Go to this blog..you might find this helpful.
http://physicshonours.blogspot.com/
Cambridge, Oxford and other universities in England offer a degree in nuclear physics.
If you have BTech applied physics(4 yrs), you are eligible for masters in any engineering field. For scholarships(financial aid), you are in direct competition with majors in electronics, computers, electrical. Some departments may prefer them over you. Put this question directly to admissions counselor at top US universities.
He did his experiments at the Indian Association for Cultivation of Sciences, Calcutta, India. He was working as Tarakanath Palit Professorship of Physics at the University of Calcutta
That depends on the specific physics question.
In many universities and colleges this is a course covering various topics in physics that avoids using the calculus.
Architectural engineering; civil engineering (physics is often not compulsory in most universities); you can also consider some architecture
Speaking from direct experience Simon Fraser University
May studied physics at Imperial College London, graduating with a B.Sc. degree in both Physics and Maths and ARCS with Upper Second-Class Honours. He then proceeded to study for a Ph.D degree, but did not complete it.
Most universities in England will ask for a grade C or above in GCSE English and Mathematics, reguardless of your results in A-Levels. However, a number of universities will ask for a grade C at GCSE or above in the chosen course (for example: If you apply to undertake a Physics degree, then the university will ask for your Science/Physics GCSE grade.
A degree from certain European and Canadian universities ranking just below that of a doctor.
Better question: "Is there good physics in the movie Transformers?"
This question definitely needs to be rephrased, there are countless physics equations.