- #1
creepypasta13
- 375
- 0
I completed my Physics undergrad studies a couple years ago, so I had forgotten a lot of what I learned. But since I plan to start grad school this fall, I have spent the past few months reviewing Griffith's QM and E&M, along with doing a little self-study of grad-level QM from Sakurai. However, I had a really bad Mech professor, so I forgot a lot about Lagrangians, actions, 4-vectors, etc until I reviewed them the past few days to help understand Classical field theory
I was wondering where I could learn QFT on my own (including any more QM I might need to learn before I could start QFT) to prepare myself for possibly taking grad-level QM and QFT for my 1st semester of grad school.
For QM, I have Griffiths book, and in class we covered the first 7 chapters (which includes all the basics, hydrogen, time-indep. perturbation, H atom, identical particles, and the variational principle). I forgot some of this stuff, but I'm sure I can relearn the stuff quickly if I need to. I also spent a few days self-studying scattering theory.
Where should I go after this? I watched a few of David Tong's QFT lectures that covered Classical Field Theory, and I was really lost. I tried a few pages of Peskin & Schroeder and also was confused often by the explanations. For example, their explanations for Noether's Thm and Energy Momentum Tensor weren't very helpful. Perhaps this is because my E&M prof barely covered Relativistic Electrodynamics.
Are Tong's lectures and Peskin and Schroeder not a good text for beginners? What texts serve as better introductions to QFT?
I was wondering where I could learn QFT on my own (including any more QM I might need to learn before I could start QFT) to prepare myself for possibly taking grad-level QM and QFT for my 1st semester of grad school.
For QM, I have Griffiths book, and in class we covered the first 7 chapters (which includes all the basics, hydrogen, time-indep. perturbation, H atom, identical particles, and the variational principle). I forgot some of this stuff, but I'm sure I can relearn the stuff quickly if I need to. I also spent a few days self-studying scattering theory.
Where should I go after this? I watched a few of David Tong's QFT lectures that covered Classical Field Theory, and I was really lost. I tried a few pages of Peskin & Schroeder and also was confused often by the explanations. For example, their explanations for Noether's Thm and Energy Momentum Tensor weren't very helpful. Perhaps this is because my E&M prof barely covered Relativistic Electrodynamics.
Are Tong's lectures and Peskin and Schroeder not a good text for beginners? What texts serve as better introductions to QFT?