Courses

Course Listing

For a snapshot of courses being offered by Harvard School of Engineering over the next four years, visit our Multi-Year Course Planning tool.

 

Physics as a Foundation for Science and Engineering, Part I

APPHY 50A
2024 Fall

Eric Mazur, Giulia Semeghini, Robert Haussman
Tuesday, Thursday
9:45am to 12:30pm

AP 50A is the first half of a year-long, team- and project-based introduction to physics focusing on the application of physics to real-world problems. The AP 50A and B sequence, designed for engineering and physics concentrators, is equivalent in content and rigor to a standard calculus-based introductory physics course sequence. Lectures and exams are replaced by interactive, hands-on, and collaborative learning activities that will not only help you master physics concepts and hone your scientific reasoning and problem-solving skills, but also grow your capacity for self-directed learning and develop your collaborative skills.

Course Content: Kinematics, mechanics, waves

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Physics as a Foundation for Science and Engineering, Part II

APPHY 50B
2025 Spring

Kelly Miller, Doeke Hekstra, Robert Haussman
Tuesday, Thursday
9:45am to 12:30pm

AP 50B is the second half of a year-long, team- and project-based introduction to physics focusing on the application of physics to real-world problems. The AP 50A and B sequence, designed for engineering and physics concentrators, is equivalent in content and rigor to a standard calculus-based introductory physics course sequence. Lectures and exams are replaced by interactive, hands-on, and collaborative learning activities that will not only help you master physics concepts and hone your scientific reasoning and problem-solving skills, but also grow your capacity for self-directed learning and develop your collaborative skills.

Course Content: Electromagnetism and optics

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Introduction to Solid State Physics

APPHY 195A
2024 Fall

Julia Mundy
Monday, Wednesday
3:00pm to 4:15pm

The physics of crystalline solids and their electric, magnetic, optical, and thermal properties. Designed as a first course in solid-state physics. Topics: free electron model; Drude model; the physics of crystal binding; crystal structure and vibration (phonons); x-ray diffraction; electrons in solids (Bloch theorem) and electronic band structures; metals and insulators; semiconductors (and their applications in pn junctions and transistors); magnetism; superconductivity.

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Introduction to Quantum Materials and Devices

APPHY 195B
2025 Spring

Robert Westervelt
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
3:00pm to 4:15pm

This course provides an introduction to quantum materials and devices, including low-dimensional materials, single and double quantum dots, Josephson junctions, and graphene. Their behavior is explained using quantum and semiclassical transport, the Coulomb blockade, and superconductivity. Quantum devices offer new approaches for electronics and photonics.

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Quantum and Classical Electromagnetic Interaction with Matter

APPHY 216
2025 Spring

Donhee Ham
Monday, Wednesday
1:30pm to 2:45pm

The first half of the course will cover the interaction of quantized atoms with electromagnetic fields, introducing a number of basic concepts such as coherent Rabi transitions vs. rate-equation dynamics, stimulated & spontaneous transitions, and energy & phase relaxations. These will be then used to study a range of applications of atom-field interactions, such as nuclear magnetic resonance, molecular beam and paramagnetic masers, passive and active atomic clocks, dynamic nuclear polarization, pulse sequence techniques to coherently manipulate atomic quantum states, and laser oscillators with applications. We will also touch upon the interaction of quantized atoms with quantized fields, discussing the atom + photon (Jaynes-Cummings) Hamiltonian, dressed states, and cavity quantum electrodynamics. The second half will cover the classical interaction of electromagnetic fields with matter, with special attentions to collective electrodynamics in particular, magnetohydrodynamics and plasma physics with applications in astrophysics, space physics, and Bloch electrons in crystalline solids.

