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         Computational Physics:     more books (100)
  1. Computational Physics by David E. Potter, 1973-01-01
  2. Fundamentals of Computational Fluid Dynamics (Scientific Computation) by H. Lomax, Thomas H. Pulliam, et all 2010-11-02
  3. Green's Functions in Quantum Physics (Springer Series in Solid-State Sciences) by Eleftherios N. Economou, 2009-12-15
  4. Computational Plasma Physics: With Applications To Fusion And Astrophysics (Frontiers in Physics) by Toshi Tajima, 2004-02-13
  5. Computational Methods in Physics, Chemistry and Biology: An Introduction by Paul Harrison, 2001-12-05
  6. Computational Physics: An Introduction by Franz J. Vesely, 2001-06-01
  7. A First Course in Computational Physics by Paul L. DeVries, 1993-08
  8. Computational Methods in Solid State Physics by V V Nemoshkalenko, N.V. Antonov, 1999-02-19
  9. Lectures on Complex Networks (Oxford Master Series in Physics, Computational, and Theoretical Physics) by Sergey Dorogovtsev, 2010-04-19
  10. Frontiers of Fundamental Physics : Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium "Frontiers of Fundamental and Computational Physics", Udine, Italy, 26-29 September 2004
  11. The Boundary Value Problems of Mathematical Physics (Applied Mathematical Sciences) by O.A. Ladyzhenskaya, 2010-11-02
  12. Computational Fluid Dynamics for Sport Simulation (Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering)
  13. Relativistic Methods for Chemists (Challenges and Advances in Computational Chemistry and Physics)
  14. A Computational Method in Plasma Physics (Scientific Computation) by F. Bauer, O. Betancourt, et all 1978-09-22

41. CCP 2004 - Conference On Computational Physics 2004
CCP logo. Conference on computational physics 2004. Barra spaziatrice Conference on computational physics 2004. APS, INFM. Conference Overview
http://www.ccp2004.infm.it/

Scientific Programme
Important Dates Fees and Grants Abstract Submission ... "Bridging the Scales" - SIMU conference
Aug 29th - 31th, 2004
Last Update:

42. Fortran 90/95 And Computational Physics
By Jens Hjorleifur Baroarson.
http://www.raunvis.hi.is/~jensba/tolvuedl_h2003/f90.pdf

43. Physics @ The University Of Queensland
Covers biophysics, quantum physics, computational physics, engineering and optics.
http://www.physics.uq.edu.au/
Physics All of UQ
Physics at The University of Queensland is a discipline within the School of Physical Sciences. Cutting edge research puts us among the best in the world, and our graduates have been succesful in gaining positions in top univerisities throughout Australia, the USA and Europe, as well as within the Australian industrial, financial and education sectors.
Interested in postgraduate study in Physics? - click here
Select a quick link: Physics Internal Info/Images About UQ my.UQ mySI-net UQ News UQ Experts UQ Images Organisational Units
Undergraduate Programs

Postgraduate Programs

Research Areas

Course Websites/Profiles
...
Centre for Mathematical Physics

PhD student Jennifer Riesz was recently the recipient of the Student Encouragement Award at the Queensland Smart Women - Smart State awards. More Information
Atom Optics group
produces atom laser. More News: Postgraduate Information and Recruitment Day, 22-23 September, 2005 Our Research Vacation Scholarships Quantum Materials Workshop (1-4 June 2005) Clearly a better coating solution. privacy feedback ABN 63 942 912 684 CRICOS Provider No: Authorised by: Head of Physics Maintained by: webmaster@physics.uq.edu.au

44. Condensed Matter Theory - Computational Physics
Universität DuisburgEssen, Department of Physics. Condensed Matter Theory computational physics. Prof. Dr. DE Wolf. Comphys Logo
http://www.comphys.uni-duisburg.de/
Department of Physics
Condensed Matter Theory
Computational Physics
Prof. Dr. D.E. Wolf
People Publications How to get here
Main Research Topics
Information/Upcoming Events
Links to other things
email to webmaster A Statement in German

