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UF
Physics
3 credits

UF PHY 2049: Physics with Calculus 2

PHY 2049 is UF's calculus-based electricity and magnetism course — electric fields, potential, circuits, magnetism, and induction — required for engineering and physical science majors after PHY 2048, with PHY 2049L as the separate lab. Grades ride on a few timed, multiple-choice exams.

Fennie is independent and not affiliated with University of Florida. This is an unofficial study guide.

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What makes it hard

The shift from mechanics to fields is jarring: where PHY 2048 problems were visible and intuitive, E&M deals in invisible fields, vector integration over charge distributions, and right-hand-rule geometry that trips up even strong students. The multiple-choice exams give no partial credit, so a flipped field direction or a sign error on a Gauss's law setup produces a confident wrong answer.

What you'll cover

  • Electric fields and Coulomb's law
  • Gauss's law and electric potential
  • Capacitance and DC circuits
  • Magnetic fields and forces
  • Ampere's law and electromagnetic induction
  • Faraday's law and inductance

The PHY 2049 study guide

How to study for UF PHY 2049, step by step.

  1. 1

    Rebuild your physical intuition for fields

    PHY 2049's invisible fields don't reward the everyday intuition that carried PHY 2048. Sketch field lines and directions for every problem until the abstractions feel concrete.

  2. 2

    Drill the right-hand rule until automatic

    Magnetism geometry is a constant exam trap, and the no-partial-credit format won't catch a flipped direction. Practice the rule on dozens of configurations.

  3. 3

    Master Gauss's and Ampere's law setups

    Choosing the symmetry and surface is the graded skill, not the integration. Work the setups for spheres, cylinders, and planes until the right surface is obvious.

  4. 4

    Keep calculus and vectors warm

    Integration over charge distributions appears early and constantly. Shaky calculus compounds an already-abstract course, so patch it in parallel if needed.

  5. 5

    Make Fennie enforce the reps

    Upload your PHY 2049 materials and Fennie's Daily Plan schedules daily problem volume ramped toward each exam, generating fresh practice quizzes from your actual coursework. Free to start.

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How Fennie helps with PHY 2049

Fennie's Daily Plans enforce the daily problem volume PHY 2049 demands, ramping toward each exam so field intuition and right-hand-rule geometry stay sharp. Chat through wrong answers to find whether the field direction, the symmetry choice, or the algebra broke, and generate fresh problems to rehearse setups you haven't seen.

FAQ

Is PHY 2049 hard at UF?

Yes — many students find the jump from mechanics to electricity and magnetism the hardest part of the physics sequence. Fields are abstract, the geometry (right-hand rules, Gauss's law symmetry) is unforgiving, and the timed multiple-choice exams give no partial credit. Problem volume is the answer.

Is PHY 2049 harder than PHY 2048?

For many students, yes — not because the math is harder but because electric and magnetic fields are invisible and counterintuitive in a way mechanics wasn't. Rebuilding physical intuition for fields is the main adjustment, and it takes deliberate practice.

How do I prepare for PHY 2049 exams?

Work many problems beyond the assigned set, always sketching the field and choosing the right symmetry before computing. Drill the right-hand rule until it's automatic, then redo missed problems from scratch days later — setup is the tested skill.

Pass PHY 2049 with a plan, not a cram

Upload your PHY 2049 materials and Fennie generates a Daily Plan paced to your deadline — plus chat, flashcards, and quizzes built from the actual course content.

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