|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
Focus is on late nineteenth- and twentieth-century philosophers of language, with particular emphasis on their technical works in analytical philosophy. G. E. Moore, Gilbert Ryle, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Rudolph Carnap, G. Morris, and A. Tarski are among the philosophers studied who applied techniques of the logical analysis of language to philosophical problems of knowledge, existence, and value. 3 credit hours. Prerequisite: any 200-level philosophy course. Offered as needed.
-
4.00 Credits
Concepts, individual thinkers, or institutional movements may be chosen to be explored intensively. 3 or 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: consent of instructor and department chair. Offered as needed.
-
4.00 Credits
The student, working with a faculty advisor, selects a topic for study and researches the topic in depth. 1 C4 credit hours. Prerequisite: consent of instructor and department chair. Offered as needed.
-
4.00 - 7.00 Credits
This noncalculus-based course includes vectors, statics, kinematics, Newton's laws, energy, momentum, fluids, thermodynamics, and wave motion. Lecture and laboratory. (7) 4 credit hours. Gen. Ed. Category LS. Offered fall and summer.
-
4.00 - 7.00 Credits
This noncalculus-based course includes electrostatics, DC and AC circuits, magnetism, electromagnetic waves, and an introduction to atomic and nuclear physics. Lecture and laboratory. (7) 4 credit hours. Gen. Ed. Category LS. Prerequisite: PHYS 101. Offered spring and summer.
-
4.00 - 7.00 Credits
This calculus-based course includes vectors, statics, kinematics, momentum, energy, rotational motion, small oscillations, and fluid mechanics. Lecture and laboratory. (7) 4 credit hours. Gen. Ed. Category LS. Prerequisite: successful completion of or concurrrent enrollment in MATH 212, or consent of department chair. Offered fall.
-
4.00 - 7.00 Credits
This calculus-based course includes electrostatics in a vacuum and in the presence of matter, DC and AC circuits, electromagnetism, and an introduction to optics. Lecture and laboratory. (7) 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: PHYS 200 and successful completion of or concurrent enrollment in MATH 213, or consent of department chair. Offered spring.
-
4.00 - 7.00 Credits
This calculus-based course includes laws of thermodynamics, kinetic theory of matter, wave phenomena, fluids, and introductions to quantum physics and relativity. Lecture and laboratory. (7) 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: PHYS 200 and successful completion of or concurrent enrollment in MATH 213, or consent of department chair. Offered spring.
-
4.00 - 6.00 Credits
Topics include relativistic mechanics, atomic structure, optical and X-ray radiation, radioactivity, fission, fusion, and elementary particle theories. Laboratory experiments emphasize these concepts. Lecture and laboratory. (6) 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: PHYS 201 or 202. Offered as needed.
-
3.00 Credits
Topics include curvilinear coordinates, complex variables, integral transforms, vectors and matrices, special functions, differential equations, and numerical methods as applied to physics. Lecture. 3 credit hours. Prerequisite: MATH 314. Offered as needed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2024 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|