MIT Physics Department

The Physics Department at MIT has over 120 faculty members. It offers academic programs leading to the SB, SM, PhD, and ScD degrees.

As of 2006, the department counts four Nobel Prize winners among its faculty: Samuel C.C. Ting (1976), Jerome I. Friedman (1990), Wolfgang Ketterle (2001) and Frank Wilczek (2004). A few other former faculty members have also been so honored: Clifford Shull (1994), Henry Kendall (1990), Steven Weinberg (1979) and Charles H. Townes (1964). MIT Physics alumni who have received the Nobel Prize for Physics are Adam Riess (2011), George Smoot (2006), Eric A. Cornell and Carl E. Wieman (2001), Robert B. Laughlin (1998), William D. Phillips (1997), Burton Richter (1976), John Robert Schrieffer (1972), Murray Gell-Mann (1969), Richard Feynman (1965) and William Shockley (1956).

Academics

Undergraduate academics

There are two paths to earning a bachelor's degree (SB) in physics from MIT. The first, "Course 8 Focused Option", is for students intending to continue studying physics in graduate school.

The second, "Course 8 Flexible Option" is designed for those students who would like to develop a strong background in physics but who do not necessarily want to pursue graduate work in the field. It is an excellent preparation for further study in medicine, law, engineering, business, etc.

Introductory physics

All undergraduate students at MIT, regardless of their major, are required to take two semesters of introductory physics (or receive equivalent transfer credit). The first semester is centered on Newtonian mechanics, the second on Electromagnetism. The two classes are taught at different levels of sophistication:

The standard introductory courses, intended to give science and engineering majors a solid grounding in introductory physics. It is currently taught in the TEAL format.
An equivalent version of 8.01 that lasts three weeks longer, into the January Independent Activities Period. Intended for students with a weaker background in calculus and/or physics. It is currently taught in a primarily lecture-based format.
The spring semester version of 8.01, taught in a small-class environment.
These classes are taught at a higher level than 8.01/8.02; a certain degree of mathematical maturity is assumed. It is currently taught in a lecture-based format.

Course 8 focused requirements

In addition to the General Institute Requirements, students must complete these classes:

Students are also required to take two additional classes offered by the Department of Mathematics that are above the 18.03 level. Students are often recommended to take 18.04 (Complex Variables) and 18.06 (Linear Algebra).

The department also requires two additional physics subjects, one of which has to be the following:

Course 8 flexible requirements

Along with the General Institute Requirements, 8-B students must also take:

Graduate academics

Candidates for admission to MIT's graduate level physics programs are expected to have the equivalent background of an MIT undergraduate physics education. Exceptions are made, however, those students are expected to bring their proficiency up to MIT standards during their course of study.

MIT offers both masters and doctoral level degree programs in physics.

Requirements for the Master of Science in Physics

In addition to the General Institute Requirements, a candidate must present a masters thesis that represents his or her independent research work. This work must be carried out under the supervision of a physics department faculty member.

Requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy or Doctor of Science in Physics

At MIT, the PhD and ScD are interchangeable. In addition to fulfilling the General Institute Requirements, a student must enroll in basic graduate subjects and pass general examinations.

There are no specific subjects the student must study, but he or she is required to take two courses in the candidates's field of research specialization, and two that are outside it.

Candidates must pass two written examinations on general physics material and an oral examination in a specialized field no later than their seventh term after they initially enroll for graduate study at MIT.

Finally, the candidate must submit a doctoral dissertation that contains a substantial piece of original research, under the supervision of a member of the physics department faculty.

