Recommand a nice qm textbook on perturbation and scattering

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around the perceived shortcomings of Sakurai's "Modern Quantum Mechanics," particularly regarding its treatment of perturbation methods and scattering theory. Participants recommend alternative texts for these topics, highlighting John R. Taylor's "Scattering Theory: The Quantum Theory of Non-Relativistic Collisions" as a solid resource that includes perturbation theory, though it is noted for its formal rigor rather than practical examples. Additionally, "Quantum Mechanics II: A Second Course in Quantum Theory" by Rubin Landau is suggested for scattering theory. For those seeking a second quantum mechanics text, Shankar's work is recommended, with Arno Bohm's book mentioned for a more advanced perspective.
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I just finished the first 4 chapters of Sakurai's Modern qm, and now I'm beginning to learn purterbation method and scattering theory, but from the feedback it seems that many people are quite unsatisfied with Modern qm on these parts. Could you guys recommand a nice book on perturbation and scattering?
 
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I like "Scattering theory : the quantum theory of non-relativistic collisions" by John R. Taylor.
 
Thanks for the information, btw does it also include perturbation theory ?
 
Yes it does. It is not the fastest shortcut to perturbation and perturbation technologies are not applied to many examples. Rather, it is a formal text justifying rigorously the perturbation formalism, pointing out the subtleties and caveats.
 
Thanks, just had a look at the content, it seems a bit too andvanced for me.
 
For scattering theory, Quantum Mechanics II: A Second Course in Quantum Theory by Rubin Landau is good.

Although, maybe what you need is a second QM text. Shankar, perhaps. Or at a more sophisticated level, the book by Arno Bohm.
 
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