Apr 20, 2024  
2017-2018 Catalog 
    
2017-2018 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

Lower Division Courses numbered 1–99 are designed primarily for freshmen and sophomores but are open to all students for lower division credit. (Graduate students requesting to enroll in lower-division undergraduate courses will not receive unit credit nor will the course fulfill degree requirements.) Upper Division Courses courses numbered 100–199 are open to all students who have met the necessary prerequisites as indicated in the catalog course description. Preparation should generally include completion of one lower division course in the given subject or completion of two years of college work.

GRADUATE COURSES

Courses numbered 200–299 are open to graduate students. (Undergraduate students must obtain the signature of the instructor, School Dean, and the Dean of Graduate Studies. Graduate level units will count towards the required 120 units for graduation; however students are urged to meet with their academic advisor in order to determine if graduate course units may be used to fulfill a graduation requirement.)

CROSS-LISTED/CONJOINED COURSES

Cross-listed Courses are the same course offered under different course subjects at the same level (either undergraduate or graduate) that share the same meeting time, requirements, units, etc. Conjoined Courses are the same course but one is undergraduate and one is graduate.

COREQUISITE COURSE

A corequisite course is a course that must be taken at the same time as another course.

PREREQUISITES

Prerequisites for courses should be followed carefully; the responsibility for meeting these requirements rests on the student. If you can demonstrate that your preparation is equivalent to that specified by the prerequisites, the instructor may waive these requirements for you. The instructor also may request that a student who has not completed the prerequisites be dropped from the course. If the prerequisite for a course is not satisfied, students must obtain the approval of the instructor (or school designee) of the course they wish to take.

For all undergraduate courses a “C-” or better grade is required for a course to be used as a prerequisite for another course. If a course was taken for a “P/NP” grade then a “P” grade is required.

For all graduate courses a “B” or better grade is required for a course to be used as a prerequisite for another course. If a course was taken for a “S/U” grade then a “S” grade is required.

FOREIGN LANGUAGES

No credit is allowed for completing a less advanced course after successful completion (C-or better) of a more advanced course in the foreign languages. This applies only to lower division foreign language courses, not upper division courses. 

GRADING OPTIONS

Unless otherwise stated in the course description, each course is letter graded with a P/NP or S/U option (unless required for your major or graduate program). The policy regarding Grading Options , can be found in an alternate section of the catalog.

More information about Course Substitutions  and Course Materials and Services Fees  can be found in alternate areas of the catalog.

 

History

  
  • HIST 298: Directed Group Study


    [1-12 units]

    Group project under faculty supervision.

    Permission of instructor required. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • HIST 299: Directed Independent Study


    [1-12 units]

    Independent project under faculty supervision.

    Permission of instructor required. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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Human Biology

  
  • HBIO 190: Research Seminar


    [1 unit]

    Student-led presentations of current topics in human biology, including independent research presentations.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option.


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  • HBIO 195: Research Project in Human Biology


    [1-5 units]

    Group or individual research projects in human biology under the direction of a BIO faculty member and a faculty member from the School of Social Sciences, Humanities and the Arts.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • HBIO 198: Directed Group Study in Human Biology


    [1-5 units]

    Group directed study in human biology under the direction of a BIO faculty member and a faculty member from the School of Social Sciences, Humanities and the Arts.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only.


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  • HBIO 199: Directed Independent Study in Human Biology


    [1-5 units]

    Independent study in human biology under the direction of a BIO faculty member and a faculty member from the School of Social Sciences, Humanities, and the Arts.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only.


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Interdisciplinary Humanities

  
  • IH 201A: Theories and Methods in the Study of the Interdisciplinary Humanities A


    [4 units]

    Designed for first semester graduate students, explores multidisciplinary perspectives on a thematic topic with broad implications for the humanities, e.g. the study of culture, human social organization, cultural production, and sources of conflict. Specific themes, readings, and assignments will vary based on instructor interests.

    Corequisite: IH 201B . Open only to major(s): World Cultures, Interdisciplinary Humanities. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • IH 201B: Theories and Methods in the Study of the Interdisciplinary Humanities B


    [4 units]

    Designed for first semester graduate students, explores multidisciplinary perspectives on a thematic topic with broad implications for the humanities, e.g. the study of culture, human social organization, cultural production, and sources of conflict. Specific themes, readings, and assignments will vary based on instructor interests.

