

Buy No-Nonsense Quantum Field Theory: A Student-Friendly Introduction on desertcart.com ✓ FREE SHIPPING on qualified orders Review: The perfect primer for QFT - Out of the 9 QFT books I own, I believe Schwichtenberg's is by far the best introduction. The combination of illustration and line-by-line derivation provides the reader with a robust intuition without sacrificing any mathematical clarity. The only sections that may require further introductory reading are those involving covariant derivatives. Schwichtenberg has two other books covering the topic (Physics from Finance, and Physics from Symmetry) which should give the reader a hint that a full intuition for these mathematical objects requires some rumination, and I would honestly recommend spending some time in the Riemannian framework first. All in all, Schwichtenberg's text respects the reader in a manner that is rare among QFT books. There are no "exercises left to the reader," and to the contrary his appendices ensure that the reader is able to walk across a mathematical bridge with no gaps to fall through. Having no exercises, he rightly directs the reader to future reading at the end of the text. The lack of exercises, from my view, is actually an advantage. It solidifies Schwichtenberg's book as the perfect primer for QFT. It does not pretend to be the ultimate destination, but is a must-read for folks who are beginning their QFT studies. The gem is perhaps Schwichtenberg's approach to perturbation series, and Feynman diagrams. Review: A wonderful read and best starting point for beginners in QFT - This reviewer is not a physicist by training but has a keen interest in physics and is a retired EE with working background in semiconductor physics and EM . This book is not a typical standard text on QFT but an extremely readable introduction to the subject. It is not a "popular" text for the general reader . This text will take you to an advance undergrad level understanding of the subject in the most "friendly" manner possible. There is no way around understanding QFT without wading into serious heavy physics and mathematics. The author has done a remarkable effort on laying out the physics in every chapter very clearly and the detail derivation are NOT glossed over. A lot of confusion for novices like myself on QFT is around the detail calculations and derivation .The book does a remarkable effort to put as much detail as humanly possible into each derivation and the reader is not left to fill in lots of gaps and left wondering how the equations move from one state to another( quantum pun intended)!!. Each chapter starts with the motivation and the underlying physics before hitting the hard part. The chapters ends with a recap and summary. Essential equations are repeated on the side bar so the reader does not have to constantly look for the neccessary background equations. The pedagogical approach is very refreshing and as good as it gets. The comparable book is "QFT - for gifted amateur" - by Lancaster/Blundell. Lancaster and Bundell covers several more advanced topics but this book goes into the fundamentals in much more detail. Both are great wonderful introductry books on QFT . I must admit that this is the first QFT text I managed to read cover to cover without getting unduly stuck ! maybe it just me being not smart enough to go thru books from Zee or Peskin etc , but I must give this author great credit for writing in such a way as to anticipate where the rough terrain are for beginners like me and smoothing it over as best as any book can. One point I do need to bring up is that this book is unlike most text is that there are no problems at the end of each chapter so there is no way to check your understanding by working thru some of these problems. All and all if you need to begin to explore QFT , this book is the best starting point I have come across in my humble opinion.
| Best Sellers Rank | #217,877 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #47 in Physics (Books) #147 in Quantum Theory (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (250) |
| Dimensions | 7.44 x 1.45 x 9.69 inches |
| Edition | Annotated |
| ISBN-10 | 3948763011 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-3948763015 |
| Item Weight | 2.5 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 642 pages |
| Publication date | February 25, 2020 |
| Publisher | No-Nonsense Books |
A**R
The perfect primer for QFT
Out of the 9 QFT books I own, I believe Schwichtenberg's is by far the best introduction. The combination of illustration and line-by-line derivation provides the reader with a robust intuition without sacrificing any mathematical clarity. The only sections that may require further introductory reading are those involving covariant derivatives. Schwichtenberg has two other books covering the topic (Physics from Finance, and Physics from Symmetry) which should give the reader a hint that a full intuition for these mathematical objects requires some rumination, and I would honestly recommend spending some time in the Riemannian framework first. All in all, Schwichtenberg's text respects the reader in a manner that is rare among QFT books. There are no "exercises left to the reader," and to the contrary his appendices ensure that the reader is able to walk across a mathematical bridge with no gaps to fall through. Having no exercises, he rightly directs the reader to future reading at the end of the text. The lack of exercises, from my view, is actually an advantage. It solidifies Schwichtenberg's book as the perfect primer for QFT. It does not pretend to be the ultimate destination, but is a must-read for folks who are beginning their QFT studies. The gem is perhaps Schwichtenberg's approach to perturbation series, and Feynman diagrams.
