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The Quantum Theory of Fields, Vol. 1: Foundations
 
 

The Quantum Theory of Fields, Vol. 1: Foundations (Hardcover)

~ Steven Weinberg (Author) "Our immersion in the present state of physics makes it hard for us to understand the difficulties of physicists even a few years ago, or..." (more)
Key Phrases: cluster decomposition principle, antiparticle creation operators, vertex carrying, New York, Nuovo Cimento, Cambridge University Press (more...)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)

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The Quantum Theory of Fields, Vol. 1: Foundations + The Quantum Theory of Fields, Volume 2: Modern Applications + The Quantum Theory of Fields, Volume 3: Supersymmetry
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"The [physics] community will not be disappointed....Volume 1 is six hundred pages of meticulous exposition of the fundamentals of the subject....In addition to a superb treatment of all the conventional topics there are numerous sections covering areas that are not normally emphasized, such as the subject of field redefinitions, higher-rank tensor fields and an unusually clear and thorough treatment of infrared effects....This latest book reinforces [Weinberg's] high scholarly standards. It provides a unique exposition that will prove invaluable both to new research students as well as to experienced research workers....this will become a classic text on a subject of central importance to a wide area of theoretical physics." Michael B. Green, CERN Courier

"...for over 20 years there has been no good modern textbook on [quantum field theory]. For all that time, Steven Weinberg has been promising to write one. That he has finally done it...is cause for celebration among those who try to teach and try to learn the subject. Weinberg's book is for serious students of field theory....[I]t is the first textbook to treat quantum field theory the way it is used by physicists today." Howard Georgi, Science

"...provides an impressively lucid and thorough presentation of the subject from this modern viewpoint....Weinberg manages to present difficult topics with richness of meaning and marvellous clarity. Full of valuable insights, his treatise is sure to become a classic..." Nature

"...a self-contained, comprehensive introduction to quantum field theory." Book News, Inc.

"...beautifully produced and meticulously edited...and it is a real bargain in price. If you want to learn quantum field theory, or have already learned it and want to have a definitive reference at hand, purchase this book." O.W. Greenberg, Physics Today

"I would recommend it to students who have completed a first course in field theory and hope that many of my colleagues will read it as well. Weinberg leads us to a frontier rich in possibilities. This is an optimistic book, written with much respect for ideas and nature--and for tools." Chris Quigg, Science


