Welcome, Physics Majors!

Similar documents
Supplemental Instruction

Welcome to Physics 161 Elements of Physics Fall 2018, Sept 4. Wim Kloet

Instructor: Welcome to

Welcome to Physics-131 Physics-I

That s how we roll. Physics : General Physics, Part 1. Agenda. About Me. Administrative Stuff

Welcome to Physics 211! General Physics I

WELCOME TO PHYSICS 201. Dr. Luis Dias Summer 2007 M, Tu, Wed, Th 10am-12pm 245 Walter Hall

Course Instructor. Home Page. Title Page. Page 2 of 33. Go Back. Full Screen. Close. Quit

Astronomy 1010: Survey of Astronomy. University of Toledo Department of Physics and Astronomy

Welcome to PHYS-131 Physics-I with Algebra. Please turn off your cell phones

Physics 151, Sections: Physics for Engineers - I

Interactive Engagement via Thumbs Up. Today s class. Next class. Chapter 2: Motion in 1D Example 2.10 and 2.11 Any Question.

Physics 1200 Mechanics, Kinematics, Fluids, Waves

Topic 1: 1D Motion PHYSICS 231

MATH 251 Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations Summer Semester 2017 Syllabus

General Physics (PHY 2130)

Physics 100. Reminder: All lecture notes posted, after lecture, follow link at:

In recording measurements, it is necessary to understand 1. SIGNIFICANCE of numbers 2. importance of UNITS.

MER419: Design of Mechanical Systems

PHY 2053 announcements: January 7, 2010

General Physics (PHY 2130)

That s how we roll. Physics 101: Conceptual Physics. About Me. Goals For This Class. Administrative Stuff. Participation 1/20/15.

Course: Phys-109 General Physics I. Text book: Physics, 6 th edition, D. C. Giancoli.

Instructor Dr. Tomislav Pintauer Mellon Hall Office Hours: 1-2 pm on Thursdays and Fridays, and by appointment.

That s how we roll. Physics 20: General Physics Part 1. Agenda. Administrative Stuff. About Me. Goals For This Class 1/16/14.

US Customary System (USC) Systeme Internationale (SI) Prefixes. Units & Significant Figures

REVIEW PACKET FOR CHEM 110 EXAM 1

Mr. Northcutt's Math Classes Class Presentation

General Physics (PHY 170) Chap 2. Acceleration motion with constant acceleration. Tuesday, January 15, 13

Chapter 2. Kinematics in One Dimension

Mechanics of Material 11/29/2017. General Information

Physics Fall Mechanics, Thermodynamics, Waves, Fluids. Lecture 1: the SI unit system; significant figures; estimations

CHEM 2: An Introduction to Inorganic Chemistry

Chemistry 451. Prerequisites: CHEM 013, MATH 141, PHYS 202 or PHYS 212. Prof. Mueller/Sykes Chemistry 451 Spring 2004 Lecture 1-1

Lecture 2- Linear Motion Chapter 10

Important Dates. Non-instructional days. No classes. College offices closed.

Chapter 2. Kinematics in One Dimension

Physics 207, Sections: 302/ /616 General Physics Faculty Instructors: General Announcements

Trigonometry I. Pythagorean theorem: WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY Physics

PHYS 1441 Section 001 Lecture #2 Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Exploring The Universe

Materials and Energy Balance in Metallurgical Processes. Prof. S. C. Koria. Department of Materials Science and Engineering

To begin, a little information about units: Milliliters, liters, gallons and ounces measure (liquid) volume.

Read Sections 1.10 and Appendix A-1 before viewing this slide show.

CHEM 102 Fall 2012 GENERAL CHEMISTRY

People to Know. Bring to Lecture Everyday: Course Materials. Bring to Discussion Everyday: Breakdown. Welcome to CHEM 102B. Coursework and Grading

Syllabus Tutors Review from previous class. Resources. Lecture: MW 5:30PM-6:50PM Room 425

PHYS 122 Introductory Physics II Dr. Eric C. Anderson UMBC Fall 2016 Syllabus. Getting ready

PHYSICS. Complete Study Material and 1000 Objective bits Useful for all SSC, RRB & Group Exams METRE

Welcome to Physics 202

AP Physics 1 Summer Assignment-2016

Standard Chemistry Summer Reading Packet 10

Physics 2240, Spring 2015

Physics 141 Course Information

Physics 2D Lecture Slides Lecture 1: Jan

AS The Astronomical Universe. Prof. Merav Opher - Fall 2013

Physics 141 Course Information

Chapter 1 Problem 28: Agenda. Quantities in Motion. Displacement Isn t Distance. Velocity. Speed 1/23/14

Welcome to Physics 201

Physics I Exam 1 Fall 2014 (version A)

Physics General Physics. Mostly mechanics, some fluid mechanics, wave motion and thermodynamics! Fall 2016 Semester Prof.