J**I
A wonderful read and best starting point for beginners in QFT
This reviewer is not a physicist by training but has a keen interest in physics and is a retired EE with working background in semiconductor physics and EM . This book is not a typical standard text on QFT but an extremely readable introduction to the subject. It is not a "popular" text for the general reader . This text will take you to an advance undergrad level understanding of the subject in the most "friendly" manner possible. There is no way around understanding QFT without wading into serious heavy physics and mathematics. The author has done a remarkable effort on laying out the physics in every chapter very clearly and the detail derivation are NOT glossed over. A lot of confusion for novices like myself on QFT is around the detail calculations and derivation .The book does a remarkable effort to put as much detail as humanly possible into each derivation and the reader is not left to fill in lots of gaps and left wondering how the equations move from one state to another( quantum pun intended)!!. Each chapter starts with the motivation and the underlying physics before hitting the hard part. The chapters ends with a recap and summary. Essential equations are repeated on the side bar so the reader does not have to constantly look for the neccessary background equations. The pedagogical approach is very refreshing and as good as it gets. The comparable book is "QFT - for gifted amateur" - by Lancaster/Blundell. Lancaster and Bundell covers several more advanced topics but this book goes into the fundamentals in much more detail. Both are great wonderful introductry books on QFT . I must admit that this is the first QFT text I managed to read cover to cover without getting unduly stuck ! maybe it just me being not smart enough to go thru books from Zee or Peskin etc , but I must give this author great credit for writing in such a way as to anticipate where the rough terrain are for beginners like me and smoothing it over as best as any book can. One point I do need to bring up is that this book is unlike most text is that there are no problems at the end of each chapter so there is no way to check your understanding by working thru some of these problems. All and all if you need to begin to explore QFT , this book is the best starting point I have come across in my humble opinion.
K**R
The Most Readable book on Quantum Field Theory I've ever seen.
I have studied Quantum Field Theory in graduate school and afterward. I was able to do the most demanding (and even all of the) calculations in the textbooks I read, but every time I finished, I was at a loss for how the many topics fit together, or how I got from the beginning to the end. I rarely knew why I was doing what I was doing while I was doing it. Some of the results would suddenly reappear hundreds of pages later. It was jarring and it frequently forced me to reread material from previous chapters. It was hard to know what topics were of great importance and would be reused later on and what topics were just a relatively unimportant tangent. Then I found this book. It seems that this book was written specifically to address all of my previous concerns. Jakob Schwichtenberg has done a remarkable job of connecting the overarching ideas with many of the nitty-gritty details. Finally, someone wrote an overview of how most of the ideas from QFT fit together. You know where each chapter fits in to the whole book. While you read this book, you will know why you are doing what you are doing. The author lets you know what is really important. You will know why group theory is so important in QFT and how it fits in with the rest of the topics in the book. This book is a bridge between the gee-whiz popular science accounts that lack equations and the relatively difficult textbooks that are full of equations and have far too few words. While there are relatively few requirements to reading this book (calculus and complex numbers are a must.), you are taken through legitimate Physics calculations by the end. This is not a comprehensive introduction to all of the topics in QFT. While the idea of spontaneously broken symmetries was covered, Electro-Weak Theory as a whole and Quantum Chromodynamics were not covered. (It does seem like more of these topics are touched on by some of the other No-Nonsense books by this author). You will not learn how to compute QED cross-sections in this book. But this book is the best place you can start if you truly want to feel like you grasp the main ideas and how they are related in QFT. It was truly exciting to work through this book and find an overall understanding of QFT.
R**E
I liked its simplicity. I used it in my investigation of QFM.
B**R
I have a Msc in electronic engineering and I study physics by myself. I found the two books no-nonsense quantum mechanics and quantum field theory excellent (The last one I am still studying it). I am so happy that I've bought all his books that appear in the amazon marketplace. A big well done to the man
A**A
An outstanding book, well done. Reading it is like listening to a good lecturer. Warmly recommended as a first book in quantum field theory.
J**R
A proposta do livro eh muito nobre. Não eh um livro que tem o conteúdo incompleto, portanto deve ser visto como um livro sério sobre o assunto. Além disso, o preço eh bom comparado a outras opções de livros de QFT
F**T
Becomes a bit difficult to follow in Part 2 of the book, but this is not for a lack of details, it's just a difficult subject.
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