Offered: Fall
A survey of selected topics in physics. The "scientific method", mechanics, fluid mechanics, heat, electricity, sound, light, and nuclear radiation will be studied.
Note: May not be taken for credit after completion of PHYS 2014, PHYS 2024, PHYS 2114, or PHYS 2124.
Lecture three hours, laboratory three hours. $20 laboratory fee.
Co-requisite: PHYS 2014 or PHYS 2114.
Co-requisite: PHYS 2024 or PHYS 2124.
Offered: Fall and summer (on demand).
Prerequisite: A grade of C or better in MATH 1113 or consent of the instructor.
Co-requisite: PHYS 2000
Open to freshmen. A broad survey course emphasizing the understanding of the principles of physics necessary for students not specifically interested in advanced work in physics, chemistry or engineering. Topics include mechanics, heat, sound, wave motion, and fluid mechanics.
Lecture three hours, laboratory three hours. $20 laboratory fee.
ACTS Common Course - PHYS2024
Offered: Spring and summer (on demand).
Prerequisite: PHYS 2014 or permission of instructor.
Co-requiste: PHYS 2010
Continuation of PHYS 2014, covering electricity and magnetism, light, relativity, particle physics, and quantum effects.
Lecture three hours, laboratory three hours. $20 laboratory fee.
ACTS Common Course - PHYS2034
Offered: Fall
Prerequisite or co-requisite: MATH 2924
Co-requisite: PHYS 2000
Introductory mechanics, heat and thermodynamics, kinetic theory, and sound.
Lecture three hours, laboratory three hours. $20 laboratory fee.
ACTS Common Course - PHYS2044
Offered: Spring
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor; prerequisite or co-requisite, MATH 2934.
Co-requisite: PHYS 2010
Introductory electricity and magnetism, wave motion, optics, and elementary quantum concepts.
Lecture three hours, laboratory three hours. $20 laboratory fee.
Offered: Spring even years
Prerequisite: PHYS 2124 or consent of instructor.
Introduction to geometrical and physical optics.
Lecture two hours, laboratory two hours. $20 laboratory fee.
Offered: Fall even years
Prerequisite: PHYS 2114
Co-requisite: MATH 3243
The conservation laws. Euler's angles. Lagrange's and Hamilton's equations.
Offered: Fall odd years
Prerequisites: PHYS 2114 and 2124
For physical science education majors. This course expands and refines essential content and laboratory skills through the modeling and experimental investigation of topics in both classical and modern physics.
Note: Will not satisfy the physics elective requirement for students majoring in physical science.
Laboratory three hours. $20 laboratory fee.
Offered: Spring even years
Prerequisite: PHYS 2124
Gauss's law, potential, Laplace's and Poisson's equations in rectangular, cylindrical, and spherical coordinates, inductance, capacitance, moving charges, dielectric phenomena, and Maxwell's equations.
Offered: Fall odd years
Prerequisites: PHYS 2114, 2124; CHEM 2124.
Co-requisite: MATH 3243
An introduction to the physics governing the crystalline state of matter. Modern theories describing lattice vibrations, energy bands, crystal binding, and optical properties are presented. These ideas are then applied to the understanding of technologically important areas such as superconductivity, doped semiconductors, ferroelectric materials, and photorefractivity.
$20 laboratory fee.
Offerd: Spring odd years
Prerequisite: PHYS 2124
Introduction to relativity, wave-particle interactions, atomic structure, quantum mechanics, quantum theory of the hydrogen atom, statistical mechanics, nuclear structure, and elementary particles.
Offered: On demand
Prerequisite: Departmental approval
Advanced students carry out independent research activity relating to significant problems in physics and astronomy. Supervised by faculty member. Formal report and presentation required. One to three credits depending on problem selected and effort made.
Offered: Fall even years
Prerequisite: PHYS 2124; Prerequiste or co-requisite, MATH 3243.
Applications of the three laws of thermodynamics, partition functions and transport phenomena.
Offered: Fall odd years
Prerequisites: PHYS 3213 and MATH 3243
A formal course in wave and matrix mechanics, designed to enable a student to set up and solve the elementary practical problems of quantum mechanics.
Offered: Spring odd years
Prerequisite: PHYS 3213
An application and investigation of advanced physical topics in the laboratory. Techniques of experimental [engineering] physics, such as computerized instrumentation, vacuum technology, optics, and electron optics will be applied to investigate various areas of advanced physics. Proper data reduction and analysis will be used to yield meaningful measurements. Intended as a culminating course, previous course work is applied to solve problems in the laboratory.
Lecture one hour, laboratory five hours. $20 laboratory fee.
Offered: Fall even years
Prerequisite: PHYS 2024 or PHYS 2124
Introduction to relativity, elementary particle physics, quantum dynamics, big-bang cosmology, atomic nucleosynthesis, and large scale structure and exotic states of matter such as black holes. Forces and interactions between the building blocks of matter in addition to cosmological models will be studied to gain insight into the complex universe we observe today.
Lecture two hours, laboratory two hours. $20 laboratory fee.
Offered: On demand
Prerequisite: Departmental approval
Advanced students carry out independent research activity relating to a significant problem in a major field of study. Supervised by faculty member. Formal report and presentation required. One to four credits depending on problem selected and effort made.
Offered: On demand
Prerequisite: Departmental approval
Advanced students carry out independent research activity relating to significant problems in physics and astronomy. Supervised by faculty member. Formal report and presentation required. One to four credits depending on problem selected and effort made.