    Corequisite: IH 201A . Open only to major(s): World Cultures, Interdisciplinary Humanities. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • IH 202: Study Plan Design


    [4 units]

    Guides graduate students through the identification of an area of humanities research specialization and the completion of a Study Plan.

    Prerequisite: IH 201A  and IH 201B . Open only to major(s): World Cultures, Interdisciplinary Humanities. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • IH 203: Pedagogy in the Interdisciplinary Humanities: Theories, Methods, Practice and Assessment


    [4 units]

    Designed to guide graduate students through a “teaching as research” paradigm, culminating in a teaching philosophy statement for humanities instruction. In addition, it is a practice and assessment course that provides graduate students with an applied experience with “teaching as research,” resulting in a set of teaching plans for humanities instruction.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only.


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  • IH 205: Humanities in the World


    [4 units]

    Teaches students about socially engaged scholarship.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 206: Methods and Research in the Interdisciplinary Humanities


    [4 units]

    Intended to instruct students in a specialized set of methods and research skills that will directly inform and benefit their own research.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 210: Readings in the Interdisciplinary Humanities: Past Worlds


    [4 units]

    Offers a cross-disciplinary perspective on a thematic topic with broad implications for the humanities, taking the perspective of the study of culture, human social organization, cultural projection, and sources of conflict in the past.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 220: Readings in the Interdisciplinary Humanities: Social and Spatial Dynamics


    [4 units]

    Offers a cross-disciplinary perspective on a thematic topic with broad implications for the humanities, taking the perspective of the study of culture, human social organization, cultural projection, and sources of conflict as manifested in social or spatial dynamics.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 230: Readings in the Interdisciplinary Humanities: Expressive and Imaginative Works


    [4 units]

    Offers a cross-disciplinary perspective on a thematic topic with broad implications for the humanities, taking the perspective of the study of culture, human social organization, cultural projection, and sources of conflict as reflected in the production, reception or content of expressive and imaginative works.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 291: Seminar Series in the Humanities


    [1-4 units]

    Attendance and participation in a seminar series offered by the Humanities Center or another campus research institute.

    Permission of instructor required. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 294: Individualized Study in Pedagogy


    [1-4 units]

    Supervised pedagogy research.

    Prerequisite: IH 203 . Open only to major(s): Interdisciplinary Humanities, World Cultures. Permission of instructor required. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 295: Graduate Research


    [1-12 units]

    Supervised research.

    Open only to major(s): Interdisciplinary Humanities, World Cultures. Permission of instructor required. Not open to students in their first year. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 296: Research for M.A. Thesis


    [1-6 units]

    Research and writing of M.A. thesis.

    Open only to major(s): World Cultures, Interdisciplinary Humanities. Permission of instructor required. Not open to students in their first year. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 297: Research for Ph.D. Dissertation


    [2-12 units]

    Research and writing of Ph.D. dissertation.

    Prerequisite: Student must be advanced to Ph.D. candidacy. At least one 297 course is required during each year following completion of qualifying examinations. Open only to major(s): World Cultures, Interdisciplinary Humanities. Permission of instructor required. Normal Letter Grade only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 298: Directed Group Study


    [1-12 units]

    Group project under faculty supervision.

    Permission of instructor required. Not open to students in their first year. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • IH 299: Directed Independent Study


    [1-12 units]

    Independent project under faculty supervision.

    Open only to major(s): Interdisciplinary Humanities, World Cultures. Permission of instructor required. Not open to students in their first year. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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Japanese

  
  • JPN 001: Elementary Japanese I


    [4 units]

    Introduction to speaking, reading, writing and understanding modern Japanese.

    Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • JPN 002: Elementary Japanese II


    [4 units]

    Introduction to speaking, reading, writing and understanding modern Japanese.

    Prerequisite: JPN 001  or equivalent exam. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • JPN 003: Intermediate Japanese I


    [4 units]

    Continuation of elementary Japanese. Emphasizes the further development of speaking, writing and reading skills, with an intensive review of basic grammar as well as an introduction to more advanced grammar and vocabulary.

