How Can I Continue Studying Physics on My Own?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Unicyclist
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Physics
AI Thread Summary
A recent high school graduate with A-levels in Maths and Physics is planning to take a year off before studying physics at university. During this break, they will attend Cyprus College for a course in Computer Engineering, which includes some introductory physics and maths, though they express concern about its adequacy. To prepare for university, they seek recommendations for self-study resources in physics and maths, emphasizing the need for both theoretical content and exercises with solutions. Suggestions include online resources like MIT's OpenCourseWare, libraries for textbook access, and older editions of popular physics texts for affordability. The discussion highlights the value of the Feynman Lectures, although it's noted that they may not be the best introductory material due to their advanced nature. Engaging with Wikipedia for topic overviews is also mentioned as a helpful strategy. Overall, the focus is on finding effective self-study methods and resources to bridge the gap before formal university education.
Unicyclist
Messages
42
Reaction score
0
I have recently graduated from High School. I got my A-levels in Maths and Physics and did the Advanced Extension in Physics(liked it a lot, too). I want to continue studying physics at university, however it seems to be not possible right now, so I'll take a break for a year and go to Cyprus College to take a course in Electrical Engineering or something like that(I'm not all too excited about it). It'll have some introductory level lectures in physics and maths, but I doubt it'll be enough for me. So, basically I want to study a bit of physics on my own before I get to go to university.

How would I go about doing that? Can you point me to some good resources that would allow self-tutoring in physics and maths? I need theory and I need some exercises with answers for me to check myself. I'm also thinking of purchasing a few text-books, but probably not just yet.

Hmm, maybe the electrical engineering can help me with laboratory physics... You never know.

Edit: whoops, no electrical engineering, it's all computer engineering, which is way worse in my opinion. You can read the course descriphttp://www.cycollege.ac.cy/academics/default.cfm?category=2&subcategory=4&school=4ere...
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Physics/index.htm

There are a few universities doing similar things (offering notes/homework from courses online) but most if not all require a textbook of some sort. If you feel like skirting the law a bit, there are a large number of physics books availible through BitTorrent (I used a PDF copy of Griffiths' Intro to Electrodynamics until I could afford the book :P). My thoughts on it is that if you are going to buy the book eventually (which you most definitely should!) it is fine to download it until you can afford it.

Also, many libraries (university and otherwise) offer copies of physics texts. A third option is ordering an older version of a common text (Halliday, Resnick, and Walker for example) online. These will generally be much, much cheaper than the current edition. Amazon is a good site for this.

Oh, and wikipedia is a surprisingly good way to get a good overview of a topic.

Hope this helps a little!
 
This is the first year textbook for a number of UK uni physics first year undergrad courses:

http://bcs.whfreeman.com/tiplerphysics5e/default.asp?s=&n=&i=&v=&o=&ns=0&uid=0&rau=0

Costs forty quid on Amazon.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Those MIT lecture notes seem quite useful. And the questions are a bit more challenging than what I'm used to from school. I like it.

What books would you recommend getting? I'm thinking to get the Feynman lectures, as apparently they're really good.
 
I suggest you suplement the feynman lectures, with something else. As entertaining as they are, they aren't a very suitable introduction to physics(buy them anyway though).
 
The Feynam lectures are a very good read, for physics grad students,
they do assume a very high background in maths.
You could call the physics dept admissions and ask what the intro physics books are for their classes.
 
TL;DR Summary: I want to do a PhD in applied math but I hate group theory, is this a big problem? Hello, I am a second-year math and physics double major with a minor in data science. I just finished group theory (today actually), and it was my least favorite class in all of university so far. It doesn't interest me, and I am also very bad at it compared to other math courses I have done. The other courses I have done are calculus I-III, ODEs, Linear Algebra, and Prob/Stats. Is it a...
I’ve been looking through the curricula of several European theoretical/mathematical physics MSc programs (ETH, Oxford, Cambridge, LMU, ENS Paris, etc), and I’m struck by how little emphasis they place on advanced fundamental courses. Nearly everything seems to be research-adjacent: string theory, quantum field theory, quantum optics, cosmology, soft matter physics, black hole radiation, etc. What I don’t see are the kinds of “second-pass fundamentals” I was hoping for, things like...
Back
Top