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Reviews for Radiation Technology Handbook

 Radiation Technology Handbook magazine reviews

The average rating for Radiation Technology Handbook based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2011-10-25 00:00:00
1984was given a rating of 3 stars Benjamin Chase Prescott
great book on alot of factors mainly on new sorts of chmeical reactions and the process of newtons ideas of crptpologly as well as carbon compounds
Review # 2 was written on 2013-02-14 00:00:00
1984was given a rating of 3 stars Jeremy Lenard
This review is for Principles of Modern Chemistry, 6th ed. by Oxtoby, Campion & Gillis. (A webpage for this edition does not exist - although, incidentally, one for the solution manual does.) This book presents itself as a general chemistry text - which it is, for the most part - but not one I would recommend to someone who is learning chemistry for the first time. In fact, I would only recommend this text to someone who is specifically interested in physical chemistry and developing the foundation to learn more. The first third of the book, for instance, is a moderately difficult, yet somewhat superficial, introduction to quantum mechanics. The chapters progress in a microscopic-to-macroscopic format, an understandable strategy, but one that runs the risk of intimidating readers with highly inelegant math and counterintuitive concepts. (The latter chapters are much easier.) I also felt this book was a tad verbose. The page dimensions are not small, the font is not large, and it still takes 900 pages to explain chemistry - which may seem like a standard length to some, but, I assure you, it could have been more concise. (Compare to Griffith's vastly more thorough introduction to QM in 400 pages.)


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