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MATHEMATICAL METHODS I

PHYS 508, Fall 2022

9:30 to 10:50, Rm 222 Loomis Laboratory

Instructor: Professor Michael Stone

This web-page contains links to documents such as homework sets and other useful material.

Syllabus Outline

The course covers four related areas:

Full Official Syllabus.


Homework Sets

There are 11 weekly homework sets that will count towards the final grade, and one end-of-term set of optional problems. Your solutions sets should be placed in the 508 homework box before 9am on the due date, which will usually be before class time on Wednesday. While I recommend you to use TeX/LateX to write up your solutions (you will need to learn TeX at some point in your studies) you can also submit handwritten solutions.

Homework number 1, due Wed Sept 7th.
Solutions 1

Homework number 2, due Wed Sept 14th.
Solutions 2

Homework number 3, due Wed Sept 21st.
Solutions 3

Homework number 4, due Wed Sep 28th.
Solutions 4

Homework number 5, due Wed Oct 5th.
Solutions 5

Homework number 6, due Wed Oct 12th.
Solutions 6

Homework number 7, due Wed Oct 19th.
Solutions 7

Homework number 8, due Wed Nov 9th
Solutions 8

Homework number 9, due Wed Nov 16th.
Solutions 9


Nov 19-27 Fall break

Homework number 10, due Wed Nov 30th.
Solutions 10

Homework number 11 due Wed Dec 07th
Solutions 11

Homework number 12, Further optional problems.

Exams

The midterm will be Wednesday November 2nd in class. There will be a review session during the class the previous Wednesday. The exam will cover everything up to the end of chapter 5.

The final exam will will cover everything. It will be Monday Dec 12th 8-11am in 3117 Everitt Laboratory (Note change of locale!)

Some old exams for you to review:


Midterm Exam, Fall 2011

Midterm Exam, Fall 2013

Midterm Exam, Fall 2019

Final Exam, Fall 2003

Final Exam, Fall 2014

Textbook and Notes

I recommend (but do not require) that you purchase Mathematics for Physics: A guided tour for graduate students by myself and Paul Goldbart. (Cambridge University Press 2009). The list price is $90, but Amazon has it for $72 (+shipping). I do not yet know what the UI bookstore is selling it for. (I do not recommend the Kindle version of the Book. The equations do not scale correctly.) Our book is an expanded version of the lecture notes for both PHYS 508 and PHYS 509. Here is a list of typos and outright errors that readers have found in the printed text.

A draft version of the book is still available for download, but, now that it is published, I am no longer maintaining this version, so typos are not being corrected.

As a cheaper alternative you can buy Mathematics for Physicists by Phillipe Dennery and Andre Krzywicki (Dover Publications, $12.95). This book covers a fair bit of the material in this course, and will be useful for the complex-variable part of PHYS 509.

Here are the brief calculus notes mentioned in the first lecture.

Grades and Gradebook

On-line gradebook.

Your grade in the course will be determined as from your total scores weighted as follows: Homework 50%, Midterm exam 20%, Final Exam 30%.

Cultural Enrichment Links

Some of the material in the course is supposed to introduce you to the wider culture of mathematical physics and its applications in the real world. Here are links relating to some of the topics discussed:

Staff

Finding me:
Office: 2117 ESB.
Phone: 3-2891.
e-mail: m-stone5@illinois.edu
My office hour is Tuesday 8-9am outside my office in ESB. If this time is inconvenient for you send me an email and I will schedule an appointment at another time.

Grader: Porter Howland
email: pbh2@illinois.edu
Office Hour: 1pm Monday
Location:Loomis 271

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Last updated Aug/17/2022