Physics
Get insights from 6.8k questions on Physics, answered by students, alumni, and experts. You may also ask and answer any question you like about Physics
Follow Ask QuestionQuestions
Discussions
Active Users
Followers
New answer posted
5 years agoContributor-Level 6
Following are the books you can use-
Fundamentals of Electricity and Magnetism: R. G. Mendiratta and B. K. Sawhney East -West Press ( 1976)
Waves and Oscillations-N K Bajaj
Fundamental of Optics, Jenkins and White, McGraw Hill (for Aberrations, Optical Instruments and Quantum Optics).
New answer posted
5 years agoGuide-Level 14
https://www.shiksha.com/university/tezpur-university/tuee-exam-syllabus
New question posted
5 years agoNew answer posted
5 years agoGuide-Level 11
As you're interested in computers & physics, my suggestion is that, you can take either B.Sc. Computers or B.Tech in CSE. In B.Tech you have only Computers education in 3 years out of 4. In B.Sc. You've physics in first year & remaining years are of computers.
New answer posted
5 years agoScholar-Level 18
1. Modern physics
2. Electrostatic (Electricity and Magnetism)
3. Optics (Young's double slit experiment, Instrument analysis)
4. Work Power Energy (Work energy theorem)
New answer posted
5 years agoScholar-Level 16
https://www.shiksha.com/hospitality-travel/travel-tourism/colleges/diploma-courses-delhi-ncr
New question posted
5 years agoNew answer posted
5 years agoScholar-Level 16
https://www.shiksha.com/aviation/flying-pilot-training/articles/career-in-commercial-flying-all-you-need-to-know-blogId-13472
New answer posted
5 years agoContributor-Level 8
https://www.shiksha.com/university/panjab-university/pu-cet-pg-exam?course=1039
New question posted
5 years agoTaking an Exam? Selecting a College?
Get authentic answers from experts, students and alumni that you won't find anywhere else
Sign Up on ShikshaOn Shiksha, get access to
- 64k Colleges
- 968 Exams
- 627k Reviews
- 1500k Answers