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Quantum Physics: Volume 1 - From Basics to Symmetries and Perturbations

ISBN: 978-3-527-40979-2

December 2010

616 pages

Description
This two-volume set, naturally divided into two semester parts, contains a full modern graduate course in quantum physics. The idea is to teach graduate students how to practically use quantum theory by presenting the fundamental knowledge and gradually moving on to broad applications, including atomic, nuclear, relativistic and many-body physics, as well as subfields of current interest, such as quantum chaos and quantum entanglement. The author discusses topics that are not usually covered in standard textbooks and has written the book in such a way that every subject contains varying layers of difficulty, so that the instructor can decide where to stop. Problems and solutions are integrated throughout the text.

From the contents:

  • Origin of Main Quantum Concepts
  • Wave Function and the Simplest Problems
  • Bound States
  • Dynamical Variables
  • Uncertainty Relations
  • Hilbert Space and Operators
  • Quantum Dynamics
  • Discrete Symmetries
  • One-Dimensional Motion: Continuum
  • Variational Approach and Diagonalization
  • Discrete Spectrum and Harmonic Oscillator
  • Coherent and Squeezed States
  • Introducing Magnetic Field
  • Macroscopic Quantum Coherence
  • Semiclassical (WKB) Approximation
  • Angular Momentum and Spherical Functions
  • Motion in a Central Field
  • Hydrogen Atom
  • Stationary Perturbations
  • Spin 1/2
  • Finite Rotations and Tensor Operators
  • Angular Momentum Coupling
  • Fine and Hyperfine Structure
  • Atom in a Static Field
About the Author
Vladimir Zelevinsky is Professor at the Department of Physica and Astronomy and National Superconducting Cyclotron laboratory at Michigan State University, USA. He graduated from Moscow University and worked for many years at the Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics in Novosibirsk where he got his Candidate of Science and highest Doctor of Science degrees (equivalent to a PhD). In the eighties he was Head of Theory Division at the Budker Institute and Head of Theoretical Physics at Novosibirsk University. He spent three years as a visiting professor at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen. He is the author of over 200 scientific publications, co-editor of the EPL journal and Associate Editor of the Nuclear Physics journal. He has also received many awards as the best teacher at MSU.