<span><div>A wide-ranging collection of problems and solutions related to quantum mechanics, this text will be useful to students pursuing an advanced degree in physics. Topics include one-dimensional motion, tunnel effect, commutation relations, Heisenberg relations, spreading of wave packets, oper
Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals: Emended Edition (Dover Books on Physics)
β Scribed by Richard P. Feynman, Albert R. Hibbs, Daniel F. Styer
- Publisher
- Dover Publications
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 382
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The developer of path integrals, Nobel Prizeβwinning physicist Richard Feynman, presents unique insights into this method and its applications. Feynman starts with an intuitive view of fundamental quantum mechanics, gradually introducing path integrals. Later chapters explore moreΒ advanced topics, including the perturbation method, quantum electrodynamics, and statistical mechanics.Β 1965 edition, emended in 2005.
β¦ Subjects
Π€ΠΈΠ·ΠΈΠΊΠ°;ΠΠ²Π°Π½ΡΠΎΠ²Π°Ρ ΡΠΈΠ·ΠΈΠΊΠ°;
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Suitable for advanced undergraduates and graduate students, this text requires only a first course in quantum mechanics. The first part develops the techniques of path integration; the second section, dealing with applications, covers a host of illustrative examples. 26 figures. 1981 edition.
This textbook on the theory and applications of path integrals contains the solution to a number of non-trivial path integrals, most notably that of the Coulomb system. This has become possible by finding a consistent formulation of path integrals in spaces with curvature and torsion. Special emphas
This book provides an ideal introduction to the use of Feynman path integrals in the fields of quantum mechanics and statistical physics. It is written for graduate students and researchers in physics, mathematical physics, applied mathematics as well as chemistry. The material is presented in an ac
This book deals with systems possessing a infinite number of degrees in freedom. In this case the mathematics behind is well understood. The authors present it in a form accessible to a broad community of theoretical physicists. Various applications, including systems with Grassmann variables, are d