Particles and Fundamental Interactions [electronic resource] : An Introduction to Particle Physics / by Sylvie Braibant, Giorgio Giacomelli, Maurizio Spurio.
Tipo de material: TextoSeries Undergraduate Lecture Notes in Physics | Undergraduate Lecture Notes in PhysicsEditor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2012Descripción: XIV, 498p. 202 illus., 35 illus. in color. online resourceTipo de contenido:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789400724648
- SpringerLink (Online service)
- 539.73 23
- QC770-798
Preface -- 1. Historical Notes and Fundamental Concepts -- 2. Particle Interactions with Matter and Detectors.-3. Particle Accelerators and Particle Detection -- 4. The Paradigm of Interactions: the Electromagnetic Case -- 5. FirstDiscussionof the Other Fundamental Interactions -- 6 Invariance and Conservation Principles -- 7. Hadron Interactions at Low Energies and theStatic Quark Model -- 8. Weak Interactions and Neutrinos -- 9. Discoveries in Electron-Positron Collisions -- 10. High Energy Interactions atthe Dynamic Quark Model -- 11. The Standard Model of the Microcosm -- 12. CP-Violation and Particle Oscillations -- 13. Microcosm and Macrocosm -- 14. Fundamental aspects of Nucleon Interactions -- Appendix 1. Periodic Table -- Appendix 2. The natural units in subnuclear physics -- Appendix 3. Basic concepts of relativity and classical EM -- Appendix 4. Diracs equation and formalism -- Appendix 5. Physical and astrophysical constants -- References -- Index.
This book aims to provide the basis of theoretical foundation and phenomenological knowledge of the structure of matter at the subatomic level. It starts by presenting the general concepts at the simplest level and does not require previous knowledge of the field, except for the basic quantum mechanics. The readers are gradually introduced to the increasingly more advanced topics, so that this text can accompany students all the way to their graduate and doctoral studies in experimental high-energy physics. Special emphasis is placed onexperimental and phenomenological aspects of the field and how measurements and theory interplay in the development of particle physics. The book is based on the authors undergraduate and graduate lecture courses at the University of Bologna, Italy.
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