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GAUGE THEORIES IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

edited by John C Taylor (University of Cambridge)

By the end of the 1970s, it was clear that all the known forces of nature (including, in a sense, gravity) were examples of gauge theories, characterized by invariance under symmetry transformations chosen independently at each position and each time. These ideas culminated with the finding of the W and Z gauge bosons (and perhaps also the Higgs boson). This important book brings together the key papers in the history of gauge theories, including the discoveries of: the role of gauge transformations in the quantum theory of electrically charged particles in the 1920s; nonabelian gauge groups in the 1950s; vacuum symmetry-breaking in the 1960s; asymptotic freedom in the 1970s. A short introduction explains the significance of the papers, and the connections between them.

 
Contents:
  • Gauge Invariance in Electromagnetism
  • Non-Abelian Gauge Theories
  • Gravity as a Gauge Theory
  • Gauge Invariance and Superconductivity
  • Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking and Particle Physics
  • Gauge-Fixing in Non-Abelian Gauge Theories
  • Gauge Identities and Unitarity
  • Asymptotic Freedom
  • Monopoles and Vortex Lines
  • Non-Pertubative Approaches
  • Instantons and Vacuum Structure
  • Three-Dimensional Gauge Fields and Topological Actions
  • Gauge Theories and Mathematics
 
Readership: Graduate students, researchers and lecturers in mathematical, theoretical, quantum and high energy physics, as well as historians of science.
 
“J C Taylor recently edited a collection of original articles on gauge theory, starting with a few pages from Maxwell's ‘Treatise’. The collection is well chosen, and is introduced by an instructive commentary. I find it especially useful since it included translations into English of several articles originally in German.”
C N Yang
SUNY, Stony Brook
 
“This is a fascinating and valuable collection, especially the earlier papers, some of which are not now well known. John Taylor's introductory commentary provides a clear and concise explanation of the context and significance of the papers.”
Tom Kibble
Imperial College, London
 
404pp    Pub. date: Oct 2001  
ISBN:   978-1-86094-281-5
1-86094-281-4
   US$148 / £98

 


404pp    Pub. date: Oct 2001  
ISBN:   978-1-86094-282-2(pbk)
1-86094-282-2(pbk)
   US$67 / £44

 


404pp    Pub. date: Oct 2001  
ISBN:   978-1-84816-160-3(ebook)
1-84816-160-3(ebook)
   US$192

 


 
 

Copyright © 2012 Imperial College Press Co. All rights reserved.