Physics 210: Computational Physics: Homework Assignments |
This document will be updated throughout the course |
Note: All assignments are due at the end of the
computer lab
session on the
specified date. In addition, there may be changes to due dates as
the course progresses depending on how the coverage of material in
lectures goes. To ensure that you download the most recent version of homework assignments, it is safest to first clear the disk and memory caches of your browser, or ensure that the Preferences/Advanced/Cache setting of your browser is set so that cached documents are compared to on-line versions every time. |
Homework | Due Date | Topic | Problem Set |
H1 | September
24 |
Unix
/ Linux including shell scripts |
(PDF) |
H2 |
October
8 |
Shell
scripts & Maple including basic Maple programming |
|
H3 |
October
27 |
MATLAB
including basic MATLAB programming |
|
H4 |
November
10 |
Applications
using MATLAB |
|
H5 |
November
24 |
Applications
using MATLAB |
IMPORTANT!! HOMEWORK
& TERM PAPER POLICY / ACADEMIC
MISCONDUCT First, please refer to the section of the UBC Calendar on Policies and Regulations, especially the sections:
In addition, in the context of this specific course, all students must understand and abide by the following policies: Consultation and discussion with classmates is permitted, and in fact encouraged. HOWEVER, ALL HOMEWORK & TERM PROJECTS SUBMITTED MUST BE YOUR OWN WORK. To be more specific, the following occurrences (not an exhaustive list) WILL be treated as possible cases of academic misconduct. (I assume in the following that cheating is fundamentally a two-person interaction; let X and Y be two students)
Again, although you are free to consult and discuss with your classmates (and others) concerning your term projects, the work that you do for your project, as well as writeup and presentation must be your own work. Additionally, you must NOT use materials, particularly source code, that you locate on the Web or elsewhere in your term project: all programming and analysis that you do for your project must be original to you, although the ideas and/or algorithms underlying your programming need not be, as long as they are properly cited. Bear in mind that if you copy something from the Web, it is now quite easy for an instructor to find the same location that you did! The University takes all forms of academic misconduct very seriously, and so do I. All strong evidence of cheating
will therefore be reported to,
and
dealt with through, the Head of the Department.of Physics &
Astronomy. |
Maintained by choptuik@physics.ubc.ca. Supported by CIFAR, NSERC, CFI, BCKDF and UBC |