Nobel laureate's brilliant attempt to develop a simple, unified standard method of dealing with all cases of statistical thermodynamics — classical, quantum, Bose-Einstein, Fermi-Dirac, and more.The work also includes discussions of Nernst theorem, Planck's oscillator, fluctuations, the n-particle problem, problem of radiation, and much more.
Erwin Rudolf Josef Alexander Schrödinger, sometimes written as Erwin Schrodinger or Erwin Schroedinger, was a Nobel Prize-winning Austrian physicist who developed a number of fundamental results in the field of quantum theory, which formed the basis of wave mechanics: he formulated the wave equation (stationary and time-dependent Schrödinger equation) and revealed the identity of his development of the formalism and matrix mechanics. Schrödinger proposed an original interpretation of the physical meaning of the wave function.
He won the 1933 Nobel prize in physics with colleague Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac "for the discovery of new productive forms of atomic theory"
Statistical Thermodynamics by Erwin Schrödinger is pretty much what it says it is. Nobel laureate Erwin Schrödinger discusses the basics of Statistical Thermodynamics, utilizing equations and formulas galore. Alongside that is a number of descriptions of those very same formulas.
All in all, this book is similar to a number of other books published by Dover. The only issue I had was that the text was sometimes blurry when they printed a fractional exponent, but other than that I really enjoyed this book. A great deal of it was read while on a bus ride, and the rest was finished at work during my break. There are no problems to solve, so if you just want the theory this is a good book for that.