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The first version of quantum theory, developed in the mid 1920's,
is what is called nonrelativistic quantum theory; it is based on a
form of relativity which, in a previous volume, was called Newton
relativity. But quickly after this first development, it was
realized that, in order to account for high energy phenomena such
as particle creation, it was necessary to develop a quantum theory
based on Einstein relativity. This in turn led to the development
of relativistic quantum field theory, which is an intrinsically
many-body theory. But this is not the only possibility for a
relativistic quantum theory. In this book we take the point of view
of a particle theory, based on the irreducible representations of
the Poincare group, the group that expresses the symmetry of
Einstein relativity. There are several ways of formulating such a
theory; we develop what is called relativistic point form quantum
mechanics, which, unlike quantum field theory, deals with a fixed
number of particles in a relativistically invariant way. A central
issue in any relativistic quantum theory is how to introduce
interactions without spoiling relativistic invariance. We show that
interactions can be incorporated in a mass operator, in such a way
that relativistic invariance is maintained. Surprisingly for a
relativistic theory, such a construction allows for instantaneous
interactions; in addition, dynamical particle exchange and particle
production can be included in a multichannel formulation of the
mass operator. For systems of more than two particles, however,
straightforward application of such a construction leads to the
undesirable property that clusters of widely separated particles
continue to interact with one another, even if the interactions
between the individual particles are of short range. A significant
part of this volume deals with the solution of this problem. Since
relativistic quantum mechanics is not as well-known as relativistic
quantum field theory, a chapter is devoted to applications of point
form quantum mechanics to nuclear physics; in particular we show
how constituent quark models can be used to derive electromagnetic
and other properties of hadrons.
Thisvolumecontainsthewrittenversionsofinvitedlecturespresentedat
the"39. InternationaleUniversitatswochenfur ..
Kern-undTeilchenphysik"in Schladming, Austria, which took place
from February 26th to March 4th, 2000. The title of the school was
"Methods of Quantization". This is, of
course,averybroad?eld,soonlysomeofthenewandinterestingdevel-
mentscouldbecoveredwithinthescopeoftheschool.
About75yearsagoSchrodingerpresentedhisfamouswaveequationand
Heisenbergcameupwithhisalgebraicapproachtothequantum-theoretical
treatmentofatoms. Aimingmainlyatanappropriatedescriptionofatomic
systems, these original developments did not take into
consideration E- stein'stheoryofspecialrelativity.
WiththeworkofDirac,Heisenberg,and
Pauliitsoonbecameobviousthatauni?edtreatmentofrelativisticandqu-
tume?ectsisachievedbymeansoflocalquantum?eldtheory,i. e.
anintrinsic many-particletheory.
Mostofourpresentunderstandingoftheelementary
buildingblocksofmatterandtheforcesbetweenthemisbasedonthequ-
tizedversionof?eldtheorieswhicharelocallysymmetricundergaugetra-
formations. Nowadays,theprevailingtoolsforquantum-?eldtheoreticalc-
culationsarecovariantperturbationtheoryandfunctional-integralmethods.
Beingnotmanifestlycovariant,theHamiltonianapproachtoquantum-?eld
theorieslagssomewhatbehind,althoughitresemblesverymuchthefamiliar
nonrelativisticquantummechanicsofpointparticles.
Aparticularlyintere-
ingHamiltonianformulationofquantum-?eldtheoriesisobtainedbyqu-
tizingthe?eldsonhypersurfacesoftheMinkowsispacewhicharetangential
tothelightcone. The"timeevolution"ofthesystemisthenconsideredin +
"light-conetime"x =t+z/c. Theappealingfeaturesof"light-conequ-
tization",whicharethereasonsfortherenewedinterestinthisformulation
ofquantum?eldtheories,werehighlightedinthelecturesofBernardBakker
andThomasHeinzl. Oneoftheopenproblemsoflight-conequantizationis
theissueofspontaneoussymmetrybreaking. Thiscanbetracedbacktozero
modeswhich,ingeneral,aresubjecttocomplicatedconstraintequations. A
generalformalismforthequantizationofphysicalsystemswithconstraints
waspresentedbyJohnKlauder. Theperturbativede?nitionofquantum?eld
theoriesisingenerala?ictedbysingularitieswhichareovercomebyare-
larizationandrenormalizationprocedure.
