An essential introduction to particle physics, with coverage ranging from the basics through to the very latest developments, in an accessible and carefully structured text."Particle Physics: Third Edition" is a revision of a highly regarded introduction to particle physics. In its two previous editions this book has proved to be an accessible and balanced introduction to modern particle physics, suitable for those students needed a more comprehensive introduction to the subject than provided by the 'compendium' style physics books.
In the "Third Edition" the standard model of particle physics is carefully developed whilst unnecessary mathematical formalism is avoided where possible. Emphasis is placed on the interpretation of experimental data in terms of the basic properties of quarks and leptons.
One of the major developments of the past decade has been the establishing of the existence of neutrino oscillations. This will have a profound effect on the plans of experimentalists. This latest edition brings the text fully up-to-date, and includes new sections on neutrino physics, as well as expanded coverage of detectors, such as the LHC detector.End of chapter problems with a full set of hints for their solutions provided at the end of the book.An accessible and carefully structured introduction to this demanding subject.Includes more advanced material in optional 'starred' sections.Coverage of the foundations of the subject, as well as the very latest developments.
Just finished the exam! so lucky to have a look of four momentum in the morning before the exam! feel good of having done a good job for this course in the final exam.
What did I think? What was I thinking when I removed this from the library shelf? I have read some interesting stuff recently on this subject, stimulated from my interest in Astronomy. However, Martin & Shaw's 'Particle Physics' is a textbook of first degree level for the pie eyed University undergrad. Like a scatty Red Setter I bounded into Chapter One:-Some Basic Concepts only to find the ice on Happy Valley Pond was rather too thin. In an instant I was spinning like a boson into some uncontrolled pirouette through the standard model of particles, unable to tell a hadron from a quark. By page 3 I hit the Relativistic wave equations and the ice cracked. Still floundering through Chapter One I hit the delights of Feynman diagrams...which is when my body mass index reached cold dark matter. John Updike gave some slight relief to the leptons, quarks and hadrons with his little ditty on electron neutrinos... Neutrinos, they are very small, They have no charge and have no mass And do not interact at all. The earth is just a silly ball To them, through which they simply pass, Like dustmaids down a drafty hall Or photons through a sheet of glass.
Through all this mush, I still hold some fascination! Take free quarks for example. Free quarks have never been seen, despite many experiments to find them. Free quarks would be most readily identified via their fractional electric charge. One consequence of this is that the lightest quark would be stable, as electric charge has to be conserved in any decay. In matter, such stable quarks would give rise to 'exotic atoms' with fractional charges which could be identified by techniques like mass spectroscopy. Many searches for pre-existing quarks in matter have been made, and many strange materials have been investigated (including moon rock,crushed oyster shells, and deep sea sludge) all with null results! Hey ho, hey ho, it's back to the library I go.