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Berkeley Physics Course

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The Berkeley Physics Course is a series of physics textbooks written mostly by UC Berkeley professors. The series consists of the following five volumes, each of which was originally used over the course of one semester at Berkeley:

1. Mechanics by Charles Kittel, et al.[1]
2. Electricity and Magnetism by Edward M. Purcell
3. Waves by Frank S. Crawford, Jr.
4. Quantum physics by Eyvind H. Wichmann
5. Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics by Frederick Reif

Volume 2, Electricity and Magnetism, by Purcell (Harvard), is particularly well known, and was influential for its use of relativity in the presentation of the subject at this level. Half a century later, the book is still in print, as Purcell and Morin.

A Sputnik-era project funded by an NSF grant, the course arose from discussions between Philip Morrison (Cornell) and Charles Kittel (Berkeley) in 1961 and was published by Mcgraw-Hill College starting in 1965. Because of the government support received, the original editions contain notices on their copyright pages stating that the books were to be available royalty-free after five years. The authors got lump-sum payments but did not receive royalties.[2]

Although the course was influential in physics education, the book series sold better in foreign markets than in the U.S., possibly because students in other countries specialized earlier and were therefore better prepared mathematically than students in the U.S.[3] The series was translated into a number of foreign languages. It was felt to be too advanced for typical engineering students at Berkeley, but continued to be used there in honors courses for physics majors. Adoption may have been hindered by the choice of Gaussian units, and later editions of volumes 1 and 2 were eventually published with these replaced by SI units.

References

  1. ^ Lewis, J. A. (May 7, 1965). "Mechanics: Berkeley Physics Course". Science. 148 (3671): 813–814. doi:10.2307/1716383. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  2. ^ A. Carl Helmholtz, "Faculty governance and physics at the University of California, Berkeley, 1937-1990 : oral history transcript / 1993"
  3. ^ Helmholtz