Structuralaspectsoftherenormal- VI Preface
izationprobleminthecaseofgaugeinvariant?eldtheorieswerediscussed
inthelectureofKlausSibold. Areviewofthemathematicsunderlyingthe
functional-integralquantizationwasgivenbyLudwigStreit.
Apartfromthetopicsincludedinthisvolumetherewerealsolectures
ontheKaluza-odingerpresentedhisfamouswaveequationand
Heisenbergcameupwithhisalgebraicapproachtothequantum-theoretical
treatmentofatoms. Aimingmainlyatanappropriatedescriptionofatomic
systems, these original developments did not take into
consideration E- stein'stheoryofspecialrelativity.
WiththeworkofDirac,Heisenberg,and
Pauliitsoonbecameobviousthatauni?edtreatmentofrelativisticandqu-
tume?ectsisachievedbymeansoflocalquantum?eldtheory,i. e.
anintrinsic many-particletheory.
Mostofourpresentunderstandingoftheelementary
buildingblocksofmatterandtheforcesbetweenthemisbasedonthequ-
tizedversionof?eldtheorieswhicharelocallysymmetricundergaugetra-
formations. Nowadays,theprevailingtoolsforquantum-?eldtheoreticalc-
culationsarecovariantperturbationtheoryandfunctional-integralmethods.
Beingnotmanifestlycovariant,theHamiltonianapproachtoquantum-?eld
theorieslagssomewhatbehind,althoughitresemblesverymuchthefamiliar
nonrelativisticquantummechanicsofpointparticles.
Aparticularlyintere-
ingHamiltonianformulationofquantum-?eldtheoriesisobtainedbyqu-
tizingthe? eldsonhypersurfacesoftheMinkowsispacewhicharetangential
tothelightcone. The"timeevolution"ofthesystemisthenconsideredin +
"light-conetime"x =t+z/c. Theappealingfeaturesof"light-conequ-
tization",whicharethereasonsfortherenewedinterestinthisformulation
ofquantum?eldtheories,werehighlightedinthelecturesofBernardBakker
andThomasHeinzl. Oneoftheopenproblemsoflight-conequantizationis
theissueofspontaneoussymmetrybreaking. Thiscanbetracedbacktozero
modeswhich,ingeneral,aresubjecttocomplicatedconstraintequations. A
generalformalismforthequantizationofphysicalsystemswithconstraints
waspresentedbyJohnKlauder. Theperturbativede?nitionofquantum?eld
theoriesisingenerala?ictedbysingularitieswhichareovercomebyare-
larizationandrenormalizationprocedure.
Structuralaspectsoftherenormal- VI Preface
izationprobleminthecaseofgaugeinvariant?eldtheorieswerediscussed
inthelectureofKlausSibold. Areviewofthemathematicsunderlyingthe
functional-integralquantizationwasgivenbyLudwigStreit.
Apartfromthetopicsincludedinthisvolumetherewerealsolectures
ontheKaluza-Kleinprogramforsupergravity(P. vanNieuwenhuizen),on
dynamicalr-matricesandquantization(A. Alekseev),andonthequantum
Liouvillemodelasaninstructiveexampleofquantumintegrablemodels(L.
Faddeev). Inaddition,theschoolwascomplementedbymanyexcellents-
inars. Thelistofseminarspeakersandthetopicsaddressedbythemcanbe
foundattheendofthisvolume. Theinterestedreaderisrequestedtocontact
thespeakersdirectlyfordetailedinformationorpertinentmaterial.
Finally,wewouldliketoexpressourgratitudetothelecturersforalltheir
e?ortsandtothemainsponsorsoftheschool,theAustrianMinistryofE-
cation,Science,andCultureandtheGovernmentofStyria,forprovidingg-
eroussupport. Wealsoappreciatethevaluableorganizationalandtechnical
assistanceofthetownofSchladming,theSteyr-Daimler-PuchFahrzeugte-
nik, Ricoh Austria, Styria Online, and the Hornig company.
Furthermore, wethankoursecretaries,S. FuchsandE.
