- #1
doggydan42
- 170
- 18
Hello,
I have been following Tong's notes on QFT and have found them to be a great introduction. I am almost at the end and am trying to figure out how to proceed. I have seen recommendations on David Skinner's notes, but I think I want to use a textbook either with Skinner's notes or maybe even without.
I was wondering if Schwartz's book on QFT would be a good next step. It seemed to be a lot clearer than Peskin, but I have not read it.
If not, are there any other recommendations? Also, it may be useful to know that I am very particular about details and small steps, so something that motivates a lot of the math and physics in QFT would be great, but Weinberg's book is a bit too advanced for me. Additionally, I'm interested in QFT for particle physics.
Thanks in advance.
I have been following Tong's notes on QFT and have found them to be a great introduction. I am almost at the end and am trying to figure out how to proceed. I have seen recommendations on David Skinner's notes, but I think I want to use a textbook either with Skinner's notes or maybe even without.
I was wondering if Schwartz's book on QFT would be a good next step. It seemed to be a lot clearer than Peskin, but I have not read it.
If not, are there any other recommendations? Also, it may be useful to know that I am very particular about details and small steps, so something that motivates a lot of the math and physics in QFT would be great, but Weinberg's book is a bit too advanced for me. Additionally, I'm interested in QFT for particle physics.
Thanks in advance.