Quantum Field Theory I, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2016
Foundations and Abelian and Non-Abelian Gauge Theories

Graduate Texts in Physics Series

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Language: English

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Quantum Field Theory I
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Quantum Field Theory I
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This textbook covers a broad spectrum of developments in QFT, emphasizing those aspects that are now well consolidated and for which satisfactory theoretical descriptions have been provided. The book is unique in that it offers a new approach to the subject and explores many topics merely touched upon, if covered at all, in standard reference works.

A detailed and largely non-technical introductory chapter traces the development of QFT from its inception in 1926. The elegant functional differential approach put forward by Schwinger, referred to as the quantum dynamical (action) principle, and its underlying theory are used systematically in order to generate the so-called vacuum-to-vacuum transition amplitude of both abelian and non-abelian gauge theories, in addition to Feynman?s well-known functional integral approach, referred to as the path-integral approach. Given the wealth of information also to be found in the abelian case, equal importance is put on both abelian and non-abelian gauge theories.

Particular emphasis is placed on the concept of a quantum field and its particle content to provide an appropriate description of physical processes at high energies, where relativity becomes indispensable. Moreover, quantum mechanics implies that a wave function renormalization arises in the QFT field independent of any perturbation theory - a point not sufficiently emphasized in the literature. The book provides an overview of all the fields encountered in present high-energy physics, together with the details of the underlying derivations. Further, it presents ?deep inelastic? experiments as a fundamental application of quantum chromodynamics.

Though the author makes a point of deriving points in detail, the book still requires good background knowledge of quantum mechanics, including the Dirac Theory, as well as elements of the Klein-Gordon equation. The present volume sets the language, the notation and provides additional background for reading Quantum Field Theory II - Introduction to Quantum Gravity, Supersymmetry and String Theory, by the same author. Students in this field might benefit from first reading the book Quantum Theory: A Wide Spectrum (Springer, 2006), by the same author.

Acknowledgements.- Preface to Volume I.- Notation and Data.- Introduction.- Preliminaries.- Quantum Field Theory Methods of Spin 1/2.- Fundamental Aspects of Quantum Field Theory.- Abelian Gauge Theories.- Non- Abelian Gauge Theories.- Appendix I: The Dirac Formalism.- Appendix II: Doing Intergals in Field Theory.- Appendix III: Analytic Continuation in Spacetime Dimension and Dimensional Regulation.- Appendix IV: Schwinger’s Point Splitting Method of Currents: Arbitrary Orders.- Appendix V: Renormalization and the Underlying Subtractions.- Solutions to the Problems.- Index.

Professor Dr. Edouard B. Manoukian, currently professor at The Institute for Fundamental Study (IF), Naresuan University, Phitsanulok, Thailand, received his M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in 1968 and 1971, from McGill and University and the University of Toronto, Canada, respectively. He was a researcher at the Theoretical Physics Institute of the University of Alberta, the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, and the Centre de Recherches Mathématiques Appliquées of the University of Montreal. In 1978 he joined the staff of the Department of National Defense of the Royal Military College of Canada and was appointed as a full professor in 1985. He has authored several books, two of which with Springer, and he has published over 190 research papers on many aspects of theoretical physics.

Offers a highly pedagogical and self-contained text on quantum field theory

Examines side-by-side Schwinger’s formalism and Feynman’s path-integral formalism

Presents an elegant approach to quantum field theory problems using the source theory and green functions

Includes the underlying theory of neutrino oscillations, neutrino masses, neutrino mass differences, and the “seesaw mechanism”

Includes a wealth of problems, with solutions at the end of the book

Complete with five appendices