College Physics Plus Mastering Physics with eText -- Access Card Package
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College Physics Plus Mastering Physics with eText -- Access Card Package: International Edition

College Physics Plus Mastering Physics with eText -- Access Card Package: International Edition


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ALERT: Before you purchase, check with your instructor or review your course syllabus to ensure that you select the correct ISBN. Several versions of Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products exist for each title, including customized versions for individual schools, and registrations are not transferable. In addition, you may need a CourseID, provided by your instructor, to register for and use Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products.   Packages Access codes for Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products may not be included when purchasing or renting from companies other than Pearson; check with the seller before completing your purchase.   Used or rental books If you rent or purchase a used book with an access code, the access code may have been redeemed previously and you may have to purchase a new access code.   Access codes Access codes that are purchased from sellers other than Pearson carry a higher risk of being either the wrong ISBN or a previously redeemed code. Check with the seller prior to purchase.   --For more than five decades, Sears and Zemansky's College Physics has provided the most reliable foundation of physics education for students around the world. The Ninth Edition continues that tradition with new features that directly address the demands on today’s student and today’s classroom.   A broad and thorough introduction to physics, this new edition maintains its highly respected, traditional approach while implementing some new solutions to student difficulties. Many ideas stemming from educational research help students develop greater confidence in solving problems, deepen conceptual understanding, and strengthen quantitative-reasoning skills, while helping them connect what they learn with their other courses and the changing world around them. Math review has been expanded to encompass a full chapter, complete with end-of-chapter questions, and in each chapter biomedical applications and problems have been added along with a set of MCAT-style passage problems. Media resources have been strengthened and linked to the Pearson eText, MasteringPhysics®, and much more.   This packge contains: College Physics, Ninth Edition MasteringPhysics with Pearson eText Student Access Code Card

