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concepts from PHYS 212 (Fundamentals of Physics 2). Labs are designed to build conceptual and quantitative understanding of the material. Pre/Corequisite: PHYS 212 1 credit PHYS 214: Fundamentals of Physics 3: Electricity and Magnetism This course provides a calculus-based introduction to electricity and magnetism and emphasizes quantitative and conceptual understanding of the material. Topics covered include Coulomb’s Law, electric fields, electric potential, basic DC and AC circuits, magnetic fields, magnetic induction, and Maxwell’s equations. Prerequisites: MATH 141 and either PHYS 111 or PHYS 210 3 credits PHYS 215: Fundamentals of Physics 3 Lab In this laboratory course, students will work in groups to perform experiments to reinforce concepts from PHYS 214 (Fundamentals of Physics 3). Labs are designed to build conceptual and quantitative understanding of the material. Pre/Corequisite: PHYS 214 1 credit PHYS 218: Lab for Engineers In this laboratory course, students will work in groups to perform experiments to reinforce selected topics from PHYS 210 (Fundamentals of Physics 1) and PHYS 212 (Fundamentals of Physics 2). Labs are designed to build conceptual and quantitative understanding of the material. Prerequisite: PHYS 111 or PHYS 210 Pre/Corequisite: PHYS 212 1 credit PHYS 300: Introduction to Modern Physics An historical and quantitative presentation of the events and thinking which led to the twentieth century revision of Classical Physics. An introduction to Relativity, Planck Quantum Theory, the Bohr atom, de Broglie’s thesis, Schroedinger quantum mechanics, and electronic spin. Prerequisites: PHYS 210, 212, 214 or equivalent 3 credits PHYS 301: Theoretical Mechanics Particle dynamics, moving reference systems, central forces, collision theory, dynamics of a system of particles, rigid body motion, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian Theory. Prerequisites: PHYS 210, 212, 214, MATH 242 3 credits PHYS 304: Mathematical Methods of Physics Fourier series, Fourier transform, Laplace transform, vector field theory, complex variables, partial differential equations, special functions, probability, numerical analysis, matrices. Prerequisite: MATH 242 3 credits PHYS 321: Statistical Mechanics Boltzman, Fermi-Dirac, and Bose-Einstein statistics by the combinatorial methods, entropy and probability, partition functions, classical and quantum mechanical specific heats of gases and solids, Planck radiation law, paramagnetic susceptibilities. Prerequisites: Chem/CHEM 331, MATH 242 3 credits, Spring PHYS 332: Experimental Physics Selected experiments from the entire field, designed to develop a facility with laboratory techniques, a critical awareness of the errors of measurements and the consequent limitations on empirical conclusions, and an original initiative toward minimizing these limitations through refinements of techniques and instruments. Laboratory: Six hours per week. 2 credits PHYS 380: Undergraduate Research I The student will work to complete an original research project in physics with a Physics faculty member. 1-3 credits PHYS 381: Undergraduate Research II The student will work to complete an original research project in physics with a Physics faculty member in continuation of PHYS 380. 1-3 credits