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Quantum Field Theory Of Point Particles And Strings

Contributors

By Brian Hatfield

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Price

$54.99

Format

Format:

  1. ebook $54.99
  2. Trade Paperback $80.00

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around April 23, 1998. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

The purpose of this book is to introduce string theory without assuming any background in quantum field theory. Part I of this book follows the development of quantum field theory for point particles, while Part II introduces strings. All of the tools and concepts that are needed to quantize strings are developed first for point particles. Thus, Part I presents the main framework of quantum field theory and provides for a coherent development of the generalization and application of quantum field theory for point particles to strings.Part II emphasizes the quantization of the bosonic string. The treatment is most detailed in the path integral representation where the object of interest, the partition function, is a sum over random surfaces. The relevant mathematics of Riemann surfaces is covered. Superstrings are briefly introduced, and the sum over genus 0 supersurfaces is computed.The emphasis of the book is calculational, and most computations are presented in step-by-step detail. The book is unique in that it develops all three representations of quantum field theory (operator, functional Schrödinger, and path integral) for point particles and strings. In many cases, identical results are worked out in each representation to emphasize the representation-independent structures of quantum field theory.

On Sale
Apr 23, 1998
Page Count
752 pages
Publisher
Avalon Publishing
ISBN-13
9780813346397

Brian Hatfield

About the Author

Brian Hatfield is co-founder and senior research physicist at AMP Research in Lexington, Massachusetts. He has help positions at the University of California, the University of Texas, and Harvard University. He received a Ph.D. in physics from Caltech.

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