CH. I ME2560 STATICS General Principles GENERAL PRINCIPLES. Rigid body mechanics. Fluid mechanics

PHYS.1410 Physics I Exam 1 Spring 2016 (version A)

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Department of Chemistry General Chemistry I - Summer General Information for CHEM 001 and CHEM 009

Dr. Soeren Prell A417 Zaffarano Hall Office Hours: by appointment (just send me a brief )

University of Alaska Fairbanks Course Syllabus Chemistry 103: Basic General Chemistry

GEOLOGY 100 Planet Earth Spring Semester, 2007

Physics 101 covers. Forces Kinematics Energy/Momentum Rotations Fluids Waves/Sound Thermodynamics. Physics 101: Lecture 1, Pg 1

ISP 205: Visions of the Universe. Your Professor. Assignments. Course Resources

These variables have specific names and I will be using these names. You need to do this as well.

MAHAPATRA218FALL12 ( MPMAHAPATRA218FALL12 )

HEAT AND THERMODYNAMICS PHY 522 Fall, 2010

Introduce Professors Chidsey and Dai, Dr. Schwartz, Marissa Caldwell and the rest of the instructional team.

Syllabus. Physics 0847, How Things Work Section II Fall 2014

Who am I? CHEM 110 General Chemistry King Abdul Aziz University Jeddah KSA. How to reach me?


Announcements. Describing Motion. Teaching Assistant. Where to find the extra-credit and home-experiment turn-in box

FTF Day 1. Feb 2, 2012 HW: Ch 3 Review Q s and Key Terms (Friday) Topic: Newton s 2 nd and 3 rd Laws Questions

KNOWLEDGE TO GET FROM TODAY S CLASS MEETING

AP Physics Math Review Packet

Reading Quiz. How many years of physics have you had?

Guest Lecture Friday. Test schedule. SOH CAH TOA! For right triangles. Review and Problem Solving Day: Geometry, movement, and Free-fall.

Important Dates. Non-instructional days. No classes. College offices closed.

MEASUREMENTS. Significant Figures

Chem400. General Chemistry. Introduction. Class Syllabus. Introduction. Instructor: Prof. Maddox. Welcome to Chem 400!

The Nature of Science

ME 201 Engineering Mechanics: Statics. Unit 1.1 Mechanics Fundamentals Newton s Laws of Motion Units

Four Types of Motion We ll Study

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Prerequisite: one year of high school chemistry and MATH 1314

US Customary System (USC)

Department of Physics & Astronomy Trent University

Summer Assign. 17 Common Math Applications. You have the potential to exceed in AP Physics 1 all you have to do is invest the time.

Honors Chemistry Mathematics Reading assignment

Physics 121 for Majors

2 Standards of Measurement

Develop problem solving skil s

2 The Way Science Works

What is a Vector? A vector is a mathematical object which describes magnitude and direction

AS 101: The Solar System (Spring 2017) Course Syllabus

Transcription:

For students enrolled in an introductory physics lab, PHYS 2108 and PHYS 2109 lab classes begin this week (August 20-24). You must attend the first week of class or send an email to lab@phys.lsu.edu PRIOR TO CLASS explaining your absence or you will be dropped from the course. Ray Chastain Welcome, Physics Majors! Freshman physics major? (or thinking about becoming one? Are you a physics minor or double major? If so, You are invited to join us for free pizza!. We will meet: Friday August 24, 4:30-6:00 pm Nicholson Hall, Room 435 We will give you some important information, like.. Who are the important people to know? How you can do research in physics and astronomy? Who are The Society of Physics Students?

Rongying Jin (professor) Department of Physics & Astronomy Office: 229B Nicholson Hall Email: rjin@lsu.edu Tel: (225) 578-0028 Visit my personal website for more information: http://www.phys.lsu.edu/rongying/

You are Science & Engineering Majors. You are registered for PHYS 2101. You want to learn PHYS 2101?? You want to have good grade!!

