Mechanics of the Cell - Book Review,
by David Boal

From Book News, Inc. A textbook for a one-semester course for senior undergraduates and beginning graduates with an interest in biophysics. Appendices summarize background material in physics and in biology for students coming from the other direction. The focus is on equilibrium properties of cells, with little discussion of their dynamics.Copyright © 2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Book Description Biological physics, the application of physics to provide an understanding of biological phenomenas, is a burgeoning, new inter-disciplinary subject. This text explores the physics behind the architecture of a cell's envelope and internal scaffolding, as well as the properties of its soft components. The analysis is performed within a consistent mathematical framework, although readers can navigate from the introductory material to biological applications without working through the intervening mathematics. The book includes applications and extensions handled through problems at the end of each chapter. This text is aimed at senior undergraduates and graduate students in science and biomedical engineering.
Book Info Simon Fraser Univ., Vancouver, Canada. Aimed at senior undergraduates and graduate students in science and biomedical engineering, this text explores the architecture of the cell's envelope and internal scaffolding, and the properties of its soft components. Softcover, hardcover not yet available.
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