Senin, 18 Februari 2008

Fisika Modern

Seri Perkuliahan Fisika Modern



Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's Modern Physics course concentrating on Classical Mechanics. Recorded October 15, 2007 at Stanford University.

This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the first of a six-quarter sequence of classes exploring the essential theoretical foundations of modern physics. The topics covered in this course focus on classical mechanics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University.

Complete playlist for the course:

http://youtube.com/view_play_list?p=189C0DCE90CB6D81

Stanford Continuing Studies: http://continuingstudies.stanford.edu/

About Leonard Susskind: http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/people/faculty/sussk...

Stanford University channel on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/stanford (less info)

Lecture by:

Leonard Susskind

Felix Bloch Professor of Physics

Director, Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics (SITP)

Leonard Susskind



Room 332
Varian Physics Bldg
382 Via Pueblo Mall
Stanford, CA 94305-4060

tel 650-723-2686
fax 650-723-9389
susskind@stanford.edu


Research Interests

Current research is involved with the following topics: models of internal structure of hadrons, gauge theories, quark confinement, symmetry breaking, instantons, quantum statistical mechanics, baryon production in the universe, model for fermion masses, gravity in lower dimensions and quantum cosmology.

Career History

  • B.S., 1962, City College of New York
  • Ph.D., 1965, Cornell University
  • National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow, Cornell University, 1965-66
  • Assistant Professor of Physics, Belfer Graduate School of Science, Yeshiva University, 1966-68
  • Associate Professor of Physics, Belfer Graduate School of Science, Yeshiva University 1968-70
  • Professor of Physics, University of Tel Aviv, 1971-72
  • Professor of Physics, Belfer Graduate School of Science, Yeshiva University 1970-79
  • Professor of Physics, Stanford University, 1979-present
  • Pregel Award, New York Academy of Science, 1975
  • Loeb Lecturer, Harvard University, 1976
  • J.J. Sakurai Prize in Theoretical Particle Physics, 1997
  • Felix Bloch Professorship in Physics, 2000-present
  • Director, Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics,


Graduate Students


Other Things of Interest

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