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Physics

Magellan Telescopes
The Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory in La Serena, Chile.

The MIT Department of Physics has been a national resource since the turn of the 20th century. Our Department has been at the center of the revolution in understanding the nature of matter and energy and the dynamics of the cosmos. Our faculty - three of whom hold Nobel Prizes and 21 of whom are members of the National Academy of Sciences - include leaders in nearly every major area of physics. World leaders in science and engineering, including 10 Nobel Prize recipients, have been educated in the physics classrooms and laboratories at MIT. Alumni of the MIT Department of Physics are to be found on the faculties of the world's major universities and colleges, as well as federal research laboratories and every variety of industrial laboratories.

Our undergraduates are sought both by industry and the nation's most competitive graduate schools. Our doctoral graduates are eagerly sought for postdoctoral and faculty positions, as well as by industry.

The MIT Physics Department is one of the largest in the nation, in part because it includes astronomy and astrophysics. Our research programs include theoretical and experimental particle and nuclear physics, cosmology and astrophysics, plasma physics, theoretical and experimental condensed-matter physics, atomic physics, and biophysics. Our students - both undergraduate and graduate - have opportunities to pursue forefront research in almost any area.

All undergraduate students at MIT study mechanics, electricity and magnetism. Beyond that, our physics majors pursue a program that provides outstanding preparation for advanced education in physics and other careers. Our undergraduates have unusual opportunities for becoming involved in research, sometimes working with two different groups during their four years at MIT.

For more information, go to http://web.mit.edu/physics/.

Available Courses
MIT Course #Course Title
8.012Physics I Fall 2002
8.02Electricity and Magnetism Spring 2002
8.02Electricity and Magnetism: TEAL:Studio Physics Project Fall 2002
8.022Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism Fall 2002
8.03Physics III Spring 2003
8.04Quantum Physics I Spring 2003
8.044Statistical Physics I Spring 2003
8.05Quantum Physics II Fall 2002
8.06Quantum Physics III Spring 2003
8.07Electromagnetism II Fall 2002
8.08Statistical Physics II Spring 2003
8.13Experimental Physics I & II "Junior Lab" Fall 2002
8.14Experimental Physics I & II "Junior Lab" Fall 2002
8.20Introduction to Special Relativity January (IAP) 2003
8.231Physics of Solids I Fall 2002
8.251String Theory for Undergraduates Spring 2003
8.261JIntroduction to Computational Neuroscience Spring 2002
8.323Relativistic Quantum Field Theory I Spring 2003
8.324Quantum Field Theory II Fall 2002
8.333Statistical Mechanics Fall 2002
8.334Statistical Mechanics II Spring 2003
8.351JClassical Mechanics: A Computational Approach Fall 2002
8.513Many-Body Theory for Condensed Matter Systems Fall 2002
8.594JIntroduction to Neural Networks Fall 2002
8.613JIntroduction To Plasma Physics I Fall 2002
8.811Particle Physics II Fall 2002
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