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Graduate Courses in Physics

Department of Physics
College of William & Mary
P.O. Box 8795
Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795
Phone: (757) 221-3500
Fax: (757) 221-3540

The department offers a variety of courses as well as the opportunity for independent study and research. For a complete list of graduate courses, together with their descriptions, please consult the graduate catalog.

A faculty adviser helps each student select courses which are most suited to his or her interest and preparation. The program typically followed for satisfying the required graduate curriculum is:

1st Year 2nd Year
FallFall
601 Classical Mechanics 611 Classical Electricity and Magnetism
603 Mathematical Physics

721 Field Theory & Relativistic Quantum Mechanics

621 Quantum Mechanics 650 Colloquium
650 Colloquium 695 Research or 651 Teaching Physics
651 Teaching Physics Elective
SpringSpring
610 Classical Electricity and Magnetism 800 DISSERTATION
630 Statistical Physics and Thermodynamics Elective
622 Quantum Mechanics Elective

650 Colloquium

 
652 Teaching Physics  

ELECTIVES: At least ONE inside and at least ONE outside Field of Study.

Regularly taught elective courses include:
  • Nuclear and Particle Physics:   771, 772, 773, 774
  • Solid State Physics:   741, 742
  • Plasma Physics:   783, 784
  • Atomic and Molecular Physics:   761, 762
  • Advanced Mathematical Physics: 702
  • General Relativity and Cosmology:   786
  • Quantum Field Theory: 722  
  •  Quantum Optics:
  • Also Computer Science, Applied Science or Mathematics Courses.
On the basis of their previous experience or individual reading, some students omit one or more of these courses and go directly into advanced work. A few students with incomplete preparation, but otherwise promising records, begin their program with some advanced undergraduate courses. To broaden their experience, all students are advised to take at least two elective courses in an area of physics other than the one in which their dissertation research is performed.
Recent examples of other special topics courses, taught as needed, include:

Accelerator Physics and Beam Dynamics
Advanced Classical Mechanics & Catastrophe Theory
Chaotic Dynamics
Electron Scattering at Medium and High Energies: Theory and Experiment
The Fundamentals of Superconducting Cavities
Introduction to Gauge Theories
Modern Optics and Lasers
Nonlinear Dynamics
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
Optical Spectroscopy and Lasers
The Theory of Neoclassical Transport Processes in Plasmas
Tokamak Plasma Stability

There is a weekly general colloquium; the speakers are visitors from other institutions and include distinguished physicists in a variety of fields. Numerous specialized seminars are also organized by the research groups of the department. Through listening to research presentations, reading journals, and talking to members of the department, students should choose a research area as rapidly as possible. It is very useful to start immediately to spend a few hours per week with one of the research groups, if only to develop one's interests. By the summer following the first academic year, each student should make at least a tentative choice of specialization and begin conducting research.


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