Current members of the faculty

Active faculty

Name Title Division Notability
Allan Adams Associate Professor NUPAT
Raymond Ashoori Professor ABCMP
William Barletta Adjunct Professor NUPAX
John Belcher Professor ASTRO
William Bertozzi Professor NUPAX
Edmund Bertschinger Professor ASTRO
Claude Canizares Professor ASTRO
Deepto Chakrabarty Professor ASTRO
Arup Chakraborty Professor ABCMP
Joseph Checkelsky Assistant Professor ABCMP
Min Chen Professor NUPAX
Isaac Chuang Professor ABCMP
Ibrahim Cissé Assistant Professor ABCMP
Riccardo Comin
(as of July 2016)
Assistant Professor ABCMP
Janet Conrad Professor NUPAX
William Detmold Assistant Professor NUPAT
Jeremy England Assistant Professor ABCMP
Matthew Evans Assistant Professor ASTRO
Nikta Fakhri Assistant Professor ABCMP
Edward Farhi Professor NUPAT
Peter Fisher Professor NUPAX Department Head
Joseph Formaggio Associate Professor NUPAX
Anna Frebel Assistant Professor ASTRO
Daniel Freedman Professor NUPAT
Liang Fu Assistant Professor ABCMP
Nuh Gedik Associate Professor ABCMP
Jeff Gore Associate Professor ABCMP
Alan Guth Professor NUPAT
Aram Harrow Assistant Professor NUPAT
Jacqueline Hewitt Professor ASTRO
Scott Hughes Professor ASTRO
Erich Ippen Professor ABCMP
Robert Jaffe Professor NUPAT
Pablo Jarillo-Herrero Associate Professor ABCMP
John Joannopoulos Professor ABCMP
Steven Johnson Professor ABCMP
David Kaiser Professor NUPAT
Mehran Kardar Professor ABCMP
Wolfgang Ketterle Professor ABCMP Nobel Laureate (2001)
Markus Klute Associate Professor NUPAX
Patrick Lee Professor ABCMP
Yen-Jie Lee Assistant Professor NUPAX
Young Lee Professor ABCMP
Leonid Levitov Professor ABCMP
J. David Litster Professor ABCMP
Hong Liu Professor NUPAT
Seth Lloyd Professor NUPAT
Nargis Mavalvala Professor ASTRO Associate Head
Michael McDonald Assistant Professor ASTRO
Richard Milner Professor NUPAX
Leonid Mirny Professor ABCMP
David Moncton Adjunct Professor NUPAX
John Negele Professor NUPAT
William Oliver Professor of the Practice ABCMP
Christoph Paus Professor NUPAX
Kerstin Perez
(as of July 2016)
Assistant Professor NUPAX
ASTRO
Miklos Porkolab Professor ABCMP
David Pritchard Professor ABCMP
Krishna Rajagopal Professor NUPAT
Robert Redwine Professor NUPAX
Gunther Roland Professor NUPAX
Paul Schechter Professor ASTRO
Hilke Schlichting Assistant Professor ASTRO
Sara Seager Professor ASTRO
Robert Simcoe Associate Professor ASTRO
Tracy Slatyer Assistant Professor NUPAT
ASTRO
Marin Soljačić Professor ABCMP
Iain Stewart Professor NUPAT
Washington Taylor Professor NUPAT
Max Tegmark Professor ASTRO
Jesse Thaler Assistant Professor NUPAT
Samuel Ting Professor NUPAX Nobel Laureate (1976)
Senthil Todadri Professor ABCMP
Mark Vogelsberger Assistant Professor ASTRO
Vladan Vuletić Professor ABCMP
Nevin Weinberg Assistant Professor ASTRO
Xiao-Gang Wen Professor ABCMP
Frank Wilczek Professor NUPAT Nobel Laureate (2004)
Mike Williams Assistant Professor NUPAX
Joshua Winn Associate Professor ASTRO
Lindley Winslow Assistant Professor NUPAX
Boleslaw Wyslouch Professor NUPAX
Paolo Zuccon Assistant Professor NUPAX
Barton Zwiebach Professor NUPAT
Martin Zwierlein Professor ABCMP

Academic staff

Retired/former members of the faculty

Professors emeriti

Former members of the faculty

Notable alumni

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Name SB PhD Notability
Eric A. Cornell 1990 Bose-Einstein Condensate,
Nobel Prize in Physics (2001)
Richard Feynman 1939 Quantum Electrodynamics,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1965)
Murray Gell-Mann 1951 Quarks,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1969)
Gerald Guralnik 1958 Co-discoverer of Higgs mechanism and Higgs boson in 1964 with C.R. Hagen, SB'58, SM '58, PhD '63
J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics (2010)[1][2]
Professor of Physics, Brown University
C. R. Hagen 1958 1963 Co-discoverer of Higgs mechanism and Higgs boson in 1964 with Gerald Guralnik, SB'58
First to derive Wallis formula for pi from physics and quantum mechanics[3][4][5][6][7][8]
J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics (2010)[9][10][11]
Professor of Physics, University of Rochester
J. David Jackson 1949 Classical Electrodynamics (textbook)
Shirley Jackson 1968 1973 President of RPI
Jay Last 1956 One of the Shockley Semiconductor "traitorous eight"
Robert B. Laughlin 1979 Fractional Quantum Hall Effect,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1998)
Ronald McNair 1976 One of the Challenger astronauts
Robert Noyce 1953 One of the Shockley Semiconductor "traitorous eight",
Co-inventor of the integrated circuit,
Co-founder of Intel
William D. Phillips 1976 Laser Cooling,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1997)
Burton Richter 1952 1956 Discovery of the J/ψ particle,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1976)
John Robert Schrieffer 1953 BCS theory,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1972)
William Shockley 1936 Co-inventor of the transistor,
Nobel Prize in Physics (1956)
George Smoot 1966 1970 Structure of cosmic microwave background radiation,
Nobel Prize in Physics (2006)
Adam Riess 1992 High-Z Supernova Search Team
Nobel Prize in Physics (2011)
Carl E. Wieman 1973 Bose-Einstein Condensate
Nobel Prize in Physics (2001)

References

External links

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