Fall 2012: PHYS2101 Section 6 Reading Assignments: Lecture schedule is provided - read material before lecture! Lectures: Concepts will be developed through the lectures, demonstrations and class discussion Homework: Best way to learn the material: -- Quizzes & Exams mostly based on HW

Class Information is also via WebAssign HW will be due in 1 week! Start early!! WebAssign will handle most of your class-related needs: homework, formulae sheets, practice tests http://webassign.net/student.html IMPORTANT: Try to log into WebAssign TODAY Click I have a class key then input your class key: lsu 3573 6541. If you have used WebAssign before, your old password will be in effect If you have NOT used WebAssign before, you can logon in by using your LSU PAWS email address without the @lsu.edu, and setup your own password. If you have a problem in logon, please check: (1) username (has to be PAWS username); (2) if you have paid for accessing WebAssign; (3) if you are in my class roster. Please contact me if you cannot logon. The first homework assignment is posted.

Course details -- see syllabus Class Format - Announcements - Mixture of Power Point and Chalk Board/Overhead - Some theory. Some problems - Power Point slides are available on class website & my own website - Please ask questions (and correct me!). Course: It is assumed that everyone has credit in PHYS 1100 so the material in Chapters 1-6 (vectors, 1- and 2-D kinematics, Newton s laws) will only be reviewed in the first two weeks of class. If you tested out of PHYS 1100, you will be assumed to know this material and should review it carefully if you don't remember it well. You will be tested on this material in the third week of class. After the first two weeks the course assumes a more normal pace and will cover most of the section contained in chapters 7 20, with the exception of chapter 17, which will be skipped. The core material of the course covers concepts in mechanics, fluids, wave motion, and thermodynamics. The lecture schedule will specifically indicate sections of text that are covered on a given week. Students should read and become familiar with this material before coming to class. Course grades will be determined by quizzes (mostly in weekly base), Homework, four 1-hour mid-term tests, and a final (see following).

Course details -- see syllabus Homework: Homework assignments will be posted online at: http://webassign.net/student.html (details announced in class). They are similar to text book HW. Except when noted in class, due dates for homework assignments will generally be midnight on Monday after the assignment. Full solutions will be available at webassign after the due date. Quiz: There will be a quiz (10-15 min.) based primarily on the HW problems due that week. Tutoring: If you do not understand the material or you experience difficulty in working the problems, seek help from the graduate tutors in Room 102 of Nicholson Hall. This service is free. There will be 2101 Supplemental, which is also free. More information coming soon. Make sure you take advantage of the instructor office hours posted. You should feel free to go to any instructor's office hours if you have class conflicts with your own instructor's office hours; all sections follow the same schedule and use the same homework assignments.

Course details -- see syllabus Exams: There will be four 1-hour mid term exams. There will be no make-up exams: if you need to miss an exam for a university-scheduled function, make sure you obtain permission from your instructor in advance. If you miss an exam with permission your other scores will be adjusted. Exams will contain a combination of multiple-choice questions and work problems for which you must show your work. The scheduled dates for exams are as following: Exam 1 100 points September 18, 2012 6 7 pm Lockett 10 Exam 2 100 points October 16, 2012 6 7 pm Lockett 10 Exam 3 100 points November 13, 2012 6 7 pm Lockett 10 Final 200 points December 6, 2012 3 5 pm TBA Students having three or more final examinations in a 24 hour period may request permission to take no more than two examinations on the day concerned. These requests must be requested by the student and approved by the instructor before Friday Nov. 9 th. A formula sheet will also be provided and no other material is to be used during the exam. You will need a scientific calculator; graphic calculators are fine, but not necessary. Old exams (with solutions) are posted here, but notice that the number of exams and material covered in them is different in different years.

Course details -- see syllabus Grading: HW-50 pts. The two lowest will be dropped. The quizzes and many of the exam questions are taken from the Home Work. Quiz - 50 pts. The quiz grade will be computed from the average grade. Middle Exams - 100 pts. each: Total 300 pts. The final exam will be composed of two parts, an examination of Ch. 18-20 (100 pts) and a separated cumulative part (100 pts). Your final grade will be based on 600 total points. The demarcations in % of 600 pts are given below A >88%, B> 77%, C>60%, D>50% If your percentage grade is within these ranges, you are guaranteed the associated letter grade. At the end of the course the instructors may adjust these cut offs slightly but only downwards.

