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    Oxbridge Applications | 13-14 New Bond Street | London W1S 3SX

    Tel: 0207 4992 394 | Fax: 0207 4910 343

    www.oxbridgeapplications.com

    Course ReportPhysics, Oxford

    This report gives you detailed information on the key features of the Physics course at Oxford, along with

    a running commentary from a graduate who studied the course, Tom.

    Im bouncing a marble, what is happening to the particles at the top of the marble?

    (Past interview question for Physics)

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    Course Outline

    Duration

    Three or four years

    Degree awarded

    BA or MPhys

    Colleges

    Available at all colleges except for Pembroke. Also not available at any Permanent Private Halls.

    Course Overview

    Physics at Oxford is hard work, particularly in the first year when you are still trying to get to grips with

    living away from home as well as the leap from A levels to degree, but it is also stimulating and rewarding

    when you finally understand the question!

    The tutorial system is one reason why choosing to do your physics degree at Oxford is so good. One-on-

    one or two-on-one tutorials give you the chance to discuss any problems you may have with the subject,

    and to get more individual help.

    Average Intake

    170

    Applications shortlisted for interview:55.9%

    Successful applications: 22.5%

    Entrance requirements

    A level: A*AA

    Advanced Highers: AA/AAB

    IB: 3840 including core points

    Or equivalent

    Essential subjects

    Candidates will be expected to have Physics and Maths to A level or equivalent, and within that a

    mechanics module is highly recommended. Further Mathematics will also be helpful but is not necessary

    for admission.

    Admissions test

    Candidates must sit the Physics Aptitude Test on 2

    nd

    November 2011.

    Written work

    Candidates do not need to submit written work.

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    Our Case StudyTom

    Tom applied to Oxford in 2005. He began the Physics course in 2006 and graduated in 2009. Here he

    describes his academic background and how he found studying the course.

    Did you apply pre or post A level?

    Pre A level. Hardly anyone ever gets accepted for Physics after a gap year so there wasnt much choice!

    What were your GCSE results at the time of your application?

    10 A*s, 3 As.

    What were your AS subjects and grades at the time of your application?

    Physics (A), Further Maths (A), German (A) and A2 Maths (A)

    Was your offer conditional or unconditional?

    Conditional: AAA

    How did you find studying Physics at Oxford?

    The course can be three or four years depending on your initial choice and whether you obtain 2:1 or

    above at the end of your second year. The four-year Physics course is equivalent to a European five-year

    Masters and so obviously has to compress in an awful lot of content. In that sense the course is actually

    quite short and is pressured because of this.

    In my experience contact time with tutors was usually spot-on, but in contrast to Humanities tutorials, it

    was often the case that science tutors didnt especially help you to understand the content because of

    the very nature of the subject. Physics isnt really discursive!Instead, you have to learn the content in

    your private study and consolidate it through the tutorials.

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    An Overview of the Course

    Year One

    Tom says:The first year was to allow students to catch up with everyone else. Essentially the first year

    was a mathematical foundation course in preparation for the real Physics beginning in the second year.

    The work you do in the first year is aimed at bringing everyone to the same level, and there are exams at

    the end of the year called Prelims. The modules are labelled CP1 to CP4.

    CP1 covers Mechanics and Special Relativity, including Newtons Laws of motion, 2-D particle

    motion, collisions and simple harmonic motion.

    CP2 focuses on electromagnetism and circuits.

    CP3 covers mathematical methods. This includes vectors, partial differentials, series and

    sequences.

    CP4 is on differential equations, waves and optics, and covers topics such as physical

    characteristics of waves, superposition of waves, ordinary differential equations, complex

    analysis, elementary geometric optics, and introduces wave optics, where classical Physics breaks

    down.

    There is also a short optionthat every physicist must take with their exams at the end of the Trinity

    (summer) term, which are all 1.5 hour exams. In your first year, you can choose from Astronomy,

    Complex analysis, and Quantum ideas.

    Tom says:I pickedIntroductory Quantum Physics as it seemed to be one of the more interesting options

    and directly led to some second year materialat the time I thought this option would prepare me

    better for the second year course.

