Graduate Program in Physics:
In January 1988, the University received State approval to start a Ph.D
program in physics and the first doctoral students were admitted
in August 1988. The Department is continuing to expand its faculty and
research laboratories for this program.
the M.S.T. in Physics is also offered and is designed to train physics
teachers at secondary and junior level.
The Physics Department moved to the new Science and Engineering building in May 1990. It has modern electronics and machine shops staffed by a full-time electronics technician and two full-time machinists.
The experimental program is presently concentrated in condensed matter physics and spectroscopy. Facilities are available for the preparation and fabrication of metallic alloy crystals, superconducting powders and semiconducting materials. Facilities are available to study and characterize these materials using Auger, LEED, uv and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, x-ray diffraction and by optical methods such as Brillouin and Raman scattering techniques.
Activities in theoretical physics include programs in astrophysics with an emphasis on stellar evolution, condensed matter and mathematical physics. Electronic structure calculations form the basis of the theoretical work on metallic alloys and superconductivity.
In-house
computing facilities include several workstations (an ALPHAstation
600 cluster, DECstations and
SPARCstation) and a MAS-PAR massively parallel computer.
A good deal of computing is also carried
out using the supercomputers at Florida
State University (CRAY-YMP), the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (C90)
and at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Paragon). The Charles E.
Schmidt College of Science
recently received funds ($500,000) from NSF and the University
to provide a high-performance graphics
supercomputing facilities for research in the College.
Over the past few years graduate students have spent
some of their graduate career carrying out their research off-site.
A number of students have used the facilities
and worked with personnel at the National
Synchrotron Light Source (Brookhaven National Laboratory); at
CAMD (Louisiana State
University); at the Oak
Ridge National Laboratory;
at the Daresbury Laboratory, England.
Students are able therefore to use state-of-the-art facilities and
to interact with internationally known experts in their field of study.
Graduate Teaching Assistantships are available to qualifying doctoral students at the rate of about $12,300 for the Fall and Spring semesters (with the liklihood of an additional $4,100 over the summer. Assistantships generally include tuition waivers.
For more information about research in the Department
For more information about admission into the graduate program
write to:
Admissions Officer (Graduate)
Department of Physics
Florida Atlantic University
Boca Raton
FL 33431-0991
Telephone: (561)297-3380
Fax: (561)297-2662
E-mail: dlittell@fau.edu
OR
submit a request form for further
information directly
over the Web for a faster response.
Return to the Physics Department home page