PHYS-PHYSICS
-- 2001-03 Catalog
Physics Department
PHYS
104 Introductory Physics (4) GE B3
Elementary
introduction to mechanics, gases, liquids and solids, heat, vibrations and
waves, light, electricity and magnetism. Intended to provide non-science
students with an understanding of basic physical concepts. Not open to students
who have credit in a college physics course. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Appropriate ELM exemption or an appropriate score on the ELM examination or
MATH 104.
PHYS
121 College Physics (4) GE B3 & B4
Introductory
course in mechanics emphasizing motion, force, and energy. Not open to students
having a grade of C- or better in PHYS 131. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory.
Prerequisite: MATH 118 and high school trigonometry, or MATH 119 or MATH 120.
PHYS
122 College Physics (4)
Continuation
of PHYS 121. Topics include properties of materials, fluids, waves and
vibrations, sound, heat, light and optics. Not open for credit to students
having a grade of C- or better in PHYS 132. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory.
Prerequisite: PHYS 121.
PHYS
123 College Physics (4)
Continuation
of PHYS 121 and 122. Electrostatics, electric current, magnetic fields and
induction. Elements of modern physics. Not open for credit to students having a
grade of C- or better in PHYS 133. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory. Prerequisite: PHYS
121. Recommended: PHYS 122.
PHYS
131 General Physics (4) GE B3 & B4
(Also listed as HNRS 131)
Fundamental
principles of mechanics. Vectors, particle kinematics. Equilibrium of a rigid
body. Work and energy, linear momentum, rotational kinematics and dynamics.
Primarily for engineering and architecture students, and for students majoring
in the physical sciences. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory. Prerequisite: MATH 141 with
grade C- or better and MATH 142 (or concurrent enrollment). Recommended: high
school physics.
PHYS
132 General Physics (4) GE B3 & B4
Oscillations,
waves in elastic media, sound waves. Temperature, heat and the first law of
thermodynamics. Kinetic theory of matter, second law of thermodynamics.
Geometrical and physical optics. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory. Prerequisite: PHYS
131.
PHYS
133 General Physics (4) GE B3 & B4
Charge
and matter, electric field, electric potential, dielectrics, capacitance,
current and resistance, electromotive force and circuits, magnetic fields,
magnetic field of a moving charge, induced emf. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory.
Prerequisite: PHYS 131, MATH 142.
PHYS
137 General Physics: Applied Physics
for Architects (4)
Applied
physics problems related to architecture. Damped, forced, and coupled
oscillations in mechanical structures and electric circuits. Earthquakes and
structures. Elementary electric circuit and wiring concepts. Energy transport,
and efficient use of energy and passive solar energy in buildings. For College
of Architecture and Environmental Design majors. 3 lectures, 1 laboratory.
Prerequisite: PHYS 132, MATH 142.
PHYS
200 Special Problems for Undergraduates
(1–2)
Individual
investigation, research, studies, or surveys of selected problems. Total credit
limited to 4 units, with a maximum of 2 units per quarter. Prerequisite:
Consent of department chair.
PHYS
201 Learning Center Tutor (1) (CR/NC)
Act
as a tutor in the Physics Learning Center. Help students with problem solving
techniques and introductory physics course material. Total credit limited to 3
units, with a maximum of 1 unit per quarter. Credit/No Credit grading only.
Prerequisite: PHYS 133 and consent of instructor.
PHYS
202 Physics on the Computer (4)
Introduction
to computer algebra system for solving problems in physics: differential equations,
matrix manipulations, simulations and numerical techniques, nonlinear dynamics.
4 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 133, MATH 242 (or concurrent enrollment) and
computer literacy.
PHYS
206 Instrumentation in Experimental
Physics (3)
L-R-C
circuits and electronic circuit elements emphasizing the applications of analog
and digital electronics to instrumentation in modern physics. 3 lectures.
Prerequisite: PHYS 133, MATH 143, computer literacy, and concurrent enrollment
in PHYS 256.
PHYS
211 Modern Physics I (4)
Special
relativity, fundamental principles of quantum mechanics, emphasizing the modern
description of atomic phenomena. Kinetic theory, wave particle duality, Bohr
theory, Schroedinger equation, elementary atomic structure. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
PHYS 123, or PHYS 132 and PHYS 133, and MATH 241.
PHYS
212 Modern Physics II (4)
Applications
of quantum physics to atoms, nuclei, and elementary particles. Quantum
statistics, principles of the laser. Topics in solid state physics such as the
free electron theory of metals, bonding in solids and energy bands. Nuclear
structure and nuclear energy. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 211.
