dark+matters
Active Member
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- Joined
- Oct 25, 2014
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- 463
Hello!
What are some high-quality websites/documentaries/books that have some sexy, introductory-level ideas about physics? I'm switching my undergraduate major from the arts/humanities to the sciences. My only background is in high school physics I and II, and following pop science figures like Brian Greene, Michio Kaku and Bill Nye. I've also been hanging out in the children's section of libraries, reading chemistry and physics books.
I've already taken almost all my GERs and the California State University system won't let me switch majors again after this (this will be switch number four in the public university system, after getting a "degree" in counseling from a seminary where I earned my atheism, point by point) so I don't have a whole lot of time to be experimenting. *tear* I figure that as I take more classes in physics, I will probably find things I click with more than others, but... I don't want to risk... not finding something I click with during classes, and then going along in my natural self-study, wishing I'd gotten a more thorough foundation in x-and-such an area, only to find that I only could have gotten that foundation in a university setting. I hope to go straight into grad school after my BA, so I need to start planning now rather than later. (Especially since I've also been toying with the idea of law or business for my graduate degree.)
I'm getting curious about quantum mechanics, theoretical physics in general, nuclear force, dark matter, particle physics, and string theory. Do you think computational, applied, or a different master's program would be best suited to investigating these topics? Thanks in advance for your input.
What are some high-quality websites/documentaries/books that have some sexy, introductory-level ideas about physics? I'm switching my undergraduate major from the arts/humanities to the sciences. My only background is in high school physics I and II, and following pop science figures like Brian Greene, Michio Kaku and Bill Nye. I've also been hanging out in the children's section of libraries, reading chemistry and physics books.
I've already taken almost all my GERs and the California State University system won't let me switch majors again after this (this will be switch number four in the public university system, after getting a "degree" in counseling from a seminary where I earned my atheism, point by point) so I don't have a whole lot of time to be experimenting. *tear* I figure that as I take more classes in physics, I will probably find things I click with more than others, but... I don't want to risk... not finding something I click with during classes, and then going along in my natural self-study, wishing I'd gotten a more thorough foundation in x-and-such an area, only to find that I only could have gotten that foundation in a university setting. I hope to go straight into grad school after my BA, so I need to start planning now rather than later. (Especially since I've also been toying with the idea of law or business for my graduate degree.)
I'm getting curious about quantum mechanics, theoretical physics in general, nuclear force, dark matter, particle physics, and string theory. Do you think computational, applied, or a different master's program would be best suited to investigating these topics? Thanks in advance for your input.