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Request for Interdepartmental input in Introductory Physics Program Dear Colleague: Attached is a list of items that we either currently cover, or could cover in our introductory Physics 121-122 sequence. There is never enough time to cover all the topics we wish to cover, and we are always considering what items could be dropped and which others added. We would like you opinion on whether any entire areas could be dropped, or whether any sub-topics within areas could be omitted (for the majors in your department). We would also like to know what topics we should cover that are not listed here, or any topics that ARE listed here that you think stand out in importance. Items in normal type are covered, and we expect to continue to cover them. Items in bold italic are not currently covered, but have been in the past or could be easily added (with other cuts). Note also that the depth and breadth of material we can cover is dependent on the quality of our students AND on how many of them we are willing to fail at least once. We would very much appreciate your input on how much pampering you wish us to do of your students. If you tell us you want an extremely rigorous program, we would gladly filter out those with weaker backgrounds or less agile minds.. There is the related problem of losing otherwise good students who have had poor or non-existent highschool physics. In our opinion, our introductory physics sequence IS INAPPROPRIATE for students without a good high-school physics course under their belt. We do not yet have a good solution to this problem. LIST A: CURRICULUM TOPICS – Phys 121 Units & Vectors SI Units 21 21 Metric Prefixes from ( 10 to10 ) Vector Addition and Subtraction Dot Product Cross Product 1-D and 3-D Motion Constant Accelerated Motion Acceleration of gravity Falling objects Acceleration of vehicles Relative reference frames Motion for non-constant acceleration Circular & Projectile motions Centripetal Acceleration Range and Trajectory of projectiles without air-resistance Corrections for Air-resistance Motion and Force Acceleration of single body system Static and Dynamic Friction Normal forces and Tension Effective weight in an elevator Applying Newton’s Laws Free-body diagrams (and drawing them properly!) Ramps / Pulleys / Cables Acceleration of multi-body systems Force couples Pushing motion / Pulling motion When will a block slip off an accelerating table? Equilibrium (Statics) of simple point mass systems Work and Kinetic Energy Work / KE Theorem Definition of work For constant vector forces For varying scalar forces For varying vector forces Calculating Work done by non-conservative forces Calculating average collision force for collision occurring over known distance. Introduction to springs (what is means for force to be proportional to length change and not length) Potential Energy and Power Conservative and Nonconservative Forces Law of Energy Conservation Deriving Potentials for gravity and for springs Ramp problems by energy methods Accounting for work lost to friction Definition of instantaneous and average power Basic calculations in units like kWh Mom. Cons. & Collisions Concept and definition of center of mass Vector calculation of center of mass for a multi-point mass system Definition of Impulse and calculation of average collision force. Conservation of center of mass momentum Internal forces and momentum conservation Center of mass stays at rest if it begins at rest and only internal forces are present. Inelastic collisions Elastic collisions General formula for 1-D elastic collisions between two bodies of arbitrary mass, one of which is initially at rest. General formula for 1-D elastic collisions between two bodies of arbitrary mass and velocity Rotation and constant angular acceleration Analog between linear 1-D motion and rotational motion Vector definitions of angular velocity and acceleration Relation between angular velocity and acceleration and linear velocity/acceleration. Definition and derivation of moment of inertia. Moment of inertia of regular solids Parallel axis theorem Rotation, Torque and Angular Momentum Definition of Rolling Velocities of objects rolling down ramps Partition of Energy between CM motion and rotation. Torque as a cross product = r x F Concept of moment arm Newton’s 2nd law for rotation = I L= r x p L= I Precession and Nutation (covered in lab only) Statics Statics of extended multibody systems that includes force and torque equilibrium Definition of Young’s Modulus of Elasticity Definition of Stress and Strain and Applications of Young’s modulus to same Gravitation and Orbital Mechanics Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation Cavendish Experiment Vector calculation of Gravitational force for a collection of point masses Proof that spherical mass distributions may be treated as point masses. Kepler’s three laws of planetary motion Derivation of Kepler’s third law for the case of circular motion Derivation of Kepler’s second law from angular momentum conservation Central forces exert zero torque. Derivation of Kepler’s third law for the case of elliptical motion Categorization of types of orbit by eccentricity or by total energy and momentum Derivation of Gravitational potential energy Calculation of Escape Velocities Calculation of Schwarzchild radius (black holes) Special