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         Particle Physics:     more books (99)
  1. Particle Physics: A Very Short Introduction by Frank Close, 2004-07-29
  2. Many Particle Physics (Physics of Solids and Liquids) by Gerald D. Mahan, 2010-11-02
  3. Gauge Theory of elementary particle physics by Ta-Pei Cheng, Ling-Fong Li, 1988-01-07
  4. Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics: The 1986 Dirac Memorial Lectures by Richard P. Feynman, Steven Weinberg, 1999
  5. CP Violation in Particle, Nuclear, and Astrophysics (Lecture Notes in Physics)
  6. Particle Physics: The Quest for the Substance of Substance (Contemporary Concepts in Physics Series) by Okun'lev Borisovich, 1985-02-19
  7. Introduction to Elementary Particle Physics by Alessandro Bettini, 2008-06-08
  8. Particle Physics: A Comprehensive Introduction by Abraham Seiden, 2004-07-26
  9. Problems and Solutions on Atomic, Nuclear and Particle Physics: Major American Universities Ph.D. Qualifying Questions and Solutions (Major American Universities ... PhD Qualifying Questions and Solutions)
  10. Symmetry Principles Particle Physics (Cambridge Monographs on Physics) by W. M. Gibson, B. R. Pollard, 1980-11-28
  11. Particle Physics (Manchester Physics Series) by Brian Martin, Graham Shaw, 2008-12-16
  12. A Tour of the Subatomic Zoo: A Guide to Particle Physics (Volume 0) by Cindy Schwarz, 1996-09-24
  13. The God Particle: If the Universe Is the Answer, What Is the Question? by Leon Lederman, Dick Teresi, 2006-06-26
  14. The Particle Garden: Our Universe As Understood By Particle Physicists (Helix Books) by Gordon Kane, 1996-07-02

21. SLAC Library - Online Particle Physics Information
Online particle physics Information. Compiled by. This list describes a broad setof online resources that are of value to the particle physics community.
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/pdg/
Online Particle Physics Information
Compiled by Revised: May 2002 This list describes a broad set of online resources that are of value to the particle physics community. It is prescreened and highly selective. It describes the scope, size, and organization of the resources so that efficient choices can be made amongst many sites which may appear similar. A resource is excluded if it provides information primarily of interest to only one institution. Databases and resources focusing primarily on accelerator physics have been excluded in deference to the excellent compilation at the World Wide Web Virtual Library of Beam Physics and Accelerator Technology My thanks to Betty Armstrong, Particle Data Group, the SLAC Library staff, and the many particle physics Web site and database maintainers who have all given me their generous assistance. Please send comments and corrections by e-mail to pkreitz@slac.stanford.edu.
Contents

22. Particle Data Group Welcome Page
An international collaboration that reviews particle physics and related areas of Astrophysics, and compiles and analyzes data on particle properties. Often cited publication in particle physics during the last decade.
http://www-spires.dur.ac.uk/HEPDATA/PART/
The 2002 edition is now available.

23. Experiments Online
Comprehensive list of current experiments in particle physics, SPIRES database at SLAC.Category Science Physics Particle Experiments......
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/find/explist.html
Current experiments in particle physics
This document lists current high-energy physics experiments, sorted alphabetically by laboratory. We also have entries for non-accelerator experiments Each listing will show a [ SPIRES Entry] which gives the abstract, spokesperson, and full collaboration list, in addition to links to papers in HEP. The [ Home page], where known, takes you directly to the departmental home page. Alternatively try our Experiments search page Please send any comments, corrections, or updates to: library@slac.stanford.edu
Information on new experiments can be submitted here
Last modified at 13:43:12 on 04/15/02. Click on the appropriate letter below to scroll quickly to the desired alphabetical category. B C D F ... T For more information click here B Beijing Bonn U.
  • BONN-ELSA-GDH [ SPIRES Home page]
  • BONN-ELSA-SAPHIR [ SPIRES Home page] Mulitparticle final states from photons on nucleons
Return to top Brookhaven
  • AccTest
  • AGS experiments
  • 24. Particle Physics News
    particle physics Newsdesk. The service. Current topics covered by theparticle physics Newsdesk (listed in alphabetical order by title)
    http://www.eagle.co.uk/news/ppnews.html
    Particle Physics Newsdesk
    The Particle Physics Newsdesk is a prototype facility designed to assess the feasibility of providing an accessible interface to newsworthy discoveries reported in Eagle Intermedia's Particle Physics on line review service. Current topics covered by the Particle Physics Newsdesk (listed in alphabetical order by title):
    Information to contributors
    Please contact Eagle Intermedia at NEWS@EAGLE.CO.UK if you would like to submit a news item to the Particle Physics Newsdesk.
    Information to editors
    Please contact Eagle Intermedia at EIPL@EAGLE.CO.UK if you are interested in including selected stories from the above categories in your own (hard copy) publication(s). Please note that only stories which appear in their full text Click here to return to the electronic newsdesk home page.

