Non-abelian gauge theories : QCD and the electroweak theory

Bibliographic Information

Non-abelian gauge theories : QCD and the electroweak theory

Ian J. R. Aitchison, Anthony J. G. Hey

(Graduate student series in physics, Gauge theories in particle physics : a practical introduction ; v. 2)

Institute of Physics Publishing, c2004

3rd ed

  • : pbk

Other Title

QCD and the electroweak theory

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 433-442) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This is the second volume of the third edition of a successful text, now substantially enlarged and updated to reflect developments over the last decade in the curricula of university courses and in particle physics research. Volume I covered relativistic quantum mechanics, electromagnetism as a gauge theory, and introductory quantum field theory, and ended with the formulation and application of quantum electrodynamics (QED), including renormalization. Building on these foundations, this second volume provides a complete, accessible, and self-contained introduction to the remaining two gauge theories of the standard model of particle physics: quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and the electroweak theory. The treatment significantly extends that of the second edition in several important respects. Simple ideas of group theory are now incorporated into the discussion of non-Abelian symmetries. Two new chapters have been added on QCD, one devoted to the renormalization group and scaling violations in deep inelastic scattering and the other to non-perturbative aspects of QCD using the lattice (path-integral) formulation of quantum field theory; the latter is also used to illuminate various aspects of renormalization theory, via analogies with condensed matter systems. Three chapters treat the fundamental topic of spontaneous symmetry breaking: the (Bogoliubov) superfluid and the (BCS) superconductor are studied in some detail; one chapter is devoted to the implications of global chiral symmetry breaking in QCD; and one to the breaking of local SU(2)xU(1) symmetry in the electroweak theory. Weak interaction phenomenology is extended to include discussion of discrete symmetries and of the possibility that neutrinos are Majorana (rather than Dirac) particles. Most of these topics are normally found only in more advanced texts, and this is the first book to treat them in a manner accessible to the wide readership that the previous editions have attracted.

Table of Contents

NON-ABELIAN SYMMETRIES Global Non-Abelian Symmetries Local Non-Abelian (Gauge) Symmetries QCD AND THE RENORMALIZATION GROUP QCD I: Introduction and Tree-Graph Predictions QCD II: Asymptotic Freedom, the Renormalization Group and Scaling Violations in Deep Inelastic Scattering Lattice Field Theory and the Renormalization Group Revisited SPONTANEOUSLY BROKEN SYMMETRY Spontaneously Broken Global Symmetry Chiral Symmetry Breaking Spontaneously Broken Local Symmetry WEAK INTERACTIONS AND THE ELECTROWEAK THEORY Introduction to the Phenomenology of Weak Interactions Difficulties with the Current-Current and "Naive" Intermediate Vector Boson Models The Glashow-Salam-Weinberg Gauge Theory of Electroweak Interactions Appendix M: Group Theory Appendix N: Dimensional Regularization Appendix O: Grassmann Variables Appendix P: Majorana Fermions Appendix Q: Feynman Rules for Tree Graphs in QCD and the Electroweak Theory References Index

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