PHYS 151
Seminar in Modern Physics Fall 2021
Division III Quantitative/Formal Reasoning
This is not the current course catalog

Class Details

Newtonian Mechanics, spectacular as it is in describing planetary motion and a wide range of other phenomena, only hints at the richness of behaviors seen in the universe. Special relativity has extended physics into the realm of high speeds and high energies and requires us to rethink our basic notions of space and time. Quantum mechanics successfully describes atoms, molecules, and solids while at the same time calling into question our notions of what can be predicted by a physical theory. Statistical physics reveals new behaviors that emerge when many particles are present in a system. This course covers the same core material as PHYS 142 but in a small seminar format for students with strong prior preparation in physics.
The Class: Format: lecture/conference/laboratory; Two 50-minute lectures per week, one 50-minute conference section per week, one 3-hour lab per week
Limit: 18
Expected: 18
Class#: 1347
Grading: yes pass/fail option, yes fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation: class participation, weekly lab/conference assignments, weekly problem sets, final paper, two hour-exams and a final exam;
Prerequisites: placement by the department (see "advanced placement" section in the description about the department). Students may take either PHYS 142 or PHYS 151 but not both
Enrollment Preferences: first-years
Unit Notes: this is a small seminar designed for first-year students who have placed out of PHYS 141
Distributions: Division III Quantitative/Formal Reasoning
QFR Notes: besides the final paper, all assignments in the course have a substantial quantitative component

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