    Prerequisite: JPN 002  or equivalent exam. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • JPN 004: Intermediate Japanese II


    [4 units]

    Continuation of elementary Japanese and Japanese 3. Emphasizes the further development of speaking, writing and reading skills, with an intensive review of basic grammar as well as an introduction to more advanced grammar and vocabulary.

    Prerequisite: JPN 003  or equivalent exam. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • JPN 092: Internship in Japanese


    [1-4 units]

    Provides oversight and structure for a student’s internship in a field related to Japanese in community organizations, professional research projects, etc. connected to the study of Japanese. Students are required to write an original research paper or relevant product that demonstrates how the internship advanced their knowledge of Japanese.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated 2 times for credit.


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  • JPN 095: Lower Division Undergraduate Research


    [1-5 units]

    Supervised research

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • JPN 098: Lower Division Directed Group Study


    [1-5 units]

    Group project under faculty supervision.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • JPN 099: Lower Division Individual Study


    [1-5 units]

    Independent project under faculty supervision.

    Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • JPN 103: Advanced Japanese I


    [4 units]

    Continuation of Intermediate Japanese II. Emphasizes the further development of reading, writing and speaking Japanese, with learning social and cultural issues of contemporary Japanese society.

    Prerequisite: JPN 004  or equivalent exam. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • JPN 104: Advanced Japanese II


    [4 units]

    Continuation of Advanced Japanese II. Emphasizes the further development of reading, writing and speaking Japanese, with learning social and cultural issues of contemporary Japanese society.

    Prerequisite: JPN 103 . Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • JPN 192: Internship in Japanese


    [1-4 units]

    Provides oversight and structure for a student’s internship in a field related to Japanese in community organizations, professional research projects, etc. connected to the study of Japanese. Students are required to write an original research paper or relevant product that demonstrates how the internship advanced their knowledge of Japanese.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated 2 times for credit.


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  • JPN 195: Upper Division Undergraduate Research


    [1-5 units]

    Supervised research.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • JPN 198: Upper Division Directed Group Study


    [1-5 units]

    Group project under faculty supervision.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • JPN 199: Upper Division Individual Study


    [1-5 units]

    Independent project under faculty supervision.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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Management

  
  • MGMT 002: Case Study Seminar on Business and Management


    [1 unit]

    Survey of the field of business management. Invited speakers from local companies and public organizations cover topics that include the business environment, human relations, technology in business, ethical behavior, global and economic forces, organization, quality, products and services, functional management, and current issues and developments.

    Prerequisite: ECON 001  or equivalent exam. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated 1 time for credit.


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  • MGMT 092: Internship in Management


    [1-4 units]

    Provides oversight and structure for a student’s internship in a field related to Management in community organizations, professional research projects, etc. connected to the study of Management. Students are required to write an original research paper or relevant product that demonstrates how the internship advanced their knowledge of Management.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated 2 times for credit.


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  • MGMT 095: Lower Division Undergraduate Research


    [1-5 units]

    Supervised research.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MGMT 097: Service Learning: Engineering Projects in Community Service


    [1-3 units]

    Multi-disciplinary teams of freshman through senior students work with community organizations to design, build, and implement engineering-based solutions for real-world problems. Students gain insight into the design and development process, and Management students gain practical experience working in a team of engineers and managing a project. Students are encouraged to participate at both the lower division and upper-division (MGMT197) levels.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated 2 times for credit. Cross-Listed with ENGR 097 , ENGR 197 , MGMT 197 .


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  • MGMT 098: Lower Division Directed Group Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MGMT 099: Lower Division Individual Study


    [1-5 units]

    The objective of an independent study is to provide advanced and capable students an opportunity to pursue a topic of their interest with in depth supervision of a faculty member. The study can be done in combination with an internship in a business or government organization.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MGMT 126: Information Systems and Service Design


    [4 units]

    Presents an end-to-end view of the design life cycle for information systems and services. It explains how design problems are conceived, researched, analyzed and resolved in different types of organizations and contexts, including start-ups, enterprises with legacy-systems, non-profit and government entities.

    Open only to major(s): Management and Business Economics, Management, Computer Science and Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included. Cross-Listed with CSE 126 .


