Physics 176 Syllabus, Spring 2010


Instructor: Professor Henry Greenside     hsg@phy.duke.edu    Physics 097    919-660-2548
Teaching Assistant:          


Welcome      Time and Place      What You Need      Prerequisites     

Grading      Important Dates      Office Hours      References     

Welcome:

Time and Place

What You Need:

  1. The course textbook An Introduction to Thermal Physics by Daniel Schroeder.

  2. A computer

Prerequisites:

    If you are not sure whether you satisfy the following prerequisites, please talk to me as soon as possible, preferably no later than the end of the first week of the semester.

Grading

Important Dates

To be updated...

Office Hours

References

    The following three books will be on reserve in the Bostok Library for supplementary reading.
    1. Molecular Driving Forces by Ken Dill and Sarina Bromberg (Garland Science, 2002). This book emphasizes more the application of thermal physics to chemistry and biology. The first half of the book is what will be most useful to the 176 class, with nice and insightful discussions about the foundations of the subject, and with some sections that review related mathematics.

    2. Thermal Physics by Ralph Baierlein (Cambridge University Press, 1999).

    3. Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics by Frederick Reif (McGraw-Hill, 1965). This older and somewhat more challenging book was widely used in undergraduate curricula of a few decades ago and is a good reference with many detailed insightful discussions and many good problems.


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