Basic concepts: 1. Measurement of a physical parameter 2. Units, systems of units (example: SI) 3. Basic units in mechanics 4. Changing units 5. Significant figures

SI Base Units seven 1) meter (m) distance 2) kilogram (kg) mass 3) second (s) time 4) ampere (A) electric current 5) kelvin (K) temperature 6) mole (mol) amount of stuff 7) candela (cd) intensity of light Derived Unit Measures Derivation Formal Def. hertz (Hz) frequency /s s -1 newton (N) force kg (m/s 2 ) kg m s -2 pascal (Pa) pressure N/m 2 kg m-1 s-2 joule (J) energy N m kg m2 s-2 or work prefix Symbol Factor Giga G 10 9 Mega M 10 6 Kilo k 10 3 Centi c 10 2 Milli m 10 3 Micro µ 10 6 Nano n 10 9 See Appendix A: International System of Units See Appendix D: Conversion Factors Significant figures

Units example Alpha Centauri is the closest star. It is 4.3 light-years away. How many kilometers away is the star from earth? Write down: What do you know? What are we trying to get to? 4.3 light years = time it takes for light to travel distance Distance = speed time Now do it.. ( ) distance = 4.3 years What s the speed (rate)? Speed of light = 3 10 8 m/s 3.15 10 7 s 3 10 8 m 1 year s 1 km 1000 m time = 40 10 12 km or 40 petameters (Pm) speed

When we measure physical quantities, the units may be anything that is reasonable as long as they are well defined. It s usually best to use the international standard units. Density may be defined as the mass of an object divided by its volume. Which of the following units would probably not be acceptable units of density? a) gallons/liter b) kilograms/m 3 c) pounds/ft 3 d) slugs/yd 3 e) grams/milliliter Questions

Questions A certain physical quantity, R, is calculated using the formula: R = 4a 2 (b c) where a is a speed (a distance traveled per unit time interval) and b and c are distances. What is the SI unit for R? a) cm/h b) cm 2 /s c) m 2 /h d) m 2 /s e) m 3 /s 2

Questions Given that one inch is equal to 25.4 mm. How many meters equal 11.3 ft? a) 3.45 m b) 4.42 m c) 2.95 m d) 1.30 m Solution: in=25.4mm ft=12in=12x2.54mm=304.8mm=0.305m e) 2.21 m

Questions Which one of the following pairs of units may not be added together, even after the appropriate unit conversions have been made? a) feet and centimeters b) seconds and slugs c) meters and miles d) grams and kilograms e) hours and years

Be sure that numerical answers appear with appropriate SI units. Points will be deducted for missing, incorrect, or silly units. If the final answer is in fact a dimentionless quantity, please write the numerical result followed by the word dimensionless

Basic Concepts: Displacement: (SI Unit: m) Average velocity: (SI Unit: m/s) Instantaneous velocity: Average acceleration: (SI Unit: m/s 2 ) Instantaneous acceleration We are dealing with Kinematics

Example Average Velocity: The World s Fastest Jet-Engine Car Andy Green in the car ThrustSSC set a world record of 341.1 m/s in 1997. To establish such a record, the driver makes two runs through the course, one in each direction, to nullify wind effects. From the data, determine the average velocity for each run. v ave = v = Δx Δt = x x o t t o v 1 st v 2 nd = Δ x Δt = +1609 m 4.740 s = +339.5m s = Δ x Δt = 1609 m 4.695 s = 342.7m s Entire trip: Average speed? 341.1 m/s Average velocity? 0 m/s Δx=0! Can Displacement be larger than Distance? When is it equal?

Special Case: Motion with Constant Acceleration

Motion with Constant Acceleration The x(t) versus t plot is a parabola that intercepts the vertical axis at x = x 0. The v(t) versus t plot is a straight line with slope = a and intercept = v 0. The acceleration a is a constant.

Example The brakes on your car are capable of creating a constant deceleration of 5.2 m/s 2. a) If you are going 137 km/hr and suddenly see a state trooper, what is the minimum time in which you can get your car under the 90 km/hr speed limit? b) How far has your car traveled during the deceleration?

Special Case: free-falling body motion Close to the surface of the Earth all objects move toward the center of the Earth with an acceleration whose magnitude is constant and equal to 9.8 m/s 2. We use the symbol g to indicate the acceleration of an object in free fall. a B y A

Question A person standing at the edge of a cliff throws one ball straight up and another ball straight down at the same initial speed. Neglecting air resistance, the ball to hit the ground below the cliff with the greater speed is the one initially thrown 1. upward. 2. downward. 3. neither they both hit at the same speed.

Kinematics: Taking Advantage of Symmetry