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         Particle Physics:     more books (99)
  1. Introduction to High Energy Physics by Donald H. Perkins, 2000-04-24
  2. Nuclear and Particle Physics: An Introduction by Professor Brian Martin, 2006-04-28
  3. Group Theory for the Standard Model of Particle Physics and Beyond (Series in High Energy Physics, Cosmology and Gravitation) by Ken J. Barnes, 2010-03-10
  4. Introduction to Nuclear And Particle Physics: Solutions Manual for Second Edition of Text by Das and Ferbel by C. Bromberg, A Das, et all 2006-08-25
  5. An Introduction to Particle Physics and the Standard Model by Robert Mann, 2009-11-18
  6. QCD and Collider Physics (Cambridge Monographs on Particle Physics, Nuclear Physics and Cosmology) by R. K. Ellis, W. J. Stirling, et all 2003-12-04
  7. Charged Particle Traps: Physics and Techniques of Charged Particle Field Confinement (Springer Series on Atomic, Optical, and Plasma Physics) by Fouad G. Major, Viorica N. Gheorghe, et all 2010-11-30
  8. Cosmic Rays And Particle Physics by Thomas K. Gaisser, 1990
  9. Gauge Theory of Elementary Particle Physics: Problems and Solutions by Ta-Pei Cheng, Ling-Fong Li, 2000-05-04
  10. Introduction To The Physics Of Particle Accelerators by Mario Conte, William W MacKay, 2008-04-28
  11. Particle Detectors (Cambridge Monographs on Particle Physics, Nuclear Physics and Cosmology) by Claus Grupen, Boris Shwartz, 2008-04-21
  12. Particle Astrophysics, Second Edition (Oxford Master Series in Physics) by D.H. Perkins, 2009-02-04
  13. Particle Accelerator Physics by Helmut Wiedemann, 2007-06-12
  14. Experimental Techniques in Nuclear and Particle Physics by Stefaan Tavernier, 2010-02-19

41. Journal Of Physics G: Nuclear And Particle Physics
Nuclear and particle physics Journal from the Institute of Physics (UK)
http://www.iop.org/Journals/jg
@import url(http://ej.iop.org/style/nu/EJ.css); Electronic Journals quick guide Journals sitemap: IOP home page IOP online services EJs HOME JOURNAL HOME   - Editorial information   - Scope   - Editorial board   - Submit an article   - Pricing and ordering   - Request sample copy EJS EXTRA   - IOP Select   - IOP Physics Reviews   - BEC Matters! SEARCH   - Content finder   - Default searches AUTHORS   - Submit an article   - Status enquiry   - Get LaTeX class file   - Classification schemes   - Scope   - Editorial board REFEREES   - Submit referee report   - Become a referee   - Update personal details   - Classification schemes   - Scope   - Editorial board LIBRARIANS   - Register your institution   - Pricing and ordering   - Library branding   - How to link to IOP journals   - Librarian help USER OPTIONS   - Create account   - Lost password
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42. CES - Creative Electronic Systems
Develops realtime test and simulation hardware and software products for telecom, aerospace, nuclear and particle physics applications.
http://www.ces.ch/

43. Welcome To Particle Physics

http://www.hep.ph.rhbnc.ac.uk/

44. Beam Line
A quarterly periodical of particle physics, published by the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (fall 1994present).
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/pubs/beamline/
Beam Line as a publication has been retired. Past issues are available on this site. Please check out Interactions.org , the electronic News Wire for regular news from the world of high-energy physics..
See what our sister Laboratories are doing! As the major national and international laboratories are increasingly collaborating on major technical projects, we think you would be interested to learn more about them through their institutional journals: CERN Fermilab Lawrence
Livermore Lab Lawrence
Berkeley Lab Updated: Tuesday, April 08, 2003 08:23 AM
Kathy Bellevin

45. Glasgow Experimental Particle Physics WWW Server
particle physics Experimental. Job vacancy RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN EXPERIMENTAL particle physics with details (closing date 25 June 2004).
http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/
Particle Physics: Experimental
Job vacancy:
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN EXPERIMENTAL PARTICLE PHYSICS with details (closing date 25 June 2004) Welcome to the Particle Physics Experimental (PPE) Group in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University Of Glasgow Lunchtime talks programme Overview of the group's main activities in ZEUS CDF ALEPH ATLAS ... LHC-b , and in GRID and Detector Development Information for Active Participants Experiment Accelerator Laboratory
ZEUS
HERA

46. Introduction To Particle Physics
Delve into the fascinating world of particle physics, an easy to understand look at particle physics. Apparently, your browser doesn t support frames. Bah.
http://www.hep.yorku.ca/yhep/main.html
Apparently, your browser doesn't support frames. Bah. Click here to continue at this site.

