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Gauge Theory of Elementary Particle Physics

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This is a practical introduction to the principal ideas in gauge theory and their applications to elementary particle physics, explaining technique and methodology with simple exposition backed up by many illustrative examples. Derivations, some of well known results, are presented in
sufficient detail to make the text accessible to readers entering the field for the first time. The book focuses on the strong interaction theory of quantum chromodynamics and the electroweak interaction theory of Glashow, Weinberg, and Salam, as well as the grand unification theory, exemplified by
the simplest SU(5) model.

546 pages, Hardcover

First published August 2, 1984

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Ta-Pei Cheng

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Stany.
36 reviews12 followers
July 24, 2019
This book is obviously dated. I have a version of 2011 and it doesn't not seem to have been updated since the original version of 1984. Not only with regard to the many experimental discoveries since then, but also with regard to the disturbingly large amount of typographical errors in the formulae, that make checking any of the more detailed calculations very laborious. There are, moreover subjects that have since then received a much better and clearer treatment. It is also a puzzle to me what the role is of the last two chapters (magnetic monopoles and instantons) as the treatment is very basic, and the link with the rest of the book is not made very clear. Nevertheless, there are some excellent chapters; the chapter on the SU(5) GUT to name only one. I guess this book has now been superseded as a standard text by Langacker (The Standard Model & Beyond) although the latter seems much more phenomenology-based. But the general style & approach of the book is pretty good and could need an update.
Profile Image for Brian Powell.
202 reviews35 followers
January 5, 2021
Solid introduction to quantum field theory and renormalization, heavy on applications to gauge theories and particle physics. Some well-written special topics, like monopoles and instantons, top everything off. I found this text to be a useful supplement to the standard introductory QFT regimen.
Profile Image for Kevin K. Gillette.
107 reviews40 followers
November 7, 2014
This is another volume I've really just skimmed, as it is really well beyond my level of physics comprehension at the moment. However, that said, I did find this book extremely illuminating on a number of topics. One of my favorite curiosities has been monopole formation, and Chapter 15 of this book deals with the Georgi-Glashow and (later) the 't Hooft-Polyakov monopole solutoins in a relatively reader-friendly way. So for me, it was worth the price of purchase just for that chapter, if not any of the others. But the book goes into extensive detail on the relationship between canonical formalisms of particle interactions (creation, annihilation, exchange of data) and their corresponding Feynman diagrams.

Well worth looking at!
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