詳細資訊
This book leapfrogs over the usual pedagogical progression, taking readers to a real understanding of quantum, relativistic, nuclear and particle physics. These areas are usually reserved for the end of one's undergraduate career or even for graduate students in physics programs, but do not need to be. The Scenic Route is really created out of the joy of science; it is not designed to produce problem-solving ability but rather is designed to reveal some physics that is just plain nifty. Guided by an understanding that much of modern physics is available to almost everyone with a moderate mathematical vocabulary, we lead the student through a short, trenchant tour of quantum physics, relativity, modern particle physics and its history. Related Link(s) The Physics Educator | Book Review: Leo Bellantoni, Modern Physics — The Scenic Route World Scientific 2022 Request Inspection Copy Sample Chapter(s) Preface Chapter 1: Symmetry Contents: Symmetry Mathematical Symmetries and Newton A Symmetry That Is Not Groups Generators Noether's Theorem The Quantum Mechanical Robert Frost The Central Procedure of Quantum Mechanics Your First Quantum Calculation Your First Quantum Experiment What Heisenberg Didn't Know Gauge Invariance Where Do the Quanta Come From? The Quest for Meaning: Particles and Waves The Logos Mental Waves Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen About Spin Bell's Theorem: Setting up the Equipment Bell's Theorem: Taking the Data I Do Not Like It If You Do Not Know Who Minkowski Was, What are You Doing in His Space? Rotational Symmetries and Matrices The Sort-of Rotation 299,792,548 Meters per Second — and No More! Going Slower by Going Faster The Twins Momentum in Minkowski Space Why E Is in Fact mc2 Antimatter Your First Nuclear Physics Theory: Protons and Neutrons Your First Nuclear Physics Theory: Symmetry SU(2): A Matrix Group Your First Nuclear Physics Theory: Pions Your First Particle Physics Theory: The Λ; Your First Particle Physics Theory: Strange Mesons The Eightfold Way and Quarks Another Symmetry That Is Not γ, W, Z, and H Bra-Kets Two Fermions in a Pod The Back of the Book Readership: Undergraduate students in physics, nuclear engineering, mathematics, or electrical engineering.