Bibliography

Sources and further reading.

Standard references for the mathematical and physical material in Math Foundations. Entries are listed chronologically.

  1. d'Alembert, J. (1747). Recherches sur la courbe que forme une corde tendue mise en vibration. Hist. Acad. Royale Sci. Belles-Lettres Berlin 3: 214–219.

    First published the general solution f(x − ct) + g(x + ct) of the 1-D wave equation.

    #dalembert-1747
  2. Euler, L. (1755). Principes généraux du mouvement des fluides. Mémoires de l'académie des sciences de Berlin 11: 274–315.

    First statement of the fluid equations of motion in their modern form — what we now call the Euler equations.

    #euler-1755
  3. Fourier, J. (1822). Théorie analytique de la chaleur. Firmin Didot, Paris.

    Introduced the decomposition of arbitrary functions into trigonometric series, motivated by the heat equation. The mathematical foundation of frequency-domain analysis.

    #fourier-1822
  4. Strang, G. (1991). Calculus. Wellesley-Cambridge Press. ↗ online

    Available free online. The most physics-friendly introductory calculus text.

    #strang-calc
  5. Riley, K. F., Hobson, M. P., & Bence, S. J. (2006). Mathematical Methods for Physics and Engineering (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press.

    The standard British mathematical-methods reference. Covers everything in the Foundations book at greater depth.

    #riley-hobson-bence
  6. Spivak, M. (2008). Calculus (4th ed.). Publish or Perish.

    The rigorous-undergraduate calculus reference. Pace and exposition match the Foundations book's posture.

    #spivak-calculus