``The language of Dirac's theory of radiation: the inception and initial reception of a tool for the quantum field theorist
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2084276
DOI10.1007/s00407-022-00293-8zbMath1502.01035OpenAlexW4283819035MaRDI QIDQ2084276
Publication date: 18 October 2022
Published in: Archive for History of Exact Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00407-022-00293-8
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The peculiar notion of exchange forces. II: From nuclear forces to QED, 1929-1950
- The manufacture of the positron
- From canonical transformations to transformation theory, 1926--1927: the road to Jordan's ``Neue Begründung
- The road to Stueckelberg's covariant perturbation theory as illustrated by successive treatments of Compton scattering
- The genesis of Feynman diagrams.
- The genesis of Dirac's relativistic theory of electrons
- The state is not abolished, it withers away: how quantum field theory became a theory of scattering
- Practicing the correspondence principle in the old quantum theory. A transformation through implementation
- C. V. Raman and the discovery of the Raman effect
- On the interpretation of Feynman diagrams, or, did the LHC experiments observe \(H\rightarrow\gamma\gamma\)?
- Wolfgang Pauli
- A beautiful sea: P. A. M. Dirac's epistemology and ontology of the vacuum
- Über Elementarakte mit zwei Quantensprüngen
- Quantised singularities in the electromagnetic field,
- Relativistic quantum mechanics
- Quantum Theory of Radiation
- Observability, Unobservability and the Copenhagen Interpretation in Dirac's Methodology of Physics
- The Conceptual Framework of Quantum Field Theory
- Über die Streuung von Licht an Licht nach der Diracschen Theorie
- I.—Some Philosophical Aspects of Modern Physics
- A Symmetry Theorem in the Positron Theory
- On the Self-Energy and the Electromagnetic Field of the Electron
- Inner excited states of the proton and neutron
- Space-Time Approach to Quantum Electrodynamics
- Bakerian Lecture - The physical interpretation of quantum mechanics