Comment by senorcrab
4 days ago
Freshman university textbooks have what you need. Two of the most popular are:
- University Physics by Young and Freedman
- Fundamentals of Physics by Halliday, Resnick, Walker
- Modern Physics by Krane
You might guess that real physics is not actually in freshman textbooks, and you are right. Modern physics requires rigorous mathematics.
For a nonrigorous introduction/overview:
- The Road to Reality by Roger Penrose
If you want to actually learn almost all of physics at a high level:
- Course of Theoretical Physics by Landau
Note that Landau is extremely difficult.
If you want to learn the math needed for modern physics (topology) in the context of physics, nonrigorously:
- Geometry, Topology, and Physics by Nakahara
Nice list. I had known of most of the books here; studied Resnick & Halliday (decades ago in bachelors) and have also perused Penrose's book. Landau/Lifshitz is of course well known.
The Nakahara book is new to me; Thanks for the pointer.
> Fundamentals of Physics by Halliday, Resnick, Walker
I strongly recommend this textbook. I used in college, and it's really good. There are a lot of problems for each chapter, I suggest doing them as they help a lot.
Landau was Einstein+ level genius and the course was a soviet theoretical physics bible many years ago. But it’s not a good educational resource by modern standards and pretty dated.
True it is pretty dated. OP was requesting resources that cover *all* of physics and Landau popped into mind. Is there a modern series of textbooks that offers such a broad coverage?
Landau these days doesn’t look like a “broad coverage” at all.
More like “many specific topics and areas covered in a set of books under same authors”.
Also Landau was one of the last (probably the last) polymath physicists who covered a wide range of fields.
I doubt it is even technically possible to cover even 30% of all modern theoretical physics in a single course with depth comparable to Landau books.
Landau! my soviet physics teacher would say the same thing!