2023-2024 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of Physics and Astronomy
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Sung-Won Lee, Ph.D., Chairperson
President’s Distinguished Chair: Duncan
Professors: Akchurin, Corsi, Huang, Lee, Maccarone, Owen, Romano
Associate Professors: Gibson, Sanati, Thacker, Volobouev
Assistant Professors: Chatzakis, DeGottardi, Eo, M. Kim, Kupfer, Whitbeck
Associate Professor of Practice: Moussa
Assistant Professor of Practice: Antoniou
Research Professors: Kunori, Lodhi
Lecturers: Damgov, Tsai
Instructors: Farooq, West
Adjunct Faculty: Babkin, Bernussi, Blawzdziewicz, Hussain, S. Kim, Pal, Sill
Joint Faculty: Poirier, Quitevis
CONTACT INFORMATION: 101 Science Building | Box 41051 | Lubbock, TX 79409-1051 | T 806.742.3767 | F 806.742.1182 | www.depts.ttu.edu/phas
About the Department
This department supervises the following degree programs:
Undergraduate Program
The Bachelor of Science in Physics degree can be taken in any of three areas of concentration and requires 120 hours of credit. These concentrations allow students to tailor their studies towards their particular career goals. Please refer to the sample course schedules in this section for details about each concentration. Physics majors should declare a concentration by the middle of their sophomore year.
Majors in this department are required to maintain a minimum institutional grade point average of 2.0 in physics courses and required adjunct courses and receive a C or better in each of these courses. Students also have a variety of university and College of Arts & Sciences requirements that must be met. Credit for any transferred physics hours will be handled on an individual basis with the department’s academic advisor. Internal transfer students must have an institutional grade point average of at least 2.5 in order to declare the physic major.
Students are strongly encouraged to devote time to undergraduate research. Research areas in the department include condensed matter physics, nuclear physics, physics education, particle physics, astronomy, and biophysics. The Bachelor of Science in Physics curricula are designed around the assumption that physics students will minor in mathematics. However, a variety of other minors complement a major in physics.
Students are encouraged to participate in the Society of Physics Students, which sponsors several academic and social activities.
The Sigma Pi Sigma Chapter of Texas Tech University was chartered in 1954. Sigma Pi Sigma exists to honor outstanding scholarship in physics, to encourage interest in physics among students at all levels, to promote an attitude of service, and to provide a fellowship of persons who have excelled in physics. Election is a lifelong membership and includes a one-year complimentary membership in the Society of Physics Students (SPS). Sigma Pi Sigma is an organization of the American Institute of Physics and the Association of College Honor Societies. Founded in 1921, there are more than 90,000 historical members.
Minors for Physics Majors. A broad variety of minor subjects may be elected by a student majoring in physics. These include, but are not limited to, mathematics, biochemistry, physical chemistry, geophysics, computer science, business, and electrical engineering. A frequent minor choice for physics majors is mathematics because most of the requirements are automatically satisfied by the sequence of math courses required for a physics major. Students contemplating minors outside the College of Arts & Sciences should seek the advice of the physics academic advisor before beginning that minor.
Graduate Program
For information on graduate programs offered by the Department of Physics and Astronomy, visit the Graduate Programs section of the catalog.
Undergraduate Program Offerings, Course Descriptions & Curricular Tables
(Click on program for curricular table.)
ProgramsBachelor’sUndergraduate MinorCoursesASTR - Astronomy (Undergraduate Courses)PHYS - Physics (Undergraduate Courses)
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