<p>Quantum mechanics and quantum field theory are highly successful physical theoΒ ries that have numerous practical applications. Largely mathematical in character, these theories continue to stimulate the imaginations of applied mathematicians and purists as weIl. In recent years, in particular, a
Topics in quantum mechanics
β Scribed by Floyd L Williams
- Publisher
- Birkhauser
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 415
- Series
- Progress in mathematical physics, v. 27
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Preface * Part I. Introductory Concepts in Quantum Theory * Units of Measurement * Quantum Mechanics---Some Remarks and Themes * Equations of Motion in Classical Mechanics * Quantization and the Schrodinger Equation * Hypergeometric Equations and Special Functions * Hydrogen-like Atoms * Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle * Group Representations and Selection Rules * A Charged Particle in an Electro-magnetic Field * Spin Wave Functions * Introduction to Multi-electron Atoms * Part II. Some Selected Topics * Fresnel Integrals and Feynman Integrals * Path Integral for the Harmonic Oscillator * Euclidean Path Integrals * The Density Matrix and Partition Function * Zeta Regularization * Helmholtz Free Energy and the Selberg Trace Formula * The Zeta Function of a Product * Two Guest Lectures * Some Further Electron Configurations * Mendeleev Periodic Table * Another Example of Zeta Regularization * Integral Evaluation * Some Informal Comments on QFT * References * Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This graduate-level text is based on aΒ course in advanced quantum mechanics, taught many times at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Topics include propagator methods, scattering theory, charged particle interactions, alternate approximate methods, and Klein-Gordon and Dirac equations. Proble
<span>Quantum mechanics is one of the most successful theories in science, and is relevant to nearly all modern topics of scientific research. This textbook moves beyond the introductory and intermediate principles of quantum mechanics frequently covered in undergraduate and graduate courses, presen
This course will be a one-semester review of non-relativistic quantum mechanics designed for physics graduate students. It should be useful in helping to prepare for the preliminary exams, but that is not the primary goal of the course.