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Foundations of Modern Optics

APPHY 217
2024 Fall

Lene Hau
Tuesday, Thursday
10:30am to 11:45am

Foundational concepts of E&M, optics, imaging, and interaction of electromagnetic fields with matter. Topics include electromagnetic wave propagation, optical properties of materials from a microscopic viewpoint, propagation of electromagnetic fields in inhomogeneous media: Ray optics and effective forces on optical rays and ray bending. Fourier Optics and advanced imaging based on full E-M wave theory. The lens as a Fourier transformer, Fourier synthesis and phase contrast imaging. Light matter interactions in the semiclassical limit and quantization of the electromagnetic radiation field. We will illustrate the material with applications in AMO physics and in biological as well as astrophysical imaging. The class has two weekly lectures and, in parallel, a series of workshops with a project-based approach that will illustrate and support the material covered in the lectures and motivate the homework problems. 

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Electrical, Optical, and Magnetic Properties of Materials

APPHY 218
2024 Fall

Xin Li
Tuesday, Thursday
1:30pm to 2:45pm

This course covers the electrical, optical and magnetic properties of technologically important materials. It provides a quantitative description of structure-property relation by introducing tensor property, crystal symmetry, Neumann's principle and Curie principle. A variety of properties of materials are then introduced, including pyroelectricity, dielectricity, piezoelectricity, ferroelectricity; pyromagnetism, magnetoelectricity, piezomagnetism, ferromagnetism; defect chemistry, transport properties and applications in semiconducting, dielectric and energy storage materials; crystal optics including birefringence, Pockels effect, Kerr effect, photoelastic effect and optical activity. In addition, special topics will cover ferroelectric and ferromagnetic phase transitions and electrical, optical and magnetic properties of energy storage materials.

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Introduction to Soft Matter

APPHY 225
2024 Fall

David Weitz
Tuesday, Thursday
10:30am to 11:45am

This course will present a survey of soft matter physics, providing an overview of the richness and breadth of the field. The emphasis will be on the physics of the systems, rather than on the formalism. It will cover most of the fields of interest within soft matter physics, both current and through the history of the field. The course is intended to be of value to both experimentalists and theorists.

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Chemistry in Materials Science and Engineering

APPHY 235
2024 Fall

Joanna Aizenberg
Monday, Wednesday
2:15pm to 3:30pm

Select topics in materials chemistry, focusing on chemical bonds, crystal chemistry, organic and polymeric materials, hybrid materials, surfaces and interfaces, self-assembly, electrochemistry, biomaterials, and bio-inspired materials synthesis.

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Introduction to Single-Molecule Biophysics

APPHY 242
2024 Fall

Maxim Prigozhin
Monday, Wednesday
10:30am to 11:45am

Single-molecule biophysics is a vibrant research field that has grown substantially over the past ~30 years. The impact of single-molecule biophysics has been significant in terms of not only the experimental and theoretical methods that have been developed, but also the scientific insights in biological and soft matter science that these tools have enabled. This course covers the motivation behind single-molecule measurements in biology and, for the majority of the time, focuses on discussing state-of-the-art single-molecule imaging techniques as well as the key biological discoveries that they have enabled.

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Platforms for Quantum Science

APPHY 276
2025 Spring

Giulia Semeghini
Tuesday, Thursday
12:00pm to 1:15pm

The course introduces various aspects of quantum science, including quantum computing, quantum simulation, quantum communication and quantum metrology. It will particularly focus on the presentation of different experimental platforms currently used in the field and include superconducting qubits, trapped ions, neutral atoms, defects in solids, photons, among others. The course will cover an introduction of the general goals and essential prerequisites for these platforms; it will elucidate their operational principles and highlight some of their most significant and recent achievements, as well as the main challenges in their development.

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Solids: Structure and Defects

APPHY 282
2024 Fall

Frans Spaepen
Tuesday, Thursday
9:00am to 10:15am

Bonding, crystallography, diffraction, phase diagrams, microstructure, point defects, dislocations, and grain boundaries.

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Statistical Mechanics

APPHY 284
2024 Fall

Vinothan Manoharan, Sunghan Ro
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
12:00pm to 1:15pm

Basic principles of statistical physics with applications including: the equilibrium properties of classical and quantum gases; phase diagrams, phase transitions and critical points, as illustrated by the gas-liquid transition and simple magnetic models; Bose-Einstein condensation.