Monschein,anumberofgra-
atestudentsfromourinstitute,and,lastbutnotleast,ourcolleaguesfrom
theorganizingcommitteefortheirassistanceinpreparingandrunningthe
school. Graz, HeimoLatal March2001 WolfgangSchweiger Contents
FormsofRelativisticDynamics BernardL. G. Bakker...1 1
Introduction...1 2 ThePoincar'eGroup...3 3
FormsofRelativisticDynamics...4 3. 1
ComparisonofInstantForm,FrontForm,andPointForm...6 4
Light-FrontDynamics...9 4. 1 RelativeMomentum,InvariantMass...9 4.
2 TheBoxDiagram...14 5 Poincar'eGeneratorsinFieldTheory...19 5. 1
FermionsInteractingwithaScalarField...20 5. 2 InstantForm...20 5. 3
FrontForm(LF)...21 5. 4
InteractingandNon-interactingGeneratorsonanInstant
andontheLightFront...22 6 Light-FrontPerturbationTheory...23 6. 1
ConnectionofCovariantAmplitudes toLight-FrontAmplitudes...24 6. 2
Regularization...26 6. 3 MinusRegularization...26 7
TriangleDiagraminYukawaTheory...27 7. 1 CovariantCalculation ...28
7. 2 ConstructionoftheCurrentinLFD...30 7. 3 NumericalResults...37
3 8 FourVariationsonaThemein? Theory...37 8. 1
CovariantCalculation...39 8. 2 Instant-FormCalculation...42 8. 3
CalculationinLight-FrontCoordinates...47 8. 4
Front-FormCalculation...49 9
DimensionalRegularization:BasicFormulae...51 10
Four-DimensionalIntegration...52 11 SomeUsefulIntegrals...53
References...53 VIII Contents
Light-ConeQuantization:FoundationsandApplications ThomasHeinzl...
In this volume seven leading theoreticians and experimenters review
the origin of the asymmetry of matter and antimatter in the Big
Bang, solar neutrinos, the physics of enormous densities and
temperatures in stars and of immense magnetic fields around
collapsed stars, strong electric fields in heavy ion collisions,
and the extreme conditions in quark-gluon plasmas. The articles
address nuclear and particle physicists, especially graduate
students, but also astrophysicists and cosmologists, since they
have to deal with events under the extreme physical conditions
discussed here.
Thisvolumecontainsthewrittenversionsofinvitedlecturespresentedat
the"39. InternationaleUniversitatswochenfur ..
Kern-undTeilchenphysik"in Schladming, Austria, which took place
from February 26th to March 4th, 2000. The title of the school was
"Methods of Quantization". This is, of
course,averybroad?eld,soonlysomeofthenewandinterestingdevel-
mentscouldbecoveredwithinthescopeoftheschool.
About75yearsagoSchrodingerpresentedhisfamouswaveequationand
Heisenbergcameupwithhisalgebraicapproachtothequantum-theoretical
treatmentofatoms. Aimingmainlyatanappropriatedescriptionofatomic
systems, these original developments did not take into
consideration E- stein'stheoryofspecialrelativity.
WiththeworkofDirac,Heisenberg,and
Pauliitsoonbecameobviousthatauni?edtreatmentofrelativisticandqu-
tume?ectsisachievedbymeansoflocalquantum?eldtheory,i. e.
anintrinsic many-particletheory.
Mostofourpresentunderstandingoftheelementary
buildingblocksofmatterandtheforcesbetweenthemisbasedonthequ-
tizedversionof?eldtheorieswhicharelocallysymmetricundergaugetra-
formations. Nowadays,theprevailingtoolsforquantum-?eldtheoreticalc-
culationsarecovariantperturbationtheoryandfunctional-integralmethods.
Beingnotmanifestlycovariant,theHamiltonianapproachtoquantum-?eld
theorieslagssomewhatbehind,althoughitresemblesverymuchthefamiliar
nonrelativisticquantummechanicsofpointparticles.
