<p>This volume contains the contributions to the INTERNATIONAL SUMMER INSTITUTE ON THEORETICAL PHYSICS 1980 held from September 1st to September 12th in Bad Honnef, Germany. This Institute was organized by Wuppertal University. It was the eleventh in a series of Summer Schools on particle physics ca
Current Problems in Elementary Particle and Mathematical Physics
β Scribed by P. Urban (auth.), Prof. Dr. Paul Urban (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Wien
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 634
- Series
- Few-Body Systems 15/1976
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-VI
Opening Address....Pages 1-5
The Wondrous Things: A Review of Probabilistic Concepts in Quantum Dynamics....Pages 7-43
Schwinger Functionals and Euclidean Measures....Pages 45-78
Non-Equilibrium Quantum Statistical Mechanics....Pages 79-131
Phase Transitions, Goldstone Bosons and Topological Superselection Rules....Pages 133-269
Construction of (Ξ»ΙΈ 4 -ΟΙΈ 2 -ΞΌΙΈ) 3 Quantum Field Models....Pages 271-321
The Canonical Structure of a Classical Theory, Quantization Procedures and Non-Equilibrium Quantum Statistical Mechanics....Pages 323-335
Stability of Matter....Pages 337-354
Summary β First Week....Pages 355-358
Phenomenology of Neutral Currents....Pages 359-363
Neutrino Interactions: How Does Charm Fare?....Pages 365-422
Renormalization of Nonabelian Gauge Fields....Pages 423-473
Supersymmetry....Pages 475-498
On Dynamical Symmetry Breaking For Leptons....Pages 499-519
Soliton Models of Hadrons....Pages 521-568
A Claim for Priority....Pages 569-570
Sum Rules for Elastic Ξ³Ξ³ Scattering? Meson Couplings to Two Photons, and the f-P Relationship....Pages 571-589
Gauge Theory of Dual Resonance Models and Spontaneous Breaking....Pages 591-628
Meta-Summary β Second Week....Pages 629-638
β¦ Subjects
Physics, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>This book has come into being as a result of scientific debates. And these debates have determined its structure. The first chapter is in the form of Socratic dialogues between a mathematician (MATH.), two physicists (pHYS. and EXP.) and a philosopher (PHIL.). However, although one of the authors