47. LIGHT QUANTUM  FIELD
An introduction to the new achievements in research on light/photon quantum physics and particle physics.
http://lqfp.nease.net
LIGHT QUANTUM FIELD ENGLISH FIRST PAGE CHINESE FIRST PAGE (Simplified chinese) E-mail: ruanwenliang@hotmail.com web maker ruan cheng-zhi editor ruan wen-liang Shanghai China. var tc_user="lqfp";var tc_class="7";

48. Elementary Particle Physics Glossary
Elementary particle physics Glossary. Note Most of Chicago). Named after particle physics pioneer Enrico Fermi. Fermion. Any particle
http://hepwww.ph.qmw.ac.uk/epp/glossary.html
Elementary Particle Physics Glossary
Note: Most of this glossary is copied from the excellent The Particle Adventure at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
Accelerator
A machine used to accelerate particles to high speeds (and thus high energy compared to their rest-mass energy).
Annihilation
A process in which a particle meets its corresponding antiparticle and both disappear. The energy appears in some other form, perhaps as a different particle and its antiparticle (and their energy), perhaps as many mesons, perhaps as a single neutral boson. The produced particles may be any combination allowed by conservation of energy and momentum and of all the charge types.
Antimatter
Material made from antifermions. We define the fermions that are common in our universe as matter and their antiparticles as antimatter. In the particle theory there is no a priori distinction between matter and antimatter. The asymmetry of the universe between these two classes of particles is a deep puzzle for which we are not yet completely sure of an explanation.
Antiparticle
For every fermion type there is another fermion type that has exactly the same mass but the opposite value of all other charges (quantum numbers). This is called the antiparticle. For example, the antiparticle of an electron is a particle of positive electric charge called the positron. Bosons also have antiparticles except for those that have zero value for all charges, for example a photon or a composite boson made from a quark and its corresponding antiquark. In this case there is no distinction between the particle and the antiparticle, they are the same object.

49. Big Bertha Thing
High energy particle physics research project, results and software. Outlandish particle periodic table. Scientific cartoons. Spam attack stategic studies. Documentation on 1st and 2nd battles of cyberspace. Astrophysics net ring.
http://tonylance.mybravenet.com/

50. Elementary Particle Physics
This page has moved. You should be automatically redirected to http//hepwww.ph.qmw.ac.uk/epp after 10 seconds.
http://hepwww.ph.qmw.ac.uk/epp/epp.html
This page has moved. You should be automatically redirected to http://hepwww.ph.qmw.ac.uk/epp after 10 seconds.

51. ~wilson
Research Professor at Harvard University. Contains published papers, arsenic project, chemical carcinogens, radiation, human rights, elementary and particle physics.
http://phys4.harvard.edu/~wilson/
Last updated April 23rd 2004
CV
Published Papers HOME Public Hearings Science and Law Arsenic Project Harvard Physics ... Link to GOOGLE
RICHARD WILSON Photograph taken in Minsk, Jan. 1992. Click on picture to enlarge and for story
General Richard Wilson , born in London, England in 1926, has been at Harvard University since 1955 where he is now Mallinckrodt Research Professor of Physics. Richard Wilson is an affiliate of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and of the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis , and of the Program on Science and International Affairs at the Kennedy School of Government. His CV shows that he is the author or coauthor of 867 published articles and papers. See also charts of ancestors and descendants . In particular look at the web site of Elaine Wilson , a fine landscape painter. Richard Wilson is a famous name and a selection of Richard Wilson's activities shows that he was, and is, an extraordinarily busy man.
Recent interests include: preparing a history of the Harvard cyclotrons In addition to this web based history, which can be added to at any time, a

52. Particle Physics 2004
particle physics 2004. particle physics 2004 is the annual conference of the High Energy particle physics Group of the Institute of Physics.
http://www.ep.ph.bham.ac.uk/iophepp/2004/
Particle Physics 2004
th th April 2004
Poynting Physics Building,
University of Birmingham
Particle Physics 2004 is the annual conference of the High Energy Particle Physics Group of the Institute of Physics . It is hosted and organised by the Particle Physics Group of the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Birmingham
Please note that the two day meeting will be preceded by the PPARC town meeting on Monday 5 th April from 1:30pm to 5:00pm.
The conference will follow the usual format of a mixture of experimental and theoretical review talks in plenary sessions, with parallel sessions devoted to all aspects of theoretical and experimental high energy physics. All members of the UK experimental and theoretical communities are invited to attend. In previous years, the conference was held in:
The conference poster (~664KB, JPEG, A4) can be downloaded from here
Conference agenda
The plenary speakers are:
Adrian Bevan (Liverpool) Guennadi Borissov (Lancaster) Roger Cashmore (Oxford) Tony Doyle (Glasgow) Jeff Forshaw (Manchester) Paul Harrison (Warwick) Rolf Heuer (DESY) Ken Long (Imperial) Paul Newman (Birmingham) Subir Sarkar (Oxford) Yves Schutz (CERN)
For contributions to parallel sessions, please contact

