The test attempts to determine the extent of the examinees' understanding of fundamental principles of physics and their ability to apply them in problem solution.
The scope of the test is largely that of the first three years of a standard United States undergraduate physics curriculum.
MAJOR CONTENT TOPICS | Percentage |
1. Classical mechanics
|
20% |
2. Electromagnetism | 18% |
3. Optics and wave phenomena[?] | 9% |
4. Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics | 10% |
5. Quantum mechanics | 12% |
6. Atomic physics | 10% |
7. Special relativity | 6% |
8. Laboratory methods | 6% |
9. Specialized topics
|
Also:
Mathematical methods and their applications in physics
Range of Raw Scores Needed to Earn Selected Scaled Scores on Three Physics Test Editions That Differ in Difficulty |
---|
Scaled Score | Raw Scores | ||
Form A | Form B | Form C | |
900 | 75 | 71 | 60-61 |
800 | 61 | 57 | 45 |
700 | 47 | 43-44 | 33 |
600 | 33-34 | 29-30 | 22 |
Number of Questions Used to Compute Raw Score | |||
100 | 100 | 98 |
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