Video Lectures for Quantum Mechanics?

AI Thread Summary
Leonard Susskind offers a series of quantum mechanics lectures on YouTube through Stanford, which are recommended for upper-division undergraduates. For graduate-level content, a course available at pirsa.org is suggested. High school students express interest in these lectures, questioning their depth and suitability for serious study. Additionally, an entire quantum mechanics course from Oxford University is available on iTunes U, and other resources include a course from UCSD and NPTEL. These various options provide a range of materials for different educational levels in quantum mechanics.
physiker99
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Are there any? If so, which are the best ones?

(Upper Division Undergrad)
 
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Leonard Susskind has a series of lectures on youtube through Stanford:
If you are looking at graduate lectures I would recommend the following: http://pirsa.org/C09021/2
 
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thanks for links, kevin.
Graduate classses are way out of my league, but do you know if Susskind's lectures are just introductory or they cover QM topics in depth so that I can use them as a major source of study
 
I'm not sure, the fact is I'm a high school student so I'm probably not the best person to assess the quality of the lectures although I'm extremely interested in Physics and I usually know where to find the lectures and answer some of the less complex questions occasionally.
 
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Hi there, im studying nanoscience at the university in Basel. Today I looked at the topic of intertial and non-inertial reference frames and the existence of fictitious forces. I understand that you call forces real in physics if they appear in interplay. Meaning that a force is real when there is the "actio" partner to the "reactio" partner. If this condition is not satisfied the force is not real. I also understand that if you specifically look at non-inertial reference frames you can...
This has been discussed many times on PF, and will likely come up again, so the video might come handy. Previous threads: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/is-a-treadmill-incline-just-a-marketing-gimmick.937725/ https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/work-done-running-on-an-inclined-treadmill.927825/ https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/how-do-we-calculate-the-energy-we-used-to-do-something.1052162/
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