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This book grew-how could it be otherwise?-out of a series
oflectures which the author held at the University of Heidelberg.
The purpose ofthese lectures was to give an introduction to the
phenomenology of elementary particles for students both of
theoretical and experimental orientation. With the present book the
author has set himself the same aim. The reader is assumed to be
familiar with ordinary nonrelativistic quantum mechanics as
presented, e.g., in the following books: Quantum Mechanics, by L.1.
Schiff (McGraw-Hill, New York, 1955); Quantum Mechanics, Vol. I, by
K. Gottfried (W.A. Benjamin, Reading, Ma., 1966). The setup of the
present book is as follows. In the first part we present some basic
general principles and concepts which are used in elementary
particle physics. The reader is supposed to learn here the
"language" of particle physics. An introductory chapter deals with
special relativity, of such funda mental importance for particle
physics, which most ofthe time is high energy, i.e., highly
relativistic physics. Further chapters of this first part deal with
the Dirac equation, with the theory of quantized fields, and with
the general definitions of the scattering and transition matrices
and the cross-sections."
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