Quantum

Welcome

Are you using these materials? Please contact us if you plan to use all or part of these course materials for your own quantum course. If you have already used these materials, please fill out a short survey (~ 5 min.) about your experience. Your valuable feedback will help us understand where and how these materials are being used, and ways they might be improved.

About this site

The Physics Education Research group at the University of Colorado Boulder (PER@C) has developed a number of resources for research- based instruction at the upper-division level. This website provides access to those resources developed specifically for first-semester upper-division quantum mechanics.

On this site, you will find a number of materials we have borrowed or developed. Feel free to use what you like - we would like to share materials, but also believe in giving credit to sources whenever possible.

We ask for your cooperation in not making any solutions you may create for the homework (and exam problems, clicker questions, etc…) available on the open web, out of respect for instructors and students at other institutions, and for maintaining the integrity of our research.

How to obtain materials

Materials on this site are organized using the menu above. You can navigate this site as you would a typical webpage to view or download course materials.

If you prefer, you can download the entire course in a zip format.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Supported by the University of Colorado and NSF-CCLI Grant #1023028.

Other Resources

Are you using these materials? Please contact us if you plan to use all or part of these course materials for your own quantum course. If you have already used these materials, please fill out a short survey (~ 5 min.) about your experience. Your valuable feedback will help us understand where and how these materials are being used, and ways they might be improved.


This material is based upon work supported by the University of Colorado and the National Science Foundation under Grant Numbers DUE 1023028 and DUE 0737118.
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.