<p><P>This monograph addresses the field theoretical aspects of magnetic monopoles. Written for graduate students as well as researchers, the author demonstrates the interplay between mathematics and physics. He delves into details as necessary and develops many techniques that find applications in
Magnetic Monopoles
β Scribed by Alfred S. Goldhaber (auth.), Richard A. Carrigan Jr., W. Peter Trower (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 339
- Series
- NATO Advanced Science Institutes Series 102
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In 1269 Petrus Peregrinus observed lines of force around a lodestone and noted that they were concentrated at two points which he designated as the north and south poles of the magnet. Subsequent observation has confirmed that all magnetic objects have paired regions of' opposite polarity, that is, all magnets are dipoles. It is easy to conceive of an isolated pole, which J.J. Thomson did in 1904 when he set his famous problem of the motion of an electron in the field of a magnetic charge. In 1931 P.A.M. Dirac solved this problem quantum mechanically and showed that the existence of a single magnet pole anywhere in the universe could explain the mystery of charge quantization. By late 1981, theoretical interest in monopoles had reached the point where a meeting was organized at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste. Many mathematical properties of monopoles were discussed at length but there was only a solitary account describing experiments. This imbalance did not so much reflect the meeting's venue as it indicated the relative theoretical and experimental effort at that point.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-x
Monopoles and Gauge Theories....Pages 1-15
Testing Guts: Where do Monopoles Fit?....Pages 17-40
Experimental Status of Monopoles....Pages 41-69
Monopole Compatibility with Cosmology....Pages 71-80
Reducing the Monopole Abundance....Pages 81-96
Catalysis of Baryon Decay....Pages 97-110
Fractional Charge and Magnetic Monopoles....Pages 111-126
Monopoles and Astrophysics....Pages 127-140
Monopoles and the Galactic Magnetic Field....Pages 141-149
The Plasma Physics of Magnetic Monopoles in the Galaxy....Pages 151-158
Monopolonium....Pages 159-173
Status of Stanford Superconductive Monopole Detectors....Pages 175-200
A Preview of Current Studies on Magnetic Monopole Detection Using Induction Coils....Pages 201-217
Acoustic Detection of Monopoles....Pages 219-243
Binding of Monopoles in Matter and Search in Large Quantities of Old Iron Ore....Pages 245-258
Monopole Energy Loss and Detector Excitation Mechanisms....Pages 259-290
Electronic Cosmic Ray Monopole Searches....Pages 291-305
Searches for Monopoles with Track-Etch Detectors....Pages 307-324
Search for Magnetic Monopoles in Proton-Antiproton Interactions at 540 GeV C.M. Energy....Pages 325-328
Back Matter....Pages 329-337
β¦ Subjects
Physics, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
ΠΠΈΡΡΠΌΠ° Π² ΠΠ§ΠΠ―. 2011. Π’. 8, β7(170). Π‘. 1242-1251<br/> These are notes of the frst part of the lectures given at the JINR-ISU Baikal Summer School on Physics of Elementary Particles and Astrophysics (July 2010). I review classical monopole solutions of the SU(2) Yang-Mills-Higgs theory, providing a p
<p>This thesis presents the first ever measurement of the noise emitted by magnetic monopoles and the development of an exquisitely sensitive magnetic-field-noise spectrometer based on a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) that enabled it. Magnetic monopoles are highly elusive elemen