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What is a good to book to start reading about quantum field theory?
Stan Marsh
Nov30-10, 09:11 PM
I believe the one by Srendnicki is very good for a starter. You can see detailed comments on amazon.
I'm not a physics major, but I've grinded through Srednicki, Zee, and Radovanovic: Solved problem in QFT
http://www.amazon.com/Problem-Book-Quantum-Field-Theory/dp/3540770135/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1291174924&sr=8-1
I would say those are the best.
The others I tried to study was Ryder, Maggiore, Weinberg, and Peskin. Ryder, and Maggiore was not to my taste. I can really appreciate Weinberg and Peskin, but they are too difficult for starters.
I've heard that Mandel is the way to go too.
nicksauce
Nov30-10, 10:53 PM
Another one not mentioned, that I like, is Field Quantization by Greiner and Reinhardt.
matonski
Nov30-10, 11:30 PM
I like Gauge Theories in Particle Physics by Aitchison and Hey.
I'd also recommend Aitchison & Hey for a first pass. Very good on the basics. I haven't picked up volume 2, though. Only canonical quantization is covered, no path integrals.
The previously mentioned Greiner is also very good on the basics, but because they don't bother with \phi^4 theory or other "toy" Lagrangians, they take a long time to get to Feynman diagrams.
I think Zee is very good, but he seems so breezy and deceptively "easy" that he should be supplemented with a book that shows more of the gory details like Srednicki, Brown, Ramond, or Ryder.
Srednicki is very good, but I think his opening chapters are actually kind of confusing for a beginner.
George Jones
Dec1-10, 04:05 AM
I, too, recommend Aitchison and Hey for self-study, but only if the expanded two-volume 2003 edition is used (even if only the first volume is studied).
dextercioby
Dec1-10, 04:52 AM
If you want take it easy, then start with Zee's book. I would do it.
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