Introduction
Part I: Nuclear Structure
Chapter 1: Rutherford Scattering
Chapter 2: Nuclear Size and Shape
Chapter 3: The Liquid Drop Model
Chapter 4: Nuclear Shell Model
Chapter 5: Radioactivity
Chapter 6: Alpha Decay
Chapter 7: Beta Decay
Chapter 8: Gamma Decay
Chapter 9: Nuclear Fission
Chapter 10: Nuclear Fusion
Chapter 11: Charge Independence and Isospin
Part 2: Particle Physics
Chapter 12: Accelerators
Chapter 13: Fundamental Interactions (Forces) of Nature
Chapter 14: Classification of ParticlesChapter 15: Constituent Quark Model
Chapter 16: Weak Interactions
Chapter 17: Higgs Boson
Chapter 18: Electromagnetic Interactions
Chapter 19: Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD)
Chapter 20: Parity, Charge Conjugation and CP
Epilogue
About the Author: Professor Belyaev obtained his PhD at Moscow State University in 1996, followed by postdoctoral research at Sao Paulo, CERN, Florida State and Michigan State Universities. He joined the University of Southampton as a lecturer in 2007 and became a full professor in 2014. He works on the phenomenology of beyond the Standard Model theories, including their collider and cosmological implications. His recent studies are devoted to theories of Dark Matter. He has worked in close contact with experimental groups, in particular, from 2007 he is a full member of the CMS collaboration at CERN. He is one of the developers of the CalcHEP, the package for the automatic evaluation and simulation of particles decay and scattering processes. In 2011, he pioneered the High Energy Physics Model Database, HEPMDB, project.
Professor Ross obtained his PhD under the supervision of J.C.Taylor. He had post-doctoral fellowships at Imperial College, Utrecht, CERN and Caltech, before arriving at Southampton University. He has worked on the application of perturbative gauge theories to both strong (QCD) and electroweak interactions. Much of his latter work was devoted to the study of the pomeron in QCD. He is a coauthor of a textbook on this subject. He became a full professor at Southampton University in 1994 and was elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society in 2005.