45. Computational Physics
two classic ways of doing physical research, computational physics is relatively new. In computational physics, one tries to give numerical solutions to
http://www.comphys.uni-duisburg.de/CompSim.html
Computational Physics Group Gerhard-Mercator-University
Computational Physics
Home In comparison to Experimental and Theoretical Physics, the two classic ways of doing physical research, Computational Physics is relatively new. In Computational Physics, one tries to give numerical solutions to problems which couldn't be solved with standard analytical methods. With simulations, one tries to develop easy models of complex physical processes. Simulations can be done in a parameter range which is, due to technical or even financial reasons, unaccessible to experimentalists. Computer simulations involve the following steps
  • Modelling of a phenomena using present theoretical understanding.
  • Efficient implementation, development of computer algorithms.
  • Prediction of new phenomena, quantitative evaluation. In our group, we mostly do computer simulations of crystal growth and granular media . The picture to the right shows an example of a Molecular Dynamics simulation of grains flowing through a vertical pipe. The grains are colour coded, with red standing for a high velocity, while in the opposite blue particles are comparable to a traffic jam. Other simulation techniques used in out group are Contact Dynamics and Monte Carlo Methods. For doing those simulations, of course we need a lot of computing power. Besides our own network of workstations, consisting of some IBM RS6000, four HP PA-RISC computers and a few Linux-PCs, Theoretical Physics in Duisburg has a Parsitec Parallel Computer. The Universities Computing Centre
  • 46. Programming By Physicist
    Student of computational physics. Includes information on programming, cars and media equipment.
    http://panoramix.ift.uni.wroc.pl/~daniel
    This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

    47. Cotter, Colin
    Imperial College London. Numerical simulations in computational physics over long time intervals. Publications.
    http://www.mathematicians.org.uk/cjc
    Sorry, you don't appear to have frame support. Go here instead -

    48. 5th Granada Seminar On Computational Physics, 1998
    5th Granada Seminar on computational physics. (and EPSIUPAP 1998 Conference on computational physics). Granada, September 2-5, 1998
    http://ergodic.ugr.es/CP/pages/5th1998.htm
    5th Granada Seminar on Computational Physics (and EPS-IUPAP 1998 Conference on Computational Physics) Granada, September 2-5, 1998 Proceedings published as
    • Abstracts: "Modelling Collective Phenomena in Complex Systems", P.L. Garrido, J. Marro & R. Toral editors, Europhysics Conference Abstracts, vol. 22F, European Physica Society 1999.
      Full selected contributions: Computer Physics Communications , special issue, volume 121-122, October 1999, North-Holland, Amsterdam.
    PROGRAMME:
    1998 Conference on Computational Physics
    September 2-5, 1998
    Exhibition and Conference Centre
    Granada (AndalucĂ­a), Spain
    Organized by the Computational Physics Group of the European Physical Society ( EPS ) and by the Institute Carlos I for Theoretical and Computational Physics. Sponsored by the EPS, which has approved it as an Europhysics Conference, and the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics ( IUPAP ), in collaboration with the American Physical Society ( APS ), the UK Institute of Physics ( IOP ), and the

    49. Emil Prodan
    Postdoctoral researcher at UCSB working with Prof. Walter Kohn. Main research interests include mathematical physics, computational physics and nanoscale physics.
    http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~eprodan/

    50. Computational Physics - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    computational physics is the study and implementation of numerical algorithms in computational physics borrows a number of ideas from computational
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computational_physics