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Research Practices and Academic Culture in Applied Sciences and Engineering

APPHY 290A
2025 Spring

Vinothan Manoharan, John Girash
Thursday
3:00pm to 5:00pm

This course supports new PhD students in finding their research fit, building good research habits, and becoming a researcher. It consists of two 2-unit courses: 290a (spring of G1 year) focuses on adapting to a research group, developing strong reading and writing habits, and preparing students for teaching during their G2 year; 290b (fall of G2 year) focuses on oral communication and on preparing students for the qualifying exam. This course also develops other skills necessary for success in graduate school such as setting goals, peer feedback, research ethics, collaboration and teamwork, and negotiation.

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Electron Microscopy Laboratory

APPHY 291
2025 Spring

David Bell
Monday
1:30pm to 2:45pm

Lectures and laboratory instruction on transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and Cs corrected, aberration-correction microscopy and microanalysis. Lab classes include; diffraction, dark field imaging, X-ray spectroscopy, electron energy-loss spectroscopy, atomic imaging, materials sample preparation, polymers, and biological samples.

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Kinetics of Condensed Phase Processes

APPHY 292
2025 Spring

Frans Spaepen
Tuesday, Thursday
9:00am to 10:15am

Kinetic principles underlying atomic motions, transformations, and other atomic transport processes in condensed matter. Application to atomic diffusion, continuous phase transformations, nucleation, growth, coarsening and mechanisms of plastic deformation.

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Introduction to Quantum Theory of Solids

APPHY 295A
2024 Fall

Subir Sachdev
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
12:00pm to 1:15pm

Lattices and symmetries. Electronic Structure of Crystals. Semiclassical Transport Theory. Semiconductors. Localization. Integer Quantum Hall effect. Topological Insulators. Phonons. Additional topics from the theory of interacting electrons, including introduction to magnetism and superconductivity.

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Quantum Theory of Solids

APPHY 295B
2025 Spring

Subir Sachdev
Tuesday
3:00pm to 5:45pm

A course on the application of the principles of many-particle quantum mechanics to the properties of solids. The objective is to make students familiar with the tools of second quantization and diagrammatic perturbation theory, while describing the theory of the electron liquid, the BCS theory of superconductivity, and theory of magnetism in metals and insulators. Modern topics on correlated electron systems will occupy the latter part of the course.

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Mesoscale and Low Dimensional Devices

APPHY 296
2025 Spring

Donhee Ham
Tuesday, Thursday
1:30pm to 2:45pm

Concepts of condensed matter physics are applied to the science and technology of beyond-CMOS devices, in particular, mesoscale, low-dimensional, and superconducting devices. Topics include: quantum dots/wires/wells and two-dimensional (2D) materials; optoelectronics with confined electrons; conductance quantization, Landauer-Buttiker formalism, and resonant tunneling; magneto oscillation; integer and fractional quantum Hall effects; Berry phase and topology in condensed matter physics; various Hall effects (anomalous, spin, valley, etc.); Weyl semimetal; topological insulator; spintronic devices and circuits; collective electron behaviors in low dimensions and applications; Cooper-pair boxes and superconducting quantum circuits.

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Special Topics in Applied Physics

APPHY 299R
2024 Fall

Federico Capasso

Supervision of experimental or theoretical research on acceptable problems in applied physics and supervision of reading on topics not covered by regular courses of instruction.

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Special Topics in Applied Physics

APPHY 299R
2025 Spring

Federico Capasso

Supervision of experimental or theoretical research on acceptable problems in applied physics and supervision of reading on topics not covered by regular courses of instruction.

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Foundations of Quantum Mechanics

ENG-SCI 200
2024 Fall

Federico Capasso
Wednesday, Friday
3:00pm to 4:15pm

This course is an introduction to the foundations of quantum mechanics, with specific focus on the basic principles involved in the control of quantum systems. Experimental foundations of quantum mechanics. Superposition principle, Schrödinger’s equation, eigenvalue and time dependent problems, wave packets, coherent states; uncertainty principle. One dimensional problems: double well potentials, tunneling, resonant tunneling, harmonic oscillator. WKB approximation. Hermitian operators and expectation values; time evolution and Hamiltonian, commutation rules, transfer matrix methods. Schrödinger, Heisenberg and interaction representations. Perturbation theory. Variational methods. Angular momentum, spin, Pauli matrices. Coherent interaction of light with two-level systems. Quantization of the EM field, absorption, spontaneous and stimulated emission. Density matrix and applications. Elements of quantum information (qubits, entanglement, teleportation, etc.). Taking this course meets the quantum mechanics core course requirement for the Applied Physics model programs.