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  • MGMT 135: Business Law


    [4 units]

    Conceptual and functional analysis of legal principles relevant to the conduct and understanding of commercial business transactions. Topics include personal and real; government regulations; negotiable instruments; debtor/creditor relationships; and bankruptcy and reorganization. Salient legal aspects of international business are also discussed.

    Prerequisite: ECON 005  and ECON 006A . Pass/No Pass option.


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  • MGMT 150: Service Science


    [4 units]

    Services e.g., restaurants, hotels, lawyers, information technology operations, business consulting – account for more than 80% of jobs in the US. Through case studies of businesses and scientific studies of people in real service settings, this course focuses on how to align people and technology effectively to generate value.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Cross-Listed with COGS 152 .


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  • MGMT 153: Judgment and Decision Making


    [4 units]

    An introduction to the study of human judgment and decision making. Topics include decision making under uncertainty, financial choices, health decision making, group decisions, rational theories of choice behavior, and improving decision making. The material is related to cognitive science, psychology, economics, and other social sciences.

    Prerequisite: COGS 001  or PSY 001  or ECON 001  or equivalent exam. Pass/No Pass option. Cross-Listed with COGS 153 , ECON 153 , POLI 153 .


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  • MGMT 154: Cognitive Science Applications for Management


    [4 units]

    Covers thought, behavior, and interaction in modern businesses, where knowledge workers interact with one another and with technology. Topics include business decision making, risk behavior, attitudes toward risk, planning, communication, information management, information systems, human-computer interaction, neuroeconomics, and organizational behavior.

    Prerequisite: COGS 001  or PSY 001  or equivalent exam. Pass/No Pass option. Cross-Listed with COGS 154 .


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  • MGMT 155: Decision Analysis in Management


    [4 units]

    Presents the tools of decision science using a quantitative approach, with a focus on investment, finance and management decisions. These tools include decision tree analysis, risk and uncertainty analysis, stochastic dominance, the value of information, probability bias, and subjective probability.

    Prerequisite: ECON 100  and (ECON 010  or POLI 010  or equivalent exam). Pass/No Pass option. Cross-Listed with ENVE 155 .


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  • MGMT 158: Service Innovation


    [4 units]

    Focuses on service innovation, generation of new successful service ventures. Helps students gain the skills necessary to be successful in three main aspects of service production and delivery systems: the back office, the front office, and service design.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included. Cross-Listed with ENGR 158 .


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  • MGMT 164: Operations Management


    [4 units]

    Operations Management (OM) deals with designing, managing and controlling business processes. It examines the concepts and quantitative analytic tools for commonly occurring problems in OM, such as capacity control, inventory management, production planning, supply chain management, quality control, etc. Students gain a competitive insight on the managerial decision-making in operations.

    Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Management and Business Economics, Mechanical Engineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Management, Economics, Cognitive Science, Environmental Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Sophomore, Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • MGMT 170: Information Systems for Management


    [4 units]

    An introduction to organizational use of information systems and information technology, and discusses how these create value for organizations.

    Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Management and Business Economics, Management, Economics, Cognitive Science, Environmental Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering. Normal Letter Grade only. Cross-Listed with ENGR 175 .


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  • MGMT 171: Information Technology Strategy


    [4 units]

    An introduction to the relationship between information technology and management, and the strategies for changing and strengthening the competitiveness of the enterprises by using information technology. The course focuses on managerial issues related to technology, and methods for restructuring of the enterprises through the creation of innovative business-models.

    Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Management and Business Economics, Materials Sci and Engineering, Management, Economics, Cognitive Science, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • MGMT 173: Advanced Judgment and Decision Making


    [4 units]

    Advanced study of recent research on judgment and decision making, such as behavioral economics, rationality and intelligence, health and medical decision making, decision neuroscience.

    Prerequisite: COGS 153  or MGMT 153  or ECON 153  or POLI 153 . Pass/No Pass option. Cross-Listed with COGS 173 .


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  • MGMT 180: Entrepreneurship


    [4 units]

    Integrates the skills students have developed in prior MGMT courses, and provides a framework for the consideration of new business ventures. Topics covered include: market research, creation of a formal business plan, marketing strategy, financing, establishing channels of distribution and bringing products or services to market.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Pass/No Pass option.


