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The Department of Physics provides graduate studies culminating in Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees. Research spans both experimental and theoretical physics across diverse disciplines including atmospheric physics, geophysics, quantum optics, condensed matter physics, subatomic physics, astrophysics, and biophysics. The department maintains strong collaborations with the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics (CITA), allowing students to collaborate with and learn from prominent theorists affiliated with CITA. Admission follows the School of Graduate Studies' General Regulations, with financial assistance available for one year of MSc studies and four years for PhD candidates (extended to five years for direct-entry PhD students).
The University of Toronto's Biological Physics program adopts a broad, interdisciplinary approach that bridges Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. Faculty research encompasses multiple scales - from individual biomolecules to entire organisms - employing diverse methodologies such as advanced optical microscopy, ultrafast laser spectroscopy, magnetic resonance techniques, computational modeling, machine vision, and data analysis. This field seeks to unravel the physical principles governing biological complexity. For those fascinated by the physics of living systems and eager to participate in this dynamic, cross-disciplinary scientific frontier, Biological Physics offers compelling opportunities.