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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
This is the first semester lab course for a one-year course in general physics. Experiments are selected from measurement systems, mechanics, properties of matter, wave motion, and heat. (One three-hour laboratory period per week) Co-requisite: PHY 2321.
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1.00 Credits
This is the second semester lab course for a one-year course in general physics. Experiments are selected from electricity and magnetism, light and optics, and modern physics. (One three-hour laboratory period per week) Co-requisite: PHY 2322.
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3.00 Credits
This is the first semester of a one-year introductory course in general physics. Areas covered include: mechanics, properties of matter, wave motion, and heat. (Three one-hour lecture periods per week) Prerequisite: MAT 1311.
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3.00 Credits
This course is a continuation of General Physics I. Topics covered includes electricity and magnetism, optics, relativity, and atomic and nuclear physics. (Three one-hour lecture periods per week) Prerequisite: PHY 2321.
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1.00 Credits
This is the first semester lab course for a one-year calculus-based physics course. Experiments are selected from measurement systems, mechanics, properties of matter, wave motion and heat (One three-hour laboratory period per week) Co-requisite: PHY 3331.
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1.00 Credits
This is the second semester lab course for a one-year calculus-based physics course. Experiments are selected from electricity and magnetism, light and optics, and Modern Physics. (One three-hour laboratory period per week) Co-requisite: PHY 3332.
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3.00 Credits
This is a calculus-based introductory physics course designed for potential physicists, chemists, mathematicians, computer scientists, and engineers. Topics include mechanics, wave motion and statistical physics. (Three one-hour lecture periods per week) Prerequisite/co-requisite: MAT 2317.
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3.00 Credits
The course is a continuation of Principles of Physics I. Topics includes electricity and magnetism, optics, relativity, and atomic and nuclear physics. (Three one-hour lecture periods per week) Prerequisite: PHY 3331.
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3.00 Credits
This is an intermediate optics course, which focuses on physical and geometrical optics, propagation of light and its interaction with matter, polarization, interference, and diffraction. Optical components such as lenses, mirrors, prisms, fiber optics, spectrometers, and interferometers will be discussed. Prerequisites: PHY 2322, PHY 2122, or PHY 3332, PHY 3132
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3.00 Credits
This is the first course of two at the intermediate level in electricity and magnetism, one of the wellestablished core areas of Physics. It provides an in-depth study of electrostatics and magnetostatics at a higher level of mathematical skill than in the introductory course and covers material considered essential for an undergraduate physics major/minor and closely related majors. Prerequisites: PHY 3332, PHY 3132.
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