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  • MGMT 191: Topics in Management


    [4 units]

    Intensive treatment of a special topic or problem in management.

    Prerequisite: ECON 005  and ECON 006A . Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated 3 times for credit.


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  • MGMT 192: Internship in Management


    [1-4 units]

    Provides oversight and structure for a student’s internship in a field related to Management in community organizations, professional research projects, etc. connected to the study of Management. Students are required to write an original research paper or relevant product that demonstrates how the internship advanced their knowledge of Management.

    Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated 2 times for credit.


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  • MGMT 195: Upper Division Undergraduate Research


    [1-5 units]

    Supervised research.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MGMT 196: Case Study Seminar in Management


    [4 units]

    Seminar and capstone experience presents case studies in the field of business management. Issues explored are the ethical behavior, global and economic forces, organization, quality, products and services, functional management, and current issues and developments. Students work in teams analyzing the cases presented.

    Prerequisite: ECON 005  and ECON 006A  and (ECON 010  or equivalent exam) and ECON 100  and ECON 110 . Open only to major(s): Management and Business Economics, Management. Open only to standing(s): Senior. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • MGMT 197: Service Learning: Engineering Projects in Community Service


    [1-3 units]

    Multi-disciplinary teams of freshman through senior students work with community organizations to design, build, and implement engineering-based solutions for real-world problems. Students gain insight into the design and development process, and Management students gain practical experience working in a team of engineers and managing a project. Students are encouraged to participate at both the lower division (MGMT97) and upper-division (MGMT197) levels.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated 2 times for credit. Cross-Listed with ENGR 097 , ENGR 197 , MGMT 097 .


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  • MGMT 198: Upper Division Directed Group Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MGMT 199: Upper Division Individual Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MGMT 290: Quantitative Labor Studies Seminar


    [3 units]

    Research presentations by visiting scholars in the area of quantitative labor studies.

    Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Cross-Listed with ECON 290 .


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Materials Science and Engineering

  
  • MSE 104: Engineering Living Systems


    [4 units]

    Engineering Living Systems is an interdisciplinary field focused on developing strategies for assembly of tissues and organs. Fundamental topics will include: cell source, cell culture, cell adhesion and migration, cell patterning, materials design and fabrication, as well as, design of bioreactors and on-chip diagnostic platforms like mini-organs.

    Prerequisite: MATH 024  and (PHYS 009  or PHYS 009H ) and (BIO 001  or equivalent exam) and ENGR 045 . Normal Letter Grade only. Laboratory included.


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  • MSE 109: Materials Thermodynamics


    [4 units]

    Thermodynamic laws and principles. Thermodynamics of solid solutions. Phase equilibria in materials systems of one, two and three components. Nucleation and growth vs. spinodal decomposition. Determination and interpretation of equilibrium binary and ternary phase diagrams for metals, ceramics and polymers. Quantitative applications of Ellingham diagrams, phase diagrams and Pourbaix diagrams.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 008  or PHYS 008H  or equivalent exam) and (CHEM 002  or CHEM 002H  or equivalent exam) and ENGR 045 . Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Chemical Sciences, Mechanical Engineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Physics, Environmental Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • MSE 110: Solid State Materials Properties


    [4 units]

    Structure of atomic and molecular solids; crystallography of inorganic and organic solids; symmetry; short range order; 1-, 2- and 3- dimensional defects; energy levels; band theory of conductors, semiconductors and insulators; mechanical, thermal, optical and magnetic properties of materials and their relevance to processing and devices.

    Prerequisite: (CHEM 002  or CHEM 002H  or equivalent exam) and ENGR 045  and (MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 008  or PHYS 008H  or equivalent exam). Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Chemical Sciences, Materials Sci and Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Laboratory included.


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  • MSE 111: Materials Kinetics and Processing


    [4 units]

    Application of kinetic principles to the study of mass transport processes, transformations and reactions in engineering materials. Thermal (including catalytically assisted) activation and rates of processes; nucleation and growth; phase transformations; control of micro- and nano-structure. Applications and case studies relevant to the processing of metals, polymers, ceramics and nanomaterials.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 008  or PHYS 008H  or equivalent exam) and (CHEM 002  or CHEM 002H  or equivalent exam) and ENGR 130 , which may be taken concurrently. Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Chemical Sciences, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included. Conjoined with BEST 204 .


