Odd Quantum

Regular price €38.99
Title
A01=Sam Treiman
Acceleration
Alpha particle
Angular momentum
Antiparticle
Antiproton
Atomic nucleus
Author_Sam Treiman
Baryon number
Beta decay
Boson
Category=PDZ
Category=PHQ
Classical electromagnetism
Classical mechanics
Conservation law
Continuous spectrum
Correspondence principle
Coulomb's law
Coupling constant
Degenerate matter
Eigenfunction
Electric charge
Electromagnetism
Electron degeneracy pressure
Electron magnetic moment
Electronvolt
Energy level
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Fermion
Gauge boson
Gluon
Gravity
Ground state
Hadron
Hidden variable theory
Ideal gas
Identical particles
Instant
Lamb shift
Lepton
Lepton number
Magnetic field
Mass–energy equivalence
Measurement
Meson
Momentum
Muon
Neutrino
Neutron
Newton's law of universal gravitation
Nucleon
Observable
Particle physics
Photon
Pion
Planck constant
Positron
Probability
Probability distribution
Quantity
Quantum electrodynamics
Quantum field theory
Quantum mechanics
Quantum number
Quark
Renormalization
Scattering
Schrödinger equation
Special relativity
Spin (physics)
Subatomic particle
Virtual particle
Wave function
Weak interaction

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691103006
  • Weight: 397g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Oct 2002
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is a rare and much-needed book: a concise but comprehensive account of quantum mechanics for popular science readers written by a respected physicist. Sam Treiman--internationally renowned for his work in particle physics--makes quantum mechanics accessible to nonspecialists. Combining mastery of the material with clear, elegant prose and infectious enthusiasm, he conveys the substance, methods, and profound oddities of the field. Treiman begins with an overview of quantum mechanics. He sketches the early development of the field by Einstein, Bohr, Heisenberg, Schrodinger, and others, and he makes clear how the quantum outlook flies in the face of common sense. As he explains, the quantum world is intrinsically probabilistic. For example, a particle is not in general in some particular place at a given instant, nor does it have a definite momentum. According to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, there is a limit to how well both location and momentum can be specified simultaneously. In addition, particles can move through barriers and otherwise move in regions of space that are forbidden by classical mechanics. If a particle has a choice of different paths, it pursues all of them at once. Particles display wave-like characteristics and waves show particle-like characteristics. Treiman pays special attention to the more fundamental wave outlook and its expression in quantum field theory. He deals here with the remarkable fact that all the particles of a given species are strictly identical, and with the unnerving fact that particles can be created and destroyed. As Treiman introduces us to these and other wonders, he also touches--without resolution--on some of the deep philosophical problems of quantum mechanics, notably how probabilities become facts. Weaving together impeccable and up-to-date science, engaging writing, and a talent for clear explanation honed over Treiman's distinguished career as a physicist and teacher, The Odd Quantum is a remarkable survey of a field that changed the course of modern scientific and philosophical thought.
Sam Treiman was the Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics Emeritus at Princeton University. He cowrote "Current Algebra and Its Applications" (Princeton) with R. Jackiw and D. Gross, "Current Algebra and Anomalies" (Princeton) with R. Jackiw, B. Zumino, and E. Witten, and "Formal Theory of Scattering" with C. Grosjeans. He wrote numerous articles, mostly centered on the study of fundamental particles, for leading physics journals. Professor Treiman died in 1999.