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The Department of Physics provides graduate programs culminating in a PhD degree. While pursuing their doctorate, students can request an MA degree as an intermediate step. However, the department does not accept applications from candidates seeking only an MA degree, except in special circumstances where students may apply for a terminal MA. The PhD curriculum emphasizes research, with opportunities spanning theoretical and experimental physics disciplines such as astrophysics, cosmology, atomic/molecular/optical physics, biophysics, condensed matter, particle physics, plasma physics, low-temperature physics, mathematical physics, nuclear physics, quantum computing, space physics, and statistical mechanics.
The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory offers substantial research possibilities in astrophysics, particle/nuclear physics, condensed matter physics, materials science, and plasma/nuclear physics. Collaborative research between the Physics Department and Space Sciences Laboratory explores space physics, interplanetary phenomena, solar plasma dynamics, upper atmospheric physics, and cosmological investigations.