MJ
23 de jul de 2019
Great course. But I was also hoping to get an in-depth analytical understanding of the second law of thermodynamics and the zeroth law as well. But I really enjoyed it and definitely learned a lot.
AM
24 de fev de 2021
Courses from the University of Michigan are always awesome. Hats off to Margaret Wooldridge, mam. Thank you so much, Coursera and the University of Michigan for making this outstanding experience.
por Nnamdi C G
•29 de jul de 2021
awesome
por pasupuletiharichandra p
•3 de jun de 2020
Useful
por himanshu g
•14 de set de 2017
gud 1
por SANTHOSH K G
•30 de out de 2020
good
por Somesh K
•7 de out de 2020
Nice
por Tarun A
•25 de jul de 2020
Good
por Shone G
•12 de jul de 2020
GOOD
por POLAGANI S K
•6 de jul de 2020
Good
por krishna s s r y
•5 de jun de 2020
good
por 187Y1A0370
•4 de jun de 2020
good
por KATRU V
•9 de mai de 2020
good
por SOMETHING C
•5 de abr de 2020
Good
por Yogesh Y
•16 de mar de 2019
ryu
por kailash s
•28 de jun de 2019
g
por Cody L
•6 de jun de 2020
I'd appreciate it if we were given some homework problems based on the lectures in order to gain a better understanding of the course materials. Plus the two textbooks provide explain very little about the video lectures
por Siddhant J
•11 de set de 2022
This course is not Introduction and is difficult for beginners. It skips essential fundamental explanations. It could have been more extensive in explaining the fundamentals.
por Hithin H
•26 de jun de 2020
It was a good course.Did felt the content was a bit heavy.
por Shiraj S
•3 de jan de 2019
Its an excellent course for new learner of themodynamics
por Mohamed E
•17 de jul de 2017
this course is quite good
por Dr. V T
•6 de jun de 2020
It was good course
por SHORYAMAN R
•16 de out de 2022
very helpfull.
por Shaik I
•22 de abr de 2020
ok
por SUMIT S V
•23 de dez de 2022
.
por SAAD A S S
•8 de nov de 2022
.
por Thomas K
•7 de out de 2019
The title ought to specify that this is a course for engineering students, not physics students. Even the prof. is an engineering professor. There is a lot of stuff about steam turbines, Rankine cycles etc. which may not be of any interest to the aspiring physicist.