Thorough and rigorous development of the subject from a mathematically based perspective

Peter J. Bussey, Contemporary Physics

This is not your average quantum field theory book. Duncan provides a new perspecetive on the field, emphasising a number of conceptual and technical aspects that are usually brushed conveniently under the carpet. This should be high on the reading list of any serious researcher.

David Tong, University of Cambridge

The book attempts to provide an introduction to quantum field theory emphasizing conceptual issues frequently neglected in more "utilitarian" treatments of the subject. The book is divided into four parts, entitled respectively "Origins", "Dynamics", "Symmetries", and "Scales". The emphasis is conceptual - the aim is to build the theory up systematically from some clearly stated foundational concepts - and therefore to a large extent anti-historical, but two historical Chapters ("Origins") are included to situate quantum field theory in the larger context of modern physical theories. The three remaining sections of the book follow a step by step reconstruction of this framework beginning with just a few basic assumptions: relativistic invariance, the basic principles of quantum mechanics, and the prohibition of physical action at a distance embodied in the clustering principle. The "Dynamics" section of the book lays out the basic structure of quantum field theory arising from the sequential insertion of quantum-mechanical, relativistic and locality constraints. The central role of symmetries in relativistic quantum field theories is explored in the third section of the book, while in the final section, entitled "Scales", we explore in detail the feature of quantum field theories most critical for their enormous phenomenological success - the scale separation property embodied by the renormalization group properties of a theory defined by an effective local Lagrangian.
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The book provides a step by step construction of the framework of relativistic quantum field theory, starting from a minimal set of basic foundational postulates. The emphasis is on a careful and detailed description of the conceptual subtleties of modern field theory, many of which are glossed over in other texts.
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PART I: ORIGINS; PART II: DYNAMICS; PART III: SYMMETRIES; PART IV: SCALES
Systematic and careful exposition of the foundations of quantum field theory, starting from a minimal set of physical assumptions. Fills a gap in the available texts, which concentrate more on calculational aspects and less on clarifying the underlying conceptual structure. Includes two historical chapters for students of history of modern physics. Problems are included in most chapters, making the book suitable for graduate course work as well as self-study.
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Anthony Duncan is Professor of Physics at the University of Pittsburgh, USA.
Systematic and careful exposition of the foundations of quantum field theory, starting from a minimal set of physical assumptions. Fills a gap in the available texts, which concentrate more on calculational aspects and less on clarifying the underlying conceptual structure. Includes two historical chapters for students of history of modern physics. Problems are included in most chapters, making the book suitable for graduate course work as well as self-study.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198807650
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
1524 gr
Høyde
247 mm
Bredde
178 mm
Dybde
38 mm
Aldersnivå
P, UP, 06, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
794

Forfatter

Biographical note

Anthony Duncan is Professor of Physics at the University of Pittsburgh, USA.