Graduate General Relativity  29:273


 

professor: Vincent G.J. Rodgers
office: 513 VAN
telephone: 319-335-1219
email:
vincent-rodgers@uiowa.edu
classes: Tues and Thurs, 10:55-12:10 PM,   618 VAN
office hours: W and Th.  3:30 PM-5:00; Also by appointment.

chair:  Prof. Mary Hall Reno

 

 Textbooks :

  • General Relativity and Cosmology, by Steven Weinberg, John Wiley
  • The General Theory of Relativity,  by P.A.M. Dirac, 

  •  

    Supplemental Resources on Reserve in Physics Library:


     Introduction to general relativity,
     by  Lewis Ryder,  Cambridge 
    University Press, 2009

    A first course in general relativity,
    by Bernard Schutz,  Cambridge
    University Press, 2009

    Gravity, black holes, and the very early universe :
     an introduction to general relativity and cosmology ,
    by Tai L. Chow, Springer, 2008
      
    General relativity : an introduction for physicists
    by M.P. Hobson, G.P. Efstathiou and A.N. Lasenby, Cambridge University Press, 2006

    Spacetime and geometry : an introduction to general relativity,
    Sean Carroll, Addison Wesley, 2004
        
         A relativist's toolkit : the mathematics of black-hole mechanics,
    by Eric Poisson, Cambridge University Press, 2004

    General relativity,
    by Robert M. Wald, University of Chicago Press, 1984

    General relativity and matter : a spinor field theory from fermis to light-years,
     by Mendel Sachs ;  D. Reidel Pub. Co. 1982
        
    Exact solutions of Einstein's field equations,
    by D. Kramer ... [et al.], Cambridge University Press, 1980
      
    Gravitation,
    by Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne, John Archibald Wheeler, W. H. Freeman 1973
          

    Course Description:

    This course introduces Einstein's Theory of General Relativity as a gravitational theory through the use of differential geometry. The course also introduces the interaction of gravity on fermions as well as vector fields. Differential geometry will be introduced and techniques for problem solving will be discussed. The Schwarzschild solution, Reissner-Nordstram, Kerr, and Maxwell-Einstein metrics will be analyzed. Issues related to cosmology will also be developed.

    Grading:

    Calendar and Homework (ICON)

    A typical distributions of grades will be:

    100%-84% A's

    84%-68% B's

    68%-52% C's

    52%-36% D's

    below 36% F

     

    General Policy: Attendance at lectures is highly recommended. I typically will not lend my notes to make up material due to absence. Any complaints about this course should be addressed directly to me. If this does not resolve matters then they can be handled by the associate executive officer, Prof. Paul Kleiber  

     College of Liberal Arts & Sciences and Dept. of Physics and Astronomy Course Policies