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I'd like to hear your professional opinion on and experience with using Quantum Field Theory for the Gifted Amateur by Tom Lancaster and Stephen J. Blundell as a self-study textbook. Thank you.
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A gifted amateur opinion, I would add.PeroK said:PS that's an amateur opinion, of course!
I tried several Zee's "in a nutshell" books. His writing style doesn't work for me.PeroK said:I also tried Zee's QFT in a Nutshell but he had lost me completely by page 5.
Unfortunately, I cannot learn "by ear" because of a form of APD.PeroK said:I supplemented it by watching Tobias Osborne's lectures on YouTube.
Hm, APD or not, you can't learn physics by just watching/attending lectures, but you have to do it yourself. Usually you start with attending a lecture or reading a book. That's just to get informed about the topic you want to learn, but then you have to practice by solving problems related to this topic for yourself. That's why it's good to have textbook with many problems (+solutions to check your work).Hill said:Unfortunately, I cannot learn "by ear" because of a form of APD.
This is my intent.vanhees71 said:you have to do it yourself
Most / all textbooks don't provide these. I think the QFTftGA doesn't either.vanhees71 said:+solutions to check your work
I should agree with vanhees71. Every time people ask for advice on what QFT textbook to use, Coleman Lectures always come up, and for a good reason. See them as some sort of "Feynman Lectures" on QFT. They are, perhaps, a bit more edited than Feynman's Red Books, but Coleman's students did a great job of keeping his spirit (and humor!). In my opinion, nothing can beat a verbatim lecture, edited or not edited. But the book is not for the light-hearted reader. Well, come to think of it, what QFT text is for light-hearted souls?vanhees71 said:I think concerning the conceptional point of view, emphasizing the importance of locality and microcausality and Poincare symmetry, Coleman's lectures are better:
S. Coleman, Lectures of Sidney Coleman on Quantum Field
Theory, World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., Hackensack
(2018), https://doi.org/10.1142/9371
Thank you, downloaded. It does not have exercises though.vanhees71 said:
This is explained in the book, too. However, they have the ##-q## factor moved from the field ##\psi## to ##A##:vanhees71 said:Well, it's reassuring for textbook/manuscript authors if the readers take the typos with good humor ;-)). I wish I could deliver typo-free texts though...
One should, however, mention that it's the crucial point of "gauging" a global symmetry to a gauge invariance that the gauge-covariant derivative transforms as the field for spacetime-dependent phase factors, i.e., you introduce the gauge field ##A_{\mu}(x)## as a connection to define the gauge-covariant derivative, i.e.,
$$\mathrm{D}_{\mu}=\partial_{\mu} + \mathrm{i} q A_{\mu}.$$
It's defined such that for
$$\psi'(x)=\exp[-\mathrm{i} q \alpha(x)]$$
the covariant derivative also fulfills the same transformation law,
$$\mathrm{D}_{\mu}' \psi'(x)=\exp[-\mathrm{i} q \alpha(x)] \mathrm{D}_{\mi} \psi(x),$$
and the question is how ##A_{\mu}## transforms to ##A_{\mu}'##. Indeed
$$\mathrm{D}_{\mu}' \psi'(x)=(\partial_{\mu} + \mathrm{i} q A_{\mu}') [\exp(-\mathrm{i} q \alpha) \psi] = \exp(-\mathrm{i} q \alpha) [\partial_{\mu} +\mathrm{i} q (A_{\mu}'-\partial_{\mu} \alpha)] \psi$$
Since this should be
$$\exp[-\mathrm{i} q \alpha(x)] \mathrm{D}_{\mi} \psi(x) = \exp[-\mathrm{i} q \alpha(x)] (\partial_{\mu} +\mathrm{i} q A_{\mu}) \psi(x),$$
you get
$$A_{\mu}'-\partial_{\mu} \alpha=A_{\mu} \; \Rightarrow \; A_{\mu}'=A_{\mu} + \partial_{\mu} \alpha.$$
Macmillan Publishing Co., at least up to the '80s, was known to publish typo-free books. I own only two from Macmillan, Birkhoff & Mac Lane's "Modern Algebra", and Leithold's "College Algebra". Not only without typos, but beautiful editions, too!vanhees71 said:Well, it's reassuring for textbook/manuscript authors if the readers take the typos with good humor ;-)). I wish I could deliver typo-free texts though... [...]