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44 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Field Theory Textbook Like no other
Finding a good field theory textbook is one of the harder tasks of people's lives - but Itzykson's book is truly incredible. Starting from the very beginning, it develops the operator formalism with the Dirac equation, moves onto perturbation theory, then onto functional methods - and then to asymptotic methods. It's truly comprehensive.

However, it's strongest...

Published on June 30, 2000

versus
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too many errors.
This book is comprehensive, BUT ...
There are 10 errata pages in the front with 121 entries, mostly in formulas. I don't dare read it until I mark all the erratas in each chapter. With that many errors, they should have corrected the edition before printing.
Published on August 22, 2009 by Old Yankee


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44 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Field Theory Textbook Like no other, June 30, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Quantum Field Theory (Paperback)
Finding a good field theory textbook is one of the harder tasks of people's lives - but Itzykson's book is truly incredible. Starting from the very beginning, it develops the operator formalism with the Dirac equation, moves onto perturbation theory, then onto functional methods - and then to asymptotic methods. It's truly comprehensive.

However, it's strongest selling point is the fact that it actually works out examples in incredible detail - where else do you find a complete computation of a two loop vacuum polarization amplitude? This is the ideal book for someone who actually wants to learn how to do calculations in field theory.

It has two shortcomings - it was written in the 80's so it isn't very modern and it has no problems. But those pale in light of its advantages.

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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good book for its time, March 14, 2003
This review is from: Quantum Field Theory (Paperback)
This book has been used a great deal both in classes on quantum field theory and as a reference, and, in spite of its date of publication, it could still serve as such, if supplemented with updated materials. There is a lot in this book that one could not find at the time it was published, and was a welcome relief to those who needed a textbook that was more up to date than Bjorken and Drell's classic work on quantum field theory.

Some of the highlights of the book include: 1. The "wave packet" solution of the Dirac equation and the Zitterbewegung phenomenon, which the authors use as a counterexample to the idea of treating negative energy states in the framework of a 1-particle theory. 2. The treatment of two-body relativistic corrections to study the recoil of the nucleus, this being done in the context of the Dirac equation. 3. The use of the Dirac hole theory to motivate the need for a true many-body theory to accomodate particles and antiparticles via quantized fields. 4. A fairly lengthy discussion of the Fock-Schwinger proper time method to obtain an exact expression for the Dirac propagator in a constant uniform electromagnetic field and a plane wave electromagnetic field. 5. The discussion on the use of coherent states to study the positive frequency part of a (free) quantum field. 6. The discussion on charged scalar fields, and why they are needed to formulate a (scalar) theory of particles and antiparticles. 7. The quantization of the electromagnetic field using the Gupta-Bleuler method using an indefinite metric, and the need for retaining the full Fock space (with indefinite norm) in order to preserve locality. 8. The discussion of the vacuum fluctuations via the Casimir effect. 9. The treatment of the Dirac field and the Pauli exclusion principle. The authors begin with two complex fields that both satisfy the Dirac equation, but the Lagrangian then vanishes. They thus are careful to note that canonical quantization will not work, and so they turn to the using their transformation laws under the Poincare group. The derivation of the anticommutators is purely heuristic (and they note this), and they point out that locality would not be satisfied if canonical quantization were followed. The same holds true, as they state also, if one were to quantize a scalar theory according to Fermi statistics. Their discussion here is a neat illustration of the spin-statistics theorem. 10. The discussion of form factors, which they motivate by calling them a relativistic generalization of charge distributions. 11. The discussion of the Euler-Heisenberg effective Lagrangian, and its ability, even though it is "classical", to model nonlinear phenomena due to quantum corrections. 12. The discussion of the Jost-Lehmann-Dyson representation. 13. The discussion of Euclidean Green functions. 14. The derivation of the Ward-Takahashi identities and the proof that they are preserved by the regularization and renormalization operations. 15. The discussion on functional integration in Bargmann-Fock space, in particular its use in fermion systems. 16. The discussion of the Schwinger-Dyson equations and their use in studying quantum field theory independent of perturbation theory. The existence of a bound state in quantum field theory has yet to be proven using these equations, but they supposedly hold the answer to this existence. The authors give an example of scalar particles interacting via the exchange of scalar particles via the Bethe-Salpeter equation, which are then studied via Wick rotation and where crossed-ladder diagrams are omitted. They also analyze the hyperfine splitting in positronium, but remark that the methods used for this are not entirely satisfactory. 17. The discussion of the sigma model, a topic that has become very important of late. 18. The discussion of asymptotic behavior, the authors emphasizing how the infinities in the relation between bare and renormalized charges and how these infinities must compensate imposes constraints on the theory, which show up in the asymptotic behavior.

Some of the omissions which might be expected from a modern standpoint: 1. Representations of the Poincare group. 2. Critical phenomena. 3. Integrable systems in quantum field theory 4. Finite temperature quantum field theory. 5. Quantum field theory in curved spacetime. 6. A more in-depth treatment of instantons (the authors only spend one page on them). 7. Topological quantum field theory.

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, August 31, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Quantum Field Theory (Paperback)
This is one of the best field theory texts written. Not an introduction but is suitable for the reader who already has a background in QFT at the level of Hatfield. The authors write very clearly and maintain a level of mathematical rigor superior to other QFT books I've encountered. The text is filled with numerous examples and interesting details. Each topic is dealt with thoroughly leaving the reader well grounded in the material. The presentation is pedagogical and very readable. This is a must read for anyone wishing to study field theory beyond the basics and obtain a mastery of the subject.

It is too bad that it is no longer in print. I was fortunate enough to buy a copy when it was still on the shelves. I would imagine though that almost every scientific library would have copy.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too many errors., August 22, 2009
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Old Yankee (Dublin, NH USA) - See all my reviews
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This book is comprehensive, BUT ...
There are 10 errata pages in the front with 121 entries, mostly in formulas. I don't dare read it until I mark all the erratas in each chapter. With that many errors, they should have corrected the edition before printing.
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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I recommend "Quantum Field Theory" by Itzykson and Zuber, February 18, 2007
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Nicely007 (California, USA) - See all my reviews
As anybody who is an expert or a student in the field knows, this is the best book available
on the subject. Dover Publication Inc.'s paperback republication of this book, which was
originally by McGraw-Hill, Inc., is an excellent idea. The Dover version has better fonts
that are clearer than the original McGraw-Hill version. On top of that, amazon.com made
it much easier for many people to order it over Internet. I will definitely recommend
students to buy this paperback version in the future.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Great Book, but not for beginners., May 6, 2011
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Quantum Field Theory by Itzykson and Zuber is truly a great text for this subject. The exposition is fairly good as well as a good number of examples without being just a problem book. There is something in it for everyone from experimental particle physicists to theorists. In this way it has a truly broad scope which makes it even more attractive given that you can normally find a copy for under $30. The book is not a great book for a first time exposure to the material, but I came to really appreciate this book when I took QFT using Peskin and Schroder and found that after I worked through most of semester with that text that Itzykson and Zuber became very accessible to me and handles certain topics a little better that P&S. I gave it only 4/5 just for the text not being an real intro type text.
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent, November 21, 2007
a book so cheap yet so great. the shipment is fast too. recommend to others who need it.
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Quantum Field Theory by Claude Itzykson (Paperback - 1987)
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