Instructor: Daniel A. Steck
email: dsteck@uoregon.edu
Office hours: walk-in and by appointment (best to email first).
Teaching Assistants:
| Gabriel Jacobo Pamplona | office: WIL 453 | office hour: T 2-3p (drop-in hour F 3-4p in the Science Library) | email: gjacobo2@uoregon.edu |
Schedule: MW 12-1:50p, 318 Willamette
Course reference number: 34290
Credits: 4
Prerequisite: PHYS 632
Links: news, readings/notes, homework sets and keys.
This course is a more-or-less standard introduction to quantum mechanics at the graduate level, one of the core components of your Ph.D. studies. This is the third of a 3-quarter sequence.
Text:
You don't need to purchase a textbook for this course. The main reference for this course will be online notes posted here.
Philosophy of This Course:
By this point, you have already survived two terms of quantum mechanics at the graduate level. Good work! I intend for this third term to be a little different, more of a transitional course between core and advanced graduate physics courses. This means: less focus on you proving that you can handle graduate-level material; less formality in exams than in previous terms; more advanced material; and solving more sophisticated problems.
In particular, unlike previous terms, there will be no midterm exam; most of your graded work this term is homework. There will be only a final exam (see below for details).
Again, the intent is for this to be a transitional class between core and advanced graduate courses, and as such will be less formal in terms of evaluation. Grades for the course will be based on lectures, homework problems, and a final exam (no midterm). The relative weights will be as follows:
Exercises: As in previous terms, these are relatively simple (compared to homework problems) related to the lecture material. These will be assigned during each lecture, when you'll start working on them, and they'll be posted on the notes page. You should turn in (online, see the notes page) your exercise solutions for each week all together, by the following Wednesday. I'll grade these on completion (i.e., if you do a reasonable job, you'll get full credit).
Homework: will be assigned every two weeks. (Thus there will be five total homework assignments.)
Final exam: The final exam will be an in-class exam; it is scheduled for Tuesday, 9 June, 10:15a-12:15p, details TBA.
Pass/fail grading option: Since this is a core graduate course, you should take the graded option.
Late work: Late homework/exercises have a grace period of 24 hours; then they will not be accepted.
This is a tentative list of topics we will cover this term. Note that the topics listed are too much to go through in one term.