Subtlety in Relativity

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A01=Sanjay Moreshwar Wagh
advanced undergraduate physics
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Author_Sanjay Moreshwar Wagh
category theory physics
Category=PHR
Category=PHU
Category=PHVB
commutative
Commutative Monoid
Doppler effect analysis
emission wave theory
Empty Arrow
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Finite Coproducts
Full Subcategory
identity
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Inverse Lorentz Transformation
Left Adjoint
Light Quanta
M. Wagh Sanjay
Maxwell's Theory
Maxwell’s Theory
Monoid Additive
Monoid Identities
Partial Binary Operation
Pullback Diagram
quantum foundations
Quotient Category
Quotient Objects
Reflective Subcategory
relativistic quantum framework
Rest Energy
Sanjay M. Wagh
Sanjay Moreshwar Wagh
statistical incompleteness
Terminal Object
Triangle Commutes
Triangle Functor
Uniform Rectilinear Motion
Uniform Relative Motion
Unique Arrow
Universal Arrow
Wavy Behavior

Product details

  • ISBN 9789814774444
  • Weight: 839g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2017
  • Publisher: Pan Stanford Publishing Pte Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: SG
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Subtlety in Relativity is the only book that has been written after the author’s discovery of a new way in which wave phenomena occur—the emission origin of waves. This drastically changes most issues of the old debate over the world being either deterministic or probabilistic. The emission origin of waves is not incompatible with the ideas of quantum theory; rather, this new and novel way in which waves can be generated justifies the use of mathematical and probabilistic methods of quantum theory. However, the emission origin of waves shows that quantum theory is statistically incomplete in, precisely, Einstein’s sense. There exists, then, a certain, previously unexplored, conceptual framework underlying the ideas of quantum theory. Whether this is the theory that Einstein and others were looking for then, how this way of thinking is related to the ideas of relativity, and whether this is a relativistic theory in the usual sense of this word are questions this book answers.

The book demonstrates how the Doppler effect with acceleration is essential to interpreting astronomical observations. It also offers a detailed and self-sufficient technical background of mathematical ideas of category theory. The book is divided into two parts. The first is less mathematical and more conceptual in its orientation. The second focuses on mathematical ideas needed to implement physical concepts. The book is a great reference for advanced undergraduate- and graduate-level students of physics and researchers in physics, astronomy, and cosmology, who will gain a deeper understanding of relativity from it.

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