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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Fermat's principles, thick lens theory, third order aberration theory, interference phenomena, Kirchoff's integral, Fresnel and Farunhoffer diffraction, Fourier transform optics, coherence times and lengths, holography, polarization, absorption, scattering, dispersion. Prerequisites: PHYS 212, MATH 232
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Schrbdinger Quantum Mechanics from an operator standpoint, wells, barriers and the harmonic oscillator, the Hydrogen atom, electric spin, angular momentum, perturbation theory, matrix representations, relativistic corrections, multi-electron atoms, Zeeman and Stark effects, molecular states. Prerequisites: PHYS 300, 304
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Schrbdinger Quantum Mechanics from an operator standpoint, wells, barriers and the harmonic oscillator, the Hydrogen atom, electric spin, angular momentum, perturbation theory, matrix representations, relativistic corrections, multi-electron atoms, Zeeman and Stark effects, molecular states. Prerequisites: PHYS 300, 304
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3.00 Credits
NC - Fall An introduction to Gannon University and the Pre-Law Program.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits/Spring Introduction to legal institutions and processes; evolution of the American legal system; major substantive areas of law; legal reasoning and the adversarial process; and, the role of attorneys and courts in American society.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Legal analysis and persuasion will introduce the student to the fundamentals of legal thinking, including the critical examination of case law, statutory law and other written materials. Applying this legal analysis, students will learn to persuade a targeted audience in both written and oral forms. Classroom exercises include briefs, mock appellate arguments and/or mock trial.
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3.00 Credits
NC/Fall A required orientation program for freshman Political Science and Pre-Law concentrators.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits, Fall/Spring Constitutional foundations of U.S. Government; structure and functions of Congress, the Presidency, the judiciary; administrative institutions and processes, interest groups and political parties; political behavior, and the electoral process.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits, Fall/Spring Principles and practices of policy analysis; emphasis on current national policy issues.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Introduction to the nature of international relations, focusing on the role of the state and international institutions; the role of ideology and culture in international affairs; and the nature of the world economy and the process of globalization.
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