Aparticularlyintere-
ingHamiltonianformulationofquantum-?eldtheoriesisobtainedbyqu-
tizingthe?eldsonhypersurfacesoftheMinkowsispacewhicharetangential
tothelightcone. The"timeevolution"ofthesystemisthenconsideredin +
"light-conetime"x =t+z/c. Theappealingfeaturesof"light-conequ-
tization",whicharethereasonsfortherenewedinterestinthisformulation
ofquantum?eldtheories,werehighlightedinthelecturesofBernardBakker
andThomasHeinzl. Oneoftheopenproblemsoflight-conequantizationis
theissueofspontaneoussymmetrybreaking. Thiscanbetracedbacktozero
modeswhich,ingeneral,aresubjecttocomplicatedconstraintequations. A
generalformalismforthequantizationofphysicalsystemswithconstraints
waspresentedbyJohnKlauder. Theperturbativede?nitionofquantum?eld
theoriesisingenerala?ictedbysingularitieswhichareovercomebyare-
larizationandrenormalizationprocedure.
Structuralaspectsoftherenormal- VI Preface
izationprobleminthecaseofgaugeinvariant?eldtheorieswerediscussed
inthelectureofKlausSibold. Areviewofthemathematicsunderlyingthe
functional-integralquantizationwasgivenbyLudwigStreit.
Apartfromthetopicsincludedinthisvolumetherewerealsolectures
ontheKaluza-odingerpresentedhisfamouswaveequationand
Heisenbergcameupwithhisalgebraicapproachtothequantum-theoretical
treatmentofatoms. Aimingmainlyatanappropriatedescriptionofatomic
systems, these original developments did not take into
consideration E- stein'stheoryofspecialrelativity.
WiththeworkofDirac,Heisenberg,and
Pauliitsoonbecameobviousthatauni?edtreatmentofrelativisticandqu-
tume?ectsisachievedbymeansoflocalquantum?eldtheory,i. e.
anintrinsic many-particletheory.
Mostofourpresentunderstandingoftheelementary
buildingblocksofmatterandtheforcesbetweenthemisbasedonthequ-
tizedversionof?eldtheorieswhicharelocallysymmetricundergaugetra-
formations. Nowadays,theprevailingtoolsforquantum-?eldtheoreticalc-
culationsarecovariantperturbationtheoryandfunctional-integralmethods.
Beingnotmanifestlycovariant,theHamiltonianapproachtoquantum-?eld
theorieslagssomewhatbehind,althoughitresemblesverymuchthefamiliar
nonrelativisticquantummechanicsofpointparticles.
Aparticularlyintere-
ingHamiltonianformulationofquantum-?eldtheoriesisobtainedbyqu-
tizingthe? eldsonhypersurfacesoftheMinkowsispacewhicharetangential
tothelightcone. The"timeevolution"ofthesystemisthenconsideredin +
"light-conetime"x =t+z/c. Theappealingfeaturesof"light-conequ-
tization",whicharethereasonsfortherenewedinterestinthisformulation
ofquantum?eldtheories,werehighlightedinthelecturesofBernardBakker
andThomasHeinzl. Oneoftheopenproblemsoflight-conequantizationis
theissueofspontaneoussymmetrybreaking. Thiscanbetracedbacktozero
modeswhich,ingeneral,aresubjecttocomplicatedconstraintequations. A
generalformalismforthequantizationofphysicalsystemswithconstraints
waspresentedbyJohnKlauder. Theperturbativede?nitionofquantum?eld
theoriesisingenerala?ictedbysingularitieswhichareovercomebyare-
larizationandrenormalizationprocedure.
Structuralaspectsoftherenormal- VI Preface
izationprobleminthecaseofgaugeinvariant?eldtheorieswerediscussed
inthelectureofKlausSibold. Areviewofthemathematicsunderlyingthe
functional-integralquantizationwasgivenbyLudwigStreit.
Apartfromthetopicsincludedinthisvolumetherewerealsolectures
ontheKaluza-Kleinprogramforsupergravity(P. vanNieuwenhuizen),on
dynamicalr-matricesandquantization(A. Alekseev),andonthequantum
Liouvillemodelasaninstructiveexampleofquantumintegrablemodels(L.
Faddeev). Inaddition,theschoolwascomplementedbymanyexcellents-
inars. Thelistofseminarspeakersandthetopicsaddressedbythemcanbe
foundattheendofthisvolume. Theinterestedreaderisrequestedtocontact
thespeakersdirectlyfordetailedinformationorpertinentmaterial.