PHYS
215 Physics of Sound and Music (3)
Wave
nature of sound. Musical instruments and production of sound, overtones and
tone quality, musical scales, decibels and noise hazards. Speech and hearing.
Recording and reproduction of sound. Electronic instruments and synthesizers.
Room acoustics. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 104 or PHYS 122 or PHYS 132 or
PSC 101 or consent of instructor.
PHYS
256 Electrical Measurements Laboratory
(1)
Experimental
studies of circuit analysis and electronics; introduction to digital
techniques; instrumentation. 1 laboratory. Prerequisite: PHYS 133, MATH 143,
and concurrent PHYS 206.
PHYS
301 Thermal Physics I (3)
Thermodynamics
and statistical mechanics. Entropy, temperature, chemical potential, free
energy. Selected applications including paramagnetism, ideal gas, Fermi-Dirac
distribution. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 132, PHYS 211, MATH 241.
PHYS
302 Analytical Mechanics I (3)
Vector
analysis, laws of motion, kinematics and dynamics of a particle. Work and
energy. Oscillatory motion (damped and forced oscillation). Center of mass.
Linear and angular momentum. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 131, MATH 242.
PHYS
303 Analytical Mechanics II (3)
Dynamics
of a rigid body. Three-dimensional motion of a rigid body. Introduction to
Lagrange's and Hamilton's equations. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 302.
Concurrent: MATH 304.
PHYS
310 Physics of Energy (3)
Physics
and mathematics applied to broad energy topics. Efficient usage,
transportation, solar energy, nuclear fission and fusion. Plasma, hydrogen
economy, fuel cells, wind wave, tidal, and geothermal energy. Transmission,
storage, fossils. National planning, and energy economics. 3 lectures.
Prerequisite: PHYS 133.
PHYS
313 Introduction to Atmospheric Physics
(3)
Properties
of the atmosphere, atmospheric motions, solar and terrestrial radiation.
Atmospheric optics and cloud physics. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 132 or
PHYS 122 and MATH 143 or equivalent.
PHYS
315 Introduction to Lasers and Laser
Applications (3)
Interaction
of radiation with matter, theory of laser action, characteristics and
modification of laser output, types of lasers. Holography and other
applications. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 133, or PHYS 123 and MATH 143.
PHYS
317 Special Theory of Relativity (3)
Fundamental
experiments and basic postulates of special relativity. Simultaneity, length
and time measurements. Lorentz transformations. Four-Vectors. Space-time
diagrams. Relativistic mechanics and electromagnetism. 3 lectures.
Prerequisite: PHYS 211.
PHYS
323 Optics (5)
Geometric
optics, lens systems, aberration, physical optics and polarization. 4 lectures,
1 laboratory. Prerequisite: PHYS 133, MATH 241.
PHYS 340
Quantum Physics Laboratory I (2)
Experimental
studies of the quantum properties of atoms and nuclei. Measurements of
fundamental constants. Statistics and data analysis. 1 lecture, 1 laboratory.
Prerequisite: PHYS 212 and PHYS 256.
PHYS
341, 342 Quantum Physics Laboratory II,
III (1) (2)
Advanced
experimental studies of quantum properties of atoms and nuclei. Interactions
with radiation, particles and fields. Courses must be taken in numerical order.
PHYS 341: 1 laboratory; PHYS 342: 2 laboratories. Prerequisite: PHYS 340.
PHYS
357 Advanced Instrumentation in
Experimental Physics (3)
Advanced
analog and digital electronics, computer interfacing to experiments, robotics.
2 lectures, 1 laboratory. Prerequisite: PHYS 206 and PHYS 256.
PHYS
363 Undergraduate Seminar (2)
Study
and oral presentation of physics topics of interest to students and faculty.
Discussion of projects and research by students and faculty. 2 seminars.
PHYS
400 Special Problems for Advanced
Undergraduates (1–2)
Individual
investigations, research, studies, or surveys of selected problems. Total
credit limited to 4 units, with a maximum of 2 units per quarter. Prerequisite:
Consent of department chair.
PHYS
401 Thermal Physics II (3)
Additional
topics in thermodynamics and statistical physics, including chemical
equilibrium, phase transitions, transport processes, and cryogenics. 3
lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 301.
PHYS
403 Nuclear and Particle Physics (3)
Advanced
nuclear physics topics. The two-nucleon problem at low energy. The deuteron.
Subnuclear particles and their structure. Elementary particles. Symmetries and
conservation laws. Parity, charge conjugation and time reversal invariance.
