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= Exam = == Exam ==
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Questions in the exam will be like those of the qualifier exams. The contents of lecture note 7 are extremely important, since they are the basic principles without which you will have a hard time doing any problem. They are to statistical mechanics as Newton's laws are to classical mechanics. At the minimum, '''one must know the basic laws that are summarized in the table of page 7 of LN 7 __by heart__''' and then apply them to various problems like those we did in homework and examples in lecture notes. That is, you must know when and how to ''start from the partition function, the Gibbs partition function, or the grand partition function, and derive all properties that you need from it.'' It is also strongly advised that you go over past qualifier problems (see below).  * <<la("E01-w-Sols.pdf", "Exam with solutions")>>.

 {{{#!wiki comment
 * <<color(Correction:)>> One correction for prob 2, one clarification for prob 3. Both marked red. &ndash; ~-''<<DateTime(2013-06-14T11:49:37-0700)>>''-~
 }}}

 *
Questions in the exam will be like those of the qualifier exams. The contents of lecture note 7 are extremely important, since they are the basic principles without which you will have a hard time doing any problem. They are to statistical mechanics as Newton's laws are to classical mechanics. At the minimum, '''one must know the basic laws that are summarized in the table of page 7 of LN 7 __by heart__''' and then apply them to various problems like those we did in homework and examples in lecture notes. That is, you must know when and how to ''start from the partition function, the Gibbs partition function, or the grand partition function, and derive all properties.'' It is also strongly advised that you go over past qualifier problems (see below).
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= Homework = == Homework ==
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 * <<color(Plotting:)>> In case you like to plot things up in Python, here is some information that might be helpful: <<ln("/ph156-11/Homework%204%20Solutions", "Plotting examples")>>, <<ln("/ph156-11/Matlab%20and%20Python#Python", "Python, scipy, matplotlib")>>. &ndash; ~-''<<DateTime(2013-05-27T21:55:30-0700)>>''-~  * <<color(Plotting:)>> In case you like to plot things up in Python, here is some information that might be helpful: <<ln("/../ph156-11/Homework%204%20Solutions", "Plotting examples")>>, <<ln("/../ph156-11/Matlab%20and%20Python#Python", "Python, scipy, matplotlib")>>. &ndash; ~-''<<DateTime(2013-05-27T21:55:30-0700)>>''-~

Exam

  • Exam with solutions.

    • Correction: One correction for prob 2, one clarification for prob 3. Both marked red. – 11:49AM, Jun 14, 2013

  • Questions in the exam will be like those of the qualifier exams. The contents of lecture note 7 are extremely important, since they are the basic principles without which you will have a hard time doing any problem. They are to statistical mechanics as Newton's laws are to classical mechanics. At the minimum, one must know the basic laws that are summarized in the table of page 7 of LN 7 by heart and then apply them to various problems like those we did in homework and examples in lecture notes. That is, you must know when and how to start from the partition function, the Gibbs partition function, or the grand partition function, and derive all properties. It is also strongly advised that you go over past qualifier problems (see below).

  • Past qualifier exams: 2010-2012, 2005-2009, 2000-2004, 1995-1999.

Homework