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Physics 2213b Modern Physics (Honors)
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These Modern Physics lectures were
created by Rick Trebino (from lectures supplied with the
textbook below) and are intended to accompany a sophomore-level
Modern Physics course taught using “Modern Physics” by Thornton
and Rex. Many images have been taken from this book and others;
these contributions are noted where possible (if you see an
improperly credited or uncredited image, please let me know).
These lectures were originally intended mainly for my students
at Georgia Tech. But if you’re a professor who is teaching such
a course at another university, feel free to use them (although
you may need permission from the book publisher to do so)! My
desire is to help to create a tradition of sharing of teaching
materials, as espoused by the Digital Libraries initiative (e.g.
MERLOT). And some day, no professor will ever have to endure the
tedious task of lecture preparation, except to improve on
existing lectures. If you use these lectures, please obey
copyright laws (that is, reference Rick Trebino and also, if
relevant, the original source of any figure or image). And if
you improve on them, please be so kind as to contribute your
improvements to the cause! Feedback is also welcome!
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These Optics lectures were created by Rick Trebino and are intended to accompany a junior-level optics course taught using Hecht’s book, “Optics.” Many images have been scanned from this book and others; these contributions are noted where possible (if you see an improperly credited or uncredited image, please let me know). These lectures were originally intended mainly for my students at Georgia Tech. But if you’re a professor who is teaching such a course at another university, feel free to use them! My desire is to help to create a tradition of sharing of teaching materials, as espoused by the Digital Libraries initiative (e.g. MERLOT). And some day, no professor will ever have to endure the tedious task of lecture preparation, except to improve on existing lectures. If you use these lectures, please obey copyright laws (that is, reference Rick Trebino and also, if relevant, the original source of any figure or image). And if you improve on them, please be so kind as to contribute your improvements to the cause! Feedback is also welcome!
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All of the
above files will run nicely on both PCs and Macintoshes, provided
that the relevant computer has Math Type v. 5 or later. (Due to
inadequacies of Math Type, when using a Mac, it may be necessary
to double click once on each equation individually for the
equations to be converted to Mac formatting to appear correctly.)
In addition, it's helpful (but not essential) to have the font
Edwardian Script Alt ITC TT. Finally, some lectures are in the
form of folders, rather than simple ppt files, because they
contain movies, and so must use the Pack n Go option. Simply
download the folder and double click on the setup file.
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These Ultrafast Optics lectures were created by Rick Trebino and are intended to accompany a first-year graduate-level ultrafast optics course taught using his book. Many images have been scanned from this book, and others have contributed to this course; their contributions are noted where possible (if you see an improperly credited or uncredited image, please let me know). These lectures were originally intended mainly for my students at Georgia Tech. But if you’re a professor who is teaching such a course at another university, feel free to use them! My desire is to help to create a tradition of sharing of teaching materials, as espoused by the Digital Libraries initiative (e.g. MERLOT). And some day, no professor will ever have to endure the tedious task of lecture preparation, except to improve on existing lectures. If you use these lectures, please obey copyright laws (that is, reference Rick Trebino and also, if relevant, the original source of any figure or image). And if you improve on them, please be so kind as to contribute your improvements to the cause! Feedback is also welcome!
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FROG Presentation
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