PHYS 427 :: Physics Illinois :: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Course Description

Prerequisite

PHYS 213/214 and PHYS 325 or consent of the instructor.

Textbook

Thermal Physics, C. Kittel and H. Kroemer and highly recommended for learning more physical intuition behind the formalism is also  Elements of Thermal Physics, 5th or later edition  by James Wolfe

Notes

Please check the course website each day for announcements, assignments, solutions and class notes.   The website will be important for the distribution of course material,  during the pandemic PHYS 427 is essentially held online. Discussions will contain important material for the course, please make every effort to attend and participate in the online discussions.  And please do not hesitate to ask any questions you may have on the material in discussions, lectures, and office hours.

Homework

Homework will be assigned on Tuesdays and will be due on Tuesday at 12 noon of the following week.  Assignments will be returned with the solutions one week after that.   Please deposit electronic versions of your assignments on GRADESCOPE.COM before 12 noon on Tuesdays (the due date).  Late assignments will be marked down 20% for each day beyond the due date, i.e., if your raw score is x, your score one day late would be 0.8 x.    The homework sets must be clearly written.  Every homework set has a maximum score of 100 points in total.

Exams

There will be two in-class midterms and a final exam. They, too, will be distributed and collected via gradescope.

Here is the zoom information for the exams:

Exam link: https://illinois.zoom.us/j/82273154104?pwd=ZFJnd056cTA5RkhSeG1MN255eS9Hdz09
meeting ID: 822 7315 4104
password: phys427

Grading

Course Component Percentage of Grade
Homework 30
Midterm Exam 1 20
Midterm Exam 2 20
Final Exam 30

General Information

 There are several excellent texts available that offer different perspectives.  The books on reserve in the library are listed below.

 

Extra Practice Problems:
The recommended textbooks have additional practice problems. The book by James Wolff and the book by Reif and others have the solutions in the back or the book. And the text book by Kittel and Kroemer has examples that can serve as practice problems. The recommended textbooks are available in the library if you do not have them, also on the reserve shelf. If you look up the topics covered in class and go through corresponding problems and examples in the text books that will give you additional practice for the materials. Also, it will help to redo some of the homework and discussion problems to get more practice. Hope that helps !