The CU geophysics graduate certificate offers a coherent curriculum in geophysics that can complement and supplement a student's regular graduate degree program and encourages multi-disciplinary education in the area of geophysics. The Geophysics certificate program allows students to obtain recognition for their accomplishments in geophysics, without having to switch into the Geophysics degree program. Participation in the certificate must coincide with pursuit of an MS or PhD at the University of Colorado Boulder. This program was approved by the CU graduate school, spring 2002.

Description of Curriculum

All students must take at least 3 Geophysics Core Courses, and the Geophysics Seminar course, listed below. At least one of the three Geophysics Core Courses must be from the Earth and Planetary Physics (EPP) series, and at least one of the remaining core classes taken must be from outside the student's home department. Most geophysics core courses are offered once every two years.

A Certificate in Geophysics will be awarded upon the student's completion of degree requirements in their home department. Upon request from a student, the Program Director and the student's advisor will determine whether a student has met the requirements for the certificate and will generate a letter to the appropriate department head and Dean. The certificate is not intended as a substitute for a degree and will be awarded only upon completion of a graduate degree.

Geophysics Graduate Certificate Core Courses
ASTR/GEOL/PHYS Earth and Planetary Physics 1. (Seismology)
ASTR/GEOL/PHYS Earth and Planetary Physics 2. (Geodesy)
ASTR/GEOL/PHYS Earth and Planetary Physics 3. (Geodynamics)
ASTR/GEOL/PHYS Geophysics Seminar
APPM Ìý(3) Nonlinear Waves and Integrable Equations
ASEN Ìý(3) Space Flight Dynamics
ASEN Ìý(3) Introduction to the Global Navigation Satellite Systems
ASEN Ìý(3) Radar and Remote Sensing
ASEN Ìý(3) Engineering Data Analysis Methods
ASEN Ìý(3) Aerospace Environment
ASEN Ìý(3) Advanced Global Navigation Satellite Systems Software and Applications
ASEN Ìý(3) Special Topics: Advanced Astrodynamics and Celestial 
Mechanics
ASTR/PHYS Ìý(3) Astrophysical & Space Plasmas
ASTR/PHYS Ìý(3) Plasma Physics
ASTR Ìý(3) Magnetospheres
ASTR Ìý(3) Introduction to Fluid Dynamics
ASTR/GEOL Ìý(3) Planetary Surfaces and Interiors
ASTR/ATOC/GEOL Ìý(3) Origin and Evolution of Planetary Systems
CVEN Ìý(3) Continuum Mechanics and Elasticity
CVEN Ìý(3) Mechanics and Dynamics of Glaciers
CVEN Ìý(3) Introduction to Rock Mechanics
CVEN Ìý(3) Earthquake Engineering
GEOG Ìý(4) Physical Climatology: Field methods
GEOG 5100Ìý(4) Advanced Remote Sensing (uses special topics course number)
GEOL Ìý(3) Remote Sensing of the Environment
GEOL Ìý(3) Geomechanics
GEOL Ìý(3) Petroleum Reservoir Characterization and Modeling
GEOL Ìý(3) Tectonics of the Western U.S.
GEOL Ìý(2) Field Geophysics
GEOL/PHYS Ìý(3) Geophysical Inverse Theory
MCEN Ìý(3) Solid Mechanics 1
MCEN Ìý(3) Dynamics of Continuous Media [not currently offered]

Requirements for Certificate

  1. Completion with a grade of B or better of a total of three geophysics core courses (at least one from the EPP sequence) and one semester credit for the Geophysics Seminar.
  2. Completion of degree requirements for graduate degree within the student's home department, with a thesis on a topic that uses geophysics in some way, including the successful defense of this thesis before a committee that includes at least one of the geophysics faculty members with the advance approval of the chair of the geophysics program committee.

Admission Requirements

A student wishing to be considered for a Certificate in Geophysics must first be admitted as a graduate student into one of the participating graduate departments (ASEN,ÌýAPS,ÌýCEAE,ÌýECEN,ÌýGEOG,ÌýGEOL,ÌýMCEN,ÌýPHYS). Students from outside the participating departments can apply for entry to the geophysics certificate program by letter addressed to the Geophysics Graduate Program Committee. A student must have a course background that includes mathematics through three semesters of calculus and four undergraduate science or engineering courses.