MarcAlexander said:
Did I not in my original post state that I was from the UK.
Yes, you did. But other than using units of furlongs per fortnight, UK physics is pretty much the same as US physics.
Also your sarcasm was not appreciated, but I do understand the point you were trying to get across.
I was not being sarcastic; I was trying to give you a dose of reality. At fourteen, you are excused for not knowing what classes you should concentrate on for a career in particle physics, but IMO you should not be excused for asking for a book that covers math from junior high to graduate level. Your posts are extremely well written, which makes it hard to believe that you are as clueless as you pretend, but if you really are, then it's past time for you to start getting serious about math, instead of just wishing you could be a physicist without doing the work.
My question is: does QM cover the maths aspect of Particle Physics or the whole of Particle Physics (and more?)?
We are trying to make you understand that you cannot do much in *any* field of physics without math through at least vector calculus, diff eq, and linear algebra. Yes, there are freshman classes in physics that are done without calculus, but they will make you about as fluent in physics as a year of Spanish will make you fluent in Spanish, i.e. a six-year old kid raised in Spain would run rings around you. And they are terminal classes --- if you want to take anything else in physics, you will have to go back and repeat freshman physics, but this time using a calculus-based text.
You probably won't get an undergraduate degree in physics without taking elementary classes in both QM and particle physics, and you will almost certainly not take an undergraduate math class that is not useful in all areas of physics. If you are 14 now, then that takes you through the next seven or eight years.
By then, when you are applying for an advanced degree, you can decide what you want to specialize in, and you will know what extra math you need for it. And I still think the best way to get a preview is to look at the websites of several physics departments. Buying the first book recommended by a stranger is going to give hit or miss results. A book that a PhD thinks is great may not be the right one for you.
For now, take all the math you can. If you can take calculus in high school, do it. Go ahead and read books for Dummies and the like, because that's all you're ready for now, and they may motivate you to learn more, but realize that if you can't solve the problems in the real textbooks for physics majors, then you don't really understand the subject; you've just learned a few buzzwords.