Program Contents
Program Contents
There are two streams leading to the Doctoral degree in Physics at IMSc: the one available to students who
have completed their Masters degree prior to joining IMSc (Ph.D.) and the one available to students who
join after their Bachelors degree (Integrated Ph.D.). The Ph.D. program has two semester compulsory
course work while the integrated Ph.D. has four semester compulsory course work. The third and fourth
semester course work of the integrated Ph.D. program is the same as the two semester course work of the
Ph.D. program.
The courses together with the pre-requisites and reference material, are given below. Integrated Ph.D.
students begin with the first semester courses while Ph.D. students begin with the third semester courses.
No.
Semester I
No.
Semester II
No.
Semester III
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Classical Mechanics
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Quantum Mechanics II
(31)
(12)
Quantum Mechanics I
(22)
(32)
Mathematical Methods II
(13)
Electromagnetic Theory
(23)
(33)
Statistical Mechanics II
(14)
Mathematical Methods I
(24)
Statistical Mechanics
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Particle Physics I
The Fourth semester has two core courses (18 credits) and a project (12 credits). The core courses differ
for students desirous of research in High Energy Physics (HEP) or Low Energy Physics (LEP). These are
to be decided in consultation with the monitoring committee.
No.
HEP students
No.
LEP students
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(42a)
Cosmology-and-Gravitation
or
Particle Physics II
(44a)
Nonlinear Dynamics
or
Quantum Information-and-Computation
or
Statistical Field Theory,
(42b)
(44b)
(44c)
The integrated Ph.D. program students earn 123 credits while those of Ph.D. program earn 60 credits at
the end of the course work.
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Linear Algebra:
Linear Vector spaces, Determinants & Matrices, Special matrices: orthogonal, hermitian,
unitary, Eigenvalue problem: matrix diagonalization, Canonical Forms, Infinite-dimensional
vector spaces: Hilbert space & Hermitian operators, Numerical solution of linear equations;
Complex Analysis:
Complex algebra, analytic functions, infinite sequences and series, tests of convergence, Weierstrass theorem, Taylor and Laurent series, classification of isolated singularities, poles & calculus of residues, contour integration, residue theorem and applications;
Differential and Integral Equations:
Ordinary differential equations, linear differential equations up to second order, orthogonal
polynomials and functions, Integral transforms: Laplace and Fourier transforms, partial differential equations, classification of PDEs, Laplace and wave equations, boundary value problems,
Special functions, Integral equations and Green functions, Ideas about nonlinear equations,
Approximation methods: WKB approximation (at the level of Mathews-Walker);
Textbooks:
1. J Mathews and R L Walker, Mathematical Methods for Physicists, Benjamin, 1964;
2. G Arfken, Mathematical Methods for Physicists, Academic Press, 1995.
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1. Continuum Mechanics:
Coarse graining and continuum limit, The displacement field and strain tensor, The stress
tensor and constitutive relations. Hookes Law, The energy functional, Deformation of thin
rods: Stretching, bending and torsion, Equations of motion. Elastic waves, Conservative
systems, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalisms;
2. Hydrodynamics:
The velocity and density fields. Continuity equation, Pascals Law and the stress tensor,
Bernoullis principle, Euler equations. Gravity waves, Viscosity, Navier-Stokes equations.
Boundary conditions, examples of flow, low Reynolds number flows, Stokes limit;
3. Electrodynamics:
The electromagnetic field tensor and Bianchi identity, covariant charge density and current,
action formalism for electrodynamics, Maxwells equations and relativistic covariance, Wave
solutions. Gauge invariance, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalism; [7 Lectures]
4. Landau-Ginzburg theories:
Order parameter field, symmetry breaking, Noether theorem, mean-field theory, Gaussian
fluctuations, Goldstone modes, generalized stiffness, topological defects, solitons, vortices,
O(N) model, Abelian Higgs model (superconductivity);
5. Gravitation:
Principle of equivalence, curvilinear coordinates, metric, connection, curvature tensor, energymomentum tensor, Einstein equations;
Textbooks:
1. L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz, The Classical Theory of Fields, Pergamon Press, 4th Edition,
1980.
2. G. Giachetta, L. Mangiarotti and G. Sardanashvily, Advanced Classical Field Theory, World
Scientific, 2009.
