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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Either semester. Credits by arrangement. This course may be repeated for credit.
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3.00 Credits
Second semester. Credits by arrangement. Recommended preparation: Cumulative GPA of 2.8 or higher.
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4.00 Credits
(101Q) Either semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Recommended preparation: MATH 1010 or the equivalent. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1201, 1401, 1501 or 1601. Basic concepts and applications of physics for the non-science major. Scientific principles and quantitative relationships involving mechanics, energy, heat and temperature, waves, electricity and instructor, by students who have received credit for PHYS 1202. Electric and magnetic fields, electromagnetic waves, quantum effects, introduction to atomic physics. CA 3-LAB.
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4.00 Credits
(125) Either semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 1-hour recitation period. Prerequisite: PHYS 1202 and MATH 1122 or 1132, both of which may be taken concurrently. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1230, 1501 or 1601. Problems, emphasizing applications of calculus, dealing with topics in general physics. Intended for those students who have taken or are taking PHYS 1202 and who desire to have a calculus-based physics sequence equivalent to PHYS 1501-1502 or 1601- 1602.
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4.00 Credits
(140Q) First semester. Four credits. Three class periods, one recitation period, and one 3-hour laboratory period. Recommended preparation: MATH 1010 or the equivalent and MATH 1060, which may be taken concurrently, or passed the Calculus Placement Survey. Quantitative exploration of the structure of matter, including gas laws, electric and magnetic forces, the electron, x-rays, waves and light, relativity, radioactivity, and spectra. Recommended for prospective Physics majors. CA 3-LAB.
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4.00 Credits
(141Q) Second semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Recommended preparation: MATH 1121 or 1131 or 1151, any of which may be taken concurrently. MATH 1151 is preferred for Physics majors. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1401 or 1501. May be taken for not more than three credits, with the permission of the instructor, by students who have received credit for PHYS 1201. Fundamental principles of mechanics, statistical physics, and thermal physics. Basic concepts of calculus are used. Recommended for prospective Physics majors. CA 3-LAB.
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4.00 Credits
(142Q) First semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Recommended preparation: PHYS 1601, and MATH 1122 or 1132 or 1152, any of which may be taken concurrently. MATH 1152 is preferred for Physics majors. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1402 or 1502. May be taken for not more than three credits, with the permission of the instructor, by students who have received credit for PHYS 1202. Fundamental principles of electromagnetism, optics and wave propagation. Basic concepts of calculus are used. Recommended for prospective Physics majors. CA 3-LAB.
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3.00 Credits
(220C) Second semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: PHYS 1230 or 1402 or 1502 or 1530 or 1602 and MATH 2410, any of which may be taken concurrently; or instructor consent. A basic introduction to numerical and mathematical methods required for the solution of physics problems using currently available scientific software for computation and graphics.
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3.00 Credits
(230) Second semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: PHYS 1230 or 1530 or PHYS 1402 or 1602 or PHYS 1502, which may be taken concurrently; or PHYS 1202 with consent of instructor. The inadequacies of classical physical concepts in the submicroscopic domain. The revision of physical principles that led to special relativity and modern quantum theory. Application to topics chosen from atomic and molecular physics, solid state physics, nuclear physics and elementary particle physics.
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3.00 Credits
(258WC-259C) Both semesters. Three credits each semester. One class period, one 3-hour laboratory period, and additional assignments on the theoretical interpretation of experiments. One hour lecture per week. Time by arrangement. A written presentation of methods and results is required for each experiment. Prerequisite: First semester, PHYS 1201 or 1401 or 1501 or 1601; Second semester, PHYS 1202 or 1402 or 1502 or 1602. Both semesters, Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800. Experiments with mechanical phenomena. Experiments with electric and magnetic phenomena, including their interaction with matter. The handling of experimental data. The use of computers in experimental physics.
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