Table of Contents:
Chapter 0  Mathematics Review 0.1   Exponents 0.2   Scientific Notation and Powers of 10 0.3   Algebra 0.4   Direct, Inverse, and Inverse-Square Relationships 0.5   Logarithmic and Exponential Functions 0.6   Areas and Volumes 0.7   Plane Geometry and Trigonometry   Chapter 1  Models, Measurements, and Vectors 1.1       Introduction 1.2       Idealized Models 1.3       Standards and Units 1.4       Unit Consistency and Conversions 1.5       Precision and Significant Figures 1.6       Estimates and Orders of Magnitude 1.7       Vectors and Vector Addition 1.8       Components of Vectors   Chapter 2  Motion along a Straight Line 2.1       Displacement and Average Velocity 2.2       Instantaneous Velocity 2.3       Average and Instantaneous Acceleration 2.4       Motion with Constant Acceleration 2.5       Proportional Reasoning 2.6       Freely Falling Objects 2.7       Relative Velocity along a Straight Line   Chapter 3  Motion in a Plane 3.1       Velocity in a Plane 3.2       Acceleration in a Plane 3.3       Projectile Motion 3.4       Uniform Circular Motion 3.5       Relative Velocity in a Plane   Chapter 4  Newton’s Laws of Motion 4.1       Force 4.2       Newton’s First Law 4.3       Mass and Newton’s Second Law 4.4       Mass and Weight 4.5       Newton’s Third Law 4.6       Free-Body Diagrams   Chapter 5  Applications of Newton’s Laws 5.1       Equilibrium of a Particle 5.2       Applications of Newton’s Second Law 5.3       Contact Forces and Friction 5.4       Elastic Forces 5.5       Forces in Nature   Chapter 6  Circular Motion and Gravitation 6.1       Force in Circular Motion 6.2       Motion in a Vertical Circle 6.3       Newton’s Law of Gravitation 6.4       Weight 6.5       Satellite Motion   Chapter 7 Work and Energy 7.1       An Overview of Energy 7.2       Work 7.3       Work and Kinetic Energy 7.4       Work Done by a Varying Force 7.5       Potential Energy 7.6       Conservation of Energy 7.7       Conservative and Nonconservative Forces 7.8       Power   Chapter 8  Momentum 8.1       Momentum 8.2       Conservation of Momentum 8.3       Inelastic Collisions 8.4       Elastic Collisions 8.5       Impulse 8.6       Center of Mass 8.7       Motion of the Center of Mass 8.8       Rocket Propulsion   Chapter 9  Rotational Motion 9.1       Angular Velocity and Angular Acceleration 9.2       Rotation with Constant Angular Acceleration 9.3       Relationship between Linear and Angular Quantities 9.4       Kinetic Energy of Rotation and Moment of Inertia 9.5       Rotation about a Moving Axis   Chapter 10  Dynamics of Rotational Motion 10.1     Torque 10.2     Torque and Angular Acceleration 10.3     Work and Power in Rotational Motion 10.4     Angular Momentum 10.5     Conservation of Angular Momentum 10.6     Equilibrium of a Rigid Body 10.7     Vector Nature of Angular Quantities   Chapter 11  Elasticity and Periodic Motion 11.1     Stress, Strain, and Elastic Deformations 11.2     Periodic Motion   11.3     Energy in Simple Harmonic Motion   11.4     Equations of Simple Harmonic Motion   11.5     The Simple Pendulum   11.6     Damped and Forced Oscillations     Chapter 12  Mechanical Waves and Sound  12.1    Mechanical Waves   12.2    Periodic Mechanical Waves   12.3    Wave Speeds   12.4    Mathematical Description of a Wave   12.5    Reflections and Superposition   12.6    Standing Waves and Normal Modes   12.7    Longitudinal Standing Waves   12.8    Interference   12.9    Sound and Hearing   12.10  Sound Intensity 12.11  Beats                                                                                                                                                     12.12  The Doppler Effect  12.13  Applications of Acoustics   12.14  Musical Tones     Chapter 13  Fluid Mechanics 13.1     Density 13.2     Pressure in a Fluid 13.3     Archimedes’s Principle: Buoyancy 13.4     Surface Tension and Capillarity   13.5     Fluid Flow 13.6     Bernoulli’s Equation 13.7     Applications of Bernoulli’s equation 13.8     Real Fluids: Viscosity and Turbulence   Chapter 14  Temperature and Heat 14.1     Temperature and Thermal Equilibrium 14.2     Temperature Scales 14.3     Thermal Expansion 14.4     Quantity of Heat 14.5     Phase Changes 14.6     Calorimetry 14.7     Heat Transfer 14.8     Solar Energy and Resource Conservation   Chapter 15  Thermal Properties of Matter 15.1    The Mole and Avogadro’s Number 15.2    Equations of State   15.3    Kinetic Theory of an Ideal Gas    15.4    Heat Capacities 15.5    The First Law of Thermodynamics 15.6    Thermodynamic Processes 15.7    Properties of an Ideal Gas     Chapter 16  The Second Law of Thermodynamics 16.1       Directions of Thermodynamic Processes   16.2       Heat Engines   16.3       Internal Combustion Engines   16.4       Refrigerators   16.5       The Second Law of Thermodynamics   16.6       The Carnot Engine: The Most Efficient Heat Engine   16.7       Entropy   16.8       The Kelvin Temperature Scale   16.9       Energy Resources: A Case Study in Thermodynamics     Chapter 17  Electric Charge and Electric Field 17.1     Electric charge 17.2     Conductors and Insulators   17.3     Conservation and Quantization of Charge  17.4     Coulomb’s Law 17.5     Electric Field and Electric Forces 17.6     Calculating Electric Fields 17.7     Electric Field Lines  17.8     Gauss’s Law and Field Calculations   17.9     Charges on Conductors     Chapter 18  Electric Potential and Capacitance 18.1     Electric Potential Energy 18.2     Potential   18.3     Equipotential Surfaces 18.4     The Millikan Oil-Drop Experiment 18.5     