Finally,wewouldliketoexpressourgratitudetothelecturersforalltheir
e?ortsandtothemainsponsorsoftheschool,theAustrianMinistryofE-
cation,Science,andCultureandtheGovernmentofStyria,forprovidingg-
eroussupport. Wealsoappreciatethevaluableorganizationalandtechnical
assistanceofthetownofSchladming,theSteyr-Daimler-PuchFahrzeugte-
nik, Ricoh Austria, Styria Online, and the Hornig company.
Furthermore, wethankoursecretaries,S. FuchsandE.
Monschein,anumberofgra-
atestudentsfromourinstitute,and,lastbutnotleast,ourcolleaguesfrom
theorganizingcommitteefortheirassistanceinpreparingandrunningthe
school. Graz, HeimoLatal March2001 WolfgangSchweiger Contents
FormsofRelativisticDynamics BernardL. G. Bakker...1 1
Introduction...1 2 ThePoincar'eGroup...3 3
FormsofRelativisticDynamics...4 3. 1
ComparisonofInstantForm,FrontForm,andPointForm...6 4
Light-FrontDynamics...9 4. 1 RelativeMomentum,InvariantMass...9 4.
2 TheBoxDiagram...14 5 Poincar'eGeneratorsinFieldTheory...19 5. 1
FermionsInteractingwithaScalarField...20 5. 2 InstantForm...20 5. 3
FrontForm(LF)...21 5. 4
InteractingandNon-interactingGeneratorsonanInstant
andontheLightFront...22 6 Light-FrontPerturbationTheory...23 6. 1
ConnectionofCovariantAmplitudes toLight-FrontAmplitudes...24 6. 2
Regularization...26 6. 3 MinusRegularization...26 7
TriangleDiagraminYukawaTheory...27 7. 1 CovariantCalculation ...28
7. 2 ConstructionoftheCurrentinLFD...30 7. 3 NumericalResults...37
3 8 FourVariationsonaThemein? Theory...37 8. 1
CovariantCalculation...39 8. 2 Instant-FormCalculation...42 8. 3
CalculationinLight-FrontCoordinates...47 8. 4
Front-FormCalculation...49 9
DimensionalRegularization:BasicFormulae...51 10
Four-DimensionalIntegration...52 11 SomeUsefulIntegrals...53
References...53 VIII Contents
Light-ConeQuantization:FoundationsandApplications ThomasHeinzl...
This volume contains the written versions of invited lectures
presented at the 29th "Internationale Universitatswochen fiir
Kernphysik" in Schladming, Aus tria, in March 1990. The generous
support of our sponsors, the Austrian Ministry of Science and
Research, the Government of Styria, and others, made it possible to
invite expert lecturers. In choosing the topics of the course we
have tried to select some of the currently most fiercely debated
aspects of quantum field theory. It is a pleasure for us to thank
all the speakers for their excellent presentations and their
efforts in preparing the lecture notes. After the school the
lecture notes were revised by the authors and partly rewritten ~n
'!EX. We are also indebted to Mrs. Neuhold for the careful typing
of those notes which we did not receive in '!EX. Graz, Austria H.
Mitter July 1990 W. Schweiger Contents An Introduction to
Integrable Models and Conformal Field Theory By H. Grosse (With 6
Figures) .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . .. 1 1. Introduction
............................................. . 1 1.1 Continuous
Integrable Models .......................... . 1 1.2 "Solvable"
Models of Statistical Physics ................. . 2 1.3 The
Yang-Baxter Relation ............................. . 3 1.4 Braids
and I(nots .................................... . 3 1.5 Confonnal
Field Theory d = 2 ......................... . 3 2. Integrable
Continuum Models - The Inverse Scattering Method - Solitons
.................... . 4 2.1 A General Scheme for Solving (Linear)
Problems ......... . 4 2.2 The Direct Step
...................................... . 6 2.3 The Inverse Step
..................................... .
