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出版时间:2015-01

出版社:世界图书出版公司

以下为《亚原子物理学(第3版)(英文版)》的配套数字资源,这些资源在您购买图书后将免费附送给您:
  • 世界图书出版公司
  • 9787510086359
  • 173634
  • 2015-01
  • O562
内容简介
Subatomic Physics, the physics of nuclei and particles, has been one of the frontiers of science since its birth in 1896. From the study of the radiations emitted by radioactive nuclei to the scattering experiments that point to the presence of subLuuts in nucleons, from the discovery of the hadroruc interactions to the real-ization that the photon possesses hadronic (strong) attributes, and that weak and electromagnetic forces may be intimately related, subatomic physics has enriched science with new concepts and deeper insights into the laws of nature.
  Subatomic Physics does not stand isolated; it bears on many aspects of life. Ideas and facts emerging from studies of the subatomic world change our picture of the macrocosmos. Concepts discovered in subatomic physics are needed to under-stand the creation and abundance of the elements, and the energy production in the sun and the stars, Nuclear power may provide most of the future energy clear bombs affect national and international decisions. Pion beams have be- come a tool to treat cancer. Tracer and Mossbauer techniques give information about structure and reactions in solid state physics, chemistry, biology, metallurgy, and geology.
目录
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Preface to the First Edition
Preface to the Third Edition
General Bibliography
 1 Background and Language
  1.1 Orders of Magnitude
  1.2 Units
  1.3 Special Relativity,Feynman Diagrams
  1.4 References
Ⅰ Tools
 2 Accelerators
  2.1 Why Accelerators?
  2.2 Cross Sections and Luminosity
  2.3 Electrostatic Generators (Van de Graaff)
  2.4 Linear Accelerators (Linacs)
  2.5 Beam Optics
  2.6 Synchrotrons
  2.7 Laboratory and Center-of-Momentum Frames
  2.8 Colliding Beams
  2.9 Superconducting Linacs
  2.10 Beam Storage and Cooling
  2.11 References
 3 Passage of Radiation Through Matter
  3.1 Concepts
  3.2 Heavy Charged Particles
  3.3 Photons
  3.4 Electrons
  3.5 Nuclear Interactions
  3.6 References
 4 Detectors
  4.1 Scintillation Counters
  4.2 Statistical Aspects
  4.3 Semiconductor Detectors
  4.4 Bubble Chambers
  4.5 Spark Chambers
  4.6 Wire Chambers
  4.7 Drift Chambers
  4.8 Time Projection Chambers
  4.9 Cerenkov Counters
  4.10 Calorimeters
  4.11 Counter Electronics
  4.12 Electronics: Logic
  4.13 References
Ⅱ Particles and Nuclei
 5 The Subatomic Zoo
  5.1 Mass and rmions and Bosons
  5.2 Electric Charge and Magnetic Dipole Moment
  5.3 Mass Measurements
  5.4 A First Glance at the Subatomic Zoo
  5.5 Gauge Bosons
  5.6 Leptons
  5.7 Decays
  5.8 Mesons
  5.9 Baryon Ground States
  5.10 Particles and Antiparticles
  5.11 Quarks,Gluons,and Intermediate Bosons
  5.12 Excited States and Resonances
  5.13 Excited States of Baryons
  5.14 References
 6 Structure of Subatomic Particles
  6.1 The Approach: Elastic Scattering
  6.2 Rutherford and Mott Scattering
  6.3 Form Factors
  6.4 The Charge Distribution of Spherical Nuclei
  6.5 Leptons Are Point Particles
  6.6 Nucleon Elastic Form Factors
  6.7 The Charge Radii of the Pion and Kaon
  6.8 Inelastic Electron and Muon Scattering
  6.9 Deep Inelastic Electron Scattering
  6.10 Quark-Parton Model for Deep Inelastic Scattering
  6.11 More Details on Scattering and Structure
  6.12 References
Ⅲ Symmetries and Conservation Laws
 7 Additive Conservation Laws
  7.1 Conserved Quantities and Symmetries
  7.2 The Electric Charge
  7.3 The Baryon Number
  7.4 Lepton and Lepton Flavor Number
  7.5 Strangeness Flavor
  7.6 Additive Quantum Numbers of Quarks
  7.7 References
 8 Angular Momentum and Isospin
  8.1 Invariance Under Spatial Rotation
  8.2 Symmetry Breaking by a Magnetic Field
  8.3 Charge Independence of Hadronic Forces
  8.4 The Nucleon Isospin
  8.5 Isospin Invariance
  8.6 Isospin of Particles
  8.7 Isospin in Nuclei
  8.8 References
