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Relativistic Quantum Physics
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    Collas, Peter and Klein, David 2018. Dirac particles in a gravitational shock wave. Classical and Quantum Gravity, Vol. 35, Issue. 12, p. 125006.

    Tarloyan, A.S. Ishkhanyan, T.A. and Ishkhanyan, A.M. 2016. Four five-parametric and five four-parametric independent confluent Heun potentials for the stationary Klein-Gordon equation. Annalen der Physik, Vol. 528, Issue. 3-4, p. 264.

    2016. An Introduction to Graphene and Carbon Nanotubes. p. 33.

    Dūdėnas, Vytautas and Gajdosik, Thomas 2016. Feynman rules for Weyl spinors with mixed Dirac and Majorana mass terms. Lithuanian Journal of Physics, Vol. 56, Issue. 3, p. 149.

    2016. An Introduction to Graphene and Carbon Nanotubes. p. 267.

    Pushpa Bisht, P. S. Li, Tianjun and Negi, O. P. S. 2012. Quaternion-Octonion Unitary Symmetries and Analogous Casimir Operators. International Journal of Theoretical Physics, Vol. 51, Issue. 12, p. 3741.

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    Relativistic Quantum Physics
    • Online ISBN: 9781139032681
    • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139032681
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Book description

Quantum physics and special relativity theory were two of the greatest breakthroughs in physics during the twentieth century and contributed to paradigm shifts in physics. This book combines these two discoveries to provide a complete description of the fundamentals of relativistic quantum physics, guiding the reader effortlessly from relativistic quantum mechanics to basic quantum field theory. The book gives a thorough and detailed treatment of the subject, beginning with the classification of particles, the Klein–Gordon equation and the Dirac equation. It then moves on to the canonical quantization procedure of the Klein–Gordon, Dirac and electromagnetic fields. Classical Yang–Mills theory, the LSZ formalism, perturbation theory, elementary processes in QED are introduced, and regularization, renormalization and radiative corrections are explored. With exercises scattered through the text and problems at the end of most chapters, the book is ideal for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in theoretical physics.

Reviews

'I have previously found no texts which give a clear and full exposition of the calculation of the electrodynamic cross-sections using tools generated in this field, so I had to develop my own. However, this text describes in reasonable detail these calculations for many of the two-body leptonic interactions. Since such calculations are the ultimate goal of this subject, their inclusion is, in my opinion, highly commendable. … The questions and exercises in the book are relevant and instructive and a valuable asset to a lecturer or student in this field. … I would recommend this book highly as a course text. … It would certainly be useful to anyone familiar with the field who would value a reference and compendium of the arguments and formalism.'

Source: The Observatory

'… thorough and very detailed … The book is ideal for final year undergraduate students in physics and first year graduate students in physics or theoretical physics. I recommend this book for its self-contained technical treatment on relativistic quantum mechanics, introductory quantum field theory and the step in between, i.e. it can fill the gap between advanced quantum mechanics and quantum field theory.'

Source: Contemporary Physics

'… a thorough and very detailed mathematical treatment of the subject … is ideal for final year undergraduate students in physics and first year graduate students in physics or theoretical physics. I recommend this book for its self-contained technical treatment on relativistic quantum mechanics, introductory quantum field theory and the step between, i.e. it can fill the gap between advanced quantum mechanics and quantum field theory.'

Source: Contemporary Physics

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