PHYS378: General Relativity and Cosmology

PHYS378: General Relativity and Cosmology

Macquarie University 2008

Description

2nd Semester 2008, 3 credit points.
PHYS378 is a core unit in the BSc Astronomy and Astrophysics program and is an option for students in the BSc program. The unit begins with a review of special relativity which leads to the idea of flat spacetime. This leads on to the idea of curved spacetime, which requires the study of tensors. The Einstein field equation is studied, as is the Schwarzschild solution to it for a spherically symmetric geometry. Experimental tests of general relativity are discussed. The last major topic is the application of the theory to a variety of cosmological models.

Prerequisites

PHYS202(P) and MATH235(P). If you do not have these prerequisites please see Mark Wardle.

Lecturers

Dr Jim CresserC5C 3579850 8913 jcresser@ Special Relativity, ~12 lectures
Dr Danny TernoC5C 3499850 4162 dterno@ General Relativity, ~20 lectures
Prof Mark Wardle
(convenor)
E7A 3229850 8909 wardle@ Cosmology, ~20 lectures
(Add physics.mq.edu.au to complete the email addresses.)

Lecture times

  • Monday 10 am E6A 108
  • Tuesday 9 am E6A 108
  • Thursday 10 am W5A 205
  • Thursday 12 am W5C 234

Text

The prescribed text is General Relativity by IR Kenyon (Oxford University Press).

Lecture topics

Review of Special Relativity
Gravity and the equivalence principle
Tensors
Spacetime - metrics and curvature
Schwarzscild metric and black holes
Experimental tests of general relativity
Cosmological ideas
Hubble expansion - the FRW metric
Observational cosmology
Structure in the Universe
Nucleosynthesis of the light elements
Inflation

Assessment

Assignments will be set at regular intervals. As is usual with all physics courses the assignments are an integral part of the unit and aid your understanding of the material in the unit.

You will also be asked to write a 1500-word essay on a topic relevant to the unit. Information about topics and essay requirements is available through this link. There is some scope to write on a subject of your choosing (if it is not already on the list) but alternatives must be approved by Prof Wardle.

Assignments20%
Essay10%
Final Examination70%

Other Important Information

Generic Skills

  • Reading, interpreting and understanding reading resources;
  • numerical, quantitative and mathematical skills - assignment problems, tensor calculus in lecture content and problems;
  • problem solving - assignments;
  • research and writing skills - essay;
  • creativity - problem solving approach;
  • developing an appreciation of a new view of the nature of the physical world.

Plagiarism

Don't. Plagiarism is defined in the University handbook as follows.

"Plagiarism involves using the work of another person and presenting it as one's own. Any of the following acts constitutes plagiarism unless the source of each quotation or piece of borrowed material is clearly acknowledged:

  • copying out part(s) of any document or audio-visual material (including computer-based material);
  • using or extracting another person's concepts, experimental results, or conclusions;
  • summarising another person's work;
  • in an assignment where there was collaborative preparatory work, submitting substantially the same final version of any material as another student.
Encouraging or assisting another person to commit plagiarism is a form of improper collusion and may attract the same penalties which apply to plagiarism."

The relevant section of the handbook can be downloaded here (pdf).

A general discussion of plagiarism, definitions, examples, procedures that will be followed by the University in cases of plagiarism, and recommended penalties are available from the MQnU website at http://www.student.mq.edu.au/plagiarism/. The University expects students to familiarise themselves with the website.

Special Consideration

Information about special considerations and student services is available at http://www.physics.mq.edu.au/undergrad/services/.

Student Liaison Committee

The Physics Department values quality teaching and engages in periodic student evaluations of its units, external reviews of its programs and course units, and seeks formal feedback from students via focus groups and the Student Liaison Committee. Please consider being a member of this committee, which meets once during the semester (lunch provided), with the purpose of improving teaching via student feedback. The class will be asked to nominate two students as representatives for the PHYS 378 unit on the student liaison committee. This nomination process will be conducted during lectures and the lecturer will forward the names to the Head of Department. The SLC meetings are minuted and student representatives receive copies of the minutes from the two preceding SLC meetings prior to the meeting. An update on the responses that have been made by the department to the feedback obtained at the two preceding SLC meetings are reported by the Head of Department at the beginning of each SLC meeting. These responses are also minuted. The feedback is acted upon in a number of ways mostly initiated via Physics Dept meetings, where decisions on actions are taken.



Back to Mark's home page
Last modified: 3 August 2008
Author: Mark Wardle (wardle@physics.mq.edu.au).