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Unique graduate level textbook on quantum mechanics by the John
David Jackson, author of the bestselling Classical Electrodynamics
Jackson's posthumously published textbook, A Course on Quantum
Mechanics, covers quantum mechanics at an advanced level,
presenting fundamental principles and techniques including the
Schrödinger and Heisenberg representations, angular momentum,
perturbation theory, scattering, quantum theory of radiation, and
relativistic quantum mechanics. Particular attention is devoted to
the WKB and eikonal approximations, which can be applied to a broad
range of physical circumstances. An especially thorough treatment
is given to atomic physics. The principles of quantum mechanics are
illustrated in applications to atomic, nuclear, particle, and
condensed matter physics, demonstrating that quantum mechanics
provides a quantitative understanding of matter and light. The book
is drawn directly from Jackson’s detailed lecture notes and
problem sets. It is edited by colleague and former student Robert
N. Cahn, who has taken care to preserve Jackson’s unique style.
The textbook is notable for its original problems focused on real
applications, with many addressing published data in accompanying
tables and figures. Solutions are provided for problems whose
content is critical for understanding the material and whose
physical consequences are the most important. Overall, the text is
comprehensive and comprehensible. Particular care is taken to
present in detailed the steps in each derivation or calculation.
More than 120 figures are included to illustrate both underlying
principles, experimental apparatus, and data. In A Course on
Quantum Mechanics, readers can expect to find detailed information
on: Wave mechanics of De Broglie and Schrödinger, the Klein-Gordon
equation, non-relativistic approximation, free particle probability
current, and expectation values Schrödinger Equation in momentum
space, spread in time of a free-particle wave packet, density
matrix, and Sturm-Liouville Eigenvalue problem WKB formula for
bound states, example of WKB with a power law potential,
normalization of WKB bound state wave functions, and barrier
penetration with WKB. Rotations and angular momentum,
representations, Wigner d-functions, addition of angular momenta,
and the Wigner-Eckart theorem. Time-independent perturbation
theory, Stark, Zeeman, Paschen-Back effects, time-dependent
perturbation theory, and Fermi’s Golden Rule. Atomic structure,
helium, multiplet structure, Russell-Saunders coupling, spin-orbit
interaction, Thomas-Fermi model, and the Hartree-Fock
approximation. Scattering amplitude, Born approximation, allowing
internal structure, inelastic scattering, optical theorem, and
validity criterion for the first Born approximation, partial wave
analysis, eikonal approximation, resonance. Semi-classical and
quantum electromagnetism, Aharonov-Bohm effect, Lagrangian and
Hamiltonian formulations, gauge invariance, quantization of the
electromagnetic field, and coherent states. Emission and absorption
of radiation, dipole transitions, selection rules, Weisskopf-Wigner
treatment of line breadth and level shift, and the Lamb shift.
Relativistic quantum mechanics, Klein-Gordon equation, Dirac
equation, two-component reduction, hole theory, Foldy-Wouthuysen
transformation, Lorentz covariance, discrete symmetries, and
non-relativistic and relativistic Compton scattering. The textbook
follows the unique—demanding!— style of Jackson's Classical
Electrodynamics, A Course on Quantum Mechanics is an advanced level
textbook, highly suitable for ambitious graduate students and their
instructors, and containing novel problems with detailed solutions
to aid in gaining a solid understanding of the subject.
Our current understanding of elementary particles and their
interactions emerged from break-through experiments. This book
presents these experiments, beginning with the discoveries of the
neutron and positron, and following them through mesons, strange
particles, antiparticles, and quarks and gluons. This second
edition contains new chapters on the W and Z bosons, the top quark,
B-meson mixing and CP violation, and neutrino oscillations. This
book provides an insight into particle physics for researchers,
advanced undergraduate and graduate students. Throughout the book,
the fundamental equations required to understand the experiments
are derived clearly and simply. Each chapter is accompanied by
reprinted articles and a collection of problems with a broad range
of difficulty.
Designed to acquaint students of particle physics already familiar
with SU(2) and SU(3) with techniques applicable to all simple Lie
algebras, this text is especially suited to the study of grand
unification theories. Subjects include simple roots and the Cartan
matrix, the classical and exceptional Lie algebras, the Weyl group,
and more. 1984 edition.
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