| Program start date | Application deadline |
| 2025-09-01 | - |
| 2025-03-01 | - |
| 2026-09-01 | - |
| 2026-03-01 | - |
| 2027-09-01 | - |
| 2027-03-01 | - |
Program Overview
Master of Arts in Physics
The Department of Physics and Astronomy in the College of Liberal Arts offers the M.A. in Physics. Graduate work in physics is planned primarily to meet the needs of students who are planning to go on to professional careers in physics, either as teachers or as research physicists. The M.A. degree does not require a thesis.
About the Program
The department has research groups in the following areas:
- condensed matter
- high energy
- gravitational physics
- physical acoustics
Program Information
Degree
M.A. in Physics
Required Credit Hours
30
Program Type
Master's Program
Program Location
Oxford
School
College of Liberal Arts
Duration
2 years
Program Details
Application Process
The Department of Physics and Astronomy welcomes student applications.
- Complete the Graduate School's Online Application.
- Upload Supplemental Application materials for the department on the online application. Applicants for graduate admission should have at least a GPA equivalent to a B (3.0 on the US university GPA 4-point scale) in previous university/college studies.
Curriculum
Students in the M.A. in Physics program complete 30 credit hours of graduate coursework,
- 15 credit hours at 600 level or higher
- At least two courses from the following list of core and breadth courses:
- Phys 709: Advanced Mechanics I
- Phys 711: Quantum Mechanics I
- Phys 727: Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics I
- Phys 721, 722: Advanced Electromagnetic Theory I, II
- Phys 605: Advanced Acoustics
- Phys 607: Atomic and Nuclear Physics
- Phys 637: Fluid Dynamics
- Phys 712: Quantum Mechanics II
- Phys 725: Solid State Physics I
- Phys 731: Quantum Field Theory I
- Phys 733: Elementary Particle Physics
- Phys 735: Gravitational Physics Students complete an oral defense of their coursework. They are also required to participate in the teaching of physics lectures or laboratories as part of their graduate training.
Financial Support
The Department of Physics and Astronomy offers graduate assistantships to M.A. students. Virtually all incoming students are offered a teaching assistantship for the first year or two, as teaching is one of the degree requirements. Students with a graduate assistantship funded in the Department of Physics and Astronomy receive
- a scholarship that covers some or all of the tuition and non-residency fee, if applicable, for regular semesters and
- subsidized health insurance.
Research and Teaching Facilities
The Department of Physics and Astronomy is housed primarily in Lewis Hall. Several faculty and graduate students have offices and research space in the Jamie Whitten National Center for Physical Acoustics nearby on campus. The Kennon Observatory, adjacent to Lewis Hall, houses astronomy labs. Lewis Hall houses teaching laboratories in undergraduate physics and astronomy courses. These include upper-division labs for electronics, optics, and modern physics. The department also staffs a tutoring center for undergraduates in physics and astronomy courses. The research wing of Lewis Hall houses research labs and a LINUX parallel-computing farm used by the high energy physics group. The departments machine shop is equipped with a large computer-controlled lathe, three computer-controlled mills, and a computer-controlled measuring machine. The shop employs a full-time machinist. The University of Mississippis ambitious initiative to construct one of the nations leading student-centered learning environments for STEM education opened Fall 2024. The 202,000-square-foot building has extensive dedicated space for basic undergraduate teaching labs for the Department of Physics and Astronomy. The department has a variety of telescopes used in astronomy laboratories. These include a portable 25-inch Dobsonian telescope, a 15-inch refracting telescope (the Grubb Twin Equatorial Telescope, purchased in 1892) mounted in the large dome of Kennon Observatory, and a 17-inch Plane Wave Corrected Dall Kirkham (CDK) telescope on a Paramount ME mount and outfitted with a CCD camera is mounted in the small dome. Additional 8-inch and 12-inch portable telescopes are also used for astronomy lab courses. The Jamie Whitten National Center for Physical Acoustics (NCPA) contains the technical and support facilities of a world-class research program. This facility includes a high-bay laboratory, an anechoic chamber, and a large open bay with subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels. Smaller laboratory rooms are electromagnetically and mechanically isolated, and the 80-seat auditorium is acoustically isolated. Supporting the acoustics research effort are an electronics shop, a carpentry shop, and a fully-equipped machine shop. The Department of Physics and Astronomy has access to the extensive research and computing facilities of the Mississippi Center for Supercomputing Research.
