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About the Major

At Hamilton, physics students learn in small classes with faculty members who offer one-on-one encouragement, personal direction, and research opportunities suited to their needs. Lab work is central to their studies, and senior projects often produce results that are presented at conferences or published in journals. Prospective engineers will be interested in Hamilton’s five-year, combined-degree programs with Columbia University, the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and Washington University in St. Louis. Astronomy is a minor within the department. 

Students Will Learn To:

  • Exhibit broad understanding in foundational physics
  • Use foundational physics to analyze a diverse set of complex problems
  • Demonstrate skills for experimental physics
  • Demonstrate skills in technical communication

A Sampling of Courses

Observatory

Introduction to Astronomy

A description of the universe, starting with the appearance and organization of the solar system and working outward. Development of the heliocentric view. Observational deduction of properties of stars. Stellar evolution and its relation to pulsars and black holes. Galaxies and the structure and history of the universe.

Explore these select courses:

Meet Our Faculty

Gordon Jones

Stone Professor of Natural History, Chair of Physics, Director of Chemical Physics

gjones@hamilton.edu

neutron spin filters and angular correlations in neutron decay

fractal analysis of Jackson Pollock drip paintings; theoretical cosmology; and non-Hermitian quantum mechanics

Charles Collett

Assistant Professor of Physics

cacollet@hamilton.edu

Experimental condensed matter, electron spin resonance spectroscopy and related electronics, computations and simulations to improve both research and teaching

Viva Horowitz

Assistant Professor of Physics

vhorowit@hamilton.edu

Experimental condensed matter

Amani Jayakody

Assistant Professor of Physics

ajayakod@hamilton.edu

Experimental condensed matter physics

Adam Lark

Associate Professor of Instruction for Physics

alark@hamilton.edu

Exoplanet detection, physics education research, and electronics

Seth Major

Litchfield Professor of Astronomy

smajor@hamilton.edu

quantum gravity, quantum geometry, general relativity and quantum gravity phenomenology

Megan Marshall Smith

Assistant Professor of Instruction in Physics

mdsmith@hamilton.edu

computational physics, black holes, and astrophysical plasmas

Careers After Hamilton

Hamilton graduates who concentrated in physics are pursuing careers in a variety of fields, including:

  • Optical Physicist, NASA Headquarters
  • Mechanical Engineer, U.S. Navy
  • Professor of Physics, University of Michigan
  • Materials Science Engineer, United Technologies Carrier Corp.
  • Associate Editor, McGraw-Hill
  • Engineer, General Motors
  • Senior Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Director, Global Financial Systems, Foster Wheeler Corp.
  • Physics Teacher, Natick Public Schools

Explore Hamilton Stories

Assistant Professor of Physics Viva Horowitz (center) with summer researchers Maya Kannan ’25 (left) and Sara Conti ’27 (right)

Physics Students Contribute Research on a Microscopic Level

“This project really taught us that to answer the big questions, sometimes you have to ask a bunch of little questions,” said Sara Cont ’27, who, with Maya Kannan ’25 and Madeleine Petro ’25 embarked on a trailblazing physics project this summer under the guidance of Assistant Professor of Physics Viva Horowitz.

Assistant Professor of Physics Charles Collett sings with the Hamilton College Choir

The Singing Physicist

Hamilton professor Charles Collett recently became a member of the College Choir, a group traditionally made up of student singers. He talked about rehearsing and performing, as well as his inspiration for joining.

 Katherine Brown (Jones-Smith)

A Ninth Planet or Modified Newtonian Dynamics?

Far out in the dark recesses of our solar system, the gravitational orbits of certain Kuiper Belt objects behave strangely.

Contact

Department Name

Physics Department

Contact Name

Gordon Jones, Chair

Office Location
198 College Hill Road
Clinton, NY 13323

Help us provide an accessible education, offer innovative resources and programs, and foster intellectual exploration.