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  • MSE 112: Materials Selection and Performance


    [3 units]

    Design considerations in the use of materials; quality control; selecting materials to optimize multiple properties; materials failure; long-term materials properties; materials behavior under extreme conditions; corrosion; discussion of design and materials selection strategy; processing and process selection strategy; process economics; life-cycle thinking and eco-design; special topics.

    Prerequisite: ENGR 045 . Good academic standing required. Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion, Laboratory included.


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  • MSE 113: Materials Characterization


    [4 units]

    Characterization of materials structure and properties. Interactions between electromagnetic radiation and matter, and between electron beams and matter. Principles of image formation; Fourier methods and convolution; image processing. X-ray diffraction, optical and electron imaging and diffraction; scanned probe methods. Thermal analysis. Mechanical property and failure characterization.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 008  or PHYS 008H  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 009  or PHYS 009H ). Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Chemical Sciences, Materials Sci and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Earth Systems Science, Environmental Engineering, Applied Mathematical Sciences, Computer Science and Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Offered spring only. Laboratory included.


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  • MSE 114: Polymeric Materials


    [4 units]

    Relationships between molecular characteristics, thermodynamics, kinetics, microstructure and properties in the context of polymeric materials. Students will apply their knowledge of physics, chemistry, mathematics and biology to develop a proficient understanding of how structure and processing affect the properties and performance of biological and synthetic polymers.

    Prerequisite: ENGR 045 . Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Sciences, Physics, Earth Systems Science, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Applied Mathematical Sciences. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included. Conjoined with BEST 224 .


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  • MSE 115: Ceramic Materials


    [3 units]

    Crystallography of inorganic compounds; packing and connectivity of co-ordination polyhedral. Defects in ionic and covalent crystals and their effect on properties. Ceramics, glasses and cements. Engineering ceramics. Production of powders; compaction; sintering; control of nanostructure and microstructure; bulk defects. Zeolites. Hydration of cement and concrete. Biological ceramics.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 008  or PHYS 008H  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 009  or PHYS 009H ) and ENGR 045 . Pass/No Pass option.


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  • MSE 116: Composites


    [3 units]

    Hard materials and soft materials. Roles of matrix and filler phases. “Rule of mixtures” as a function of morphology and connectivity. Length scale effects: nanocomposites, microcomposites and macrocomposites. Biological composites. Porous materials. Interface characteristics and their effect on properties. Toughening mechanisms in composites. Processing and joining. Structure and property characterization.

    Prerequisite: (PHYS 009  or PHYS 009H ) and ENGR 045 . Pass/No Pass option.


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  • MSE 117: New Materials


    [3 units]

    Sustainable materials and the Environment. “Whole life cycle” concepts and sustainability. Sustainability and eco design. Minimizing resource consumption. Limiting emissions and waste. Analyzing the product life cycle. Green materials. Self-assembling materials. Self-healing materials. Biological and bio-inspired materials.

    Prerequisite: ENGR 045 . Good academic standing required. Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion, Laboratory included.


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  • MSE 118: Introduction to Nanotechnology and Nanoscience


    [3 units]

    An introduction for engineers in nanotechnology and nanoscience. Topics covered include nanoscale phenomena; nanofabrication (top-down and bottom-up approaches); and applications relevant to engineering, the physical sciences and biology. Interdisciplinary aspects of nanotechnology and nanoscience are discussed, including perspectives from materials science, chemistry, physics, and biology.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 008  or PHYS 008H  or equivalent exam) and (CHEM 002  or CHEM 002H  or equivalent exam). Normal Letter Grade only. Offered fall only.


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  • MSE 119: Materials Simulations


    [3 units]

    Difference between modeling, theory and simulations. Atomic and molecular scale modeling. Ab initio, Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics methods. Lattice models. Mesoscale and multiscale modeling. Finite element methods. Modeling phase separation, nanostructure and microstructure evolution, and material properties. A computational project using a modeling software will be performed.

