I love your videos even though I'm a PhD student in tropical botany and will never be confronted with this type of research ahah ! Please keep going :)
Hi Afik. I love your content! Please make the video about the textbooks you used. Thanks!
Can't wait for the textbooks video!!
I could never do a degree, let alone a physics degree. Lol! I don't even understand how levers work. However I am very pleased that there are people who are clever enough to do these studies. There is something very admirable about a decent person doing something good with their life.
Bloody loved this video, bravo !
Great video Afiq
Please do not ignore me. I want your opinion, i like the topic of physics and i want to study it. Problem is i do not want to have to physically attend university but i am ready to self study and study online , i am hoping to do a master's degree in CS online from Georgia Tech (OMSCS) and after that combine what i will learn from thst masters with my self study of physics and math(MIT online lectures and other sources) to peruse a career in computational physics. The end goal is to be able to publish research and papers in respectable physics journals.
Hey, just wondering if you have any advice for a maths interview at Cambridge because I’ve got both of mine on Monday ðŸ˜ðŸ˜
Hello, I would like to ask a small question. Is it possible to take these courses by self-learning? Thank you!
Thank you for the video.
I find it pretty interesting that yout took all these physics courses and still decided to jump into finance. my question now is, how much of physics and that math that you've learned is actually used in your jobs? I'm currently an undergrad in physics at ETH-Zurich and its pretty common that banks and quantative trading companies try to recrute math- and physics students, but I dont see the jump from theoritecal physics to finance.
I am curious about the difficulties. Was it abstract mathematics that made it difficult or were the physical models hard to understand? I have a math background so things like topology and geometry are understandable to me, but I sometimes fear the concepts in physics will get so hard that my math knowledge is useless if I pursued a Physics PhD. I audited QM this semester and I found all of that stuff conceptually accessible. Not sure how hard it really gets.
This may sound stupid but how could someone learn these things, not for a degree or anything but just out of curiosity?
All wonderfull!!!
How hard is it to get into maths part3 is it worth it? All of the course you mentioned are given to students in the graduate program at my current uni.
do you have a recommendation on books, lecture and roadmap specifically for self-learners
What textbooks/lecture notes did you use for each course?
Can you make a video how you got accepted and what can I as a 1st year physics undergrad do to get accepted at institutions like Cambridge or Oxford to better prepare for masters in these colleges
Hi, Afiq! Thanks for making this video :) I just got accepted into the MASt in Theoretical Physics at Cambridge 🥳I would love to have your opinion on how students treat each other since I've heard that this programme is so competitive that it becomes toxic between other students. Is this true or are students supportive? How was your experience dealing with the workload?
@StianOke