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Introduction:
Length, time and energy scales in condensed matter, soft and hard condensed matter, examples of materials properties, bonding and interactions, van der Waals interaction, hydrogen
bonding;
Condensed matter systems:
Crystals: Lattice, basis, 2-d and 3-d crystals, point and space groups, symmetries, experimental determination of structure, scattering, lattice with basis, Miller indices, structure factor,
form factors, defects in crystals;
Liquids and glasses, Liquid crystals, Polymers, Quasicrystals;
Electronic Properties:
Jhelium model: Single electron model, density of states, Fermi surface and quasiparticles;
Thermodynamic properties: Review of thermodynamics, statistical mechanics of
non-interacting electrons, Sommerfeld expansion, specific heat, magnetic susceptibility;
Transport properties: Drude Model, electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity thermoelectric phenomena. Band theory;
Electrons in periodic potentials, Blochs theorem, Kronig-Penney model, Brillouin zones,
nearly free and tightly bound electrons, Fermi surfaces, band theory, effective mass, Wannier functions and tight binding, survey of the periodic table;
Lattice vibrations:
Cohesion of solids, mechanical properties, elasticity, constitutive relations;
Modes of lattice vibrations. Quantization and phonons. Statistical mechanics of phonon gas,
Einstein and Debye models, umklapp processes, thermal expansion, Kohn anomalies, chargedensity waves;
Electron phonon interactions;
Semiconductor Physics:
Introduction: Valence and conduction bands. Doping and the Fermi level;
Band diagrams, metal interfaces, work functions, Schottky barrier, diodes and transistors;
Nano-electronics: heterostructures, quantum wells, quantum wires and quantum dots;
Optical Properties:
Optical properties of metals, optical properties of semiconductors, direct and indirect band
gaps, polarization, Clausius-Mosotti relation, polarons, point defects and color centres, metals
at low frequencies, anomalous skin effect, plasmons, Brillouin and Raman scattering;
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1. Fundamental principles :
Elements of probability theory, algebra and calculus of random variables, binomial, Poisson
and Gaussian distributions, moments and cumulants of probability densities, the central limit
theorem, the basic postulate of statistical mechanics, first discussion of ergodicity and mixing;
2. Thermodynamics:
Macroscopic definition of thermodynamic variables, temperature, pressure, work and heat,
the Carnot cycle and empirical definition of entropy, free energy and other thermodynamic
potentials, convexity of entropy and thermodynamic potentials, thermodynamic potentials as
Legendre transforms of the entropy, thermodynamic relations of Maxwell, Gibbs and Duhem,
Clausius and Clapeyron, and Clausius and Mosotti, the third law of thermodynamics;
3. The Gibbs distribution:
Gibbs definition of entropy, the Gibbs distribution as maximisation of entropy subject to
constraints, connection with Legendre transforms, connection to thermodynamics, the three
canonical distributions, the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, the probability distribution of a
classical and quantum harmonic oscillator;
4. Non-interacting systems I:
Classical ideal gas, the Boltzmann distribution and classical statistics, the counting approach
to the Boltzmann distribution, free energy and equation of state of the ideal gas, the law of
equipartition, ideal gases with internal degrees of freedom, diatomic and polyatomic gases, the
magnetism of an ideal gas;
5. Non-interacting systems II:
Fermi distribution, Bose distribution, counting approach to Fermi and Bose distributions,
Fermi and Bose gases of elementary particles, the degenerate electron gas, the specific heat
of the degenerate electron gas, magnetism of an electron gas, the degenerate Bose gas, black
body radiation;
6. Non-interacting systems III:
Solids at high temperature and the Dulong-Petit law, solids at low temperatures and Einsteins
theory of specific heat, the Debye interpolation formula, thermal expansion of solids;
7. Interacting systems I :
Deviations of gases from ideality, van der Waals equation, the conditions of phase equilibrium,
the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, the critical point, law of corresponding states, virial and
cluster expansions, the method of correlation functions, the Ornstein-Zernike relation;
Textbooks:
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First two-third portion of the course is meant for all students, while a bifurcation is made at the
end of this for separately orienting students towards HEP and LEP, during the remaining one-third
portion of the course. Thus the common section has 32 lectures, the other two parts have 16 to 18
lectures.
1. QFT I part I:
(Common to all students. Knowledge of Relativistic Quantum Mechanics, i.e., Dirac equation
and KG equation is expected. Some basic notions of the Lorentz group and Poincare group
are also expected)
Elements of Classical Field theory:
Lagrangian and Hamiltonian densities, quantization of KG and Dirac and electromagnetic
fields, propagators for KG, Dirac and vector (photons) ;
Perturbation theory:
Wicks theorem and Wick expansion, Feynman diagrams, cross sections and S matrix.
