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Topic 6: Electromagnetic Waves
Topic 6: Electromagnetic Waves

PHY481 - Lecture 17: Magnets field lines, North and South. Lorentz
PHY481 - Lecture 17: Magnets field lines, North and South. Lorentz

... repel and unlike poles attract. No elementary particles with an isolated magnetic charge or Dirac monopole have been discovered. Instead elementary particles often have a property called spin which is quantized (for example the electron has spin half). Associated with spin is a quantum of magnetic d ...
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Here is the 2014 exam with solutions.

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... The Challenges: The challenges listed in the following sections appear on the main menu of the CP program. Select the appropriate letter to begin each challenge. The CP program is keyboard oriented. Your mouse does not work. Watch the menu at the bottom of each screen for keys to use. Check the pane ...
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electric field lines - Erwin Sitompul

...  The Coulomb’s law tells us how a charged particle interacts with another charged particle.  The question now: Since the particles do not touch, how can one particle push or pull the other? How can there be such an action at a distance with no visible connection between the particles?  The concep ...
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Electric Charge

PHYS102 - LAB 2- Millikan Oil Drop 2012_w_Procedure
PHYS102 - LAB 2- Millikan Oil Drop 2012_w_Procedure

... In this experiment, we determine the total charge on a droplet. By analyzing the data obtained, the charge of a single electron can be determined. It is important to select only spheres which rise and fall slowly under the action of the applied electric field. Such spheres have a very small number o ...
Electric Fields and Forces
Electric Fields and Forces

... uniform with a magnitude of 1500N/C. a) How much work would be required to move a proton from the negative to the positive plate? b) What is the potential difference between the plates? c) If the proton is released from rest at the positive plate, what speed will it have just before it hits the nega ...
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... temporarily stick to the pattern on the drum and are later transferred to paper and “melted” to produce the copy. Suppose each toner particle has a mass of 9.0x10-16kg and carries an average of 20 extra electrons to provide an electric charge. Assuming that the electric force on a toner particle mus ...
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EXAM 3 - University of Utah Physics

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... 25. Mass is an intrinsic quality of matter that never changes, regardless of the position of the object (Earth, moon, other planets etc.). People get confused because they think of the weight (Fg=mg), which depends on mass m but also depends on gravity. Weight does change if you go somewhere else. T ...
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Red-Electrostatics Protons have what type of charge? Electrons

... The number of cycles per time is called what? Frequency is measured in what units? The time it takes for one wave to pass a point is called what? Do waves transfer energy, matter, or both? Waves are caused by what? What type of relationship exists between the frequency and the wavelength? A wave pul ...
HighFour Physics Round 5 Category D: Grades 11 – 12 Monday
HighFour Physics Round 5 Category D: Grades 11 – 12 Monday

... Four hundred grams of lead BB shot is heated to 100°C and dropped in a 100-g glass beaker containing 200 grams of water at 20°C. The specific hear of glass is 0.20 . The mixture is stirred until temperature equilibrium is 24.2°C. What is the specific heat (in ...
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ELECTRODYNAMICS—lecture notes second semester 2004 Ora Entin-Wohlman

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The Measurement of the ESA Effect

... The delay rod is there to enable us to hear the tiny sound signal without interference. As soon as the electric field is applied to the cell, the very sensitive transducer ‘hears’ a signal of the same frequency, generated by what is called ‘cross talk’. That signal is so strong that it would drown o ...
Physics: Light 1.a Introduction, Ancient History of theories of light
Physics: Light 1.a Introduction, Ancient History of theories of light

... In the middle ages, Islamic scholars advanced the study of optics. It had become clear that light was no longer a phenomena only tied to human vision but was a physical entity itself. In the later parts of the 1600s two competing of views of what light is. • Light is comprised of particles. This was ...
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HNRS 227 Lecture #2 Chapters 2 and 3

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Speed of gravity

In classical theories of gravitation, the speed of gravity is the speed at which changes in a gravitational field propagate. This is the speed at which a change in the distribution of energy and momentum of matter results in subsequent alteration, at a distance, of the gravitational field which it produces. In a more physically correct sense, the ""speed of gravity"" refers to the speed of a gravitational wave, which in turn is the same speed as the speed of light (c).
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