Contests
 USA Physics Olympiad
   Introduction
US Physics Olympiad
[contests]
The USA Physics Olympiad is a sequence of tests designed to test high school students in all aspects of physics, from kinematics to electromagnetism to fluid dynamics to nuclear physics. The ultimate goal is to select the 24 members of the U.S. Physics Team for the training camp and then the final five students to represent the United States at the International Physics Olympiad.

Students participate through their high schools and are nominated by teachers (who must submit their nominations to the American Association of Physics Teachers). Nominated students take the initial examination, which has 20 - 30 multiple choice questions in a time span of 40 minutes (previously it was 30 questions worth 1 point each but recently there have been 20 questions worth 2 points each) in addition to 4 longer free response questions in a time span of 60 minutes (worth 25 points each for a total of 100 points). The multiple choice questions cover all the whole breadth of physics, so be prepared for anything in that portion of the exam. The free response section is limited only to kinematics, which is more familiar to most students, although the questions themselves are also more in-depth.

From the initial examination, around 200 students are selected into the semifinal rounds. Cutoffs on the first examination vary greatly and are (generally) not reported to the public. Your teacher will give you feedback on your scores, but the official graders from the USA Physics Olympiad will not (hence, it is possible that your teacher's grading was too lenient or too harsh, the former being much more devastating than the latter). Out of the 140 total points in the first round, a score of 70 to 80 will usually be enough to get into the semifinal rounds.

The semifinal exam is considerably more difficult and is broken down into two sections: the A portion (90 minutes for 4 questions) and the B portion (90 minutes for 2 questions). From the results of the semifinal exam, 24 students are chosen to attend the training camp.

Preparation for the exam requires intensive studies of all areas of physics. Possible reference books include the Fundamentals of Physics, by Halliday, Resnick, and Walker and The Feynman Lectures on Physics by Richard Feynman.