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Graduate overview
Where we are
What we've got
Our grad students
How to apply
Financial aid
A grad student's life <
Facilities
On-campus
Off-campus
Research areas
Astronomy
Atmospheric/
    Environmental
Condensed Matter
Mathematical Physics
Medical Imaging/PET
Nonlinear Dynamics
Optics
Particle/Nuclear
Photonics/Quantum
    Electronics
Plasma
Space

A Graduate Student's Life

Transition to graduate school

  • Our department helps you adjust to graduate school with a one-week orientation for all new students.
  • We provide training to TAs. Each semester, we have a training meeting for all TAs, and TAs for laboratories also receive 30 minutes of training each week before beginning a new experiment.
Graduate students in the commons
 

Housing

In Iowa City you will find many apartments at affordable rates. The University of Iowa also offers apartments; for example, many graduate students live in The University of Iowa's Hawkeye Court, where a one-bedroom apartment has a monthly rent of $400, as of 2003.

 
 

Transportation

  • Three bus systems serve Iowa City and Coralville, including the free Cambus. All bus lines pass through the downtown area where our two buildings are located.
  • To arrive in Iowa City by air, you will fly to the Eastern Iowa Airport, Cedar Rapids, located about 23 miles from campus. There are 42 scheduled flights each day, from Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Louis, and several other cities. A shuttle is available to bring you to campus.
  • Iowa City is near Interstate 80 and easily reached by car and bus.
   

International students

Iowa City is a friendly place to live. With graduate students from more than 100 countries living in Iowa City, you are sure to find friends from your own country. Many national groups have clubs and social events. Large cities, including Chicago, are near enough for you to travel by bus. The University of Iowa's International Center helps foreign students with visas and other services, such as a women's club for both students and spouses. Free classes in English as a second language are available to all adults. Children of school age will enjoy attending one of the best public school systems in the United States.

 
 

Research

As you develop into a researcher, you and your advisor will publish papers in journals, and you will write your thesis. Most students also attend scientific conferences, where they give talks on their research and where they learn about job opportunities.

 
 

Placement

Our students find excellent jobs after completing their degrees. They are prepared for this success by the experience they gain while performing their research and by the worldwide connections of our faculty members. We have a very successful record of placing students as scientists in all kinds of positions, in universities, national laboratories and observatories, and in industry. The department has a Career Development and Placement Office to help our graduate students find their jobs.

 

Typical course sequence

First year courses (to prepare for the Ph.D. qualifying exam)

Fall Semester
029:205 Classical Mechanics - 3 credit hours
029:213 Electrodynamics I - 3 credit hours
029:245 Quantum Mechanics I - 3 credit hours
Spring Semester
029:212 Statistical Mechanics - 3 credit hours
029:214 Electrodynamics II - 3 credit hours
029:246 Quantum Mechanics II - 3 credit hours
Alternatives
You may substitute a course in a research area for one of the courses above.
To improve your math skills, you may enroll in 029:171/172 Mathematical Methods of Physics during the fall and spring semesters of your first year.

Second year

Qualifying Exam - August

Courses in research areas, such as:

Mechanics of Continua
Nonlinear Optics
Laser Principles
Quantum Electronics
Semiconductor Physics
Medical Physics
Quantum Field Theory
Quantum Gauge Theories
Advanced Nuclear Physics
Theoretical Solid State Physics
General Relativity and Cosmology
Particle Physics
Solar-Terrestrial Physics
Advanced Atomic and Molecular Physics
Advanced Plasma Physics


Last updated April 4, 2008.
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