Nuclear and Particle Physics

Regular price €69.99
A01=Brian R. Martin
A01=Graham Shaw
accelerators and detectors
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applications of nuclear physics
applications of particle physics
Author_Brian R. Martin
Author_Graham Shaw
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biomedical applications
Category1=Non-Fiction
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COP=United States
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exotic states
experimental methods
experimental physics
Grand Unification
hadron and lepton properties
Higgs boson
Language_English
liquid drop model
medical imaging and cancer therapy
neutrino physics
nuclear fission
nuclear fusion
nuclear instability
nuclear physics
nuclear power
nuclear reactions
nuclear weapons
nucleosynthesis
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particle astrophysics
particle phenomenology
particle physics
particle physics beyond the standard model
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properties of nuclei
PS=Active
quantum chromodynamics
quark-gluon plasma
quarks and quark model
shell model
softlaunch
standard model of particle physics
strong interactions
structure of hadrons
super-heavy elements
supersymmetry
symmetry breaking in weak interactions
Theoretical physics
weak interactions

Product details

  • ISBN 9781119344612
  • Weight: 1111g
  • Dimensions: 201 x 252mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Apr 2019
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Updated and expanded edition of this well-known Physics textbook provides an excellent Undergraduate introduction to the field

This new edition of Nuclear and Particle Physics continues the standards established by its predecessors, offering a comprehensive and highly readable overview of both the theoretical and experimental areas of these fields. The updated and expanded text covers a very wide range of topics in particle and nuclear physics, with an emphasis on the phenomenological approach to understanding experimental data. It is one of the few publications currently available that gives equal treatment to both fields, while remaining accessible to undergraduates.

Early chapters cover basic concepts of nuclear and particle physics, before describing their respective phenomenologies and experimental methods. Later chapters interpret data through models and theories, such as the standard model of particle physics, and the liquid drop and shell models of nuclear physics, and also discuss many applications of both fields. The concluding two chapters deal with practical applications and outstanding issues, including extensions to the standard model, implications for particle astrophysics, improvements in medical imaging, and prospects for power production. There are a number of useful appendices. Other notable features include:

  • New or expanded coverage of developments in relevant fields, such as the discovery of the Higgs boson, recent results in neutrino physics, research to test theories beyond the standard model (such as supersymmetry), and important technical advances, such as Penning traps used for high-precision measurements of nuclear masses.
  • Practice problems at the end of chapters (excluding the last chapter) with solutions to selected problems provided in an appendix, as well as an extensive list of references for further reading.
  • Companion website with solutions (odd-numbered problems for students, all problems for instructors), PowerPoint lecture slides, and other resources.

As with previous editions, the balanced coverage and additional resources provided, makes Nuclear and Particle Physics an excellent foundation for advanced undergraduate courses, or a valuable general reference text for early graduate studies. 

BRIAN R. MARTIN and GRAHAM SHAW have researched and taught for many years in the Physics and Astronomy departments at University College London and the University of Manchester, respectively. Prior to that they have held positions at various institutes, including Brookhaven National Laboratory and Niels Bohr Institute (Martin), Columbia University and Rutherford Laboratory (Shaw). They have previously collaborated on other successful textbooks, including Particle Physics (4th edn. 2017) and Mathematics for Physicists (2015), both published by Wiley. Brian has also published books on statistics and a Beginner's Guide to Particle Physics, while Graham is the co-author with Franz Mandl of the well-known postgraduate text, Quantum Field Theory (2nd. edn. 2010), also published by Wiley.