

BSc Physics with a Year Abroad
About this course
Physics is the most fundamental of the natural sciences, concerned with the nature of matter, energy, space, and time, and the laws that govern how they interact. From the particles that make up the atom to the structure of the cosmos, physics seeks to understand the deep regularities of the universe through a combination of precise observation, mathematical modelling, and experimental testing. It is a discipline that has produced some of the most profound intellectual achievements in human history, including quantum mechanics, general relativity, and the standard model of particle physics, and that continues to generate new understanding with extraordinary practical consequences. At the University of Liverpool, this four-year programme incorporates a year abroad at a partner institution, giving you the experience of studying physics in a different academic culture and research environment. During your three years of academic study at Liverpool, you will build a thorough grounding in the core areas of undergraduate physics: classical and quantum mechanics, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, optics, and special relativity. You will develop your mathematical skills alongside your physical understanding, and you will work in laboratories developing the experimental techniques and data analysis skills that physics research demands. Liverpool's physics department has research strengths in particle physics, astrophysics, and accelerator science, and the degree benefits from close connections to that research activity. Physics graduates are in high demand because the analytical, mathematical, and problem-solving skills developed in the degree transfer widely across sectors. Research careers in academia, the National Laboratories, the nuclear industry, and the space sector draw graduates who want to stay close to fundamental or applied science. Finance, particularly quantitative roles in banking and asset management, consistently attracts physics graduates. Engineering, defence, computing, and data science also provide major employment destinations. Teaching physics at secondary level is a well-supported career pathway, and there is consistent demand for physics teachers in UK schools. Some graduates continue to postgraduate study, either deepening their physics expertise or moving into related fields such as materials science, engineering, or mathematical finance.
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