- #1
kratos
- 5
- 0
Hi, I am in my 3rd year and have General Relativity as one of my options.
I'm kind of feeling the peer pressure of selecting General Relativity, but putting all the hype aside, is it really necessary to learn General Relativity for an Experimental Physicist?
I have to say, maths isn't really one of my strong points, but I hear tensor calculus is quite different to what one is used to in normal physics based maths?
Will tensor calculus do me any good outside General Relativity/research/or even in the workplace?
Thanks
I'm kind of feeling the peer pressure of selecting General Relativity, but putting all the hype aside, is it really necessary to learn General Relativity for an Experimental Physicist?
I have to say, maths isn't really one of my strong points, but I hear tensor calculus is quite different to what one is used to in normal physics based maths?
Will tensor calculus do me any good outside General Relativity/research/or even in the workplace?
Thanks