Physics Reference Books
These are my favorite physics and mathematics books that I hope a budding science enthusiast will find interesting and useful. Please keep in mind that the choices are always biased, hence you should develop your own taste.
High School and Intermediate Level:
Resnick and Halliday: Principles of Physics
H. C. Verma: Concepts in Physics
Kumar and Mittal: Nootan Intermediate Physics (in Hindi, not so popular at present)
[Some good mathematics books]
S. L. Loney: The elements of Coordinate Geometry; Plane Trignometry
Hall and Knight: Higher Algebra
Hall and Stevens: School Geometry
Undergraduate level:
R. P. Feynman: Feynman Lectures in Physics
A. M. Purcell and D. J. Morin: Electricity and Magnetis
A. Reif: Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics
D. J. Tritton: Physical Fluid Dynamics
S. H. Strogatz: Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos
Mathews and Walker: Mathematical methods of Physics
M. K. Verma: Introduction to Mechanics (my own book)
Advanced UG and graduate level
L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz: Mechanics, Classical Theory of Fields, Fluid Dynamics, Statistical Mechanics. Other volumes are classic too, but I have no experience with them at all.
A. Zangwill: Modern Electrodynamics
T. Lancaster and S. J. Blundell: Quantum Field Theory for the Gifted Amateur
Popular Science Books
G. Gamow: One, Two, Three,..Infinity: Facts and Speculations of Science, and other books of Gamow
E.T. Bell: Men of Mathematics
J. Gleick: Chaos: Making a new science
R. P. Feynman: Character of Physical Laws
G. Polya: How to Solve it
J. D. Watson: Double Helix
Popular science, mathematics, and puzzle books by Carl Sagan, Martin Gardner
D. Hofstadter: Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid
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