53. 2000 CP Physics Conference
The Conference will focus on experimental and theoretical aspects of CP violation in elementary particle physics. It will consist of plenary sessions only, aimed at giving a complete picture of what is presently known and of the future progress in the field, both theoretically and experimentally.
http://www.fe.infn.it/CPconf/
CPconf 2000
International Conference
On CP Violation Physics

September 18-22, 2000
Ferrara, ITALY

Photo Credit: Ferrara, The Castle
Click To Enter

54. A World Of Particles.The Discovery Of The Model. Atoms.
A key stage 4 resource for physics GCSE Atoms The story of particle physics goes back 2000 years to the Greeks. Atoms, history 1.
http://www.schoolscience.co.uk/content/4/physics/particles/particlesdiscover1.ht
document.write(''); CSAct[/*CMP*/ 'B3CE3D2A4'] = new Array(CSShowHide,/*CMP*/ 'orangemap',1); Atoms history 1 The story of particle physics goes back 2000 years to the Greeks; and Isaac Newton thought that matter was made up of particles in the 17th century. However, it was John Dalton who formally stated in 1802 that everything is made from tiny atoms. accelerator tunnels that are the size of a small town. The photo shows an aerial view of the path of the accelerator tunnel at CERN which crosses the French/Swiss border. The tunnel is 27 km long. As well as discovering new particles, the scientists at CERN developed the technology that has now become the Internet. The first particle model The pattern period In 1869 Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist, grouped the elements into periods according to their chemical properties. However, his periodic table had gaps in it. Mendeleev was not put off; instead he used his periodic patterns to predict the existence and properties of the missing elements. Within a few years, germanium and gallium, for example, were discovered with the predicted properties. Similarly, a hundred years on, physicists were predicting the existence and properties of new fundamental particles , which were later discovered.

55. Feynman Diagram Drawing Program: FeynDraw
FeynDraw Windows program is used to quickly draw, scale, print, and save as images, Feynman, qed, qcd, twistor, string, or other particle physics diagrams and can be downloaded free for trial use.
http://www.feyndraw.com
Feynman Diagram Drawing Program
- 29 Oct 2001
Student Price $20
FeynDraw is a new modern Windows software program enabling you to easily draw scientific and mathematical diagrams. Draw sets of QED, QCD, and other Feynman diagrams or use FeynDraw to generate topological diagrams. Send us an email if you want notification of the planned Linux version. FeynDraw was developed because of a lack of a sophisticated drawing product for the Windows environment which could be used to generate Feynman or topological diagrams and provide images for use on the internet and in publications. Version 2.25 was released on 29 Oct 2001. This release fixes an origin setting problem with postscript print drivers. It has been tested with the Adobe Generic Postscript Printer Driver V4.5.1 and the HP Laserjet 4ML Postscript Driver and viewed using the GSview Postscript interpreter. (By the way, you can get GSview at http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/ to provide an easy method of generating PDF files from Postscript print files.) Click here to obtain a FREE TRIAL COPY of FeynDraw for Windows at this site. The file is 1,210,269 bytes long and will take about 5 minutes to download using a 56k modem. A 28.8k modem will take twice as long. The demo is fully functional. The demo program puts "DEMO" on the prints and saved images. Purchase (see below) will remove the "DEMO" message. Try it out and see for yourself if it meets your needs.

56. Particle Physics Group
Back to Bristol University Physics Department This is http//www.phy.bris.ac.uk/research/pppages/. Please send comments on the
http://www.phy.bris.ac.uk/research/pppages/
University of Bristol
Particle Physics Group
Learn about particle physics
Particle Physics in the UK
Fundamental particles poster
Masterclasses for sixth-formers
A talk about the 1999 Nobel prize ...
The Portable Cosmic Ray Detector Contact the group
Group members (phone,email)
How to find us Research activities
ZEUS at DESY
BaBar at SLAC
CMS at CERN
LHCb at CERN
Detector development
Electronics Support Join the Group
Lectureship position
Postgraduate study
Postdoctoral research positions Useful links
Experiments worldwide
Laboratories worldwide
Conferences
Train and plane timetables ...
Install LaTeX on your PC
Back to: Bristol University Physics Department
This is http://www.phy.bris.ac.uk/research/pppages/
Please send comments on the content and layout of this page to Bob Tapper
This page was last updated on 9 Feb 2003 Picture credits: 3: CERN Photo 4: PPARC Press Office