    25. [astro-ph/9312022] Introduction To Cosmology
    These notes form an introduction to cosmology with special emphasis on large scale structure, the cmb anisotropy and inflation. In some places a basic familiarity with particle physics is assumed, but otherwise no special knowledge is needed.
    http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/9312022
    Astrophysics, abstract
    astro-ph/9312022
    From: LYTH@v1.ph.lancs.ac.uk Date: Sun, 12 Dec 93 15:29 GMT (66kb)
    Introduction to Cosmology
    Authors: David H Lyth (School of Physics and Materials, Lancaster University, 52 LA1 4YB. U. K.)
    Comments: (Lectures given at the Summer School in High Energy Physics and Cosmology, ICTP (Trieste) 1993.) 60 pages, plus 5 Figures by airmail on request. LANC-TH 9319
    These notes form an introduction to cosmology with special emphasis on large scale structure, the cmb anisotropy and inflation. In some places a basic familiarity with particle physics is assumed, but otherwise no special knowledge is needed. Most of the material in the first two sections can be found in several texts, except that the discussion of dark matter and the cosmological constant is more up to date. Most of that in the remaining sections can be found in a review of structure formation and inflation done with Andrew Liddle, which describes original work by various authors including ourselves and Ewan Stewart. The reader is referred to these works for more detail, and a very complete list of references.
    Full-text: PostScript PDF , or Other formats
    References and citations for this submission:
    SLAC-SPIRES HEP
    (refers to , cited

    26. An Introduction To Particle Physics
    An introduction to particle physics. particle physics is the studyof 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.

    27. Royal Holloway Physics
    Includes an overview of the department, information for prospective students, current research details and a section for physics teachers which includes free nanotechnology and particle physics datasheets.
    http://www.ph.rhul.ac.uk/
    Department of Physics It's official
    Best department in the country ,see Welcome to the Department of Physics Home Page
    Overview of the Department
    Research Interests

    Research Groups
    For Schools

    Talks
    Posters
    Yearly Events For prospective Students
    Admissions Information
    NEW Degree Programmes
    Open Days The National Particle Physics Masterclass - This year, the 10th 11th April is for schools as usual, but we are again arranging an additional day on Saturday 12th April aimed at teachers only. This proved very successful when we introduced it last year. [ details and booking form Web Offer: Summary Sheets for Schools FREE with no postage on first 10 sets. [ ORDER Please see our admissions page for all enquiries about 'the best teaching department in the country'. see Guardian Cryogenic Equipment SALE - everything must go [ details Department of Physics, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX UK

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

    29. Caltech Theoretical Particle Physics
    Research in superstring theory, quantum gravity, quantum field theory, cosmology, and particle phenomenol Category Reference Education Research Physics and Astronomy...... research in superstring theory, quantum gravity, quantum field theory, cosmology,particle phenomenology, and quantum information theory. Physics on the Web
    http://www.theory.caltech.edu/
    Caltech Particle Theory
    Welcome to the Caltech Particle Theory Group. We conduct research in superstring theory, quantum gravity, quantum field theory, cosmology, particle phenomenology, and quantum information theory.
    Physics on the Web:
    Local Resources:
    webmaster@theory.caltech.edu

