Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1 Neutrino Properties and Its Interactions
- Chapter 2 Relativistic Particles and Neutrinos
- Chapter 3 Quantization of Free Particle Fields
- Chapter 4 Interacting Fields and Relativistic Perturbation Theory
- Chapter 5 Phenomenological Theory I: Nuclear β-decays and Weak Interaction of Leptons
- Chapter 6 Phenomenological Theory II: Weak Decays of Hadrons
- Chapter 7 Gauge Field Theories and Fundamental Interactions
- Chapter 8 Unified Theory of Electroweak Interactions
- Chapter 9 Neutrino and Electron Scattering from Point Particles
- Chapter 10 Neutrino scattering Cross Sections from Hadrons: Quasielastic Scattering
- Chapter 11 Neutrino Scattering from Hadrons: Inelastic Scattering (I)
- Chapter 12 Neutrino Scattering from Hadrons: Inelastic Scattering (II)
- Chapter 13 Neutrino Scattering from Hadrons: Deep Inelastic Scattering
- Chapter 14 Weak Quasielastic v(⊽)-nucleus Scattering
- Chapter 15 Inelastic Scattering of (Anti)neutrinos from Nuclei
- Chapter 16 Deep Inelastic Scattering of (Anti)neutrinos from Nuclei
- Chapter 17 Neutrino Sources and Detection of Neutrinos
- Chapter 18 Neutrino Mixing and Oscillations
- Chapter 19 Neutrino Astrophysics and the Synthesis of Elements
- Chapter 20 Neutrino Interactions Beyond the Standard Model
- Appendices
- Appendix A Lorentz Transformation and Covariance of the Dirac Equation
- Appendix B Cabibbo Theory
- Appendix C Some Properties of Pauli and Dirac Matrices and Spin Density Matrices
- Appendix D Leptonic and Hadronic Tensors
- Appendix E General Expression for the Total Scattering Cross Section and Decay Rates
- Appendix F Expressions of N(q2), the Coefficients of the Polarization Observables
- References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2020
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1 Neutrino Properties and Its Interactions
- Chapter 2 Relativistic Particles and Neutrinos
- Chapter 3 Quantization of Free Particle Fields
- Chapter 4 Interacting Fields and Relativistic Perturbation Theory
- Chapter 5 Phenomenological Theory I: Nuclear β-decays and Weak Interaction of Leptons
- Chapter 6 Phenomenological Theory II: Weak Decays of Hadrons
- Chapter 7 Gauge Field Theories and Fundamental Interactions
- Chapter 8 Unified Theory of Electroweak Interactions
- Chapter 9 Neutrino and Electron Scattering from Point Particles
- Chapter 10 Neutrino scattering Cross Sections from Hadrons: Quasielastic Scattering
- Chapter 11 Neutrino Scattering from Hadrons: Inelastic Scattering (I)
- Chapter 12 Neutrino Scattering from Hadrons: Inelastic Scattering (II)
- Chapter 13 Neutrino Scattering from Hadrons: Deep Inelastic Scattering
- Chapter 14 Weak Quasielastic v(⊽)-nucleus Scattering
- Chapter 15 Inelastic Scattering of (Anti)neutrinos from Nuclei
- Chapter 16 Deep Inelastic Scattering of (Anti)neutrinos from Nuclei
- Chapter 17 Neutrino Sources and Detection of Neutrinos
- Chapter 18 Neutrino Mixing and Oscillations
- Chapter 19 Neutrino Astrophysics and the Synthesis of Elements
- Chapter 20 Neutrino Interactions Beyond the Standard Model
- Appendices
- Appendix A Lorentz Transformation and Covariance of the Dirac Equation
- Appendix B Cabibbo Theory
- Appendix C Some Properties of Pauli and Dirac Matrices and Spin Density Matrices
- Appendix D Leptonic and Hadronic Tensors
- Appendix E General Expression for the Total Scattering Cross Section and Decay Rates
- Appendix F Expressions of N(q2), the Coefficients of the Polarization Observables
- References
- Index
Summary
The need for writing a self-contained comprehensive book on the physics ofneutrino interactions had been in our minds for a long time, while teachingvarious graduate courses in high energy physics and nuclear physics andconducting research in the field of neutrino physics at the Aligarh MuslimUniversity. We also realized the need for such a book while attending manytopical workshops, conferences, and short-term schools like NuFact, NuInt,NuSTEC, etc., held in the USA, Europe, Japan, and elsewhere in the area ofneutrino physics and while responding to questions asked by the youngresearchers in many formal and informal discussions. The aforementionedscientific events bring together research students and senior scientistsworking on various aspects of neutrino physics common to nuclear physics,particle physics, and astrophysics, which make the subjectinterdisciplinary. In recent times, the research activity in the field ofneutrino physics, around the world, and its applications in the other areasof physics has attracted a large number of students to this field. It was,therefore, felt that this is an appropriate time to write a book on thephysics of neutrino interactions focusing on introducing the basicmathematical and physical concepts and methods with the help of simpleexamples to illustrate the calculation of various neutrino processesrelevant for applications in particle physics, nuclear physics, andastrophysics, for the benefit of all those interested in learning thesubject.
The main aim of the book is to present a pedagogical account of the physicsof neutrino interactions, with balance among its theoretical andexperimental aspects, for describing various neutrino scattering processesfrom leptons, nucleons, and nuclei used in studying neutrino properties likeits mass, charge, magnetic moment, and the newly discovered phenomenon ofneutrino mixing and oscillations. The book is intended primarily forgraduate students and young post-doctoral research scientists working inneutrino physics but it can also be used by advanced undergraduates who havesome exposure to basic courses in special theory of relativity, quantummechanics, nuclear physics, particle physics, and are interested in neutrinophysics.
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- Information
- The Physics of Neutrino Interactions , pp. xxxix - xliiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020