|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
The book shows how classical field theory, quantum mechanics, and
quantum field theory are related. The description is global from
the outset. Quantization is explained using the Peierls bracket
rather than the Poisson bracket. This allows one to deal
immediately with observables, bypassing the canonical formalism of
constrained Hamiltonian systems and bigger-than-physical Hilbert
(or Fock) spaces. The Peierls bracket leads directly to the
Schwinger variational principle and the Feynman functional
integral, the latter of which is taken as defining the quantum
theory. Also included are the theory of tree amplitudes and
conservation laws, which are presented classically and later
extended to the quantum level. The quantum theory is developed from
the many-worlds viewpoint, and ordinary path integrals and the
topological issues to which they give rise are studied in some
detail. The theory of mode functions and Bogoliubov coefficients
for linear fields is fully developed, and then the quantum theory
of nonlinear fields is confronted. The effective action,
correlation functions and counter terms all make their appearance
at this point, and the S-matrix is constructed via the introduction
of asymptotic fields and the LSZ theorem. Gauge theories and ghosts
are studied in great detail. Many applications of the formalism are
given: vacuum currents, anomalies, black holes, fourth-order
systems, higher spin fields, the (lambda phi) to the fourth power
model (and spontaneous symmetry breaking), quantum electrodynamics,
the Yang-Mills field and its topology, the gravitational field,
etc. Special chapters are devoted to Euclideanization and
renormalization, space and time inversion, and the closed-time-path
or "in-in" formalism. Emphasis is given throughout to the role of
the functional-integral measure in the theory. Six helpful
appendices, ranging from superanalysis to analytic continuation in
dimension, are included at the end.
This updated and expanded second edition of an established text presents a detailed exposition of the modern theory of supermanifolds, including a rigorous account of the superanalogs of all the basic structures of ordinary manifold theory.
This text covers classical field theory, quantum mechanics and all major theoretical aspects of quantum field theory, and shows how they are related. Unlike any other book on the subject, fields are viewed as global entities in spacetime rather than as systems evolving from one instant of time to the next.
Bryce DeWitt, a student of Nobel Laureate Julian Schwinger, was
himself one of the towering figures in 20th century physics,
particularly renowned for his seminal contributions to quantum
field theory, numerical relativity and quantum gravity. In late
1971 DeWitt gave a course on gravitation at Stanford University,
leaving almost 400 pages of detailed handwritten notes. Written
with clarity and authority, and edited by his former student Steven
Christensen, these timeless lecture notes, containing material or
expositions not found in any other textbooks, are a gem to be
discovered or re-discovered by anyone seriously interested in the
study of gravitational physics.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
The Public
Alec Baldwin, Emilio Estevez, …
DVD
R216
Discovery Miles 2 160
|