Feynman rules for scalars, spinors and gauge fields (Abelian) ;
Elementary processes in QED:
electron positron annihilation, Compton scattering, Bhabha scattering, crossing symmetry etc. ;
Radiative corrections for scalar theory:
loop corrections, regularization and renormalization, dimensional regularization. elementary ideas of the systematics of renormalization ;
Functional method techniques:
Scalar field theory quantization (with, if time permits, some discussion of critical phenomena in this approach) ;
The last two lectures below while not relativistic QFT is included because i would be useful
for HEP students too and hence is placed in the common section
Non-interacting electrons:
Tight binding models, the many body ground state, quasi-particle and quasi-hole excitations. Partially filled bands and Fermi surface kinematics ;
2. QFT 1 part II: (For HEP students)
LSZ formalism:
one loop diagrams in QED, Ward Takahashi identities, regularization in QED ;
Path integral/Functional method
Quantization in spinor and vector (gauge) theories ;
Systematics of renormalization:
Power counting, idea of counter terms, structure of one loop and beyond in scalar and
QED. (no explicit 2 loop calculations etc.) ;
3. QFT I part III: (Many Body Theory for Condensed Matter/LEP students)
Second quantization in operator formalism (non-relativistic):
Diagrammatic perturbation theory, Retarded Greens functions, Spectral function, quasiparticle lifetimes, Angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) ;
Linear response theory and Kubo formulae ;
Interacting bosons:
Symmetry breaking, semi-classical spectrum. Applications to cold atoms and superfluids ;
Mean field theory:
BCS hamiltonian and superconductivity ;
Magnetism:
Heisenberg models. Spin waves. Coherent states and path integrals for spin systems.
Non-linear sigma models ;
Part II and part III will run concurrently, however, to allow the more enterprising and interested
students to attend both parts (if they so wish), lectures for these two parts are intended to be
arranged at non-overlapping times.
Textbooks:
1. M. E. Peskin and D. V. Schroyder, Quantum Field Theory, Sarat Book House, 2005.
2. G. D. Mahan, Many-Particle Physics, Springer, 2010.
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Dynamics of fluctuations:
Linear response in physical systems, the regression of fluctuations and Onsagers hypothesis,
symmetry of kinetic coefficients, the Fokker-Planck and Langevin descriptions of fluctuations,
the fluctuation-dissipation theorem;
Textbooks:
1. L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz, Statistical Physics, 3rd Edition, Butterworth-Heinmann,
1980.
2. H. E. Stanley, Introduction to Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena, Oxford Univ. Press,
1987.
3. D. Chandler, Introduction to Modern Statistical Mechanics, Oxford Univ. Press, 1987.
4. M. Plischke and B. Bergersen, Equilibrium Statistical Mechanics, World Scientific, 1994.
5. R. K. Pathria, Statistical Mechanics, Butterworth-Heinmann, 1996.
6. S.-k. Ma, Modern Theory of Critical Phenomena, Westview Press, 2000.
7. P. M. Chaikin and T. C. Lubensky, Principles of Condensed Matter Physics, Cambridge Univ.
Press, 2000.
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(42a)
Principle of relativity, principle of equivalence, tensors, tensor calculus on Riemannian manifolds, symmetries of Riemannian manifolds, hypersurfaces, extrinsic curvatures,
Gauss-Codazzi equations;
Einsteins field equations:
Newtonian limit, tests of general relativity, gravitational radiation;
Solutions of Einsteins equations :
Schwarzschild solution, Kerr solution, black holes;
Tetrad formulation of gravity, generalizations to arbitrary dimensions;
Hamiltonian formulation :
For metric gravity, for tetrad formulation, canonical quantization and path integral quantization;
Cosmology : Robertson-Walker model, early universe;
Singularity theorems;
Textbooks:
1. S. Weinberg, Gravitation and Cosmology, Wiley, 1972.
2. R. Wald, General Relativity, Chicago, 1987.
(42b)
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Advanced Condensed Matter Physics (four-and-half hours classwork per week, 9
credits)
Correlated Electron Physics: Second quantization review, Hubbard model, Heisenberg model;
Materials phenomenology, magnetic phases, CDW states;
Quantum magnetism, Stoner criterion, double exchange;
Superconductivity, Cooper argument, BCS, gap equation, Bogoliubov-de Gennes equations,
strong coupling theory, RVB and modern approaches to superconductivity in correlated systems;
Quantum Hall effect, integer and fractional, edge states, Laughlin and Jain wave functions,
topological defects; Luttinger liquids, Bethe ansatz;
Mesoscopic physics;
Disordered electronic systems and metal insulator transitions;
Soft Condensed Matter Physics Interactions in soft matter, entropic interactions, fluctuationinduced interactions, hard sphere statistical mechanics and crystallization;
Self-assembly of amphiphiles, phases, theoretical approaches;
Colloids, self-assembly, the freezing transition;
Polymers, polymer structure, self-avoidance, Edwards model, osmotic pressure, Flory-Huggins
theory, screening, semi-flexibility, persistence length;
Membranes, biological membranes, lipid bilayers, physical properties, de Gennes-Taupin length,
tethered membranes;
Liquid crystals, nematic, cholesteric and smectic, order parameters, Frank free energy,
Landau-de Gennes model defects, defect phases;
Survey of hydrodynamics, hydrodynamic approaches to soft matter physics, dynamical properties of polymers, membranes, colloids;
Soft matter away from equilibrium, shear-induced phases;
Optional: Granular media and Glasses;
Textbooks: For Strongly Correlated Systems:1. M. P. Marder, Condensed Matter Physics, Wiley-Interscience, 2000.