    Science degrees at Oxford are quite intense in terms of working hours. I had up to 20 hours of lectures

    per week in my first year, as well as two hours of tutorials, three to five of labs, and 20 further hours in

    private study, finishing problem sheets for my tutorials.

    Prelims were at the end of the summer term. They were mostly problems to solve, but marks were

    included for the years lab work.

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    Year Two

    Tom says:The second year was designed to help us consolidate the material we began in the first year.

    We also go to start learning some new areas of Physics which we hadnt covered before.

    At the end of your second year, you sit your Part A exams. A1 covers Thermal Physics, including kinetic

    theory and statistical mechanics. A2 is Electromagnetism and Optics, which extends your first year study,

    and A3 is Quantum Physics, introducing Dirac Notation and the Schrodinger Equation for modelling

    Hydrogen and Helium atoms. A4 is Mathematical Methods II which continues the mathematics studied in

    the first year.

    You will again sit a short option, this time with more choices, including Energy Studies, Financial Physics,

    History of Electromagnetism, Classical Mechanics, Covariant Electromagnetism, Plasma Physics, Medical

    and Environmental Physics, Numerical Methods, Introduction to Biophysics, and Chaos, Chance andPredictability.

    You will also need to complete 12 days of labs, but you can replace half of these by taking two short

    options rather than just one. The labs are run two days at a time every other week. Some short options

    can be taken in your second term, so if you decide you would rather do two options it is worth seeing

    which papers you can take early to avoid a heavy exam timetable. Having said this, the workload of two

    short options in the summer term is acceptable. You will need to write up a certain number of labs which

    will be marked. This number will be less if you take two short options.

    In your second year, you must also complete an Oral Skills session which is a 20-minute presentation you

    give to the other physicists in your college and your tutors. This is enjoyable and not particularly scary,

    and gives you the chance to research absolutely anything to do with physics that interests you.

    Tom says: Not much by way of options this year either, but at least we were doing proper Physics. It was

    hard work again, and I had a similar work load, albeit with more labs, and therefore more time spent

    writing up lab reports. Submitted work once again tended to take the form of problem sheets, which

    could be quite time-consuming.

    We were examined in everything we studied this year, again at the end of the summer term, though in

    this case they counted towards our Final marks. It was a bit of a slog. Marks from our lab reports also

    contributed to the years score.

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    Year Three

    Tom says:This time around, the goal was simple: complete the degree.

    At the beginning of your third year you must confirm whether you are doing the three year BA course or

    the four year MPhys course. Only students who obtained a 2:1 or higher in their Part A exams will be

    eligible for the MPhys course.

    In the third year students take Part B exams. According to the new 2010/11 course structure, the

    following six options are offered:

    Flows, Fluctuations and Complexity

    Symmetry and Relativity

    Quantum, Atomic and Molecular Physics Subatomic Physics

    General Relativity and Cosmology

    Condensed Matter Physics

    On top of this, you also take a short option and continue with relevant practical work. MPhys students

    must take all six modules, whereas BA students choose only four, and complete a project in their final

    term. This will be allocated after you have made a preference of eight projects or essays of a long list

    available to you. The department will try their best to allocate you a topic you want, and it is possible to

    switch at the early stages if you are unhappy with your topic and you make enough of a fuss! You will

    have a supervisor for the project who will help you along. If you write an essay it must be no longer than

    6,000 words. You will then finish your degree and graduate after the Part B exams. MPhys students do

    not take on a project in their third year, but in their fourth and final year.

    Tom says:The course structure has changed since I did it, so the options I picked have now changed. I

    chose them because they were closest to my prior interests and aptitudes in Physicsas determined

    from previous results in Finals.

    Workload was again pretty similar to the two previous years, though it picked up somewhat in the final

    term when exam revision started to bite.

    Part B of our Finals happened at the end of the summer term, on all the modules studied in the third

    year.

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    My Experience

    Tom looks back at his time studying Physics:

    Why did you choose to apply for Physics?

    I originally wanted to apply for German. This choice changed to German and Philosophy, then Physics and

    Philosophy, then Physics. Physics was something I could do reasonably well and was enthusiastic about.

    Why was your course a good choice for you?

