Dr. Nick Lepeshkin
Office: TH 317
Phone: 415-338-2944
E-mail: nlepeshk@stars.sfsu.edu
Course website: http://www.physics.sfsu.edu/~nlepeshk/360/phys360.html
Class time: 11:10-12:00, MWF, TH 428
Office Hours: 14:00-14:30 M; 12:30-13:30 W; 12:30-13:00 F
Physics 360 presents the concepts and relationships of electricity and magnetism. We will use calculus and vector analysis to develop equations which relate the physical quantities.
Prerequisites: Physics 230, Physics 330, Physics 385 or Math 374
Texts
Primary: David J. Griffiths: Introduction to Electrodynamics, 3rd edition
Reference and additional reading:
Any good introductory-physics textbook. Use you favorite text. If you took intro physics here at SFSU, Lea&Burke will make a good reference book. Another excellent book is Matter and Interactions, vol. 2 by R. Chabay, B. Sherwood.
Prof. Lea's lecture notes on E&M from previous years (available at http://www.physics.sfsu.edu/~lea/courses/ugrad/360hnd.html)
Your notes and textbooks (especially div, grad, curl and all that) from Physics 385
R. Feynman, The Feynman lectures on physics, vol. 2 (3-volume edition)
Assignments: There will be weekly required homework assignments. You may discuss the homework problems with me and with other students, but the writeup of the problems must be done on a totally individual basis. No late homework will be accepted.
Exams and Grades: There will be two midterm exams, a final exam, and quizzes. Grades will be assigned according to the following approximate percentages: homework, 30%; quizzes, 10%; midterms, 30%; final, 30%.
Grading scale (Percentage of work completed vs. Grade)
90+ % A
75+ % B or better
50+ % C or better
50- % assigned on a case-to-case basis
Efficient Method of Study: Before the lecture, read at least the indicated text sections and study the examples. Read the sections again after the lecture. At the very least, attempt all the assigned problems and if at all possible, work through some additional problems. Ask questions in the lecture and in office hours. Finally, keep up with the material as it is covered. Each new section will build on the previous material, and you will lose much of the benefit of the lectures and assignments if you fall behind.