This volume describes the advances in the quantum theory of fields that have led to an understanding of the electroweak and strong interactions of the elementary particles. These interactions have all turned out to be governed by principles of gauge invariance, so we start here in Chapters 1'5-17 with gauge theories, generalizing the familiar gauge invariance of electrodynamics to non-Abelian Lie groups.
PREFACE
NOTATION
1 HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION
1.1 Relativistic Wave Mechanics
1.2 The Birth of Quantum Fiedld Theory
1.3 The Problem of Infinities
Bibliography
References
2 RELATIVISTIC QUANTUM MECHANICS
2.1 Quantum Mechanics
2.2 Symmetries
2.3 Quantum Lorentz Transformations
2.4 The Poincare Algebra
2.5 One-Particle States
2.6 Space Inversion and Time-Reversal
2.7 Projective Representations
AppendixA The Symmetry Representation Theorem
AppendixB Group Operators and Homotopy Classes
AppendixC Inversions and Degenerate Multiplets
Problems
References
3 SCATTERING THEORY
3.1 In and Out States
3.2 The S-matrix
3.3 Symmetries of the S-Matrix
3.4 Rates and Cross-Sections
3.5 Perturbation Theory
3.6 Implications of Unitarity
3.7 Partial-Wave Expansions
3.8 Resonances
Problems
References
4 THE CLUSTER DECOMPOSITON PRINCIPLE
4.1 Bosons and Fermions
4.2 Creation and Annihilation Operators
4.3 Cluster Decomposition and Connected Amplitudes
4.4 Structure of the Interaction
5 QUANTUM FIELDS AND ANTIPARTICLES
5.1 Free Fields
5.2 Causal Scalar Fields
5.3 Causal Vector Fields
5.4 The Dirac Formalism
5.5 Causal Dirac Fields
5.6 General Irreducible Representations of the Homogeneous Lorentz Group
5.7 General Causal Fields
……
6 THE FEYNMAN RULES
7 THE CANONICAL FORMALISM
8 ELECTRODYNAMICS
9 PATH-INTEGRAL METHODS
10 NON-PERTURBATIVE METHODS
11 ONE-LOOP RADIATIVE CORRECTIONS IN QUANTUM ELECTRODYNAMICS
12 GENERAL RENORMALIZATION THEORY
13 INFRARED EFFECTS
14 BOUND STATES IN EXTERNAL FIELDS
AUTHOR INDEX
SUBJECT INDEX
OUTLINE OF VOLUMEⅡ