Fuhren die sozialen Medien zu einer einseitigen
Pseudo-Informiertheit von Burgern und verstarken damit die
Polarisierung der Gesellschaft? Der Nachrichten- und
Informationskosmos im Internet befindet sich im Umbruch - mit
beunruhigenden Folgen fur die Demokratie. Lange waren
journalistische Medien, alternative Angebote und die oeffentliche
Kommunikation unter Burgern getrennt. In Facebook, YouTube, Google
und Co. vermischen sie sich. Nachrichten, Verschwoerungstheorien
und Hasskommentare stehen direkt nebeneinander. Das uberfordert die
Medienkompetenz vieler Burger. Obwohl sie das Nachrichtengeschehen
kaum uberblicken, fuhlen sie sich gut informiert. Gleichzeitig
bleiben die Meinungslager unter sich (Filterblase) und schaukeln
sich gegenseitig auf (Echokammer). Das tragt zur verzerrten
Wahrnehmung der oeffentlichen Meinung durch den Einzelnen bei,
verandert die Meinungsbildung und verscharft die Polarisierung der
Gesellschaft. Indizien sprechen dafur, dass besonders die
politisierte Bildungsmitte betroffen ist.
Das Handbuch gibt in zahlreichen Beitragen einschlagiger
FachautorInnen einen umfassenden und systematischen UEberblick des
aktuellen Forschungsstandes kommunikationswissenschaftlicher
Online-Forschung. Einfuhrend werden die zentralen Fragestellungen,
theoretischen Ansatze und empirischen Befunde dargestellt. Das
Themenspektrum reicht von den Grundlagen computervermittelter
Kommunikation (interpersonale, Gruppen- und oeffentliche
Kommunikation), uber oekonomische, ethische und politische Fragen
wie Regulierung und Kontrolle des Internets, sowie seine
Verbreitung, Nutzung und Wirkung. Weitere Beitrage befassen sich
mit OEffentlichkeit und Journalismus online, kulturellen und
sozialpsychologischen Aspekten, Online-Werbung und -PR,
Gesundheitskommunikation, E-Learning und Wissensmanagement sowie
Online-Spielen. Ein UEberblick uber Methoden der Online-Forschung
sowie die wichtigsten Datenquellen und Standarduntersuchungen
rundet das Werk ab.
Inzwischen hat das Internet eine neue Entwicklungsphase erreicht:
Mit dem Schlagwort "Web 2.0" werden partizipative Formate wie
Weblogs und kollaborative Websites gelabelt, die den Nutzern die
aktive Teilnahme an der Offentlichkeit in der Kommunikatorrolle
ermoglichen. Haufig ist in diesem Zusammenhang auch von
"partizipativem Journalismus," "Burgerjournalismus" oder
"Open-Source-Journalismus" die Rede. Machen normale Burger den
professionellen Online-Journalismus uberflussig oder erlebt der
Online-Journalismus eine neue Blute?
In diesem Band werden Akteure, Strukturen, Prozesse und Leistungen
neuer Formen der aktuellen Internetoffentlichkeit facettenreich
diskutiert. Neben deutschsprachigen Kommunikationswissenschaftlern
kommentieren auch internationale Experten und anerkannte
Praxisvertreter neueste Entwicklungen.
Massenmedien sind aus modernen Gesellschaften nicht wegzudenken.
Nicht umsonst hat die herrschende Rechtsprechung in Deutschland dem
Fernsehgerat den Status einer nicht pfand- ren Sache des
persoenlichen Gebrauchs gegeben. Jeder erwachsene Deutsche nutzte
2005 taglich zehn Stunden Medien, davon achteinhalb Stunden
Fernsehen, Radio, Zeitung und das Internet (van Eimeren &
Ridder 2005). Eine knappe Stunde davon werden zwei oder mehrere
Medien gleichzeitig genutzt, so dass die netto mit Medien
verbrachte Zeit etwas kurzer ist. Ein Vergleich mit 1980 zeigt
schliesslich, dass die Bedeutung der Massenmedien in den
vergangenen 25 Jahren erheblich gestiegen sein muss: Damals lag das
Brutto-Zeitbudget bei weniger als sechs Stunden. Dabei wurde
Mediennutzung schon immer ambivalent gesehen. Bereits im
ausgehenden 17. Jahrhundert zog die 'Zeitungslust' mancher
Zeitgenossen Kritik auf sich (Stieler 1695). Heute ist die Rede von
ubergewichtigen und sozial isolierten Kindern und Jugendlichen, die
den g- zen Tag vor dem Fernseher, Computer oder der Spielkonsole
sitzen, von einer zunehmenden Aggressivitat auf Schulhoefen, von
Politikverdrossenheit unter Erwachsenen durch anspruchslose
Politikberichterstattung im Fernsehen oder von der generellen
Verdummung der Gesellschaft durch verantwortungslose Medienmacher,
die lediglich die primitivsten Bedurfnisse ihres Pub- kums
befriedigen. Auf der anderen Seite befeuert besonders das Internet
weitreichende Ho- nungen. Man musse nur dafur sorgen, so die
Annahme, dass alle Menschen weltweit Anschluss ans Internet haben
und die noetige Medienkompetenz erwerben. Dann wurde die
allgegenwartige Verfugbarkeit von Informationen zu einem
gesamtgesellschaftlichen Wissens- und Bildun- schub fuhren, die
volkswirtschaftliche Leistungsfahigkeit erhoehen und sogar die
Bedingungen der gelebten Demokratie - Stichworte sind E-Government
und E-Democracy - verbessern.
