MATHEMATICAL METHODS I

Course Page

The worm

PHYS 508, Fall 2008

10:30 to 11:50 Monday, Wednesday, Room 144 Loomis Laboratory.

This web-page contains links to documents such as handouts and other useful stuff. These files are now only in PDF (.pdf) format.

Syllabus Outline

The course covers four related areas:

A more detailed, but approximate, week-by-week syllabus can be found here.

Homework Sets

There are weekly homework sets. Your solutions must be deposited in the 498mma box before 4pm on the due date, which will always be a Thursday. This time has been chosen to encourage you to go to the Physics Department Colloquia which are at 4pm each Thursday. Attending the Colloquium is an important part of your broader physics education.

Homework number 0, due Thursday August 28th.
Solutions 0

Homework number 1, due Thursday Sept 4th.
Solutions 1

Homework number 2, due Thursday Sept 11th.
Solutions 2

Homework number 3, due Thursday Sept 25th.
Solutions 3

Homework number 4, due Thursday Oct 2nd.
Solutions 4

Homework number 5, due Thursday Oct 9th.
Solutions 5

Homework number 6, due Thursday Oct 16th.
Solutions 6

Homework number 7, due Thursday Oct 30th
Solutions 7

Homework number 8, due Thursday Nov 6th.
Solutions 8

Homework number 9, due Thursday Nov 27th.
Solutions 9

Homework number 10, due Thursday Dec 4th.
Solutions 10

Homework number 11, optional problems.

Exams

There will be a midterm exam sometime in early November.

Old Exams:

Midterm Exam, Fall 2002
Midterm Exam, Fall 2003
Final Exam, Fall 2003

Lecture notes

The lecture notes are a fairly accurate representation of the course as given in the classroom. They are no longer password protected, and so are available to the general public.

Loyal readers will note that this new edition of the online "notes" now has Paul Goldbart listed as a co-author. Paul has in fact been a secret co-author for several years. When I first taught this class I based my course outline on a set of notes that he had prepared for his own version of 598MMA. The previous online text retained Paul's outline, but substantially expanded the content. For this new edition, he has gone over the text in detail, improving the pedagogy and clarity of my frequently too terse exposition. The fruit of our joint labours is soon to be published by Cambridge University Press.

I would like to thank past MMA students for all their help in fixing typos and warning me of obscurites. There must still be some undiscovered. Please feel free to contact me if you find errors.

Textbook

Although the lecture notes should be self contained, I recommend Mathematics for Physicists by Phillipe Dennery and Andre Krzywicki (Dover Pulications, $12.95) as an alternative textbook. It covers much of the material in this course, and will be useful for the complex-variable part of PHYS 509.

Grades and Gradebook

Registered students may access the on-line gradebook by using your university username and password. You will need to accept cookies, and have JavaScript turned on for the gradebook to work.

Your grade in the course will be determined as from your total scores weighted as follows: Homework 60%, Midterm exam 10%, Final Exam 30%.

Cultural Enrichment Links

Some of the material in the course is supposed to introduce you to the wider culture of mathematical physics and its applications in the real world. Here are links relating to some of the topics discussed:

Staff

Finding me:
Office: 2117 ESB.
Phone: 3-2891.
e-mail: m-stone5@uiuc.edu
My office hour is Thursday 8-9am, in 2117 ESB.

Graders and TAs:

Shiying Dong
496 Loomis Lab
Phone: 4-6687
E-mail: Sdong2@uiuc.edu
Office hour: Wednesday 4-5pm, in 496 Loomis Lab.

Xianhoa Xin
Office: 390U (Loomis-Seitz-Interpass)
Phone: 3-3053
xin2@uiuc.edu
Office Hour: Tuesday 1-2pm in 390U.


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Last updated 19/06/08