    Prerequisite: ENGR 045 . Good academic standing required. Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion, Laboratory included.


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  • MSE 120: Materials Capstone Design


    [3 units]

    Design project based on materials selection and performance evaluation, with reference to engineering standards and realistic constraints that include the following considerations: economic, environmental, sustainability, processability, ethical, health and safety, social, political. A different project will be implemented on each occasion that the course is offered.

    Prerequisite: MSE 112  and MSE 113 . Open only to major(s): Materials Sci and Engineering. Open only to standing(s): Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Laboratory included. Cross-Listed with ENGR 190 .


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  • MSE 121: Mechanical Behavior of Materials


    [4 units]

    Matrix, tensor, and representation surface descriptions of stress, strain, and material properties (elastic, plastic, photoelastic and piezoelectric). Isotropic and anisotropic properties. Microscopic and macroscopic response of materials to stress, including plasticity due to dislocation motion, twinning and martensitic transformations. Kinetics of plastic deformation. Applications to materials processing, strengthening, and failure.

    Prerequisite: ENGR 045 . Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Applied Mathematical Sciences. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included. Conjoined with BEST 221 .


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  • MSE 126: Nanodevice Fabrication: Bridging Research and Education


    [4 units]

    Basic properties of nanomaterials and their applications as transducers (the lecture part). Nanomaterial synthesis using both solution and vapor-based approaches will be performed and a transducer will be fabricated and tested (the lab part). The interactive and experiential education will be blended with theoretical concepts.

    Prerequisite: (CHEM 002  or CHEM 002H  or equivalent exam) and (PHYS 009  or PHYS 009H  or PHYS 019 ). ENGR 065  highly recommended. Open only to standing(s): Junior, Senior. Normal Letter Grade only. Laboratory included. Cross-Listed with BIOE 126 . Conjoined with BEST 226 .


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  • MSE 195: Upper Division Undergraduate Research


    [1-5 units]

    Supervised research.

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass option. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MSE 198: Upper Division Directed Group Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MSE 199: Upper Division Individual Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit. Laboratory included.


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Mathematics

  
  • Syllabus

    MATH 005: Preparatory Calculus


    [4 units]

    Preparation for calculus. Analyzing data by means of functions (linear, quadratic, polynomial, logarithmic, exponential and trigonometric) and graphs with an emphasis on mathematical modeling of real-world applications.

    Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 011 , MATH 021 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 011: Calculus I


    [4 units]

    Introduction to differential and integral calculus of functions of one variable, including exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric functions, emphasizing conceptual understanding and applying mathematical concepts to real-world problems (approximation, optimization). Course does not lead to MATH 23, 24.

    Prerequisite: MATH 005  or equivalent exam. Not open to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Sciences, Materials Sci and Engineering, Physics, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Applied Mathematical Sciences. For majors that do not require more than two semesters of Calculus courses. Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 021 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 012: Calculus II


    [4 units]

    Continuation of MATH 011 . Introduction to integral calculus of functions of one variable and differential equations, emphasizing conceptual understanding and applying mathematical concepts to real-world problem. Course does not lead to MATH 023 , MATH 024 .

    Prerequisite: MATH 011  or MATH 021  or equivalent exam. Not open to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Sciences, Materials Sci and Engineering, Physics, Applied Mathematical Sciences, Environmental Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering. For majors that do not require more than two semesters of Calculus courses. Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 022 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 015: Introduction to Scientific Data Analysis


    [2 units]

    Fundamental analytical and computational skills to find, assemble and evaluate information, and to teach the basics of data analysis and modeling using spreadsheets, statistical tool, scripting languages, and high-level mathematical languages.

    Prerequisite: MATH 005  or MATH 011  or MATH 021 , any of which may be taken concurrently, or equivalent exam. Not open to major(s): Bioengineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Undeclared Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering. Normal Letter Grade only. Laboratory included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 018: Statistics for Scientific Data Analysis


    [4 units]

    Analytical and computational methods for statistical analysis of data. Descriptive statistics, graphical representations of data, correlation, regression, causation, experiment design, introductory probability, random variables, sampling distributions, inference and significance.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 005  or MATH 011  or MATH 021  or equivalent exam) and (MATH 015  or CSE 020  or CSE 005  or ENVE 105  or equivalent exam). Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 032 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 021: Calculus I for Physical Sciences and Engineering


    [4 units]

    An introduction to differential and integral calculus of functions of one variable. Elementary functions such as the exponential and the natural logarithm, rates of change and the derivative with applications to physical sciences and engineering.