    30. Particle Physics Data Grid
    particle physics Data Grid,
    http://www.ppdg.net/
    ANL BNL Caltech FNAL ...
    Webmaster
    What's New: Many PPDG collaborators participate in GlobusWorld ...[more] The Particle Physics Data Grid collaboration was formed in 1999 because its members were keenly aware of the need for Data Grid services to enable the worldwide distributed computing model of current and future high-energy and nuclear physics experiments. Initially funded from the NGI initiative and later from the DOE MICS and HENP programs, it has provided an opportunity for early development of the Data Grid architecture as well as evaluating some prototype Grid middleware. document.write (' ' + imgArray[randNum(imgArray.length)] + ' '); PPDG is actively participating in iVDGL together with GriPhyN as a three prong approach to data grids for US physics experiments, symbolized by Trillium flower. As well, it is working closely with complementary data grid initiatives in Europe and beyond: GlobalGridForum , European DataGrid and as part of the HENP InterGrid Coordination Board (HICB) and HICB Joint Technical Board.

    31. Tibetan Particle Physics - Preface
    While Western physics describes matter and energy well, it doesn't really address the fundamental question of ontology, how things exist, nor does it deal with the nature of human perception as a determinant of the way things seem to exist to us. Buddhism offers a view of the world that is capable of explaining these things in one seamless paradigm, while western science is fragmented into ever more subdisciplines that are often at odds with each other.
    http://www.cyborganic.com/people/gizard/Tibud/Mad/index.html
    "An Analysis of Madhyamike Particle Physics"
    What it is
    It's a paper I wrote some years ago, when I was a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin, sitting for a Ph.D. in Buddhism. My advisor, Geshe Sopa, taught a seminar on Madhyamika, the logic of the Middle Way between the extremes of permanence and nihilism, as taught by Nagarjuna and Tsongkhapa and many others. Tibetan Buddhist logic is the product of over 2000 years of steady and concerted scholarship at the monastic universities of India and Tibet. It describes the nature of phenomena using terms and metaphors rather different from those used by modern physicists. More to the point, it explores the realization that it speaks with metaphors and addresses the debate of ideas itself as part of the problem, in contrast to the Realist bent of modern science. While Western physics describes matter and energy well, it doesn't really address the fundamental question of ontology , how things exist, nor does it deal with the nature of human perception as a determinant of the way things seem to exist to us. Buddhism offers a view of the world that is capable of explaining these things in one seamless paradigm, while western science is fragmented into ever more subdisciplines that are often at odds with each other. The paper is now old and in need of revision - I have cut out the last two chapters for the time being, and am kicking at the quantum physics section - but I think that the major points still carry. Science tends to deny the existence of mind, on the grounds that it will explain everything without it as soon as it has spent enough time and money on the necessary research. Without making any reference to revealed religious truths for proof, Buddhism offers another description, backing it up with experiential and logical proofs. As an academic curiosity, at the very least, this conceptual framework of existence deserves a closer look.

    32. ESF - HTTP Error: 404 - Not Found
    European Science Foundation network.
    http://www.esf.org/physical/pn/old/TOPDEF/topola.htm
    Search by topics... Programmes Networks EURESCO Conferences Exploratory Workshops EUROCORES Forward Looks Research Infrastructures
    Programmes
    Networks EURESCO Conferences Exploratory Workshops ... Research Infrastructures ESF
    Mailing Lists ESF
    Discussion
    Forum
    404 Not Found The page you were looking for could not be found. It may have been moved,
    may no longer exist on our server or
    may be that you entered the url in capitals letters. Please note that only small letters should be used. If you were presented with this page as a result of following a link on one of our pages,
    please drop a note to the webmaster Thank you.

    33. The Institute For Particle Physics Phenomenology
    Based at the university of durham in the united kingdom, the group aims to increase understanding Category Science Physics Particle Research Groups......
    http://www.ippp.dur.ac.uk/

