PHY 184 lecture 1 - MSU Department of Physics and Astronomy
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Transcript PHY 184 lecture 1 - MSU Department of Physics and Astronomy
PHY 184
Physics for Scientists & Engineers 2
Spring Semester 2007
Lecture 1
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Meet Your Professor (1)
Section 1
Prof. Reinhart Schienhorst
Section 2
Prof. Daniel Stump
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Meet Your Professor (2)
Daniel Stump
Ph. D. 1976 (M. I. T.)
Teaching at MSU since 1980
Theoretical High-Energy Physics
Office hours
Mon & Thu, 1:00 -2:30 pm
Learning Center (Room 1248)
Best way to contact me – after class
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Comparing Data and Theory
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Meet Your Professor (2)
Daniel Stump
Ph. D. 1976 (M. I. T.)
Teaching at MSU since 1980
Theoretical High-Energy Physics
Office hours
Mon & Thu, 1:00 -2:30 pm
Learning Center (Room 1248)
Best way to contact me – after class
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Textbook
Bauer and Westfall
“Physics for Scientists and Engineers 2”,
McGraw-Hill (2005).
• Available at the MSU Bookstore
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PHY 184 on the Web
Web site:
• http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/phy184
Homework web site
• http://msu.loncapa.org
Strosacker Learning Center in Room 1248 BPS (this
building) will be our help room for LON-CAPA
homework.
Coverage will be numerous and varied hours each
week.
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LON-CAPA Login
Enter your MSU mail id
Enter your password
Enter msu
Click or hit return
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Grades
We grade on a fixed scale - no curve
What Counts
Midterm 1
Midterm 2
Final Exam
Homework
Total
%
20%
20%
30%
30%
100%
Up to 5% extra credit: Inclass quizzes using HITT
clickers
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What Grade
92<x<100 4.0
84<x<92 3.5
76<x<84 3.0
68<x<76 2.5
60<x<68 2.0
52<x<60 1.5
44<x<52 1.0
0<x<44
0.0
9
To get a good grade in PHY 184, you’ll need to do 4 things:
/1/ Come to class, pay attention, take notes. (4 hours/wk)
/2/ Do the reading. (2 hours/wk)
/3/ Do the LON-CAPA homework. (8 hours/wk at least )
/4/ Study for the exams. (10 hours the week before the exam)
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Clicker Quizzes
HITT clickers – purchase at the bookstore
Enroll your clicker in LON-CAPA by giving your clicker
ID!
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Clicker Sign-up
Registration in LON-CAPA: Course document “Clicker”
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Schedule for PHY 184
Lectures
If you care about your
grade, come to class !
• M, Tu, W, Th
• 9:10 - 10:00
Two Midterm Exams
• Thursday, February 8
• Thursday, March 22
Final Exam
• Time – Thursday May 3
• Location - TBA
Homework due each Tuesday morning at 8:00 am
Work on homework every day!
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Syllabus and Exams
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Electromagnetism
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Electricity and Magnetism
Electricity and magnetism have been known for
thousands of years.
• The philosophers of ancient Greece knew that a piece of
amber rubbed with fur would attract small, light objects
• The word for electron and electricity derive from the Greek
word for amber, o.
• Naturally occurring magnetic materials called lodestones
were used as early as 300 BC to construct compasses.
The relationship between electricity and magnetism
was not known until the middle of the 19th century.
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Fundamental Forces of Nature
The force of gravity was described by Isaac Newton
• Late 17th century
In the 20th century, two more forces were discovered
• The weak force and the strong force – inside the atomic nucleus
The electromagnetic force and the weak
force have a unified theory
• The electroweak force
• 1979 Nobel prize in physics for
Weinberg, Salam, and Glashow
Currently physicists are working to unify
the electroweak force and the strong
force.
Gravity remains a puzzle although it was
identified first.
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The Four Forces
We think that the four fundamental forces work by
exchanging elementary particles
•
•
•
•
Gravity - graviton (has not been observed)
Electromagnetic – photon (the elementary component of light)
Weak - W and Z bosons (first observed 1983, but unstable)
Strong – gluons (first observed 1978, but confined)
Thus forces can act across distance (objects not
touching)
• The Sun attracts the Earth from 93 million miles away
• A magnet attracts iron.
The forces act through the fields of the exchanged particles.
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Gravitational and Electric Forces
For gravity we defined a
gravitational force…
…and a gravitational potential
We will do the same for the
electric force and the electric
potential.
We will develop the theory of
the electric field to describe
the electric force.
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GM1M2
F
2
r
GM1M2
U
r
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Elementary Particles
Force
Gravity
Exchange particles
Leptons
Quarks
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Particle
graviton
Electromagnetic photon
Weak
W, Z
Strong
gluon
electron electron neutrino
muon
muon neutrino
tau
tau neutrino
down strange bottom
up
charm
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Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Link
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