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The physics department
encourages students to take advantage of opportunities besides courses. Students may
work with professors engaged in research,
at Syracuse or other locations, help teach their peers, and
work in the demonstration room,
to name some of the possibilities. There are also meetings and
events organized or coordinated by the local Society of Physics Students Chapter.

Many physicists spend their
careers carrying out research, seeking new physical principles, inventing
experimental techniques, and simulating physical objects and materials using a computer.
Regardless of whether one is going to be a researcher, engineer, teacher, medical
professional, or a financial analyst, experience in research prepares people to
find new solutions and to try out new methods to arrive at a goal.
The Physics Department at Syracuse University offers students an
opportunity to be part of a thriving scientific community. Your activities
working in one of our research groups may be the single most valuable
component of your undergraduate education.
An undergraduate researcher
interacts strongly with faculty, postdoctoral researchers, and graduate
students engaged in related work; he or she joins in research group meetings,
research seminars, and departmental colloquia. An undergraduate research
project is a genuine distinction which is understood by employers and graduate
school admissions officers.
To gain such experience, every undergraduate
physics student is encouraged to join a research program.
In the Department
of physics, you can
get hands-on experience on a variety of topics that will familiarize you
with advanced research techniques and more:
- experimental particle
physics and low-noise analog microelectronics
- magnetic resonance imaging
- research on the interstellar medium in an astrophysics laboratory
- solar cells (amorphous silicon)
- gravitational wave
detectors
- simulation (computation) techniques
- ideas from cosmology
To identify
the program best suited to your interests you can contact any faculty member who is
carrying out research in an area you are interested in or contact the Director of
Undergraduate Studies.
Students have
also travelled to pursue research opportunities, such as Research Experience for
Undergraduate Program and even abroad.
For further information, contact a faculty member and follow some of these links:

One opportunity that most Physics Majors take advantage of is the chance to teach.
The introductory courses in Physics have lab or workshop sessions, with about 20 or fewer students each.
In these small meetings, a graduate teaching assistant and one or more undergraduate instructors guide
the students, in groups of two or three, through lab work and exercises. This attention is of course very
helpful to the students, but the undergraduate instructors find it to be an instructive and rewarding
experience. The peer instructors learn the introductory material much better, preparing them for future
courses and graduate admissions exams, and have the experience of working closely with faculty and graduate
students. This is a good way to get to know a professor better, also, which can be helpful for future
guidance or references. Peer instructors either take a class (PHY399, Practicum and Seminar in Physics
Education) or are paid hourly.

Behind Stolkin Auditorium is the Syracuse Physics Demonstration Facility. Sam Sampere works there to prepare
demonstrations large and small for classroom use and for displays. Sam is often looking for students to help
glue, solder, paint, assemble, wheel out, sort, design, or repair demonstration equipment. Please contact Sam
if you are interested in working in the "demo room".

The Society of Physics Students is a student-run organization that organizes and coordinates events,
such as inviting speakers, organizing informational meetings about physics, and helping to organize
the departmental picnic. For more information, please see the
web page.

Department of Physics
Syracuse University
201 Physics Building
Syracuse, NY 13244-1130
Phone (315) 443-3901
Fax (315) 443-9103
E-mail physics@phy.syr.edu
Undergrad
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