    34. [astro-ph/9312022] Introduction To Cosmology
    These notes form an introduction to cosmology with special emphasis on large scale structure, the cmb anisotropy and inflation. In some places a basic familiarity with particle physics is assumed, but otherwise no special knowledge is needed.
    http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9312022
    Astrophysics, abstract
    astro-ph/9312022
    From: LYTH@v1.ph.lancs.ac.uk Date: Sun, 12 Dec 93 15:29 GMT (66kb)
    Introduction to Cosmology
    Authors: David H Lyth (School of Physics and Materials, Lancaster University, 52 LA1 4YB. U. K.)
    Comments: (Lectures given at the Summer School in High Energy Physics and Cosmology, ICTP (Trieste) 1993.) 60 pages, plus 5 Figures by airmail on request. LANC-TH 9319
    These notes form an introduction to cosmology with special emphasis on large scale structure, the cmb anisotropy and inflation. In some places a basic familiarity with particle physics is assumed, but otherwise no special knowledge is needed. Most of the material in the first two sections can be found in several texts, except that the discussion of dark matter and the cosmological constant is more up to date. Most of that in the remaining sections can be found in a review of structure formation and inflation done with Andrew Liddle, which describes original work by various authors including ourselves and Ewan Stewart. The reader is referred to these works for more detail, and a very complete list of references.
    Full-text: PostScript PDF , or Other formats
    References and citations for this submission:
    SLAC-SPIRES HEP
    (refers to , cited

    35. Welcome To SCIPP - Santa Cruz Institute For Particle Physics
    The Santa Cruz Institute for particle physics (SCIPP) is an organizedresearch unit within the University of California system.
    http://scipp.ucsc.edu/
    The Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics (SCIPP) is an organized research unit within the University of California system. SCIPP's scientific and technical staff are involved in many diverse scientific projects. The primary focus is experimental and theoretical particle physics and particle astrophysics, including the development of technologies needed to advance that research. SCIPP is also pursuing the application of those technologies to other scientific fields such as neurophysiology and biomedicine. The institute is recognized as a leader in the development of custom readout electronics and silicon micro-strip sensors for state-of-the-art particle detection systems. Current Employment Opportunities Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics
    1156 High Street
    Santa Cruz, CA 95064
    (831) 459-2635 or (831) 459-4842
    FAX: (831) 459-5777
    Webmaster

    36. Glasgow Experimental Particle Physics WWW Server
    particle physics Experimental. Job vacancies RA1A RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INEXPERIMENTAL particle physics with further particulars. Welcome to
    http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/
    Particle Physics: Experimental
    Welcome to the Particle Physics Experimental (PPE) Group in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University Of Glasgow Windows virus protection: see the alert on the Physics server 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

    37. X-TRONIX LTD - Thin Films, Epitaxy, Gas Flow, Cryogenics, Surface Science, Parti
    Provides equipment for vacuum techniques, including consumables, thin films and surface science, gas flow control, helium cryogenics, and particle physics.
    http://www.x-tronix.com/
    This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them. Legal Notice webmaster: XFG-Consult Switzerland

    38. Elementary Particle Physics At Birmingham
    The group works with the ALICE, ATLAS, BaBar, H1, NA57 and OPAL. Details of this work and the researchers Category Science Physics Particle Research Groups...... BaBar. H1. NA57. OPAL. particle physics Group, School of Physics and Astronomy Universityof Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom. Monday 17 March 2003.
    http://www.ep.ph.bham.ac.uk/
    Welcome
    PhD entry Seminars Who we are ... Masterclass 2003 Experiments ALICE ATLAS BaBar OPAL Particle Physics Group, School of Physics and Astronomy
    University of Birmingham
    , Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom.
    Sunday 23 March 2003

    39. Oxford Particle Physics
    Subdepartment of particle physics. particle physics at Oxford. Oxford has the largestparticle physics group in the UK, with a large academic and support staff.
    http://www.physics.ox.ac.uk/pnp/
    Oxford home PP home Contact General Info ... Info for Staff
    Sub-department of Particle Physics
    Particle Physics at Oxford
    Oxford has the largest particle physics group in the UK, with a large academic and support staff . Our research covers a wide range of topics in particle physics and particle astrophysics. Contact information (addresses, staff) General information for schools and the general public Undergraduate studies (courses, admissions) Graduate studies Research (programme, groups, seminars, etc.) Jobs (local vacancies, other web sites) Links (for particle physics, physics, and Oxford Internal pages (information for local staff, restricted access) We follow the principles of Equal Opportunity for students and employees. Last changed 12 December 2002 , Susan Cooper

    40. Welcome To Particle Physics

    http://www.hep.ph.rhbnc.ac.uk/
    This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.
    Goto hep_home2.html

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