- #1
Coelum
- 97
- 32
Dear all,
I want to be able to read and understand the basic concepts of Theoretical Physics (String Theory, LQG, Supersymmetry, AdS/CFT) at the level of:
1- A First Course in String Theory by Barton Zwiebach
2- Quantum Gravity by Carlo Rovelli.
I plan to study the following textbooks (in fact, I already began...).
Mathematics:
1- Mathematics for Physics and Physicists by Walter Appel
2- Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers by Lokenath Debnath
3- Geometrical Methods of Mathematical Physics by B. Schutz.
Physics:
1- A First Course in General Relativity by Bernard F. Schutz
2- An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory by M Dasgupta
3- Introduction to Elementary Particles by D. Griffiths.
You may safely assume that I have the background to study all of those texts - both in physics and mathematics.
My main question is: are there unfilled gaps in my planned preparation?
A subordinate question is: are there better books for introductory self-study (rather than those by Zwiebach and Rovelli)?.
Thanks a lot in advance,
Francesco
P.S. In case you need to check the book's contents: all the cited books are available from Amazon except for the textbook by M. Dasgupta, which can be downloaded at http://hepwww.rl.ac.uk/hepsummerschool/Dasgupta%2008%20Intro%20to%20QFT.pdf.
I want to be able to read and understand the basic concepts of Theoretical Physics (String Theory, LQG, Supersymmetry, AdS/CFT) at the level of:
1- A First Course in String Theory by Barton Zwiebach
2- Quantum Gravity by Carlo Rovelli.
I plan to study the following textbooks (in fact, I already began...).
Mathematics:
1- Mathematics for Physics and Physicists by Walter Appel
2- Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers by Lokenath Debnath
3- Geometrical Methods of Mathematical Physics by B. Schutz.
Physics:
1- A First Course in General Relativity by Bernard F. Schutz
2- An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory by M Dasgupta
3- Introduction to Elementary Particles by D. Griffiths.
You may safely assume that I have the background to study all of those texts - both in physics and mathematics.
My main question is: are there unfilled gaps in my planned preparation?
A subordinate question is: are there better books for introductory self-study (rather than those by Zwiebach and Rovelli)?.
Thanks a lot in advance,
Francesco
P.S. In case you need to check the book's contents: all the cited books are available from Amazon except for the textbook by M. Dasgupta, which can be downloaded at http://hepwww.rl.ac.uk/hepsummerschool/Dasgupta%2008%20Intro%20to%20QFT.pdf.