Main navigation
- Programs
- Subjects
- Universities
- Destinations
- Advice
As one of the foundational science departments at the UW-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health, the Department of Medical Physics provides extensive education in diagnostic and therapeutic medical physics, along with health physics. Earning a PhD from this department demonstrates exceptional academic rigor and research capabilities within one of North America's premier medical physics programs. Alumni are equipped for careers in academia, research institutions, national labs, or the medical and nuclear technology sectors. They also meet the qualifications for medical physics residency programs, paving the way for clinical board certification.
Medical physicists play vital roles in patient care, advanced medical imaging, diagnostic processes, and related research and education. Health physicists oversee radiation safety programs in nuclear facilities, hospitals, or research labs, or conduct studies on ionizing radiation measurement techniques (dosimetry).
The medical physics program stands out due to its faculty's diverse expertise and research specializations. Students gain knowledge in diagnostic x-ray physics, CT imaging, MRI and spectroscopy, nuclear medicine and PET imaging, biomagnetism, medical ultrasound, elastography, radiation dosimetry, treatment planning, and radiobiology.
International applicants must have a degree comparable to a regionally accredited U.S. bachelor’s degree.
English Language Requirement
Minimum TOEFL requirement: 92 internet (iBT); 580 paper-based test (PBT)
Minimum IELTS requirement: 7.0