E.S. Swanson office: 213 Bureau of Mines ph: 515-6016 email: swanson@unity.ncsu.edu office hours: 11:00 - 12:00 daily url: http://fafnir.physics.ncsu.edu/AQM
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9:50 -- 11:05, in Cox 209.
To learn Quantum Mechanics at a level commensurate with the study of physics at the graduate level.
Principles of Quantum Mechanics by R. Shankar. $66.00 at Amazon. $58.70 ($44.05 used) at the book store, $56.10 at Varsitybooks. You may also wish to consult Quantum Mechanics by Cohen-Tannoudji, Diu, and Laloë, Modern Quantum Mechanics by JJ Sakurai, or Quantum Mechanics by E. Merzbacher.
The course is organized as follows. Chapters in grey will not be covered. Extra material is denoted by green text.
August 16 Classes begin August 23 Last day to add August 30 Last day to register September 6 Holiday September 16 Class cancelled September 20 Academic difficulty reports due October 7 Midterm (chapters 1 -- 7) October 8-14 Fall break October 15 Last day to drop 600 level courses without penalty November 25-26 Thanksgiving December 2 Last class December 9 Exam 8:00-11:00 (chapters 1 -- 13)
Assignments shall be given every Thursday and are due the following Thursday unless otherwise indicated. Solutions are posted near room 213 in the Bureau of Mines, are kept on file in the library, and are available on the web.
Grades are determined numerically according to the formula
    final = 0.3 assignments + 0.5 exam + 0.2 midterm
Late assignments will only be accepted upon the approval of the course marker. Incomplete grades (missing midterm or exam) will result in an IN which becomes an F automatically after six months if no action is taken.
No attendance will be taken.
PY401/402 or equivalent or the instructor's permission.
1.1 Universities are unique communities committed to creating and transmitting knowledge. They depend on freedom - individuals' freedom to explore ideas and to explore and further their own capabilities. Those freedoms depend on the good will and responsible behavior of all the members of the community, who must treat each other with tolerance and respect. They must allow each other to develop the full range of their capabilities and take full advantage of the institution's resources.1.2 In this Code of Student Conduct, North Carolina State University sets out the kind of behavior that disrupts and inhibits the normal functioning of the University, and what actions it will take to protect the community from such disruption. Like civil authorities (such as the federal, state, and county governments, to which the members of the community are also subject), the University has expectations about how its students will behave, and rules to follow when students are accused of violating those expectations. This Code and the accompanying manual of procedures describe those rules, which are designed to protect both the University community and any of its student members who are accused of disrupting it. The Code and Procedures Manual set out both what the University will do if a student is accused of a violation, and what their rights are.
COMMENTARY: The University must commit its policies and procedures first to protect and promote the academic enterprise. Consequently, it may be necessary to suspend or expel students who have been found responsible for violations of this Code, or who otherwise pose a substantial danger to the campus community.
Further information may be found in Appendix L of the Handbook for Advising and Teaching
Any student with a disability is invited to set up an appointment to arrange academic accommodations.
There is no laboratory with this course.
There are no pass-through charges with this course.