57. An Introduction To Particle Physics
An introduction to particle physics. particle physics is the study of the basic elements of matter and the forcesacting among them.
http://hepwww.rl.ac.uk/Pub/Phil/ppintro/ppintro.html
An introduction to Particle Physics
Particle physics is the study of the basic elements of matter and the forcesacting among them. It aims to determine the fundamental laws that control themake-up of matter and the physical universe. RAL is one of the leading laboratories investigating this.
Probing Particles
Experiments at particle accelerators, such as LEP , where sub-atomic particles collide at very high energies, reveal details of particlesand conditions that prevailed just after the Big Bang over 15 billion years ago. Most experiments involve large international collaborations and are performed atoverseas laboratories such as CERN in Geneva and DESY in Hamburg. These collaborations typically involve more than 300 people and the work at CERN is supported by 19 European countries.
Accelerators
The accelerator is the basic tool of particle physics. It allows us to createthe particle collisions that we want to study in our own laboratories. The highenergy collisions between particles that physicists are interested in do occurnaturally but the events are unpredictable and the number that can be observed(in cosmic rays ) is low.

58. Contents
Contents. Start tour. An introduction to particle physics An introduction to RAL; LEP; CERN; LHC; Higgs Bosons; DESY; Inside the proton;
http://hepwww.rl.ac.uk/Pub/Phil/contents.html
Contents

59. An Introduction To Quantum Cosmology
This is an introductory set of lecture notes on quantum cosmology, given to an audience with interests ranging from astronomy to particle physics.
http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/mathphysics/abstracts/ADP-95-11-M28.html
An introduction to quantum cosmology
D.L. Wiltshire
ADP-95-11/M28, gr-qc/0101003
in Cosmology: The Physics of the Universe, Proceedings of the 8th Physics Summer School, A.N.U, Jan-Feb, 1995 , eds. B. Robson, N. Visvanathan and W.S. Woolcock (World Scientific, Singapore, 1996), pp. 473-531. ISBN 981-02-2513-X. This is an introductory set of lecture notes on quantum cosmology, given to an audience with interests ranging from astronomy to particle physics. Topics covered:
    1. Introduction
    • 1.1 Quantum cosmology and quantum gravity
    • 1.2 A brief history of quantum cosmology
    2. Hamiltonian Formulation of General Relativity
    • 2.1 The 3+1 decomposition
    • 2.2 The action
    3. Quantisation
    • 3.1 Superspace
    • 3.2 Canonical quantisation
    • 3.3 Path integral quantisation
    • 3.4 Minisuperspace
    • 3.5 The WKB approximation
    • 3.6 Probability measures
    • 3.7 Minisuperspace for the Friedmann universe with massive scalar field
    4. Boundary Conditions
    • 4.1 The no-boundary proposal
    • 4.2 The tunneling proposal
    5. The Predictions of Quantum Cosmology
    • 5.1 The period of inflation
    • 5.2 The origin of density perturbations

60. III. ELEMENTARY PARTICLE PHYSICS TODAY
III. ELEMENTARY particle physics TODAY. A. INTRODUCTION The study of the top quark and its properties represents an exciting frontier for particle physics.
http://www.hep.net/documents/drell/sec3.html
III. ELEMENTARY PARTICLE PHYSICS TODAY
A. INTRODUCTION High-energy physics is the search for elementary particles and basic laws of nature. What are the smallest building blocks out of which protons, neutrons, atoms, and all matter are made? Do such elementary particles exist?; and if so, what are they? This search to unveil the elementary constituents of matter, along with the forces that link them, involves distances thousands of times smaller than nuclear sizes, about one ten trillionth of a centimeter, or 10-13cm. Accelerators must have very large energies to probe nature at such small distances. The ultimate goal of this quest is a view of the underlying first principles that govern our entire physical universe. In recent years, we have realized a strong and growing synergism between the physics of short distances and the properties and large- scale structure of the universe. This development reflects the unity of science as explored on both the high-energy and particle astrophysics frontiers. With this connection, we are now addressing some of the most basic questions one can ask: How did our physical universe begin? How did it evolve to its present state? What will be its final fate? Over the past several decades, experimental discoveries and theoretical insights have significantly advanced our understanding of the elementary particles and their forces. We now know that electrons, protons, and neutrons make up the visible matter all around us, but only the electron appears to be a point-like elementary particle. Protons and neutrons are bound states of more basic constituents, the up and down quarks. Those quarks are permanently bound or confined by what are called strong interactions or forces.

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