    Prerequisite: MATH 005  or equivalent exam. Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Chemical Sciences, Mechanical Engineering, Materials Sci and Engineering, Physics, Earth Systems Science, Undeclared Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Applied Mathematical Sciences. Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 011 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 022: Calculus II for Physical Sciences and Engineering


    [4 units]

    Continuation of MATH 021 . Analytical and numerical techniques of integration with applications, infinite sequences and series, first order ordinary differential equations.

    Prerequisite: MATH 021  or equivalent exam. Open only to major(s): Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Sciences, Physics, Materials Sci and Engineering, Earth Systems Science, Undeclared Engineering, Computer Science and Engineering, Applied Mathematical Sciences, Environmental Engineering. Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 012 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 023: Vector Calculus


    [4 units]

    Calculus of several variables. Topics include parametric equations and polar coordinates, algebra and geometry of vectors and matrices, partial derivatives, multiple integrals, and introduction to the theorems of Green, Gauss, and Stokes.

    Prerequisite: MATH 022  or equivalent exam. Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 023H . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • MATH 023H: Honors Vector Calculus


    [4 units]

    Honors version of MATH 023 . Topics cover vectors, calculus of multi-variable functions, coordinate systems, parametric curves and surfaces, and theorems of Green, Gauss and Stokes. Small class size and innovative pedagogical methods are adopted to help students develop a deep understanding of theories and a mastery of skills.

    Prerequisite: MATH 022  with A- or better, or equivalent exam. Course may not be taken for credit after obtaining credit for: MATH 023 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 024: Linear Algebra and Differential Equations


    [4 units]

    Introduces ordinary differential equations, systems of linear equations, matrices, determinants, vector spaces, linear transformations and linear systems of differential equations.

    Prerequisite: MATH 022  or equivalent exam. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 032: Probability and Statistics


    [4 units]

    Concepts of probability and statistics. Conditional probability, independence, random variables, distribution functions, descriptive statistics, transformations, sampling errors, confidence intervals, least squares and maximum likelihood. Exploratory data analysis and interactive computing.

    Prerequisite: MATH 023  or MATH 023H , either of which may be taken concurrently. Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • Syllabus

    MATH 050: Beginning MATLAB Programming


    [2 units]

    This half-semester minicourse introduces students to the writing, implementing, and testing of MATLAB algorithms to solve mathematical problems. Topics include programming syntax, data visualization, debugging, and coding aesthetics.

    Prerequisite: MATH 022  or equivalent exam. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • MATH 091: General Topics in Applied Mathematics


    [1 unit]

    Introduction to a variety of concepts useful in applied mathematics. Topics covered included floating point arithmetic, methods of proofs, random walks, stereographic projections, transforms, etc. Students are exposed to advanced mathematical topics in preparation for their ongoing studies.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 023  or MATH 023H ) and MATH 024 , all of which may be taken concurrently. Pass/No Pass only.


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  • MATH 095: Lower Division Undergraduate Research


    [1-6 units]

    Supervised research in mathematics.

    Permission of instructor required. Normal Letter Grade only.


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  • MATH 098: Lower Division Directed Group Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MATH 099: Lower Division Individual Study


    [1-5 units]

    Permission of instructor required. Pass/No Pass only. Course may be repeated for credit.


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  • MATH 101: Real Analysis


    [4 units]

    Introduction to rigorous mathematical proofs and concepts pertaining to real numbers. The class will cover the structure of real numbers, sequences, series and functions of real numbers, and, time permitting, concepts of abstract algebra.

    Prerequisite: MATH 023  or MATH 023H . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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  • MATH 122: Complex Variables and Applications


    [4 units]

    Introduction to complex variables, analytic functions, contour integration and theory of residues. Mappings of the complex plane. Introduction to mathematical analysis.

    Prerequisite: (MATH 023  or MATH 023H ) and MATH 024 . Normal Letter Grade only. Discussion included.


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