An Uno cial Guide To Part III - University of Cambridge.
I did part iii not so long ago and I'd agree with the advice here - there is a lot of good info on part iii out there already such as some of the stuff linked here. I'd add a couple of things: don't be casual about the essay: go and speak to the person setting the essay and ask questions like how much contact time you'd expect to have with them on it and try and tease out what they would.

The University of Cambridge (formally The Chancellor, Masters, and Scholars of the University of Cambridge) is a collegiate public research university in Cambridge, England.Founded in 1209 and granted a Royal Charter by King Henry III in 1231, Cambridge is the second-oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world's fourth-oldest surviving university.

Part III offers all the relevant courses given by famous and awesome lecturers in an environment filled with extremely knowledgeable people and students. I would have a nice time wherever I learned about supersymmetry and string theory but Cambridge offers so much more than just that.

PhD students might help with running examples classes for Part III students, too. Open Days. The University of Cambridge will be hosting its Cambridge Postgraduate Open Day on Friday 1 November 2019. Visit the Postgraduate Open Day page for more details. Details of activities hosted by the Faculty of Mathematics can be found on the Faculty website.

Hello world! I am Alex, a fourth year grad student at Boston University.Previously I worked at TU Kaiserslautern (on the MPIR Library), and studied at the Universities of Cambridge and Warwick. I am interested in many things, but mostly number theory and related topics right now. I would try to be more specific, but honestly there is just too much cool stuff out there.

I graduated in Maths from UCL with around 95 average this year. (do not have my certificate yet to tell you the precise number) As you might have guessed I thoroughly enjoyed the course and it was an obvious option to apply to Cambridge for Part III (pure mathematics) and pursue a career in academia.

As of 2018 the Mathematical Tripos course comprises three undergraduate years (Parts IA, IB and II) which qualify a student for a BA degree, and an optional one year masters course which qualifies a student for a Master of Mathematics (MMath) degree (with BA) if they are a Cambridge fourth year student or a Master of Advanced Study (MASt) degree if they come from outside just to do Part III.