Although it sounds more, the landlord can rest assured. General physics does not have high requirements for mathematics, but it involves theoretical physics, that is, the four "mechanics" mentioned above, such as theoretical mechanics, electrodynamics, quantum mechanics and thermodynamic statistical physics, which requires a strong mathematical foundation and mathematical analysis ability. Generally speaking, mathematics is a foundation and a tool. But I think the mathematical foundation required by physics is also required by other engineering majors, and this part is not much. Of course, because physics and mathematics are naturally closely related, especially the ability to establish physical models and mathematical analysis is not easy for beginners, and it is necessary to lay a solid foundation from the beginning.
I don't quite agree with SRT and graduation project mentioned in some previous answers. Those training schemes proposed by individual colleges and universities at most are not universal.
Although it sounds more, the landlord can rest assured. General physics does not have high requirements for mathematics, but it involves theoretical physics, that is, the four "mechanics" mentioned above, such as theoretical mechanics, electrodynamics, quantum mechanics and thermodynamic statistical physics, which requires a strong mathematical foundation and mathematical analysis ability. Generally speaking, mathematics is a foundation and a tool. But I think the mathematical foundation required by physics is also required by other engineering majors, and this part is not much. Of course, because physics and mathematics are naturally closely related, especially the ability to establish physical models and mathematical analysis is not easy for beginners, and it is necessary to lay a solid foundation from the beginning.
I don't quite agree with SRT and graduation project mentioned in some previous answers. Those training schemes proposed by individual colleges and universities at most are not universal.