Product Description

In The Quantum Theory of Fields, Nobel Laureate Steven Weinberg combines his exceptional physical insight with his gift for clear exposition to provide a self-contained, comprehensive, and up-to-date introduction to quantum field theory. This is a two-volume work. Volume I introduces the foundations of quantum field theory. The development is fresh and logical throughout, with each step carefully motivated by what has gone before, and emphasizing the reasons why such a theory should describe nature. After a brief historical outline, the book begins anew with the principles about which we are most certain, relativity and quantum mechanics, and the properties of particles that follow from these principles. Quantum field theory emerges from this as a natural consequence. The author presents the classic calculations of quantum electrodynamics in a thoroughly modern way, showing the use of path integrals and dimensional regularization. His account of renormalization theory reflects the changes in our view of quantum field theory since the advent of effective field theories. The book's scope extends beyond quantum electrodynamics to elementary particle physics, and nuclear physics. It contains much original material, and is peppered with examples and insights drawn from the author's experience as a leader of elementary particle research. Problems are included at the end of each chapter. This work will be an invaluable reference for all physicists and mathematicians who use quantum field theory, and it is also appropriate as a textbook for graduate students in this area.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 635 pages
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press; 1 edition (June 30, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0521550017
  • ISBN-13: 978-0521550017
  • Product Dimensions: 9.8 x 7 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #481,082 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
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41 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Brilliant, September 4, 2002
By Derek Lee (St. Paul, MN USA) - See all my reviews
For those who are receptive to its charms, this book is simply indispensible to any high energy physicist. This book is not terribly "intuitive"(in the sense that things are derived heuristically just to the point that the result seeems plausible), nor does it take a purely mathematical standpoint, emphasizing the unbending rigour of all proofs. Instead, it offers something far, far more valuable to any physicist; namely it offers truly profound physical insight into the fundamental principles of nature. This book is so chock full of brilliant profound ideas that it seems as if Weinberg put into this book almost all of the insights he has had over the course of his long, productive, and Nobel Prize winning career. He offers a truly logical presentation of particle physics, starting from the fundamental principles of quantum mechanics (superposition principle especially) and the principle of invariance under the Poincare group modulo time and spatial inversion, as well as the principle that distant measurements do not affect each other, and derives, with a minimum of simplifying assumption, the whole, wonderful edifice of quantum field theory. This set of volumes contains almost all that we know about QFT, but somehow, magically, it is not encyclopedic; it is instead refreshingly original and, as I have said before, truly profound. Also, unlike many other QFT texts, it very clearly points out how the assumptions of the theory could be weakened, and also gives an indication of what sorts of theories come from these modified assumptions. The whole book is simply fascinating, but I found the chapter on general renormalization theory particularly enlightening, especially the section on "nonrenormlizable" theories. I learned, in a particularly clear, inspiring way, that these theories are not any more or less renormalizable than standard model theories, when all terms alowed by symmetry are included in the Lagrangian. Although these theories might seem as if they have little power of prediction (after all, there are an infinite number of parameters to the theory), but in fact Weinberg argues that the nonrenormalizalbe interactions are strongly suppressed at low momenta, so it is possible for low energies to create an effective perturbation theory, which yield in this regime astonishingly precise prediction. On the other hand, Weinberg is quick to point out that for large enough energies, this perturbation expansion simply does not make sense, and that THIS is the reason why quantum gravity based on the Einstein-Hilbert Lagrangian makes no sense for energies at the scale of unification.
Although this book is truly wonderful, I would not recommend reading it as an introduction to QFT. This book is simply too intense and profound for the uninitiated. Instead, I would recommend as a first introduction Ryder's fine text, which yields enough insights to give the reader a taste of the ideas behing QFT but not so many that the reader is overwhelmed at first, followed by Peskin-Schroeder, which gives the student all of the tools that he/she will need for almost any QFT calculation.
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25 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Demanding but very readable book., November 2, 2000
By A Customer
I like this book because it explains everything from first principles to the most advanced results, and this is really the best way to master such a subject. Moreover, Weinberg managed to give full proofs of all intermediate steps using only maths available to the average physicist. I don't think it is a pedagogic text, like e.g. Peskin-Schroeder, it is too demanding at some places (however the most advanced sections that can be skipped at first reading are indicated by footnotes). Paradoxically, this can make the reader's task easier because he/she gets better equipped to tackle the difficult problems, and the systematic development does not tolerate any hiatus. The contrast is in the generality and completeness: Peskin-Schroeder discuss the representations of Lorentz group only in the context of spin 1/2. Weinberg discusses them in full generality. P-S do not explain canonical quantisation of the EM field; Weinberg explains it for any kind of field. On the other hand, the first QED process computation (Compton scattering) only appears at page 362 (page 131 in Peskin-Schroeder), and it appears as a unique example, while Peskin-Schroeder teaches you how to compute any known process. So this book is more focussed on the inner working and motivations or foundations of the theory than Peskin-Schroeder or other similar books, which have applications to particle physics in mind.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very thorough and logical, but somewhat difficult and painful to get through, July 23, 2007
To put the review in perspective, My Background: I am a senior undergraduate engineering/physics student with an interest in mathematics and theoretical physics. This is my third QFT book.

Things I liked about the book:
- The book follows a very logical progression. I love how Weinberg presents a coherent argument based on simple physical principles (specifically Lorentz invariance and the cluster decomposition principle).
- Weinberg takes painstaking effort to avoid hand-waving, and is very careful to enumerate (and make plausible) his assumptions. In so doing, he avoids the sort of black-magic feeling I got when reading some less well written QFT books (see for example: Peskin and Schroeder, which makes a mockery of logical progression in an effort to teach you how to calculate as soon as possible).
- The book was very thorough, and often provided an original approach to the material. The coverage of renormalization seemed natural and coherent, and since the book is presented in a logical order (rather than a historical one) Weinberg avoids justifying renormalization as some mysterious subtraction of infinities, basing it instead on general non-perterbative methods (e.g. poles of the S-matrix, etc...)

