KICKSTART PHYSICS IDEAS TO IMPLEMENTATION 1. HERTZ S EXPERIMENTS 2. CATHODE RAY TUBES 3. THE PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT 4. CONDUCTORS AND SEMICONDUCTORS

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1 KICKSTART PHYSICS IDEAS TO IMPLEMENTATION 1. HERTZ S EXPERIMENTS 2. CATHODE RAY TUBES 3. THE PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT 4. CONDUCTORS AND SEMICONDUCTORS 5. SUPERCONDUCTORS Kickstart would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the traditional owners of the land the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation. It is upon their ancestral lands that the University of Sydney is built. As we share our knowledge, teaching, learning, and research practices within this University may we also pay respect to the knowledge embedded forever within the Aboriginal Custodianship of Country. For more information head to

2 Implement Your Ideas Risk Analysis Conduct a risk analysis by filling out the following table. List 3 risks to do with this investigation in the 2 nd year lab. Also, list 3 risks in an industry where physics is used. What are the consequences of those risks? Use the risk matrix below to make your judgment. What precautions would you take to stop those risks from coming about? What steps would you take to mitigate those risks? Risk Consequence Precaution/Mitigation Kickstart Physics Industry What sort of careers do you think you could get if you studied this topic at the University of Sydney? 1

3 Hertz s Experiments with Radio Waves Heinrich Hertz ( ) performed experiments with electromagnetic (EM) radiation. These confirmed many of the predictions that Maxwell had made a few years before. Sketch and label a standing wave with the Node, Antinode and Wavelength (λ). Identify some properties of light that Hertz may have used in his experiments Constant Velocity In this experiment you will calculate the length of the microwaves 1. Measure the distance between maxima and multiply this number by 2 2. Multiply your wavelength (λ) by your frequency (ƒ) in Hertz (Hz) with the formula v = ƒλ 3. Show your working: 2

4 Cathode Ray Tubes There are two ways you can change the direction of a cathode ray, with an electric field (E), or a magnetic field (B). Quick and dirty derivation of charge to mass ratio for Thompson s experiment We assume that the electron was accelerated prior to entering the circular path by passage through a potential difference, V. Therefore the kinetic energy of the particle is: qv = 1 2 mv! which gives v! = 2qV m where v and m are the velocity and mass of the particle. For the path to be circular, the magnetic force must balance the centrifugal force : mv! r = q v B rearranging for q m = v rb After squaring this equation and substituting the relation for v! given above, we have: q! m! = 2qV mr! B! You can use the apparatus here to measure the ratio q/m. The radius of the circular path the electrons take in the tube depends on how fast they are going and how strong the magnetic field is. The current in the coils (this produces the magnetic field) is: I = (A) You can therefore calculate B (= 7.8x10-4 x I) B = (Wb/m 2 ) The accelerating voltage is: V = (V) The radius of the circular path is: r = (m) Use these measurements and the formula to calculate q/m in units of Coulombs/kg. q! m! = 2qV mr! B! solve this equation for q m = 3

5 The Photoelectric Effect Albert Einstein won his Nobel Prize in Physics for his insight into the photoelectric effect. His understanding of this phenomenon was one of the milestones in the development of quantum theory and introduced the world to the concept of wave-particle duality. Waves? Particles? Both? Neither? Light definitely does behave like a wave: it diffracts, refracts and interferes. Light also seems to behave like a particle: it can knock electrons off surfaces and transfer energy to other objects in packets of E = hf. Qualitative Observing the Photoelectric Effect In this experiment you can observe the photoelectric effect as certain frequencies of light knock electrons out of a metal surface. Now shine the UV lamp on the metal plate. What do you observe? Quantitative Measuring the Photoelectric Stopping Voltage Observe and record the amount of energy the ejected electrons receive from the photons. Electrons knocked out from the surface of a material will all have roughly the same amount of kinetic (moving) energy when they leave: Filter Colour Yellow Green Blue Violet Ultraviolet Filter Frequency (Hz) 5.19 x x x x x Stopping Voltage (V) You now have the necessary information to determine the work function of the phototube s cathode, and to find a value for Planck s constant. How would you go about doing this? Remember to fill out the Excel Spreadsheet on the lab computers and the survey attached to the spreadsheet at 4

6 Conductors and Semiconductors What do you think will happen to the light bulb when we heat up the conductor or semiconductor? Predict Observe Explain Apply Conductor Semi-conductor This process of Predict, Observe, Explain, Apply was used by David Unaipon ( ), known as Australia s Leonardo Da Vinci. He was of the Ngarrindjeri people of South Australia and was an Aboriginal inventor and author who made significant contributions to science. David invented many devices, including a sheep shearer that is still in use today. He never received any recognition or monetary benefit from any of his innovative inventions. In a semiconductor, a current can flow through the movement of negative electrons, the movement of positive holes, or both. This property can be used to create devices such as diodes and transistors that can accurately control whether current flows in a circuit. The Diode Label the diagram for a diode (a p-n junction) with P-type, N-type, direction of electrons and holes, and the battery. 5

7 Superconductors From the graph, identify the critical temperature of this high-temperature YBa2Cu3O7 superconductor: K Superconductors Flux Pinning and Stable Levitation List some applications of superconductivity Identify 3 limitations of the use of superconductors 6

8 Title 7

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