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Handbook of Mathematical Functions: with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables | 
enlarge | Creators: Milton Abramowitz, Irene A. Stegun Publisher: Dover Publications Category: Book
List Price: $36.95 Buy Used: $8.19 You Save: $28.76 (78%)
New (17) Used (18) from $8.19
Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 164848
Media: Paperback Pages: 1046 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.4 Dimensions (in): 10.5 x 7.9 x 1.6
ISBN: 0486612724 Dewey Decimal Number: 517.5083 EAN: 9780486612720 ASIN: 0486612724
Publication Date: June 1, 1965 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Students and professionals in the fields of mathematics, physics, engineering, and economics will find this reference work invaluable. A classic resource for working with special functions, standard trig, and exponential logarithmic definitions and extensions, it features 29 sets of tables, some to as high as 20 places.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Great Product for a Great Price! October 24, 2008 Michael J. Gherini Great Product for a Great Price! It was in great condition! Thank you very much!
A classic, useful reference July 20, 2007 Nu One (USA) There are other good texts out there less than 40 years old, but this in my opinion belongs along with them on the serious engineer's office shelf along with Gradshteyn & Rhyzik and the others. Note: The text is actually taken from the 1972 10th edition, plus some corrections Dover made.
a must have May 26, 2007 Denis Jaisson (Germany) A good reference for the scientist or the engineer, well organised and easy to use
A seminal work January 29, 2007 someonesdad 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The amount of material in this book still stuns me, as well as the care that was taken in compiling it. Its influence is still felt in that many people still use its nomenclature for special functions. Many of the comments of the other reviewers are valid. However, one should realize this book came from another era, one in which the availability of digital computation resources weren't so prevalent or cheap as they are today. When one had to evaluate an expression to more significant figures than available on a slide rule, the calculation had to be done with logarithms and tables. It was noxious drudgery and error-prone to boot. This book covers many, if not most, of the special functions a technical person will be likely to encounter during his or her career. The level of presentation is approximately at what one could expect of a four year technical degree that has had exposure to the normal year and a half of elementary calculus, a semester or two of advanced calculus including differential equations, a semester of complex variables, and possibly a numerical analysis course. However, the book can still be used profitably even if you haven't had all that background. For $25 new or $5-10 used, it's hard to get this kind of information density for such low cost. My copy is pretty beat up; it's marked at $6.95 and I probably bought it in the late 1960's or early 1970's. The NIST is working on a digital replacement of Abramowitz and Stegun. Visit their website for an update.
May Be The Best Math Functions Book Around The World March 4, 2006 LIOBA ARAGON REBOLLEDA 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
(First of all, excuse my english, is not my mother lenguage) This book details math functions properties for the most and the less known functions. Starting with math and physical constants, only as an ilusion, cause the body kernel for this text is to take a function( transcendental, exponential, Gamma, Error, Legendre, Bessel, Jacobi......) and detail every property(formulas) and every useful numerical data(tables) you would know. But be careful, if you are serching for a complete list of more general formulas, may be you have to try in other texts( as i.e: Zwillinger's Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae, edited by CRC Press), here you can't find matrices nor tensors, none about algebras, nothing on general analysis(calculus) but yes, you will find all the analytical properties for all the functions you use to use, and for those that only someone use... enjoy your book
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