
Quantum Field Theory
A Tourist Guide for Mathematicians
Gerald B. Folland(Author)
American Mathematical Society (Publisher)
Published on 30. November 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
325 pages
978-1-4704-6483-7 (ISBN)
Description
Quantum field theory has been a great success for physics, but it is difficult for mathematicians to learn because it is mathematically incomplete. Folland, who is a mathematician, has spent considerable time digesting the physical theory and sorting out the mathematical issues in it. Fortunately for mathematicians, Folland is a gifted expositor.
The purpose of this book is to present the elements of quantum field theory, with the goal of understanding the behavior of elementary particles rather than building formal mathematical structures, in a form that will be comprehensible to mathematicians. Rigorous definitions and arguments are presented as far as they are available, but the text proceeds on a more informal level when necessary, with due care in identifying the difficulties.
The book begins with a review of classical physics and quantum mechanics, then proceeds through the construction of free quantum fields to the perturbation-theoretic development of interacting field theory and renormalization theory, with emphasis on quantum electrodynamics. The final two chapters present the functional integral approach and the elements of gauge field theory, including the Salam-Weinberg model of electromagnetic and weak interactions.
The purpose of this book is to present the elements of quantum field theory, with the goal of understanding the behavior of elementary particles rather than building formal mathematical structures, in a form that will be comprehensible to mathematicians. Rigorous definitions and arguments are presented as far as they are available, but the text proceeds on a more informal level when necessary, with due care in identifying the difficulties.
The book begins with a review of classical physics and quantum mechanics, then proceeds through the construction of free quantum fields to the perturbation-theoretic development of interacting field theory and renormalization theory, with emphasis on quantum electrodynamics. The final two chapters present the functional integral approach and the elements of gauge field theory, including the Salam-Weinberg model of electromagnetic and weak interactions.
Reviews / Votes
Folland's book is valuable for the mathematician who wants to understand how quantum field theory describes nature. ... [This book] is a great introduction to these issues. A mathematician who is serious about learning quantum field theory as a physical theory could do no better than to start with it. Physicists could also benefit from his careful and succinct survey."" - SIAM Review""The style of the present monograph is clear and the author is honest about possible mathematical shortcomings of quantum field theory."" - Mathematical Reviews
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Providence
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
ISBN-13
978-1-4704-6483-7 (9781470464837)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Gerald B. Folland, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Content
Prologue
Review of pre-quantum physics
Basic quantum mechanics
Relativistic quantum mechanics
Free quantum fields
Quantum fields with interactions
Renormalization
Functional integrals
Gauge field theories
Bibliography
Index
Review of pre-quantum physics
Basic quantum mechanics
Relativistic quantum mechanics
Free quantum fields
Quantum fields with interactions
Renormalization
Functional integrals
Gauge field theories
Bibliography
Index