ZapperZ said:
Think about it. If graduate level courses of these subjects are nothing more than rehashing undergraduate material, what's the point in teaching these material? Do you honestly think that graduate level E&M and QM and CM are IDENTICAL to what we teach students at the undergraduate level? Seriously?
I think that undergraduate physics classes are taught to undergraduates. They are presumed when they are taught classical mechanics that they have a bit of calculus, almost no understanding of differential equations, and no understanding of PDEs. Thus you can't teach them much real physics at all. I am presuming that the graduate class teaches them the same stuff, but assuming they have the mathematical tools to understand it properly. Is that wrong?
The Jackson's classic graduate level E&M text covers practically all of undergraduate electrostatics in his INTRODUCTION! By the time you start "Chapter 1", you are expected to know all of your undergraduate electrostatics!
And this isn't an immature understanding informed by an inadequate knowledge of the necessary math, to be largely superseded by what you learn in Jackson? It actually requires that undergraduate understanding as a basis for what is learned?
Never having done any graduate physics myself, I know I don't understand. But back when I was taking the required introductory undergraduate physics at Caltech, I found that whenever I talked to graduate students (outside of class) about the physics I was learning and how it might apply to the research they were doing I was always told something like "Oh, don't take too seriously that crap they're teaching you; when you get to grad school you have to learn it again the right way. In this case, what that means is ..."
QuantumCurt said:
Because classes have prerequisites for a reason.
Do introductory graduate physics classes have prerequisites? Maybe a specific example would help.
Knowing all the math in the world doesn't prepare you for a graduate level class in physics. Math is but a small part of solving a physics problem. There is a great deal of...well...physics!
Yes, of course. So you are saying that an introductory graduate physics class is not going to teach me all the physics I need to solve physics problems. Okay.
People seem to often think that working a physics problem is like solving a math problem. Just "solve for x and substitute values." It's not. Once one is to the point that they're solving for a symbolic or numerical solution...one is no longer "doing physics." One is simply solving an equation.
Likewise, you seem to think that solving a math problem is just "solve for x and substitute values." It's not. An actual math problem looks more like "Here's a situation; try to understand it; prove some things about it and similar situations." That's math.
There's a lot of math in chemistry. Would a math degree prepare a student for graduate school in chemistry?
I don't know, but it seems quite a bit less likely than physics. Chemistry seems to involve far more arbitrary memorized information than physics. And the mathematical modeling seems much messier and uncertain.
Graduate level physics courses cover a lot of the same physics that is covered at the undergraduate level, but often in significantly different ways. It's not going to cover the basics. A graduate level classical mechanics course assumes that one is comfortable with drawing force diagrams, working with Newton's Laws, has a working knowledge of Conservation of Energy, and many more subjects. One is assumed to understand these things conceptually. Physics isn't just about solving equations. It's about understanding physics.
Sure. When you learn physics in high school without calculus it's about understanding physics too, but you don't have the right tools. Same thing for undergraduate physics, where you are beginning to have some useful tools, but still lack those with the necessary power. You mention understanding things conceptually -- perhaps I have been led wrong in believing statements to the effect that in modern theoretical physics you will find that physical intuition is not only insufficient but will actually mislead you.
It's apparent to me that I'm not communicating my questions very effectively, and I've effectively derailed this thread, so I'm going to stop now. My apologies.