    Physics applies maths, logic and experience to help understand the Universe and all its machinations.

    Why wouldn't you want to study that? Beyond its intrinsic value though, studying Physics is also a great

    way of training your mind to formulate creative solutions to quantitative puzzles. Almost everything that

    can be measured can also be modelled using insights from Physics.

    What did you enjoy the most about your course?

    The new and exciting parts of Physics (while not the norm in the course) were highly rewarding. Thedifficulty and intensity of the course was in itself very satisfying I certainly never got the impression that

    the course was for those without quite a bit of stamina.

    What did you enjoy the least about your course?

    The department often just threw material at its students without really thinking about whether or not the

    workload was particularly realistic! Many Physicists I know spent almost all of their time in the library...

    just to get their bog-standard work completed.

    Would you like to have studied Physics at a different institution?

    No, Oxford is a pretty amazing place, and through all the hard work, I certainly got a thorough education.

    Having now experienced the course, would you like to have studied a different course?

    I think I might have enjoyed Physics and Philosophy. Its a better combination of humanities and science,

    while pure Physics is quite ploddingtheres an awful lot of material but rarely much opportunity to

    reflect on it and its significance.

    What would you have done differently during your time at Oxford?

    I wish Id worked smarter. I spent a lot of time worrying about bits of work which werent so important,

    and it cost me time that could have been spent on social life. I got better at prioritising eventually.

    How would you advise students to get the most out of studying Physics?

    Get into a strict regime of work, eight to five every day, and that should preserve your sanity!

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    How to Prepare

    Suggested Reading:

    All of the below suggestions serve only as examples for the kinds of things you should be considering

    reading. The key factor in determining what you read must be your own interest, as you find reading and

    absorbing difficult otherwise.

    A Briefer History of TimeStephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow

    This is much more digestible and goes into more detail on a few of the most interesting concepts

    than the original.

    The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives Leonard Mlodinow

    He is a very good writer and this is interesting and witty.

    Fermat's Last TheoremSimon Singh and David RintoulGood read and a look at the history of trying to solve one of the most famous theorems.

    The Pleasure of Finding Things Out,The Character of a Physical Law and QED: The Strange Theory

    of Light and MatterRichard Feynman

    The End of TimeJulian Barbour

    Strange BeautyandJust Six NumbersGeorge Johnson

    E=mc2David Bodanis

    Designing the Molecular Worldand H2O: A History of WaterPhilip Ball

    In Search of Schrodingers CatJohn Gribbin

    Reading The New Scientistand Physics Reviewis also advised.

    You should look to read beyond your A level course. This could therefore include books such as those by

    Paul Davies, Stephen Hawking, or Roger Penrose; or one of the American University Physics textbooksa

    good introduction to quantum mechanics, relativity etc, which is an easier read than Hawking. This is up

    to your own interest in physicsthink about what you are interested in and try and learn more about it.

    Also check out the following link for past Physics Aptitude Tests:http://www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/study-here/undergraduates/physics-aptitude-test-pat/pat-past-papers

    DONT FORGET:

    Re-read your personal statement and consider questions that might be asked. In 2010, 64% of all

    applicants were asked about their personal statement in their interview.

    Re-read all the information on the course and your college of choice. Think about the obvious

    questions that might be asked. These may include questions about the appeal of Oxford, Physics and

    the college. You should also think about what you have to offer the collegewhat would you

    contribute to the community?

    http://www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/study-here/undergraduates/physics-aptitude-test-pat/pat-past-papershttp://www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/study-here/undergraduates/physics-aptitude-test-pat/pat-past-papers
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    My Preparation

    Tom answers our questions on how he prepared for his application:

    Where did you go to school?

    I went to an independent school. The numbers that it sent tended to fluctuate, but in my year there were

    four successful offers but one student decided against Cambridge after being offered a place there.

    What help did you receive from your school?

    Somesupport: wegotone mock interview, which was useful, as well as a bit of guidance on course and

    college choices.

    What help did you receive from your parents?I got moral support, but seeing as neither of them had been to Oxbridge, they werent that well placed to

    help me with my application.

    How did you prepare?

