Description
A systematic, accessible guide to the more commonly used ideas and techniques in statistical analysis as used in physical sciences, together with explanations of their origins
About the Author
Prof. Brian R. Martin graduated from Birmingham University with a BSc in Physics and then moved to University College London (1962-1965) to take a PhD in Theoretical Physics. He was a Ford Foundation Fellow at the Institute for Theoretical Physics, Copenhagen University, Copenhagen; a NATO Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Neils Bohr Institute, Copenhagen; and a Research Associate in the Physics Department of Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York. Returning to University College London, he served as a Lecturer, then a Reader and Professor, before becoming Head of Department (1993-2004). Professor Martin retired as Professor Emeritus in October 2005.
Reviews
"Martin (physics and astronomy, U. College London) has produced an undergraduate textbook that is more thorough than the drivel of statistics that physical science students get - usually as part of some other course - but still not the full theoretical and practical treatment that most students do not have time for and most schools do not teach. He assumes a knowledge of calculus and matrices the level of first-year undergraduate physical science student." --Reference and Research Book News, Inc.
Book Information
ISBN 9780123877604
Author Brian Martin
Format Hardback
Page Count 320
Imprint Academic Press Inc
Publisher Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
Weight(grams) 810g