Good Books to use to Study Particle Physics

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To begin studying physics, a solid understanding of mathematics is essential, particularly in areas such as algebra, trigonometry, geometry, and precalculus. Recommended resources include "Basic Mathematics" by Lang, which covers necessary high school math concepts. For those with a precalculus background, transitioning directly to calculus-based physics is advisable, as it is more engaging than algebra-based physics. Suggested textbooks for calculus include works by Lang, Kleppner, and Kline. Once comfortable with calculus, students can explore introductory physics texts like Halliday and Resnick. Online resources such as Udacity and Light and Matter offer free courses to supplement learning. A rigorous approach to studying physics is emphasized, as it requires dedication and a willingness to tackle challenging material.
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I'm in tenth grade and am interested in studying physics. I've heard that the best way to get started is to have an understanding of elementary physics, so can anyone recommend some books and websites to get started? I have practically no background at the moment, so a general overview would be helpful. Thanks!
 
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If you're just interested in some popular science books, then I'm sure you can find many of these. They are often very fun to read and give an idea what physics is roughly about.

However, pop sci books won't help you understand the topic. If you want to gain real understanding, then you will have to study physics rigorously. But it will take years of dedicated study before you can do something like particle physics. Many people lack the discipline for such a study, or they lack the motivation, or they even find out that physics is boring and not at all what they thought it was! (Yes, particle physics is entirely different from how it is presented in the popular media!)

Anyway, if you're truly interested in a rigorous and real understanding, then the most important thing to study now is mathematics. Make sure you are very comfortable with basic algebra, trigonometry, geometry, precalculus,... I highly recommend the book "basic mathematics" by Lang. This book contains everything of mathematics (before calculus) that one needs to know of high school. Lang is a mathematician though, and his style is mathematical. You may dislike this. But do check out the book.

After the basic mathematics, you can do some algebra based physics. This is very boring. They will basically just give you the formulas and you will have to solve questions by plugging in values in the formulas. But it might make you familiar with a lot of concepts used commonly in physics.

Instead of doing algebra based physics, you can just skip it and move directly to calculus based physics. Of course, you need to have a good grasp on basic calculus first. Usually, a Calculus I suffices (and a bit of Calculus II perhaps). Some good calculus books are Lang: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0387962018/?tag=pfamazon01-20 and Kleppner: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0471827223/?tag=pfamazon01-20 and Kline: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0486404536/?tag=pfamazon01-20
Once you know a bit of calculus, you can study books like Halliday and Resnick. These books are better than algebra based physics, but they are still boring. But it is a beginning. Later on, the physics will be much more interesting and challenging.
 
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micromass said:
Anyway, if you're truly interested in a rigorous and real understanding, then the most important thing to study now is mathematics. Make sure you are very comfortable with basic algebra, trigonometry, geometry, precalculus,... I highly recommend the book "basic mathematics" by Lang. This book contains everything of mathematics (before calculus) that one needs to know of high school.

I am IN precalculus right now. I took algebra 2/trig last year, and geometry in 8th grade. With that kind of math knowledge, what should I be doing right now?
 
PaintStuff said:
I am IN precalculus right now. I took algebra 2/trig last year, and geometry in 8th grade. With that kind of math knowledge, what should I be doing right now?

Then I guess you can either do an algebra-based physics book. Or you can work through a calculus book. I recommend the latter since algebra-based physics is really boring. Physics is only fun with calculus.
 
Ok thanks!
 
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