    Imade sure to learn every possible proof and derivation that could have come up during the interview. I

    then revised all the work Id already done thoroughly. An awful lot of work went into thisI dont think

    there are any valid shortcuts. I also prepared my personal statement very far in advance.

    What advice would you give to an applicant preparing for interview?

    Prepare thoroughlygo through similar questions and practice them all carefully. Be sure to read around

    the subject, and familiarise yourself with contemporary issues in Physics. The Large Hadron Collider

    looms large these days, for instance.

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    My Interview

    Tom answers questions about his interviews. The details he gives are specific to his experience but should

    give you a general idea of what might happen at your interview. Remember, no two interviews are ever

    the same.

    How many interviews did you have in total?

    Four interviews in total. I had two of these at a different college but then was offered a place at the

    original college despite this.

    What was the format of the interviews?

    They were pretty simple: I had to answer Physics questions. I was given no material to pre-prepare, and

    no one asked me anything about my personal statement or anything else: just Physics, Physics and more

    Physics.

    How did you go about answering the questions asked?I sat back, considered each problem on its merits, and answered when I felt I was ready. Its okay to take

    some time to answer the questions, because theyre long and complicated, and not designed as a quick-

    fire round.

    What was your overall experience of the interviews?

    Terrifying! The first couple of interviews were highly stressfulmostly because I wasnt prepared for a

    panel-interview. One of the interviewers spoke rather broken English. The second set of interviews went

    much better because by that point I thought I had nothing to lose and managed to relax quite a bit.

    What do you think interviewers are looking for in a prospective student?

    Above all, they want mathematical confidence and creativity. Interviews aim to stretch the candidate to

    determine whether he or she can use existing knowledge in new and unfamiliar circumstances. Hence

    two things are required: firstly, superb knowledge of the A level material, and secondly the ability to use

    this in new ways without becoming flustered.

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    Past Interview Questions

    The following questions have come up in Oxbridge interviews in recent years. We strongly recommend,

    however, that you use these to help you to think laterally about your chosen subject rather than to learn

    and rehearse answers to them.

    Ability-based problems to solve differential equations and formulate physical problems in

    mathematical terms.

    How does sound come from a flute?

    How do capacitors add in series?

    Explain how we know a centripetal force exists and how can we prove the presence of this force?

    Which reaches the bottom of a slope faster, a ball rolling down the slope, or a ball sliding down

    the slope?

    How would a square wave differ from a sinusoidal wave when applying both to a transformer?

    What is the equation for the motion of a pendulum?

    Draw the equation for the discharge of the capacitor.

    If there are equal resistors on each side of a cube what is the total resistance from one corner to

    an opposite corner?

    Why is the sky blue?

    How does the voltage on a capacitor vary if the dielectric gas is ionised?

    Why is it not strictly true to say that one planet orbits another?

    How is a rainbow formed?

    How does depressing a piano key make a sound?

    What happens if you throw a lead soldier or a ton of gold out of a boat, does the lake go up or

    down?

    How does a glass transmit light?

    Why does metal expand when its heated?

    Discussions about gravitational, electrical and magnetic force.

    Converting Cartesian co-ordinates to polar co-ordinates.

    I have a three-litre and a five-litre bottle. How can I get four litres?

    Sketch the graph of a fourth order polynomial, then differentiate it.

    How does heat travel through air and what kind of wave is it?

    Explain Schrdingers cat.

    Explain the phases of the moon.

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    Why does a satellite keep orbiting Earth? What forces are present?

    A container with liquid nitrogen is left in a laboratory, and its temperature is being recorded over

    a long period. The recorded temperature shows variations. Why?

    How can you measure the speed of sound in air?

    If you have an oscillating wave whose vertical displacement depends on time and horizontal

    displacement, what is its velocity? Draw the graph of this function.

    Solve y for x = arctan y

    How can you measure the length and thickness of a tape when its inside the cassette?

    Why does CuSO4 solution in water look blue when being lit with white monochromatic light?

    Where does your love of science come from?

    If I jump on a train travelling at constant speed, where do I land? If I jump up on a train and

    whilst Im in the air it slows down, where would I land?

    How far away is the horizon?

    If you know the record for the 100m, can you predict the record for the pole-vault?

