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Black Book of Quantum Chromodynamics -- A Primer for the LHC Era [Pehme köide]

(MSU Foundation Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Department of Physics, Michigan State University), (Professor for Particle Physics, Department of Physics, ), (Senior Scientist, Senior Scientist, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 768 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 246x171x35 mm, kaal: 1395 g, 35 color and 270 grayscale line figures
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Oct-2022
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 019287196X
  • ISBN-13: 9780192871961
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 768 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 246x171x35 mm, kaal: 1395 g, 35 color and 270 grayscale line figures
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Oct-2022
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 019287196X
  • ISBN-13: 9780192871961
The Black Book of Quantum Chromodynamics is an in-depth introduction to the particle physics of current and future experiments at particle accelerators. The book offers the reader an overview of practically all aspects of the strong interaction necessary to understand and appreciate modern particle phenomenology at the energy frontier. It assumes a working knowledge of quantum field theory at the level of introductory textbooks used for advanced undergraduate or in standard postgraduate lectures. The book expands this knowledge with an intuitive understanding of relevant physical concepts, an introduction to modern techniques, and their application to the phenomenology of the strong interaction at the highest energies. Aimed at graduate students and researchers, it also serves as a comprehensive reference for LHC experimenters and theorists.

This book offers an exhaustive presentation of the technologies developed and used by practitioners in the field of fixed-order perturbation theory and an overview of results relevant for the ongoing research programme at the LHC. It includes an in-depth description of various analytic resummation techniques (which form the basis for our understanding of the QCD radiation pattern and how strong production processes manifest themselves in data) and a concise discussion of numerical resummation through parton showers. This forms the basis of event generators for the simulation of LHC physics, and their matching and merging with fixed-order matrix elements. It also gives a detailed presentation of the physics behind the parton distribution functions (which are a necessary ingredient for every calculation relevant for physics at hadron colliders such as the LHC) and an introduction to non-perturbative aspects of the strong interaction, including inclusive observables such as total and
elastic cross sections, and non-trivial effects such as multiple parton interactions and hadronization. The book concludes with a useful overview contextualising data from previous experiments such as the Tevatron and the Run I of the LHC which have shaped our understanding of QCD at hadron colliders.

Arvustused

The three authors are leading world experts in the field and have produced an authoritative and comprehensive text on the subject. There is a wealth of information for students of particle physics and for researchers in high energy physics which has never before been collected together in one place. * Alan D. Martin, Contemporary Physics * A comprehensive overview of the physics of the strong interaction. * Virginia Greco, CERN Courier *


1. Introduction
2. Hard Scattering Formalism
3. QCD at Fixed Order: Technology
4. QCD at Fixed Order: Processes
5. QCD to All Orders
6. Parton Distribution Functions
7. Soft QCD
8. Data at the Tevatron
9. Data at the LHC
10. Summary
Appendix A: Mathematical Background
Appendix B: The Standard Model
Appendix C: Catani-Seymour Subtraction
John Campbell is Senior Scientist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

Joey Huston is MSU Foundation Professor of Physics and Astronomy in the Physics and Astronomy Department at Michigan State University.

Frank Krauss is Professor for Particle Physics at the Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology and the Physics Department at Durham University.