Physics Today
Jump to Content
Increase text size Decrease text size
  • Sign In
  • View Items in Cart View Cart
  • Advanced
  • Keyword
 
  • Home
  • Print Edition
  • Daily Edition
    • News Picks
    • The Dayside
    • Physics Update
    • Singularities
    • Points of View
    • Politics and Policy
    • Science and the Media
    • Obituaries
    • We Hear That
    • Events Calendar
  • Advertising
  • Buyer's Guide
  • About us
    • Our mission
    • Our people
    • American Institute of Physics
    • Member societies
    • Register
    • Subscribe
    • Submit content
    • Marketing reprints
    • Rights and permissions
    • Help/FAQ
    • Change mailing address
    • Contact us
  • Jobs
    • Job Seeker Login
    • Search Jobs
    • Post Resumes
    • Career Resources
    • For Employers
    • Success Stories
    • Resume Templates
    • About Us
    • Advertising
    • Display Advertising
    • Employer Resources
    • Banner Advertising
    • Security Tips
Follow us: Facebook    Twitter    rss    E-mail alert
  • Table of contents
  • Past issues

yellow star Featured Jobs

  • Search jobs
  • Post jobs
Books

The Charm of Strange Quarks: Mysteries and Revolutions of Particle Physics

R. Michael Barnett, Henry Mühry, and Helen R. Quinn
Springer-Verlag, New York, 2000. $39.95 (302 pp.).
ISBN 0-387-98897-1

Despite the intense research that has been done in particle physics, the public remains mostly mystified by the subject. The field's conceptual and mathematical complexity is a barrier even to individuals who are interested in particle physics but lack the skills necessary to unravel its mysteries.

We rely on K-12 education to provide citizens with the foundations of science that will enable them to understand new scientific developments. Yet physics courses at the high-school and even introductory-college levels are preoccupied with classical physics; little time is left for 20th-century physics. Most high-school physics curricula, even the National Science Education Standards (National Academy Press, 1996), do not move past atomic structure and radioactive decay, the physics of the 1930s. Until recently, textbooks included little, if any, discussion of elementary particles.

The preface to The Charm of Strange Quarks contains a clear statement of intent "to bring the excitement and a basic understanding of this fundamental topic to the public and especially to students." In the first two-thirds of the book, the authors present the Standard Model of particle physics and related elements of cosmology. Concepts and discoveries, starting with the structure of the atom, are emphasized. Although it feels like a traditional text, this book has no questions or problem sets at the end of the chapters. Using few equations, the authors augment the main text with drawings, photographs, and boxed inserts, providing concise physics explanations or recognition of the contributors to this work. The emphasis on the work of scientists is an important feature, with the first chapter dedicated to the story of the independent discoveries of the J/ψ particle by physicists working at SLAC and at Brookhaven National Laboratory.

While the mathematical complexity is absent, the book is not "light" reading. The language is sufficiently technical that a solid understanding of basic physics is essential. The history of the discoveries is presented in a coherent fashion, with clear and thorough explanations of the significance or surprise that each contributed. The interdependence of experimental and theoretical physics is accurately portrayed, with examples where each breaks new ground. The reader will be convinced that the Standard Model is not a far-fetched theory but an established framework grounded in both mathematical reasoning and experimental verification. Not only is the Standard Model well explained, but its limitations, such as its inability to predict quark masses or to unify strong and electroweak forces, are clearly stated. The relevance of particle physics to cosmological issues, and new theories addressing unresolved questions, are explored (in chapters 8 and 9) in fascinating yet readily comprehensible terms.

Although it is a thorough presentation, The Charm of Strange Quarks appears disjointed in some places, especially in chapter 3 in which flavors of quarks, discussed on page 52, are reintroduced on page 62 as if they had not been discussed previously. At times, the explanations are too short and would benefit from additional elaboration, as in the case of the explanation of quark masses on page 68. The book includes a few real-world analogies to help visualize difficult concepts, such as exchange of virtual particles during an interaction. Additional analogies would be useful.

The last third of this book is devoted to some conventional appendices, plus appendix D, an introduction to basic physics concepts as applied to particle physics. This section is less inhibited in its use of equations and quantitative concepts. It contains exercises for the reader and is clearly intended as a supplement to an introductory physics course.

The book is recommended as a supplementary text for introductory college courses or for advanced high-school courses; science teachers will find it useful for updating their knowledge in an ever-expanding field of physics research.

Mary Lauko
Educational Testing Service
Princeton, New Jersey
Thomas J. Devlin
Rutgers University
New Brunswick, New Jersey

 

  • Article Tools
  • Enlarge text   Enlarge text
  • Shrink text   Shrink text
  • Comment on this articleWrite a letter to the editor
  • Related links
  • Free this month
  • A Physicist with the Air Force in World War II
  • Novel Heavy-Water Detector Unveils the Missing Solar Neutrinos
  • Atoms Hop between Islands of Regular Motion in a Sea of Chaos
  • New Books
  • Letters
  • Most popular articles
  • Gedanken experiment: Levitate a physics sitcom?
    Points of View
  • Nanoplasmonics: The physics behind the applications
    February 2011
  • Half-quantum vortices
    Physics Update
  • Quantum criticality
    February 2011

 



SERVICES
Physics Today Jobs
Physics Today Buyers Guide
Event Calendar
Obituaries
DAILY EDITION
The Dayside
News Picks
Science in the Media
Politics & Policy
Singularities
Physics Update
Points of View
THE MAGAZINE
This month in print
Institutional subscriptions
Information for advertisers
READER SERVICE
Register
Sign in
Subscribe
Email alert
MORE INFO
FAQ
Contact us
About Physics Today
Privacy Policy
Marketing reprints
Rights and Permissions

Copyright © by the American Institute of Physics - All rights reserved

Find articles by AUTHORNAME

This PublicationThis Publication
ScitationScitation
SPINSPIN
ScitopiaScitopia
Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
PubMedPubMed