PHYSICS 2150 LABORATORY LECTURE 1
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1 PHYSICS 2150 LABORATORY LECTURE 1
2 1865 Maxwell equations HISTORY theory expt in 2150 expt not in 2150
3 SCOPE OF THIS COURSE Experimental introduction to modern physics! Modern in this case means roughly the 20th Century Your goals: take data efficiently and carefully keep a good lab notebook develop your understanding of how to do uncertainty/error analysis present your results in writing and graphic form
4 COURSE STAFF & WEBSITE Instructor Professor Noel Clark Course web site: Teaching Assistants Gabriel Peterson: Scott Sullivan: Lab coordinators Michael Schefferstein Office: Duane G2B J.D. Drumheller Office: Duane G2B78A
5 SUPPLIES SUPPLIES Syllabus (handout; on WWW) Lab manual (handout) Lab notebook (1 per student supplied) Error analysis pamphlet (handout) Radioactive material handling training Textbook: Taylor, An Introduction to Error Analysis (required) Clicker (available at University Book Store) (required)
6 REQUIREMENTS PRE/CO-REQUISITES Have completed PHYS 1140 Are taking / have taken PHYS 2170 or 2130 Familiarity with numerical calculation program (Mathcad, etc.) Taylor, Chapters 1-4 Standard deviation Standard deviation of the mean Propagation of uncertainty
7 WHY INDEPENDENT UNCERTAINTIES ADD IN QUADRATURE INTRO - Addition in quadrature is a description in words of the Pythagorean addition c 2 = a 2 + b 2 for a right triangle, and is a characteristic of the net result of moving along orthogonal directions in a space. So we go a certain distance y north and then x east. These displacements are independent in the sense that moving north doesn t change our east-west position: the x and y axes are orthogonal. Mathematically this shows up in the calculation of the magnitude of the net displacement vector c = x + y: This magnitude is c c = c 2 = c = (x + y) (x + y) = (x 2 + y 2 + 2x y). Since x and y are orthogonal and their displacements independent, then x y = 0 and c = (x 2 + y 2 ) is given by addition in quadrature. A similar idea applies to fluctuations contributing to a sum or product. If they are independent their net effect is obtained by addition in quadrature: IN A SUM Suppose a and b are some measured quantities. Measurement processes for determining a and b give well-defined averages and uncertainties <a> ± δa and <b> ± δb. If we repeat the measurement process for a one more time we get a i, the i th measurement of a i, and we can define the fluctuation δa i as δa i = a i - <a>. Similarily for the j th measurement of b: a i = <a> + δa i b j = <b> + δb j where, by definition <δa i > = <δb j > = 0. If the fluctuations in a and b are independent, then the average of the product of the fluctuations is zero: <δa i δb i > = 0 (definition of independence). The quantities <δa i 2 > and <δb j 2 >, always positive, are a measure of how big the fluctuations in a and b are in a single measurement. Now we calculate the fluctuations in the sum c = a + b. Treating fluctuations like differentials, we have <c> = <(a + b)> = <a> + <b>, and δc = δa i + δb j. <δc> = <(δa i + δb j )> = 0, so the average of δc doesn t reveal anything about the magnitude of the δc s. To probe this we calculate <δc i 2 >: <δc 2 > = <δa i 2 > + 2<δa i δb j > + <δb j 2 > = <δa 2 > + <δb 2 >. Since the cross term <δa i δb i > = 0 independent uncertainties in a sum add in quadrature: δc = <δc 2 > = (<δa 2 > + <δb 2 >) MULTIPLE INDEPENDENT MEASUREMENTS OF THE SAME QUANTITY Let c = (a 1 + a a N )/N, where a i are independent measurements of a. Then c = a and <δc 2 > = [<δa i 2 > + <δa 2 2 > <δa N 2 >]/N 2 = <δa i 2 >/N, where all of the cross terms <δa i δa j > = 0. Thus, after averaging N independent measurements of a, we have: a = a, δa = δ a = δa i / N, where δa i is the uncertainty for a single measurement IN A PRODUCT Let c = ab. Then, using the chain rule dc = a db + b da or dc/c = da/a + db/b δc k /<c> = δa i /<a> + δb i /<b> and (δc k /<c>) 2 = (δa i /<a>) 2 + (δb i /<b>) 2 + 2δa i δb i /<a><b>, or <(δc/<c>) 2 > = <(δa i /<a>) 2 > + <(δb i /<b>) 2 > = (δa/<a>) 2 + (δb/<b>) 2, so independent fractional uncertainties in a product add in quadrature: δc/<c> = (<δc k 2 >/<c> 2 ) = [(δa/<a>) 2 + (δb/<b>) 2 ] IN THE GENERAL CASE Suppose c = f(a,b). Then δc i = [ f/ a]δa i +[ f/ b]δb i and <δc i 2 > = [ f/ a] 2 <δa i 2 > +[ f/ b] 2 <δb i 2 > so δc = <δc i 2 > = ([ f(<a>,<b>)/ <a>] 2 <δa i 2 > +[ f(<a>,<b>)/ <b>] 2 <δb i 2 >)
