Reference books on Elementary particles,Statistical mechanics

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The discussion centers around finding reference books for an undergraduate physics syllabus that covers a wide range of advanced topics, including nuclear physics, elementary particles, relativistic kinematics, the history of the universe, quantum mechanics, superconductivity, and statistical mechanics. Recommendations for textbooks include "Elementary Particle Physics: Concepts and Phenomena" by Otto Nachtmann, which is praised for its clear exposition of the standard model, and "Particles and Nuclei" by Bogdan Povh and Klaus Rith, which offers an experimental perspective on both particle and nuclear physics. The importance of incorporating a minimum understanding of quantum field theory is emphasized, as it is deemed essential for grasping the complexities of the subjects. The discussion also notes a gap in recommendations for thermodynamics and statistical physics, inviting further suggestions from participants.
1ndranil
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I need some reference books on the following...

My 3rd year 2nd sem Undergraduate physics syllabus has a part like this-
(I have 2 sem q.m., 1 sem special relativity as background.)

The nuclear two-body problem and simple theory of the deuteron.

Elementary particles:

Baryons, Mesons and Leptons, Additively conserved
quantum numbers, antiparticles, isospin, analogy with angular momentum, charge
independence of nuclear forces.
Proliferation of particles: The discovery of resonance particles, uncertainty
principle and the lifetime of resonance particles.
The quark model, the basic building blocks of matter ( quark and leptons ) and
their interactions, uncertainty principle and the meson theory of nuclear forces,
The virtual particles as carriers of fundamental forces in nature.

Simple application of relativistic kinematics:

Two-body and three-body decays, kinematic variables in the lab-frame and CMframe.
Fixed target vs colliding beam experiment, a few important discoveries at
positron-electron and bardon colliders.

A brief history of the universe and its future, Dark matter.

Quantum mechanics of two -level systems, the ammonia maser, Ko-Ko
oscillations, neutrino oscillations, and lepton flavour violation.

History of superconductivity, the Meissner effect, perfect conductivity and perfect
diamagnetism of superconductors, the London equation, the Jesephsonjunction.
Superfluidity, the fountain effect, the superfluidity ofHe4, the two-fluid model,
thermodynamics of superfluids.
Statistical mechanics of a dimensional spin chain, qualitative ideas of modern
theories of phase transitions.
 
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Wow, that's a lot of stuff for 1 semester.

For nuclear physics and elementary particles, I would start with a good phenomenological textbook using only a minimum of quantum-field theory. I'd not recommend a book which avoids qft all together, because I don't believe that you gain a good understanding of the subject without such a minimum.

A good book for elementary particles of this kind is

Otto Nachtmann, Elementary Particle Physics, Concepts and Phenomena, Springer 1990

I only know the German edition, and I find it marvelous. The only drawback is that it does not cover neutrino mass and oscillations. But it's the best exposition on the physics of the standard model on a very comprehensible level. It seems to fit perfectly to your preknowledge in quantum theory and special relativity.

Another good book on both particle and nuclear physics is

Bogdan Povh, Klaus Rith et al, Particles and Nuclei, Springer 2008 (6th edition)

This is more on the experimental point of view but also contains some theory.

In thermodynamics/statistical physics, I'm not so sure what to recommend, given your syllabus. Perhaps somebody else has some suggestions for this topic.
 
Thanks Vanhees for your suggestion..:-)
 
For the following four books, has anyone used them in a course or for self study? Compiler Construction Principles and Practice 1st Edition by Kenneth C Louden Programming Languages Principles and Practices 3rd Edition by Kenneth C Louden, and Kenneth A Lambert Programming Languages 2nd Edition by Allen B Tucker, Robert E Noonan Concepts of Programming Languages 9th Edition by Robert W Sebesta If yes to either, can you share your opinions about your personal experience using them. I...
This is part 2 of my thread Collection of Free Online Math Books and Lecture Notes Here, we will consider physics and mathematical methods for physics resources. Now, this is a work in progress. Please feel free comment regarding items you want to be included, or if a link is broken etc. Note: I will not post links to other collections, each link will point you to a single item. :book:📚📒 [FONT=trebuchet ms]Introductory college/university physics College Physics, Openstax...

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