Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2010
Summary
Prefaces are rarely inspiring and, one suspects, seldom read. They generally consist of a dry, factual account of the content of the book, its intended readership and the names of those who assisted in its preparation. There are, of course, exceptions, of which Den Hartog's preface to a text on mechanics is amongst the wittiest. Musing whimsically on the futility of prefaces in general, and on the inevitable demise of those who, like Heaviside, use them to settle old scores, Den Hartog's preface contains barely a single relevant fact. Only in the final paragraph does he touch on more conventional matters with the observation that he has ‘placed no deliberate errors in the book, but he has lived long enough to be quite familiar with his own imperfections’.
We, for our part, shall stay with a more conventional format. This work is more of a text than a monograph. Part A (the larger part of the book) is intended to serve as an introductory text for (advanced) undergraduate and post-graduate students in physics, applied mathematics and engineering. Part B, on the other hand, is more of a research monograph and we hope that it will serve as a useful reference for professional researchers in industry and academia. We have at all times attempted to use the appropriate level of mathematics required to expose the underlying phenomena. Too much mathematics can, in our opinion, obscure the interesting physics and needlessly frighten the student.
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- Information
- An Introduction to Magnetohydrodynamics , pp. xvii - xviiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001