Relativity Michelson-Morley Experiment Time Dilation Length Contraction Lorentz Transformation Minkowski Space Four-Vector invariance Space-time interval Doppler Effect Relativistic velocity addition formulae Relativistic momentum Relativistic Kinetic and Total Energies Relativistic Forces and Accelerations. Nuclear energy and particle physics The “electron volt” and the Joule. General Relativity Curvature of light in a gravitational field Einstein Lensing Temperature and Kinetic Theory of Gases Definition of temperature as internal kinetic Energy Direction of heat flow (thermal equilibrium) Types of thermometers Heat of Vaporization / Heat of Fusion Heat transfer Conduction Convection Radiation Stefan Boltzman Law Wien’s Law Black body radiation Emissivity Kinetic Theory of Gases Deriving ideal gas law from basic kinetic principles Corrections to ideal gas law. 3 E kT for monatomic gas. 2 Definition of heat capacity R and k Deriving molar heat capacities from basic kinetic principles Equipartition of Energy Law of Dulong and Petit for heat capacities of solids. Thermodynamics Vocabulary (isotherms, adiabats, equations of state, critical points) First Law Calculating net work/cycle from p-V diagram Calculating work done in isothermal expansion by integration pV = Constant (adiabatic expansion) pV= Constant (isothermal expansion) Deriving from first principle calculations of CP / CV Entropy Definition as dQ/T Carnot Cycle Carnot efficiency Stirling Cycle engines Second law of thermodynamics. Understanding in terms of statistical probabilities LIST B: TECHNICAL LITERACY TOPICS A) Mathematics a. Vectors i. Magnitude and Direction from Components (and vice versa) ii. Graphical method for Addition and Subtraction of Vectors iii. Addition and Subtraction of Vectors by components iv. Vector Dot Product v. Vector Cross Product b. Trigonometry i. Definitions of sin/cos/tan committed to memory ii. Definition of radian measure and the relationship s r iii. Pythagorean theorem in 3-dimensions iv. Surface area, volume and circumference for Spheres and Circles c. Algebra i. Solutions of systems of equations ii. Multiplying whole equations by constants, getting common denominators of algebraic expressions etc. d. Calculus i. How to take a derivative ii. Chain rule iii. Product Rule iv. Integration by Parts v. Integration by Substitution vi. Interpretation of integrals as area under a curve vii. Line integrals viii. Gradients 1. Gradient as direction of steepest descent 2. Gradient as inverse of line integral e. Approximations to complex functions for small arguments i. ii. iii. iv. Use of Taylor / McLaurin series to expand f(x) about f(0) Statement of Binomial theorem Use of binomial theorem to approximate f(x) about f(0) Binomial theorem B) Problem Solving a. Physical units i. Using formulae like F=ma to guide conversions 1. (e.g. 1 N = 1 kg m/s*s) ii. Memorizing important English to metric conversion factors and important physical constants, # of seconds in a day, # of feet in a mile, speed of light, speed of sound 3 b. c. d. 3 iii. Understanding how to convert m to cm Proper use of calculators i. The degree/radian trap in arcsin ii. The “wrong quadrant” trap in arctan iii. How to handle problems that are beyond the limit of calculator precision (e.g. subtracting two large quantities that differ by a small quantity). iv. Maintaining 4-significant figure precision throughout a long calculation. (How to prevent accumulation of rounding errors). The sketch i. Sketches should be 3”x3” and labeled ii. Sketches should capture the essence of the problem, or at least the relationships in space or time between the important parts of the problem iii. Sketches may be used to translate a word problem into a picture to aid the solution process. The “ISEE” method (Identify / Set-up / Execute / Evaluate) i. Identify – Draw a properly labeled diagram, identify known and unknown variables, characterize the overall type of problem in terms of what approaches or formulae may yield success. ii. Set-up – Break vector equations into component equations, specialize general equations to the problem at hand (drop zero factors). iii. Execute – Crunch the equations, do not plug actual #s in until have full algebraic solution. iv. Evaluate – 1. Checking of units. a. Units matching on left and right of = sign. b. 2. 3. Noting if you end up with funny units like meters ew tons). or cos(N Looking for alternate methods of solution. a. Adding vectors graphically to check that the algebraic method didn’t give a wildly erroneous result. b. Comparing magnitudes with rule of thumb magnitudes to check validity. Checking calculator work by estimation with pencil and paper. C) The Scientific Method a. History and Philosophy of Science i. Thomas Kuhn and the structure of scientific revolutions ii. From Aristotle to Newton iii. From Newton to Einstein iv. The Correspondence Principle v. BS Detection in life and technical careers (importance of the “back of the envelope” calculation) 1. Perpetual Motion b. c. Experimental Method i. How to write a lab report ii. Using Common laboratory instruments 1. The multimeter 2. The oscilloscope 3. The photogate and timer 4. Calipers 5. Acoustic, optical and force transducers Error Analysis i. Reporting data with error bars ii. Discussing sources of error realistically iii. Propagating errors through different types of calculations