PHYS 151(F) Seminar in Modern Physics (Q)
Why does a hot coal glow red rather than blue or green or some other color? Remarkably, this simple question could not be answered before the year 1900, because the answer depends on a radical assumption introduced in that year by Max Planck. His work on thermal
radiation marked the beginning of a revolutionary era in the history of physics that culminated in a new framework for our understanding of the physical world. Relativity, quantum
mechanics, and statistical physics are the pillars of the modern framework, and constitute the
core of this course. As we study this material, we will also be exploring the process of research in physics, partly by doing some experiments of our own. We will discuss the interaction between experiment and theory, as well as the roles of simplicity, elegance, and unity
in the search for explanations. This is a small seminar designed for first-year students who
have placed out of Physics 141.
Format: lecture/discussion, three hours per week; laboratory, every other week. Evaluation
will be based on class participation, labs, weekly problem sets, an oral presentation, two
hour-exams and a final exam, all of which have a substantial quantitative component.
Prerequisites: placement by the department (see advanced placement above). Students may
take either Physics 142 or Physics 151 but not both. Enrollment limit: 18 (expected: 18).
Hour: AALBERTS