a supplement. It is worth noting that the reason for this is that it is common for physicists to refer to the components of a tensor as the actual tensor. In any case, this book deals with this wonderfully. The book starts out by not following this traditional by-components formalism, and I believe it is one of the reasons why it is so understandable. However, as you progress through the book the author shows both the more rigorous formalism and the by-components formalism. This by extension gives the reader the ability to understand and access a greater number of sources including more traditional ones, and helps when learning about Penrose’s abstract index notation, which is the modern formalism used by relativists.Finally, the only section I thought was hard to read was half of section 5.5 talking about curvature. This is partially in page 101 and partially in page 102. This is about a page of material, so not that much and it’s not that big of a deal. If you go through it carefully enough you can get the meaning probably, but I was in a bit of a rush. In any case I would supplement that section with section 3.3 Curvature from the book A First Course in Loop Quantum Gravity. If you do this, then you will have no problems at all even if you skip that second half of section 5.5 that I mentioned.I suggest that anyone trying to read this book to have at least taken some Vector Calculus. Linear algebra is useful, but is arguably not completely necessary. As long as you know what matrices are, what linear independence is, and basically what vector spaces and linear transformations are, then you will be fine for the most part. Though it’s always useful to know more than what you need, because the more familiar you are with certain concepts the easier to get greater insight on them. With enough dedication and willingness to think about the concepts and review them in your head, I think you will be surprised at the amazing insights you will discover.This book despite its possible flaws doesn’t deserve anything less than 4 stars, but considering how terrible the rest of the literature on tensors can be and considering how incredibly helpful (and inexpensive!) this book is for understanding all those other sources, this book deserves the whole 5 stars in my opinion. Furthermore, considering how one review just uses one sentence to say that it’s in broken English, but I already explained why that is not really the case and that no understanding is lost by any spelling mistakes, then this is an unfair review. Another reviewer just says in one sentence that they don’t understand it, but they don’t explain what they are having trouble with at all. And finally, the third bad review of the book also uses only one sentence and the reviewer just says that they took two years of calculus MANY YEARS AGO. The fact that they don’t understand might be self-explanatory in this case, at least partially.Therefore, considering how poorly the book has been rated, and unfairly so in my opinion, this just further supports why I have given the book the full 5 stars.Note: For those interested in learning even more differential geometry, I suggest the book Differential Forms and The Geometry of General Relativity. It’s not about tensors exactly, but you will understand the connection between differential forms and tensors, and you will learn enough about that language so that you can feel comfortable tackling any text in either the language of differential forms or the language of tensors. Trust me, the sheer pleasure of learning some of the same concepts in a different setting makes it worth the read. For example, the definition of what a geodesic is might seem to differ in these two books, but figuring out how they actually are the same can help you build a solid understanding of the mathematics. Therefore, at the very least I suggest reading the half of the book on differential forms. And after reading all that for those interested in learning group theory, more differential geometry, or quantum gravity I suggest the book GAUGE FIELDS, KNOTS AND GRAVITY.
L**N
The writing soon gets much better. The author uses the duality condtion and Kronecker ...
My edition is labeled the 4th. The definition of a vector in section 1.1 needs to be rewritten and expanded. The writing soon gets much better. The author uses the duality condtion and Kronecker symbol to explain the relationship between basis vectors and covectors. (pages 7-14) The solved problems 2 and 3 at the end of the book beautifully demonstrate this relationship. The T-Mosaic graphic metaphor beautifully illustrates what a tensor is how it is formed (Pages 14-24) Problem 5 nicely demonstrates how a tensor is built from the components of vectors. The book builds on this foundation in the first thirty pages to review the distance , gradient tensors, and covariant derivatives needed for general relativity. The books assumes basic skills in trigonometry, linear algebra, and partial differential equations. If you have read, "Collier's A Most Incomprehensible Thing", Bernacchi's book will provide you more insight into the math of the tensors. Bernacchi's book with the many solved problems is a wonderfull example of text written for self learners. Please read a few pages at a time. You will have to match each concept with the solved problem in the back. I think a better title for the book would be "Tensors Made Easier". It will take some time but it is worth the beauty of this math is worth the effort. Addendum: On second reading I have identified a few typos. They are usually obvious. The discussion of symmetry, T-mosiac patterns, and 24 distinct inner products (page 35) needs to be expanded.
K**S
Good points and bad points
First the good: The solved problems are excellent for self learning and understanding what can appear abstract.However, there are several bad points: The book need editing by a native English speaker who knows the subject. There are several (? typo) mistakes in the solutions, which usually correct by the final line. The text is hard to understand at times, because it reads like an Italian speaking English as a second language. Some abbreviations were very confusing to me until I used an Italian dictionary, e.g. "e" means "and" in Italian and "ecc." is "etc." There are also some sentences that are totally untranslated. Finally , there is no index in the book, which makes searching for difficult.
S**M
Best book for beginners.
No joke, I have been studying (or trying to study) tensors and tensor calculus for over a year. I have used a handful of other books, Tensors Analysis on manifolds, Applications of Tensor Analysis, Tensor Calculus made simple, etc. I've also used several online resources.In one week of seriously reading and taking notes from this book, I have learned more from this book than from all other resources over a year. Definitely need a strong linear algebra background, and also a strong calculus background. Other than that, this book gives you everything you need, not just to do the problems, but have the intuition that comes from a deeper grasp of the concepts.
P**L
No, sorry, tensors are not made easy!
The presentation is original however, and probably worth a look but do not dream, the subject is too intrinsically deep and complex to give a real feeling of what tensors are.
A**S
like me, you are seriously trying to study general ...
This handy little paperback is exactly what I was looking for. If, like me, you are seriouslytrying to study general relativity but are frustrated by tensor notation, buy this book. My librarycontains many of the popular textbooks on general relativity (Hartle, Schultz, Carroll, etc.) butnone of them explains tensors thoroughly at a basic level. Just like learning a new language, youhave to learn to read and write the tensor lingo, including lots of practice working problems.Although seemingly childish at first, Bernacchi's T-mosaic model of tensor manipulations actuallyhelps to visualize tensors as objects. Bravo!
M**O
Fantastico
Ho letto una decina di testi che trattavano in parte i tensori ma solo questo mi ha permesso di comprenderli. E conciso, essenziale ma completo, non salta alcun passaggio. Le spiegazioni sono chiare e accompagnate quando necessario da rappresentazioni grafiche ben fatte. La rappresentazione a mosaico è utile soprattutto all'inizio per rendere meno astratte le formule. Molti esercizi svolti. Trovo corretto tenerli alla fine per dare continuità alla teoria. E utile un'infarinatura sul tema, chi è fresco della matematica da ingegneria con l'impegno non dovrebbe aver problemi. Un grazie all'autore
F**I
O conteúdo não corresponde ao título, completo mas não simples
corresponde ao título, completo mas não simples
H**A
I recommend it for those with post-intermediate math knowledge.
Good book, but be careful as some reviews are misleading. This book is not for beginners at all.
L**Z
Lo mejor para entender tensores
Había revisado muchos libros antes de éste (Misner, Schutz, Roman, Nakahara), pero nunca entendí como operar con los tensores y tampoco entendía las operaciones con índices. "Tensors made easy" es un muy buen libro para entender bien el concepto, saber cómo operar para luego formalizar. Aunque no trae ejercicios se entiende y puedes trabajar en conjunto con otros libros como el schutz para agarrarle práctica.
J**S
good book
A great "liitle" book does the Job of getting you into tensors fast and relatively painless
Trustpilot
5 days ago
1 month ago