| New Reply |
Suggested books for QED et al |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Aug3-12, 10:39 PM | #1 |
|
|
Suggested books for QED et al
Hi All,
I am currently undergoing independent study in quantum mechanics with Zettili's "Quantum Mechanics: Application and Concepts" and would like to know some good books for independent study for the "next level". My ultimate goal is to end up on the forefront of physics in terms of grand unification\cosmology. I am almost done with Zettili's book and found it to be extrodinarily clear and understandable ( as much as one can understand QM). On the other side of the spectrum, I am using RWT Gravitation and Schultz GR for general relativity (I already have Wald's book, but I am saving that for later because I know it's far too advanced for me at this time). So, can anyone point me in the direction of the books I need for the next "levels". If the book is not self contained (there are mathematical subjects that aren't covered thoroughly enough for a self-learner, please suggest a book that I can fill in the missing parts with). I am guessing I need a good book on QED next, but I am not sure how to fill the gap between QED\RWT and something on the level of QFT\Wald. |
| Aug4-12, 03:03 AM | #2 |
|
|
The Weinberg books are essential and similar in level to Wald's book
For a good intro, Michele Magiores "A Modern Introduction to Quantum Field Theory" is in my opinion a great book that, unlike Zee, is a great starter book and actually does calculations. Of course you will also need Peskin, mostly because it is a standard and very useful for practical purposes (QFT means nothing if you cant do calculations with it). The above three books discuss field theory as a whole. If you are looking to learn only QED and skip field theory methods then there are two books: Landaus QED: This book discusses QED but the notation and viewpoint is a bit dated. Greiner's QED: This book skips does not do much field theory but it covers feynman diagrams and is in my opinion VERY good at giving a physical intuition about QED. Hope this helps |
| Aug4-12, 03:18 AM | #3 |
|
Recognitions:
|
I would recommend Ryder's Quantum Field Theory
|
| Aug5-12, 03:23 AM | #4 |
|
|
Suggested books for QED et al
Of the many QFT books I have, the best introduction by far is Aitchison and Hey, in two volumes:
http://www.amazon.com/Gauge-Theories.../dp/0750308648 Greiner's QED has been mentioned, but Greiner splits up the subject of QFT into several books, and I would suggest starting with Field Quantization, as it has a lot of good background coverage. |
| Aug5-12, 03:52 AM | #5 |
|
Recognitions:
|
|
| Aug7-12, 03:35 PM | #6 |
|
|
Besides textbooks, if you are self-studying then I would recommend you to watch David Tong lectures on QFT and follow his notes which I found very useful.
Also I would recommend the textbook by Mandl and Shaw on QFT. I would not recommend to start with Weinberg or Zee unless you already have a good notion of quantization and path integrals. On the other side I found Ryder to be too basic. |
| New Reply |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: Suggested books for QED et al
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Books suggested for physics beginners | Science Textbook Discussion | 5 | ||
| Suggested books-- engineering | Academic Guidance | 2 | ||
| Suggested Reading? | Academic Guidance | 26 | ||
| Suggested Readings? | General Physics | 6 | ||