Electron17 said:
Hi everybody. I'm just wondering what kind of marks (in %) would be enough to consider a career in Theoretical Physics.
It's an area I've become interested in, though I'm only in Grade 10, so things might change by the end of high school. I have a 97% in "Pure" Math 10, which is the toughest Math you can take in Grade 10 (Then there's Applied and Math 14 in descending order). In Science, I got an 84%. I did great in Chemistry and Physics (which I'm interested in), but pretty bad in Biology (which was mostly boring). The school I go to only breaks the three sciences into separate courses in Grade 11 and 12.
Any input is much appreciated.
It seems to me that what courses you take are a bit more important than your high school grades. Let me preface this by saying that grades are by no means
unimportant. High school grades don't determine college success. I know people who aced high school and failed out of college (the reverse is also true). But if you don't get decent grades in high school, you won't even get into college. So I'm not trying to say that you should settle for bad grades, because this could end your academic career before it even begins.
Having said that, it's important to take some advanced science courses in high school, especially if you're already planning on a career in physics. For example, a B+ in physics is worth more than an A+ in underwater basketweaving. You seem to have already had experience in physics, chemistry, and biology. It might be helpful to take AP physics sometime in the next two years. It would also be helpful if you took calculus 1, and possibly calculus 2, sometime in the next couple of years. I would say that at this point, math is more important than physics. There's no shame in taking introductory physics your freshman year of college. But at almost every school, the calculus-based physics sequence requires concurrent enrollment in calculus. And it sometimes requires calculus as a prerequisite. I've heard of cases where physics majors who haven't had enough math aren't able to take any sort of physics at all during their first semester. If you've already taken calculus, you'll have more physics courses open to you.
Typically, the first half of the college undergraduate physics curriculum consists of mechanics, electromagnetic theory, a course on thermal physics, optics, and relativity, and an introduction to modern physics. If you can manage to also pull off a year of AP physics in high school, you'd be a year ahead in the physics sequence once you get to college. This would give you considerably more time to take the more interesting, advanced courses in physics, such as solid-state or plasma physics (or whatever you're interested in).
Anyway, I realize it might sound strange that I'm asking you to think five years ahead. But take it from someone who's just completed a physics degree: if you plan ahead, you can get a lot more out of your college education. And high school is an excellent time to start preparing.