The birth of string theory / edited by Andrea Cappelli, INFN, Florence, Elena Castellani, Department of Philosophy, University of Florence, Filippo Colomo, INFN, Florence, Paolo Di Vecchia, Nordita, Stockholm and Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2012. - 1 online resource (xxv, 636 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).

Overview: Introduction and synopsis; Rise and fall of the hadronic string / Gravity, unification, and the superstring / Early string theory as a challenging case study for philosophers / The Prehistory: The Analytic S-Matrix: Introduction to Part II; Particle theory in the sixties: from current algebra to the Veneziano amplitude / The path to the Veneziano model / Two-component duality and strings / Note on the prehistory of string theory / The Dual Resonance Model: Introduction to Part III; From the S-matrix to string theory / Reminiscence on the birth of string theory / Personal recollections / Early string theory at Fermilab and Rutgers / Dual amplitudes in higher dimensions: a personal view / Personal recollections on dual models / Remembering the 'supergroup' collaboration / The String: From dual models to relativistic strings / The first string theory: personal recollections / The string picture of the Veneziano model / From the S-matrix to string theory / The analogue model for string amplitudes / Factorization in dual models and functional integration in string theory / The hadronic origins of string theory / Beyond the Bosonic String: Introduction to Part V; From dual fermion to superstring / Dual models with fermions: memoirs of an early string theorist / Personal recollections / Aspects of fermionic dual models / The dual quark models / Remembering the dawn of relativistic strings / Early string theory in Cambridge: personal recollections / The Superstring: Introduction to Part VI; Supersymmetry in string theory / Gravity from strings: personal reminiscences of early developments / From the Nambu-Goto to the [sigma]-model action / Locally supersymmetric action for the superstring / Personal recollections / The scientific contributions of Jooël Scherk / Preparing the String Renaissance: Introduction to Part VII; From strings to superstrings: a personal perspective / Quarks, strings and beyond / The rise of superstring theory / Gabriele Veneziano; John H. Schwarz; Elena Castellani -- Marc Ademollo; Hector R. Rubinstein; Peter G.O. Freund; Murray Gell-Mann -- Paolo Di Vecchia; Joel A. Shapiro; Daniele Amati; Louis Clavelli; Claud Lovelace; Renato Musto; Francesco Nicodemi; Stefano Sciuto -- Peter Goddard; Leonard Susskind; Holger B. Nielsen; Yoichiro Nambu; David B. Fairlie; Stanley Mandelstam; Richard C. Brower -- David I. Olive; Pierre Ramond; André Neveu; Edward Corrigan; Korkut Bardakci and Martin B. Halpern; Jean-Loup Gervais; Claus Montonen -- Ferdinando Gliozzi; Tamiaki Yoneya; Lars Brink; Paolo Di Vecchia; Eugène Cremmer; John H. Schwarz -- Michael B. Green; Alexander M. Polyakov; Andrea Cappelli and Filippo Colomo. Part I. 1. 2. 3. 4. Part II. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Part III. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. The '3-Reggeon vertex' / Part IV. 19. Introduction to Part IV; 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. Part V. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. Part VI. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. Part VII. 42. 43. 44. 45.

String theory is currently the best candidate for a unified theory of all forces and all forms of matter in nature. As such, it has become a focal point for physical and philosophical discussions. This unique book explores the history of the theory's early stages of development, as told by its main protagonists. The book journeys from the first version of the theory (the so-called dual resonance model) in the late sixties, as an attempt to describe the physics of strong interactions outside the framework of quantum field theory, to its reinterpretation around the mid-seventies as a quantum theory of gravity unified with the other forces, and its successive developments up to the superstring revolution in 1984. Providing important background information to current debates on the theory, this book is essential reading for students and researchers in physics, as well as historians and philosophers of science.

9780511977725 (ebook)


String models.
Duality (Nuclear physics)

QC794.6.S85 / B57 2012

539.7/258