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Optics and Photonics

ENG-SCI 273
2025 Spring

Federico Capasso
Monday, Wednesday
3:00pm to 4:15pm

The focus is on the foundations of optics/photonics and on some of its most important modern developments and applications. Powerful and widely used computational tools will be developed in the sections. Topics to be covered: Maxwell's equations, Free space optics. Reflection, refraction, polarization (Jones Calculus and Stokes parameters); interference and diffraction. Light-matter interaction, dispersion and absorption. Guided wave optics (including optical fibers). Perturbation and couple mode theory, transfer matrix methods; numerical methods. Optical resonators.  Photonic crystals. Near-field optics. Metal optics and Plasmonics. Metamaterials and Metasurfaces.

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Humanity and its Futures: AI and Human Cognition

ENG-SCI 294
2025 Spring

Fawwaz Habbal
Tuesday
9:45am to 12:30pm

This course provides students with an understanding of the complexities surrounding today’s most intractable problems and helps them develop methodologies for navigating the challenges they will face. After introducing systems thinking, with a focus on interconnections and feedback loops, the course will address a significant interdisciplinary issue: Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its relationship to human cognition.

 

The study of AI and human cognition is both timely and dynamic. This expansive domain integrates computer science, statistics, big data, cognitive science, psychology, and philosophy. As a transformative technology, AI has achieved remarkable success in understanding natural language and emulating human reasoning, making it invaluable in augmenting human cognition.

Despite these advances, many questions remain about the nature of AI and its relationship with human thought. This course invites participants to explore these questions through an intellectual journey. Students will engage in discussions on systems and paradigms, the essence of intelligence, computational approaches, mind and machine metaphors, cognitive biases in AI, and the role of AI in creativity and intuition.

The course emphasizes collaborative learning, with students working in teams to learn from each other, as well as from lectures and selected literature. Each lecture will be paired with research papers and books, followed by a discussion session.

The topics covered in the course are listed in the syllabus. Each will include an overview of the issue and its significance. Students will apply systems thinking and a multidisciplinary approach to analyze and critique each topic. By the end of the course, students will have developed a strong framework for multidisciplinary discussions, gained a deep understanding of AI’s power, limitations, and risks, and explored its technical building blocks through hands-on exercises. Additionally, students will experience the value of collaboration and the importance of diversity while working in diverse teams.

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ESG Undergraduate Teaching

MIT ES .200
2024 Fall

An opportunity to assist in the teaching of subjects in ESG in biology, chemistry, humanities and social sciences, mathematics, and physics. Student instructors may be involved in grading, running problemsolving sessions, or teaching classes depending on experience and interest. Qualified students may also develop and teach undergraduate seminars under the supervision of an appropriate faculty or staff member. Student instructors meet weekly with staff to discuss their teaching and cover a variety of topics related to effective teaching techniques.
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Foundations of Quantum Mechanics

QSE 200
2023 Fall

Federico Capasso
Monday, Wednesday
3:00pm to 4:15pm

This course is an introduction to the foundations of quantum mechanics, with specific focus on the basic principles involved in the control of quantum systems. Experimental foundations of quantum mechanics. Superposition principle, Schrödinger’s equation, eigenvalue and time dependent problems, wave packets, coherent states; uncertainty principle. One dimensional problems: double well potentials, tunneling and resonant tunneling; WKB approximation. Hermitian operators and expectation values; time evolution and Hamiltonian, commutation rules, transfer matrix methods. Crystals, Bloch theorem, superlattices. Angular momentum, spin, Pauli matrices. Coherent interaction of light with two-level systems. Quantization of the EM field, spontaneous and stimulated emission; qubits, entanglement, teleportation.

Taking this course meets the quantum mechanics core course requirement for the Applied Physics model programs.

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