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The Geophysical Sciences Department provides distinctive academic programs focusing on earth, atmospheric, and planetary sciences. Subjects covered encompass atmospheric, oceanic, and cryospheric physics, chemistry, and dynamics; historical and contemporary climate shifts; the formation and chronology of Earth, the moon, and meteorites; characteristics of Earth's deep interior and tectonic plate movements; as well as the development of life and terrestrial environments across geological eras. These interdisciplinary subjects demand a comprehensive methodology rooted in mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology. Student research possibilities expand through collaborations with the Enrico Fermi Institute, Field Museum of Natural History, National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and various national laboratories. The department offers resources for sediment transport studies, satellite data interpretation, atmospheric chemistry research, remote atmospheric sensing, weather pattern analysis, high-pressure and high-temperature mineralogical and geophysical experiments, fossil preparation and imaging, low-temperature geochemical and sedimentological investigations, neutron activation trace-element analysis, and specialized equipment including electron and ion microprobes, scanning electron microscopes, stable isotope mass spectrometers, and X-ray diffractometers.
Students are required to have high school equivalent of US qualification.
Applicants are required to have score of 100 or higher on the Internet-Based TOEFL or 600 or higher on the Paper-Based TOEFL. Minimum required scores on the IELTS are an overall score of 7.0, with subs cores of 7.0 each. The minimum acceptable score on the PTE is 70