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    Introductory Physics for the Life Sciences (Volume 2)

    Posted By: GFX_MAN
    Introductory Physics for the Life Sciences (Volume 2)

    Introductory Physics for the Life Sciences (Volume 2)
    English | 2023 | ISBN: 9781003308072 | 289 pages | True PDF | 20.09 MB

    This textbook provides an accessible introduction to physics for undergraduate students in the life


    sciences, including those majoring in all branches of biology, biochemistry, and psychology and

    students working on pre-professional programs such as pre-medical, pre-dental, and physical

    therapy. The text is geared for the algebra-based physics course, often named College Physics in

    the United States.

    The order of topics studied in this volume requires students to first understand a concept, such as

    the conservation of energy, momentum, voltage, or current, the change in a quantity such as

    entropy, or the rules of ray and wave optics. Then, students apply these concepts to solve problems

    in the areas of thermodynamics, electrical circuit, optics, and atomic and nuclear physics.

    Throughout the text these quantity-based applications are used to understand systems that are

    critical to the understanding of biological systems, such as the entropy of evolution, the signal

    down the axon of a nerve cell, the optics of the eye, and the operation of a laser.

    This is part 2 of a two-volume set; volume 1 introduced students to the methods of mechanics and

    applied these problem-solving techniques to explicitly biological topics such as the sedimentation

    rate of red blood cells in haemoglobin, the torques and forces on a bacterium employing a

    flagellum to propel itself through a viscous fluid, and the terminal velocity of a protein moving in a

    gel electrophoresis device.

    Key features

    • Organized and centered around analysis techniques, not traditional mechanics and E&M.

    • Presents a unified approach, in a different order, meaning that the same laboratories,

    equipment, and demonstrations can be used when teaching the course.

    • Demonstrates to students that the analysis and concepts they are learning are critical to the

    understanding of biological systems.