8 COURSE SCHEDULE: LECTURES Lectures are Tuesdays, 4:00-4:50 PLEASE READ THE APPROPRIATE CHAPTERS IN TAYLOR BEFORE EACH LECTURE! Lecture 1 (January 12): Review of syllabus, Error introduction Lecture 2 (January 17): Clicker Quiz: Taylor Chapter 5 Uncertainty in Scientific Measurements, Random and Systematic Uncertainty, Gaussian Distributions, Mean, Standard deviation
9 COURSE SCHEDULE: LECTURES / HOMEWORK Lecture 3: Clicker Quiz Taylor Ch. 6, 7 Rejection of data, Weighted averages Lecture 4: Clicker Quiz: Taylor Ch. 8 Least squares analysis Lecture 5: Clicker Quiz: Taylor Ch. 9, 11 Correlation analysis, Poisson statistics Homework: One assignment, worth one lab (assignment announced in class)
10 COURSE SCHEDULE: LABS Signup: Sign up for experiments on the pages in the lab. Sign up one lab in advance; don t sign up for the whole semester at once. You must do at least 12 weeks worth of labs Lab partners: You can work with a partner. You and your partner must do separate write-ups. Labs take 2 or 3 weeks
11 LAB RULES AND PROCEDURE You will be issued a lab notebook. Everything must be recorded in your lab book! Record in ink; do not erase. Correct mistakes by crossing out items, leaving them legible. Do not remove pages.
12 LAB SAFETY Some experiments use radioactive materials. You must complete the on-line radioactive handling course. The biggest hazards in the lab are high voltage (enough current capacity for an unpleasant shock!) and trips/falls. Never touch energized electrical components, and always look out where you are going! Treat the equipment with care
13 GRADING Grades will be based on the lab reports, the homework assignment, and the clicker participation. Labs take 2 or 3 weeks 2 week labs - turn in the lab report within 10 days of the class day of starting the lab. 3 week labs - turn in the lab report within 17 days of the lab class day of starting the lab. Penalty for late reports
14 YOUR LAB REPORT Include any computer-generated work (Mathcad output, etc.) in your report. Number and date all pages in your report. Refer explicitly in the text to tables, calculations, graphs. Be professional and neat! Goal of report is to inform an educated reader, not as a record of your work.
15 YOUR LAB REPORT: FORMAT Experiment title Objective: Several sentence description of scientific goal (not to learn about... ) Idea: Paragraph or two giving background and physics to be tested. Apparatus: Explanation of equipment. Draw carefully labeled diagrams including model numbers and any changeable connections!
16 YOUR LAB REPORT: FORMAT Procedure: First person summary of process, including unexpected occurrences. What did YOU do? Discuss problems and how they were resolved Include details! Should be sufficient for someone else to do the experiment Data Analysis and Results: IN MATHCAD THE IT JUST TURNDS RED RULE
17 DATA FORMAT STATE FORMAL RESULT ( SFR # in writeup) - State each result as an equation - Uncertainty rounded to 1 significant figure - Value rounded to uncertainty - Same power of 10 for value and uncertainty - Units expressed - e.g. - measured speed c = ( ) 10 8 m/s PLOTS - Data plotted as points, theory as lines - X,Y axes labeled with what is being plotted, with appropriate units - Caption, explaining what is important about the plot - Independent variable on the horizontal axis UNITS - Units of all quantities used on a page immediately evident on that page - Only one set of units in use at any given place in a report (e.g., lengths in meters)
18 YOUR LAB REPORT: FORMAT Conclusions Short discussion summarizing (restating) results. Compare results to accepted value: what is level of agreement based on your error estimate? Further comment on uncertainties: explain basis of assigning them, possible hidden errors, etc. Stick to scientific conclusions! No opinions, no personal comments. READ THE SYLLABUS FOR DOS/DON TS ON YOUR LAB REPORT!
19 GRADING CODES RO round off appropriately 1SF express uncertainty with one significant figure SPOT same power of ten for value and uncertainty SFR state final result in standard form: x = (val. ± unc.) UNITS AXL label axes (0,0) include origin in plot CAP no plot cption LABEL no plot label PDAP plot data as points UNITS express units SP spelling problem
20 UNCERTAINTY Error is a synonym of uncertainty. It is not the same as discrepancy or mistake. A result is meaningless without an uncertainty. ALL results should be quoted with an error! The uncertainty can result from inaccurate equipment, limited statistics, or other factors beyond your control. Uncertainties should have 1 significant digits. The measurement result ( central value ) should have the same final digit as the uncertainty: GOOD BAD 1.41 ± ± ± ± ± ± 0.004
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