    51. Computational Physics
    This new edition of computational physics expands the original greatly on both the range of the physics problems treated and the numerical algorithms
    http://www.physics.purdue.edu/~hisao/book/
    Computational Physics, 2nd Edition
    ISBN: 0-13-146990-8 Publisher: Prentice Hall Nicholas J. Giordano bio ng@physics.purdue.edu Hisao Nakanishi ... hisao@purdue.edu Department of Physics, Purdue University 525 Northwestern Aveue, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2036 Prentice-Hall web page for this book Briefly about the book: This new edition of Computational Physics expands the original greatly on both the range of the physics problems treated and the numerical algorithms described. It contains a whole new chapter on the physics of music as well as several new sections such as those discussing the scaling in phase transitions, coupled nonlinear oscillators, two-dimensional time-dependent Schroedinger equation, real neurons, and cellular automata. In addition, a series of self-contained appendices that elaborate on the various numerical algorithms and theories behind them are given including one that discusses the solution of linear systems, a topic that was little touched in the original edition. View the Table of Contents View the Preface to the 2nd Edition
    Sample programs
    Some sample programs are available in True Basic or Fortran. However, please note that they are provided only to guide you in suggesting some particular ways to implement the strategies given in the book and

    52. Introduction To Computational Physics Course Material Academic Year 2001/02
    Introduction to computational physics Course material Academic year 2001/02.
    http://homepage.univie.ac.at/Franz.Vesely/cp0102/dx/
    Next: Preamble
    Introduction to
    Computational Physics
    Course material
    Academic year 2001/02
    Franz J. Vesely
    University of Vienna
    franz.vesely@univie.ac.at
    This regular course extends over the entire academic year and consists of a weekly 3 hours of lectures and 2 hours of workshop. It is designed for students from the third year up.
    The textbook "Computational Physics - An Introduction" by Franz Vesely (Plenum 1994 and Kluwer 2001) is based on this course.
    Note to teachers: If some of the Java applets that are part of this course material are of any use to you, you may copy and adapt them for your purposes, provided that you treat them according to the GPL rules. This means, among other things, that you cite the original source, and that you do not make commercial use of the resulting programs.

    53. Franz Vesely
    computational physics is physics done by means of computational methods. Nevertheless, computational physics is much more than ``Physics Using Computers
    http://homepage.univie.ac.at/Franz.Vesely/cp_kluwer/
    Home
    Franz J. Vesely:
    Computational Physics - An Introduction
    Second Edition
    Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, New York-London 2001.
    ISBN 0-306-46631-7 To order Errata Course material with didactic applets
    Preface: What is Computational Physics?
    Computational physics is physics done by means of computational methods. Computers do not enter into this tentative definition. A number of fundamental techniques of our craft were introduced by Newton, Gauss, Jacobi, and other pioneers who lived quite some time before the invention of workable calculating machines. To be sure, nobody in his right state of mind would apply stochastic methods by throwing dice, and the iterative solution of differential equations is feasible only in conjunction with the high computing speed of electronic calculators. Nevertheless, computational physics is much more than ``Physics Using Computers.'' The essential point in computational physics is not the use of machines, but the systematic application of numerical techniques in place of, and in addition to, analytical methods, in order to render accessible to computation as large a part of physical reality as possible. In all quantifying sciences the advent of computers rapidly extended the applicability of such numerical methods. In the case of physics, however, it triggered the evolution of an entirely new field with its own goals, its own problems, and its own heroes. Since the late forties, computational physicists have developed new numerical techniques (Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics simulation, fast Fourier transformation), discovered unexpected physical phenomena (Alder vortices, shear thinning), and posed new questions to theory and experiment (chaos, strange attractors, cellular automata, neural nets, spin glasses, ...).