Wie fugt sich das Internet in die Alltagshandlungen seiner Nutzer
ein? Welche Veranderungen ergeben sich fur Journalisten? Nach
welchen Kriterien entscheiden sich Nutzer fur ein bestimmtes
Internetangebot? Diese Fragen beruhren einen zentralen Aspekt der
Kommunikationsforschung: die Selektion. Dieser Band setzt sich aus
empirischer Sicht mit dem Thema auseinander."
The first version of quantum theory, developed in the mid 1920's,
is what is called nonrelativistic quantum theory; it is based on a
form of relativity which, in a previous volume, was called Newton
relativity. But quickly after this first development, it was
realized that, in order to account for high energy phenomena such
as particle creation, it was necessary to develop a quantum theory
based on Einstein relativity. This in turn led to the development
of relativistic quantum field theory, which is an intrinsically
many-body theory. But this is not the only possibility for a
relativistic quantum theory. In this book we take the point of view
of a particle theory, based on the irreducible representations of
the Poincare group, the group that expresses the symmetry of
Einstein relativity. There are several ways of formulating such a
theory; we develop what is called relativistic point form quantum
mechanics, which, unlike quantum field theory, deals with a fixed
number of particles in a relativistically invariant way. A central
issue in any relativistic quantum theory is how to introduce
interactions without spoiling relativistic invariance. We show that
interactions can be incorporated in a mass operator, in such a way
that relativistic invariance is maintained. Surprisingly for a
relativistic theory, such a construction allows for instantaneous
interactions; in addition, dynamical particle exchange and particle
production can be included in a multichannel formulation of the
mass operator. For systems of more than two particles, however,
straightforward application of such a construction leads to the
undesirable property that clusters of widely separated particles
continue to interact with one another, even if the interactions
between the individual particles are of short range. A significant
part of this volume deals with the solution of this problem. Since
relativistic quantum mechanics is not as well-known as relativistic
quantum field theory, a chapter is devoted to applications of point
form quantum mechanics to nuclear physics; in particular we show
how constituent quark models can be used to derive electromagnetic
and other properties of hadrons.
Das Handbuch gibt in zahlreichen Beitragen einschlagiger
FachautorInnen einen umfassenden und systematischen Uberblick des
aktuellen Forschungsstandes kommunikationswissenschaftlicher
Online-Forschung. Einfuhrend werden die zentralen Fragestellungen,
theoretischen Ansatze und empirischen Befunde dargestellt.
Das Themenspektrum reicht von den Grundlagen computervermittelter
Kommunikation (interpersonale, Gruppen- und offentliche
Kommunikation), uber okonomische, ethische und politische Fragen
wie Regulierung und Kontrolle des Internets, sowie seine
Verbreitung, Nutzung und Wirkung. Weitere Beitrage befassen sich
mit Offentlichkeit und Journalismus online, kulturellen und
sozialpsychologischen Aspekten, Online-Werbung und PR,
Gesundheitskommunikation, E-Learning und Wissensmanagement sowie
Online-Spielen. Ein Uberblick uber Methoden der Online-Forschung
und die wichtigsten Datenquellen und Standarduntersuchungen rundet
das Werk ab.
"
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