 9 P,C,CP,and T
  9.1 The Parity Operation
  9.2 The Intrinsic Parities of Subatomic Particles
  9.3 Conservation and Breakdown of Parity
  9.4 Charge Conjugation
  9.5 Time Reversal
  9.6 The Two-State Problem
  9.7 The Neutral Kaons
  9.8 The Fall of CP Invariance
  9.9 References
Ⅳ Interactions
 10 The Electromagnetic Interaction
  10.1 The Golden Rule
  10.2 Phase Space
  10.3 The Classical Electromagnetic Interaction
  10.4 Photon Emission
  10.5 Multipole Radiation
  10.6 Electromagnetic Scattering of Leptons
  10.7 Vector Mesons as Mediators of the Photon-Hadron Interaction
  10.8 Colliding Beams
  10.9 Electron-Positron Collisions and Quarks
  10.10 The Photon-Hadron Interaction: Real and Spacelike Photons
  10.11 Magnetic Monopoles
  10.12 References
 11 The Weak Interaction
  11.1 The Continuous Beta Spectrum
  11.2 Beta Decay Lifetimes
  11.3 The Current-Current Interaction of the Standard Model
  11.4 A Variety of Weak Processes
  11.5 The Muon Decay
  11.6 The Weak Current of Leptons
  11.7 Chirality versus Helicity
  11.8 The Weak Coupling Constant GF
  11.9 Weak Decays of Quarks and the CKM Matrix
  11.10 Weak Currents in Nuclear Physics
  11.11 Inverse Beta Decay: Reines and Cowan's Detection of Neutrinos
  11.12 Massive Neutrinos
  11.13 Majorana versus Dirac Neutrinos
  11.14 The Weak Current of Hadrons at High Energies
  11.15 References
 12 Introduction to Gauge Theories
  12.1 Introduction
  12.2 Potentials in Quantum Mechanics-The Aharonov-Bohm Effect
  12.3 Gauge Invariance for Non-Abelian Fields
  12.4 The Higgs Mechanism;Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
  12.5 General References
 13 The Electroweak Theory of the Standard Model
  13.1 Introduction
  13.2 The Gauge Bosons and Weak Isospin
  13.3 The Electroweak Interaction
  13.4 Tests of the Standard Model
  13.5 References
 14 Strong Interactions
  14.1 Range and Strength of the Low-Energy Strong Interactions
  14.2 The Pion-Nucleon Interaction-Survey
  14.3 The Form of the Pion-Nucleon Interaction
  14.4 The Yukawa Theory of Nuclear Forces
  14.5 Low-Energy Nucleon-Nucleon Force
  14.6 Meson Theory of the Nucleon-Nucleon Force
  14.7 Strong Processes at High Energies
  14.8 The Standard Model,Quantum Chromodynamics
  14.9 QCD at Low Energies
  14.10 Grand Unified Theories,Supersymmetry,String Theories
  14.11 References
Ⅴ Models
 15 Quark Models of Mesons and Baryons
  15.1 Introduction
  15.2 Quarks as Building Blocks of Hadrons
  15.3 Hunting the Quark
  15.4 Mesons as Bound Quark States
  15.5 Baryons as Bound Quark States
  15.6 The Hadron Masses
  15.7 QCD and Quark Models of the Hadrons
  15.8 Heavy Mesons: Charmonium,Upsilon
  15.9 Outlook and Problems
  15.10 References
 16 Liquid Drop Model,Fermi Gas Model,Heavy Ions
  16.1 The Liquid Drop Model
  16.2 The Fermi Gas Model
  16.3 Heavy Ion Reactions
  16.4 Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
  16.5 References
 17 The Shell Model
  17.1 The Magic Numbers
  17.2 The Closed Shells
  17.3 The Spin-Orbit Interaction
  17.4 The Single-Particle Shell Model
  17.5 Generalization of the Single-Particle Model
  17.6 Isobaric Analog Resonances
  17.7 Nuclei Far From the Valley of Stability
  17.8 References
 18 Collective Model
  18.1 Nuclear Deformations
  18.2 Rotational Spectra of Spinless Nuclei
  18.3 Rotational Families
  18.4 One-Particle Motion in Deformed Nuclei (Nilsson Model)
  18.5 Vibrational States in Spherical Nuclei
  18.6 The Interacting Boson Model
  18.7 Highly Excited States;Giant Resonances
  18.8 Nuclear Models-Concluding Remarks
  18.9 References
 19 Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics
  19.1 The Beginning of the Universe
  19.2 Primordial Nucleosynthesis
  19.3 Stellar Energy and Nucleosynthesis
  19.4 Stellar Collapse and Neutron Stars
  19.5 Cosmic Rays
  19.6 Neutrino Astronomy and Cosmology
  19.7 Leptogenesis as Basis for Baryon Excess
  19.8 References
Index
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