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4 answers

It depends what you want to do and are interested in, I suppose. If you want to graduate school in Physics, then it will certainly help. As to how much it would help, that would depend upon what what you'd be going into graduate school for (for instance, math is really, really important for theorists while less important for experimentalists or computationalists, though it's still important :) ). I'm not sure how Physics would help in going to grad school for Mathematics, though I'd imagine that it would help somewhat in more applied mathematics. In the end, it won't hurt, and might very well help in the long run.

Of course, in the short run (e.g. while in undergraduate college), you may have to work hard, because neither subject is a breeze, but if you're interested in both areas (or either area, I suppose), then it won't be so bad.

2006-09-30 07:23:04 · answer #1 · answered by DAG 3 · 0 0

Yes. The 2 are greatly related.

2006-09-30 02:13:01 · answer #2 · answered by the Politics of Pikachu 7 · 0 0

if you are good at one, then the other will be easy and also a BONUS to boot

2006-09-30 15:29:27 · answer #3 · answered by charlatan 7 · 0 0

yes if you are interested in those subjects

2006-09-30 00:27:16 · answer #4 · answered by ❀swe3tie✿ 4 · 1 0

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