What I didn't like about the book:
- As a result of his unwavering emphasis on logical progression, and his inclusion of a vast amount of material (almost all of which is necessary to understand in order to progress through the book), the book is somewhat painful to get through. Be prepared to re-read many of the sections a couple of times, and to make very slow progress.
- Weinberg chooses to present QFT in a very general form (i.e. abstracting it from a particular field such as particle physics or condensed matter physics). This is not necessarily a disadvantage, but I often found my interest waning after reading a few hundred pages without making any contact with phenomenology. Additionally, the excercises were similarly abstract, which makes it difficult (at least for me) to particularly care about their results. (More of a problem for self-study)
- The notation is very complete, which isn't normally a bad thing. However, the equations sometimes become very cumbersome when he includes every index, and every functional dependence regardless of how redundant they may be.
- In his coverage of path integrals, he derives things using functional determinants rather than through the more common generating functional methods. I think this hides a lot of the physical insight of the path integral approach, particularly, its equivalence to the 2nd-quantized approach, and its relation to Feynman diagrams.
- This book will drive the more mathematically inclined crazy, as the author admits, it makes very little attempt at rigour, and is very uncareful. He exchanges orders of limits willy-nilly, and often is not even clear about what sort of limiting process is taking place. There is not discussion of functional integration measures, or convergence, and there is very little justification provided for regularization methods (actually the coverage of dimensional regularization is extremely sparce, and would have been unfollowable, had I not already known it).


General Comments:
- I think that, contrary to some of the previous reviews, that the first few chapters of the book (through 6) would be a good first exposure to quantum field theory. I think the reader would have a much better understanding of the theory. However, the rest of the book is quite advanced, and would not be good for the uninitialized.
- I think that in an effort to make his coverage thorough and abstracting his discussion from phenomenology, the author sacrificed some of the readability of the book. That being said, if you're serious about learning the subject, this is a good resource.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Quantum Theory of Fields
This book, along with volume II, is definitely the best of all the qft books I have read. After a year-long course based on Peskin and Schroeder I was able to calculate Feynman... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Daniel Harlow

4.0 out of 5 stars Complete discussion
I have been able to get a lot out of this book. However, it is *very* complete, and the order of the book is different than a lot of other textbooks on the subject (for example... Read more
Published on October 27, 2007 by Another Grad Student

5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
Weinberg never disappoints the serious student of theoretical physics. There is no good reason to ignore perusing his texts. Read more
Published on September 14, 2006 by G. A. Schoenagel

5.0 out of 5 stars superb book
in my opinion this should be one of the best books in qft.
Althought I've read jauch&rohrlich photons and electrons, p. Read more
Published on August 15, 2006 by snowflake

1.0 out of 5 stars Reading for Rhetoric
Physics is usually a horribly taught subject, that is why most students avoid it. When it is effectively communicated, physics can be wonderful. Read more
Published on March 30, 2006 by Roger W. Anderson

5.0 out of 5 stars Perfection, but advanced
This is one of the best written physics books to ever hit the market. However, it deals with an advanced topic and its not for the faint of heart or those without the proper... Read more
Published on January 9, 2006 by Chris West

5.0 out of 5 stars Review for Vol. 2 and 3 under those titles
Within the realm of non-specialized books on QFT, this one is absolutely the best. Weinberg walks a line between axiomatic field theory (Haag or Baez et. al. Read more
Published on March 25, 2005 by Javier Reynaldo

5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent text in QFT
Weinberg's book can be considered a masterpiece in QFT. The quality of physical insight, the mathematical details, and the logical coherence of the development of the subject as a... Read more
Published on June 19, 2004 by jghst6

4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant but hard, a book for advanced students only
Let me start by stating the essentials:

1. If you are a grad student in theoretical physics or you already have your Ph.D, buy this book! Read more

Published on December 26, 2003 by Wolfgang Zernik

5.0 out of 5 stars Good if you know math and not much physics
You can read Weinberg's textbooks with joy and profit knowing a decent amount of mathematics and not much physics. Read more
Published on March 11, 2003

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