2. A. Altland and B. Simons, Condensed Matter Field Theory, Cambridge University Press, 2006.
3. G. D. Mahan, Many-Particle Physics, Springer, 2010.
For Soft Condensed Matter:1. P. M. Chaikin and T. C. Lubensky, Principles of Condensed Matter Physics, 1st Edition,
Cambridge University Press, 2000.
(44a) Quantum Information and Computation (four-and-half hours classwork per week, 9
credits)
Resume of Quantum Mechanics:
Composite quantum systems and tensor product Hilbert spaces, Subsystems and density operators, From Schrodinger to Liouville evolution; completely positive maps as quantum channels;
From projective measurements to POVMs; State estimation;
Entanglement and its applications:
EPR argument and Bell inequalities; Separability vs. entanglement; Positive unphysical maps
witnessing entanglement; Partial transpose criterion for checking separability; Other entanglement detection criteria; Multi-partite entanglement; Quantum teleportation, dense coding,
entanglement swapping;
Connection with Shannon information theory:
Shannons noiseless coding theorem and Schumachers quantum counterpart; Accessible information and Holevos bound; Shannons noisy channel coding theorem and HSW theorem;
Quantum channel capacities; Decoherence and quantum error correction;
Measures of entanglement:
Thermodynamic considerations of entanglement under LOCC; Entanglement concentration
and dilution; Several measures of entanglement; Majorization;
Quantum Cryptography:
Basics of classical cryptography; RSA cryptosystem; Quantum key distribution; Security of
quantum key distribution;
Entanglement in continuous variable systems:
Gaussian states; Role of Wingner description and symplectic transformations; Quantum information processing with continuous variable systems;
Quantum computation:
Classical and quantum computers; Circuit complexity; One- and two-qubit gates; Universality
of gates; Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm; Grovers search algorithm; Quantum Fourier transform and
Shors factorization algorithm;
Implementations:
Quantum key distribution experiments; Unconditional quantum teleportation using continuous
variable systems; Implementations of quantum computers using NMR, trapped ions, Josephson
junctions, linear optical devices, etc.;
Recommended readings:
1. Quantum Computation and Information, Michael A. Nielsen and Issac L. Chuang (Cambridge
University Press, 2000);
2. John Preskills Lectures on Quantum Information and Computation, available at:
http://theory.caltech.edu/people/preskill/ph229/]lecture;
3. David Mermins Lectures on Quantum Computation, available at:
http://people.ccmr.cornell.edu/ mermin/qcomp/CS483.html;
4. The Physics of Quantum Information: Quantum Cryptography, Quantum Teleportation,
Quantum Computation, Dik Bouwmeester, Artur Ekert, Anton Zeilinger (eds.) (Springer,
2000);
5. Elements of Information Theory, Thomas M. Cover and Joy A. Thomas (John Wiley & Sons,
1999);
6. Contemporary review articles available at:- http://xxx.imsc.res.in/archive/quant-ph
(44b)
Hamiltonian formulation :
Iterative maps, fixed points, Lyapunov exponents, Integrable systems, Perturbed integrable
systems, Poincare-Birkhoff construction (illustration with driven pendulum);
Deterministic Nonlinear Dynamics :
Discrete dynamics and maps, differentiable dynamics : dissipative systems, non-dissipative
systems, Hamiltonian systems;
Integrability Aspects of Hamiltonian Dynamics :
Liouville-Arnold theorem, KAM theory;
Chaos :
In discrete dynamical systems, in Hamiltonian systems, in dissipative systems;
Semiclassical Analysis :
Berry-Tabor theory, Gutzwiller Theory;
Quantum Aspects.
Textbook:
1. M. Tabor, Chaos and Integrability in Nonlinear Dynamics, Wiley, 1989.
2. M. C. Gutzwiller, Chaos in Classical and QUantum Mechanics, Springer, 1990.
3. I. Percival and D. Richards, Introduction to Dynamics, Cambridge, 1991.
4. L. Reichl, A Modern Course in Statistical Physics, Wiley, 1998.
5. S.H. Strogatz, Nonlinear dynamics and Chaos: Applications to Physics, Biology, Chemistry
and Engineering, Cambridge, 2001.
6. M. Lakshmanan and S. Rajasekar, Nonlinear Dynamics, Springer, 2003.
7. L. Reichl, The transition to Chaos, Springer, 2004.
(44c)