The Science Education department consists of five divisions, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Earth Scinece and Science Education. The students study the basics of all these divisions through lectures, experiments and fieldwork. From the first semester of their junior year, students can join either one of the research labs of the five divisions and study more about each. In their senior year, students work on their thesis with their obtained expertise to study the systems of nature.
 

Electromagnetism
Quantum Mechanics
    TERASHIMA Hiroaki Quantum Information
Relativity
Analytical Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Organic Chemistry
Coordination Chemistry
Plant Physiology
Cell Biology
Zoology
Cell Biology
Volcanology
Geology of American National Parks
Meteorology
Geophysics
Introduction to Mineralogy
Science of Minerals
Astronomy
Science Education
    MASUDA Hiromitsu
Science Education

 
Master's Theses
Development of an Electron-Spectrometer System for Auger-Photoelectron Coincidence Spectroscopy in Solids
Ce3d XPS Study on the Dependence of Electronic States on the Temperature and Depth in Ce Metal
Electron Optical System for Spin-Polarized Electron Spectroscopy
Estimate of the Optical Characteristics of a Grazing-Incidence Monochromator by Ray Tracing
Naive Conception about Force and Motiion and Its Conceptional Change
Reconstruction of Teaching Materials in Education of Radiotherapy
Efficient Catalyst for the Oxidation of Cresols by Molecular Oxygen
Oxidative Coupling by Cerium Complexes
Electroanalytical Study on the Interaction between Proteins and Their Ligands
Lectin-Immunoanalyses of Glycoconjugates in Tobacco cell Membrane
Reproductive organ system of Neritidae(Gastropoda, Mollusca)
Some Features on the Merge of Cumulonimbus Cloud in Summer Season over the Kanto District
Diurnal Variation of Convective Activity and Precipitable Water over the "Semi-Basin"
Secondary Minerals in the Okura Metabasaltic Rock, Minakami, Gunma, Japan
Alterations of Rock Forming Minerals in Sulfuric Acid
A Polarimetric Study of Herbig Ae/Be Stars
A Photometric Study of Close Binary System AU Ser