    54. Home
    Research topics quantum computing, timeresolved optical imaging, morphological image analysis, quantum Monte Carlo, nano-scale magnetism, chaos; in Netherlands.
    http://rugth30.phys.rug.nl/compphys0/
    Computational Physics
    Mission Statement
    To conduct research in physics through the innovative use of computer and information technology.
    Contact Information
    Prof.Dr. H.A De Raedt
    Department of Applied Physics
    Materials Science Centre
    University of Groningen
    Nijenborgh 4
    NL-9747 AG Groningen
    The Netherlands
    Phone: +31 50 363 4852
    FAX: +31 50 363 4947
    E-mail: deraedt@phys.rug.nl
    Links
    Computational-physics group anthem (Warning: Listener Discretion Advised)
    Number of visits to this page: Send mail to deraedt@phys.rug.nl with questions or comments about this web site. Last modified: September 06, 2005

    55. IngentaConnect Publication: Journal Of Computational Physics
    Journal of computational physics. ISSN 00219991 visit publication homepage Journal of computational physics logo Academic Press logo
    http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/ap/cp

    56. Computational Physics
    Fortran 77 codes by J. M. Thijssen to accompany his book.
    http://www.cp.tn.tudelft.nl/people/thijssen/book/progdir.html

    57. Home Page: Jose Fernando Mendes, Universidade De Aveiro
    Information about research, namely on random networks. Also presents classes online Statistical physics, computational physics, and mechanics and relativity.
    http://sweet.ua.pt/~f2064/

    Cv
    Biography Publications Projects ...
    UNIVERSIDADE DE AVEIRO

    home page

    I am a theoretical physicist working on Statistical Physics. My research, in the last years, focus mainly in the study of the structure and the evolution of communications networks, the World Wide Web, the Internet, biological networks, etc. Other interests are related with: granular media, self-organized criticality, non-equilibrium phase transitions, deposition models,etc. In fact, my last research on networks has inumerous applications and is a realization of a general principle: popularity is attractive
    Statistical physics

    New!
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    New!
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    Gazeta de Fisica (SPF)
    Mapa Campus UA FCT (Projects) CiteSeer Complexity Digest Useful Links USA maps Research Mendes Group My talks 2003 My talks 2004 Self-organized Criticality ... Last 5 papers Links... Theoretical and Computational Physics (Univ. Aveiro) TIPTOP Citations of JFFM Maps (Yahoo) ... Physics resources - directory of Physics related websites. "I didn't arrive at my understanding of the fundamental laws of the universe through my rational mind" - A. Einstein "I think the next century will be the century of complexity." - Stephen Hawking

    58. Institute For Computational Physics: Home
    Homepage of Institute of computational physics. Institute for computational physics. Physics on High Performance Computers
    http://www.ica1.uni-stuttgart.de/
    Institute for Computational Physics
    Physics on High Performance Computers
    Pfaffenwaldring 27, D-70569 Stuttgart
    Tel. 49-(0)711/685-3593, Fax. 49-(0)711/685-3658
    Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Hans Herrmann
    Last Modified: 25.07.2005 16:00:53 CET by Webmaster Legal Notice/Impressum

    59. Institute For Computational Physics: Publications
    Recent Publications at Institute for computational physics.
    http://www.ica1.uni-stuttgart.de/Recent_publications/

    Home
    News Research Teaching ... Sitemap
    Recent Publications
    Here are some recent publications from our Institut. As we are just setting up the server, this is a only a small collection of the work done. Most Papers below are in .html format to allow easy browsing, as well as a .tex or .ps version. Please contact the authors if you cannot find what you are looking for. Do you want to add your work? Contact webmaster , please.
    Dissertations
    Books
    Proceedings
    • H. J. Herrmann, J-P Hovi, and S. Luding (eds.),
      Physics of dry granular media,

      NATO-ASI Series, Kluwer academic publishers, Dordrecht, 1998.
      [ Author index ]
      , and [ Contents ]
    Publications and Preprints
    • Trapping and Mobilization of Residual Fluid During Capillary Desaturation in Porous Media
      A. Lucian and R. Hilfer

    60. International Journal Of Modern Physics C
    Covers computational physics, Physical Computation and related subjects. Publishes both review and research articles on the use of computers to advance knowledge in the physical sciences, and the use of physical analogies in computation. Topics include computer algebra, numerical simulation techniques, parallel and vector computers, lattice gauge theory, and algorithms.
    http://www.wspc.com/journals/ijmpc/ijmpc.html

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