
A Personal History of CESR and CLEO
Brian Foster reviews in 2004 A Personal History of CESR and CLEO.
Thank you for registering
If you'd like to change your details at any time, please visit My account
Brian Foster reviews in 2004 A Personal History of CESR and CLEO.
This graduate textbook is based on lectures given at Michigan State University. It leads the reader from basic laws to the final formulae used to calculate measurable quantities, and examines in detai...
QCD-motivated, it gives a detailed description of hadron structure and soft interactions in the additive quark model, and is aimed at graduate students and researchers in particle and nuclear physics.
A self-contained introduction to the path-integral method in field theory and its applications to quantum anomalies, this book assumes no previous knowledge beyond advanced undergraduate quantum mecha...
This is the third volume in a series on the subject, and the first such monograph to focus on the implications of the experimental results from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven.
This book presents a comprehensive view of the mathematical theory of impulsive light-like signals in general relativity.
Christine Sutton reviews in 2004 Gravity from the ground up.
Now a standard reference for many undergraduate and more advanced courses, this book is a uniform presentation of nuclear and particle physics split into "Analysis" and "Synthesis" sections.
Published as part of the series of Cambridge Monographs on Mathematical Physics, this is an English translation of the lectures given by Gribov in 1969, when the physics of high-energy hadron interact...
Peggie Rimmer reviews in 2004 Oppenheimer: Portrait of an Enigma.