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This book presents thermal field theory techniques, which can be
applied in both cosmology and the theoretical description of the
QCD plasma generated in heavy-ion collision experiments. It focuses
on gauge interactions (whether weak or strong), which are essential
in both contexts. As well as the many differences in the physics
questions posed and in the microscopic forces playing a central
role, the authors also explain the similarities and the techniques,
such as the resummations, that are needed for developing a formally
consistent perturbative expansion. The formalism is developed step
by step, starting from quantum mechanics; introducing scalar,
fermionic and gauge fields; describing the issues of infrared
divergences; resummations and effective field theories; and
incorporating systems with finite chemical potentials. With this
machinery in place, the important class of real-time (dynamic)
observables is treated in some detail. This is followed by an
overview of a number of applications, ranging from the study of
phase transitions and particle production rate computations, to the
concept of transport and damping coefficients that play a
ubiquitous role in current developments. The book serves as a
self-contained textbook on relativistic thermal field theory for
undergraduate and graduate students of theoretical high-energy
physics.
The topic of the CVIII session of the Ecole de Physique des
Houches, held in July 2017, was Effective Field Theory in Particle
Physics and Cosmology. Effective Field Theory (EFT) is a general
method for describing quantum systems with multiple length scales
in a tractable fashion. It allows to perform precise calculations
in established models (such as the Standard Models of particle
physics and cosmology), as well as to concisely parametrise
possible effects from physics beyond the Standard Models. The goal
of this school was to offer a broad introduction to the foundations
and modern applications of Effective Field Theory in many of its
incarnations. This is all the more important as there are
preciously few textbooks covering the subject, none of them in a
complete way. In this book, the lecturers present the concepts in a
pedagogical way so that readers can adapt some of the latest
developments to their own problems. The chapters cover almost all
the lectures given at the school and will serve as an introduction
to the topic and as a reference manual to students and researchers.
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