    What is the force between two large objects, each of mass M?

    Explain Newtons three laws of motion.

    Explain why a space probe going to the outer reaches of the solar system is first sent to one of

    the inner planets, and then back past earth.

    It is a hot summer day, and I have a fridge on in the room, what is the best way to cool myself

    down?

    This is a spring, it exhibits SHM, correct? Please establish equations of motion for it.

    Estimate the mass of the Earth.

    Sketch the graph of y=(e^-x)(sinx) and find the first positive maximum.

    Sketch the graph of x/(x-1).

    Explain how a hot air balloon works.

    Which integral is the largest between 1 and e: lnx, ln(x^2) or (lnx)^2?

    Estimate the mass of a proton.

    What is the photoelectric effect?

    Explain boiling points at different atmospheric pressures.

    How many NMR peaks would you get from this molecule?

    Devise an equation to estimate the number of aeroplanes in the sky.

    Derive small angle formulae.

    How does a boat float?

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    How does the movement of a particle change as it is projected into the air at a certain speed?

    How would one go about travelling through time?

    Look at these functions and differentiate and integrate them just using the graphs.

    What are cosmic rays?

    How would the ratio of elements change in a radioactive substance over time?

    Draw the graph of -xe^x2 and then draw the graph of the integral of that function using graphical

    methods only.

    How high can I go up a mountain having only eaten a Mars bar?

    If I have 5 people in my class what is the probability that none have a birthday in January?

    I have two jars one of oil, one of vinegar. Each contain 1 litre, I put 100ml of my vinegar into my

    oil. I then shake it so it is fully mixed. I then put 100ml of this into the jar containing vinegar.

    Have I got more oil in my vinegar, or vinegar in my oil?

    If I tunnel through the Earth from London to New York, and put a frictionless train through it.

    Where will the train stop if there is no engine used?

    How would you reshape a cuboid wire to double its resistance?

    I have a length of fence, which is to make up three sides of a rectangle (the fourth side being a

    section of a very long wall). What is the maximum possible area that I can enclose?

    Draw (e^-t)(cos t).

    Evaluate integral of ((x+3)^2)/(x+9)

    Why does a tennis ball curl?

    How does a submarine submerge?

    Why do different stringed instruments have different sounds?

    Do hidden variables exist?

    Explain the EPR paradox.

    How high must a rollercoaster be in order to make the loop-the-loop?

    Draw an acceleration against velocity graph to describe the motion when you are in a lift.

    How many grains of sand are there in the world?

    Im bouncing a marble, what is happening to the particles at the top of the marble?

    A jug of water with a few ice cubes in it is filled to the brim. What happens when the ice melts?

    If you are on a boat with a hairdryer and a sail, and you blow the hairdryer into the sail, what are

    the forces which are acting on the boat?

    Why don't fish freeze?

    How many of these pebbles would fit in a car?

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    You are shooting a monkey in a tree, but as you fire, it drops from the tree. Where do you aim?

    Tell me about the physics of food.

    What would happen if you drilled through the earth all the way to the other side and jumpedinto the hole?

    Why are British aircraft carriers shorter than American ones?

    Why does a bullet spiral?

    Why does a cricket ball drift in a direction opposite to the spin imparted on the ball?

    Talk about a light bulb.

    Why do balloons go bang when they pop?

    Sketch y=x 2 y=e^-x y=e^-x^2

    At what time, after 8 OClock would each hand point in opposite directions?

    There is a new disease which effects 1/1000 people, a test is 99% accurate. It says you have the

    disease, should you be worried?

    Sketch y=sinx, y=e^-x, y=sin(e^-x)

    Using Archimedes principle show that an Ice cube in water being pushed down and let go

    oscillates in simple harmonic motion.

    Calculate the pressure exerted by N number of atoms on a surface of area A inclined at an angle

    theta.

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    Disclaimer: Oxbridge Applications is purely an advisory service. The information and preparation we offer

    should be taken in that context. We cannot guarantee an applicant a place at any university. As such,

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    whatsoever if the information it provides proves to be incorrect or if an applicant acts differently to how he orshe would have acted without the services of Oxbridge Applications. Your statutory rights are unaffected.