Hadronic interactions. The weak interaction. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 212
and PHYS 405.
PHYS
405 Quantum Mechanics I (4)
Wave
nature of matter and the basic postulates of quantum mechanics. The wave
function, operators, and their interpretation. Schroedinger's Equation and its
solutions in one and more dimensions. The hydrogen atom and the periodic table.
4 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 211, MATH 242. Recommended: PHYS 212, MATH 304.
PHYS
406 Quantum Mechanics II (3)
Angular
momentum operators and problems in three dimensions including the hydrogen
atom. The elements of matrix mechanics and spin wave functions. Perturbation
theory. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 405.
PHYS
408, 409 Electromagnetic Fields and
Waves I, II (4) (3)
Electric
and magnetic field theory using vector analysis. Electric fields, dielectric
materials, magnetic fields, induced emf's, magnetic materials, Maxwell's
equations, wave equations, plane electromagnetic waves. Dipole radiation,
radiation from an accelerated charge. 4 lectures, 3 lectures. Prerequisite:
MATH 304, PHYS 206 or consent of instructor.
PHYS
410 Physics of the Solid Earth (3)
Gravity
and the figure of the Earth. Body wave seismology, structure and composition of
the Earth, heat flow and heat sources, Earth tides, rotational dynamics, the
geomagnetic field and its source, paleomagnetism. 3 lectures. Prerequisite:
PHYS 133 and MATH 242 or equivalent.
PHYS
412 Solid State Physics (3)
Physics
of the solid state of matter. Relationship between atomic bonding and the
structural, mechanical, thermal, optical, and electronic properties of solids.
Emphasis on those properties that influence electronic behavior and processes
in metals, insulators, and semiconductors. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 211
or MATE 340, MATH 242.
PHYS
413 Advanced Topics in Solid State
Physics (3)
Semiconducting
devices, including junction and field-effect transistors, LED's, and diode
lasers. Magnetic properties of solids. Superconductivity, including discussion
of high-temperature superconductors. Other topics of current interest in solid
state physics. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 412.
PHYS
423 Advanced Optics (4)
Lens
aberrations, interference and diffraction, Fourier optics, quantum optics,
image formation and holography, non-linear optics. Miscellaneous course fee
required–see Class Schedule. 3
lectures, 1 laboratory. Prerequisite: PHYS 323.
PHYS
424 Theoretical Physics (3)
Contour
integration in the complex plane, properties of the delta function, properties
of some common functions of theoretical physics, Green's function techniques
for solving differential equations. 3 lectures. Prerequisite: PHYS 133, MATH
304, MATH 318.
PHYS
452 Solid State Physics Laboratory (1)
Selected
experiments on the solid state of matter using electrical, optical, and x-ray
methods. 1 laboratory. Prerequisite or concurrent: PHYS 412.
PHYS
461, 462 Senior Project (2) (2)
Selection
and completion of a project under faculty supervision. Projects typical of
problems which graduates must solve in their fields of employment. Project
results are presented in a formal report. Minimum 120 hours total time.
PHYS 463, 464 Senior Project - Laboratory
Research (2)
(2)
Selection
and completion of a laboratory research project under faculty supervision.
Projects typical of problems which graduates will encounter in industry or
graduate school. Project results are presented in a formal report. Minimum 120
hours total time. 2 laboratories. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
PHYS
470 Selected Advanced Topics (1–4)
Directed
group study of selected topics for advanced students. Open to undergraduate and
graduate students. Class Schedule will
list topic selected. Total credit limited to 8 units. 1 to 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
PHYS
471 Selected Advanced Laboratory (1–4)
Directed
group laboratory study of selected topics for advanced students. Open to
undergraduate and graduate students. Class
Schedule will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 8 units. 1 to 4
laboratories. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
PHYS
485 Cooperative Education Experience
(6) (CR/NC)
Part-time
work experience in business, industry, government, and other areas of student
career interest. Positions are paid and usually require relocation and
registration in course for two consecutive quarters. Formal report and
evaluation by work supervisor required. Total credit limited to 16 units.
Credit/No Credit grading only. Prerequisite: Sophomore standing and consent of
instructor.
PHYS
495 Cooperative Education Experience (12)
(CR/NC)
Full-time
work experience in business, industry, government, and other areas of student
career interest. Positions are paid and usually require relocation and
registration in course for two consecutive quarters. Formal report and
evaluation by work supervisor required. Total credit limited to 16 units.
Credit/No Credit grading only. Prerequisite: Sophomore standing and consent of
instructor.