Capacitors 18.6     Capacitors in Series and in Parallel  18.7     Electric Field Energy  18.8     Dielectrics   18.9     Molecular Model of Induced Charge     Chapter 19  Current, Resistance, and Direct-Current Circuits 19.1     Current 19.2     Resistance and Ohm's Law 19.3     Electromotive Force and Circuits 19.4     Energy and Power in Electric Circuits 19.5     Resistors in Series and Parallel 19.6     Kirchhoff's Rules 19.7     Electrical Measuring Instruments 19.8     Resistance-Capacitance Circuits 19.9     Physiological Effects of Currents  19.10   Power Distribution Systems    Chapter 20  Magnetic Field and Magnetic Forces   20.1     Magnetism   20.2     Magnetic Field and Magnetic Force   20.3     Motion of Charged Particles in a Magnetic Field   20.4     Mass Spectrometers   20.5     Magnetic Force on a Current-Carrying Conductor   20.6     Force and Torque on a Current Loop   20.7     Magnetic Field of a Long, Straight Conductor   20.8     Force between Parallel Conductors   20.9     Current Loops and Solenoids  20.10   Magnetic Field Calculations  20.11   Magnetic Materials    Chapter 21 Electromagnetic Induction   21.1     Induction Experiments   21.2     Magnetic Flux   21.3     Faraday’s Law   21.4     Lenz’s Law   21.5     Motional Electromotive Force   21.6     Eddy Currents   21.7     Mutual Inductance   21.8     Self-Inductance   21.9     Transformers   21.10   Magnetic Field Energy   21.11   The R—L Circuit   21.12   The L—C Circuit     Chapter 22 Alternating Current   22.1     Phasors and Alternating Currents   22.2     Resistance and Reactance   22.3     The Series R—L—C Circuit   22.4     Power in Alternating-Current Circuits   22.5     Series Resonance   22.6     Parallel Resonance     Chapter 23 Electromagnetic Waves   23.1     Introduction to Electromagnetic Waves   23.2     Speed of an Electromagnetic Wave   23.3     The Electromagnetic Spectrum   23.4     Sinusoidal Waves   23.5     Energy in Electromagnetic Waves   23.6     Nature of Light   23.7     Reflection and Refraction   23.8     Total Internal Reflection   23.9     Dispersion   23.10   Polarization   23.11   Huygens’s Principle   23.12   Scattering of Light     Chapter 24  Geometric Optics   24.1     Reflection at a Plane Surface   24.2     Reflection at a Spherical Surface   24.3     Graphical Methods for Mirrors   24.4     Refraction at a Spherical Surface   24.5     Thin Lenses   24.6     Graphical Methods for Lenses     Chapter 25 Optical Instruments   25.1     The Camera   25.2     The Projector   25.3     The Eye   25.4     The Magnifier   25.5     The Microscope   25.6     Telescopes   25.7     Lens Aberrations     Chapter 26 Interference and Diffraction   26.1     Interference and Coherent Sources   26.2     Two-Source Interference of Light   26.3     Interference in Thin Films   26.4     Diffraction   26.5     Diffraction from a Single Slit   26.6     Multiple Slits and Diffraction Gratings   26.7     X-Ray Diffraction   26.8     Circular Apertures and Resolving Power   26.9     Holography     Chapter 27 Relativity   27.1     Invariance of Physical Laws   27.2     Relative Nature of Simultaneity   27.3     Relativity of Time   27.4     Relativity of Length   27.5     The Lorentz Transformation   27.6     Relativistic Momentum   27.7     Relativistic Work and Energy   27.8     Relativity and Newtonian Mechanics     Chapter 28 Photons, Electrons, and Atoms   28.1     The Photoelectric Effect   28.2     Line Spectra and Energy Levels   28.3     The Nuclear Atom and the Bohr Model   28.4     The Laser   28.5     X-Ray Production and Scattering   28.6     The Wave Nature of Particles   28.7     Wave—Particle Duality   28.8     The Electron Microscope     Chapter 29 Atoms, Molecules, and Solids   29.1     Electrons in Atoms   29.2     Atomic Structure   29.3     Diatomic Molecules   29.4     Structure and Properties of Solids   29.5     Energy Bands   29.6     Semiconductors   29.7     Semiconductor Devices   29.8     Superconductivity     Chapter 30 Nuclear and High-Energy Physics   30.1     Properties of Nuclei   30.2     Nuclear Stability   30.3     Radioactivity   30.4     Radiation and the Life Sciences   30.5     Nuclear Reactions   30.6     Nuclear Fission   30.7     Nuclear Fusion   30.8     Fundamental Particles   30.9     High-Energy Physics   30.10   Cosmology  

About the Author :
Hugh D. Young is Emeritus Professor of Physics at Carnegie Mellon University. He earned both his undergraduate and graduate degrees from that university. He earned his Ph.D. in fundamental particle theory under the direction of the late Richard Cutkosky. He also had two visiting professorships at the University of California, Berkeley.   Dr. Young’s career has centered entirely on undergraduate education. He has written several undergraduate-level textbooks, and became a coauthor with Francis Sears and Mark Zemansky for their well-known introductory texts. In addition to his role on Sears and Zemansky’sCollege Physics, he is also author of Sears and Zemansky’sUniversity Physics.


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9780321753496
  • Publisher: Pearson Education (US)
  • Publisher Imprint: Pearson
  • Height: 279 mm
  • No of Pages: 1180
  • Sub Title: International Edition
  • Width: 215 mm
  • ISBN-10: 0321753496
  • Publisher Date: 22 Feb 2011
  • Binding: SA
  • Language: English
  • Spine Width: 41 mm
  • Weight: 2094 gr

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College Physics Plus Mastering Physics with eText -- Access Card Package: International Edition
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