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Download 504 Advanced Placement Physics C Course Description Students
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Department: Science Course Number and Title: 504 Advanced Placement Physics C Course Description Students are expected to complete rigorous course and lab work consistent with college level Physics and to complete 5-8 hours per week of independent practice such as homework, reading, and projects. This course will follow the curriculum prescribed for an AP Physics C – Mechanics class. Students will prepare and be required to take the AP Physics exam. AP Physics C – Mechanics presents the areas of mechanics and wave phenomena. The course stresses both the mathematical and the practical applications of the topics being studied. A significant amount of class time is spent doing laboratory investigations. The topics addressed in this course include one and two-dimensional motion, Newton’s laws of motion, work and energy, momentum, circular motion and gravitation, rotational dynamics, periodic motion, and geometric optics. Analysis of these topics will use calculus where appropriate. This course assumes that students will be able to solve problems independently and have a high level of math skill. A TI-80 series graphing calculator is used in this course. MHS Learning Expectations: • Demonstrate the ability to problem solve effectively. • Demonstrate the ability to use technology responsibly and effectively. Essential Questions: How is it possible to describe to motion of objects? What conservation laws govern the universe? What is a system? How can the interactions between bodies and systems be understood? Students will know: • The general relationships among position, velocity and acceleration • The special case of motion with constant acceleration • How to deal with situations in which acceleration is a specified function of velocity and time • How to work with vectors • The general motion of a particle in two dimensions • The motion of projectiles in a uniform gravitational field • How to analyze situation in which a particle remains at rest, or moves with a constant velocity, under the influence of forces Students will be able to: • Analysis a graph of any of the kinematic quantities to understand the other quantities as functions of time • Given an expression of one of the kinematic quantities as a function of time find information about the other quantities • Use equations to generate equations for other kinematic quantities • Write appropriate differential equations • Use vectors to describe the kinematic quantities • Describe the general motion of a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The relation between force and the changing of an objects velocity How Newton’s second law applies to an object or a system The significance of the coefficient of friction The effect of drag forces on the motion of an object How Newton’s Third law applies to a system Definition of work The work-energy theorem The concepts of conservative and non-conservative forces The concept of potential energy The concepts of mechanical energy and of total energy The concepts around conservation of energy The definition of power What the center-of-mass, center of gravity is of an object or a system Impulse and Momentum That linear momentum is conserved in a system The relationships between frames of reference The uniform circular motion of a particle The concept of torque and how it relates to static equilibrium Rotational inertial The parallel-axis theorem The analogy between translational and rotational kinematics The dynamics of fixed-axis rotation The motion of a rigid object along a surface Angular momentum conservation The vector relationship between angular quantities Simple Harmonic Motion\ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • particle in two dimensions with functions x(t) and y(t) Use expressions in analyzing the motion of a projectile Calculate the changes in velocity of an object due to a force that is a function of time Draw free-body diagrams and use these diagrams to create equations Use their understanding of vectors to explain the actions of an object or a system Analyze situations involving different types of frictional forces Use their understanding of drag forces to express the terminal velocity of falling objects Determine the differential equation for the velocity or the acceleration of an object falling as a function of time Apply Newton’s Third law to systems and individual bodies To solve problems in which application of Newton’s laws lead to two or three simultaneous linear equations involving unknown forces or accelerations Use the concept of work to explain and show the effects on bodies and systems Use the work-energy theorem to calculate the kinetic energy and speed of an object or a system Apply their understand of different types of forces to situations involving both conservative and non-conservative forces State and apply the relation between work and energy Apply relations of conservation of energy and a system to explain changes to a system • • • • • How to apply their understanding of SHM to the case of a mass on a spring How to apply their understanding of SHM to the case of a pendulum Newton’s Law of Gravitation How an object balances gravitational and circular forces in orbit Kepler’s laws and how to apply them • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Use the definition of power to explain situations involving energy and power Apply their understanding of center-of-mass and use integration to find the center of mass of a thin rod of non-uniform density Understand and apply the relation between center-of-mass velocity and linear momentum, and between center-of-mass acceleration and net external force for a system Use center-of-mass and potential energy concepts Use their understanding of impulse and Momentum to analyze interactions of objects and systems Relate their understanding of linear momentum to the center-of-mass of a system Use graphs and functions to calculate to momentum of systems as functions of time Relate momentum to forces and Newton’s laws Relate the actions of a system to their understanding of energy, momentum and forces Analyze situations with multiple frames of reference Analyze situations involving uniform circular motion and all the kinematic vector quantities involved Calculate the torque in situations Analyze situations that are in static equilibrium Analyze the rotational inertial of various objects and collections of points Write and apply relations among • • • • • • • • angular quantities Relate angular and linear kinematic and dynamic quantities Apply equations of translational and rotational motion simultaneously Analyze situations using angular momentum and torque Apply conservation laws to rotational motion, especially when the rotational inertia changes Analyze situations involving SHM both graphically and using equations Derive equations involving object in SHM Analyze orbital motion using both their understanding of gravity and circular motion but also Kepler’s laws Use energy and momentum concepts to express and explain orbital motion Course Outline Semester One Semester Two Kinematics: One dimension Circular Motion Kinematics: Two dimensions Rotational Motion: Torque & Statics Linear Momentum: Center of mass Rotational Motion: Kinematics Linear Momentum: Impulse and Changes in Momentum Rotational Motion: Dynamics Linear Momentum: Conservation in a System Oscillations: SHM Newton’s laws of Motion: Static & Oscillations: Pendulums Rotational Motion: Angular Momentum Oscillations: Mass & Springs Equilibrium Gravitation: Newton’s law Newton’s laws of Motion: Dynamics Gravitation: Orbits & Planets Newton’s laws of Motion: Systems Work, energy, power: Work & Kinetic Energy Work, energy, power: Potential Energy Work, energy, power: Conservation of Energy Work, energy, power: Power Primary Course Materials Textbook: Physics for Scientists and Engineers (Eighth Edition): Serway & Jewett (978-0538-49722-0) Additional Materials: laboratory activities, computer simulations, scientific articles, teachercreated projects, and extensions to college level content Grade Determination: Quarterly grades will be based on: Tests & Quizzes Projects, Labs, Class Work Homework 40 % 40 % 20 % Major Assignments: Students are required to keep a lab journal containing all lab experiments, data, and reports. This will be kept for the entire course to serve as a portfolio of the student’s laboratory work. There will be multiple practice tests during the course to prepare the students for taking the AP test in the spring. Midyear and Final Exams Midyear and Final Exams will be given. These exams count as 10% of the respective semester grade. The average of the first and second quarter grades will count 90% in determining the first semester average. Similarly, the second semester average will include the average of third and fourth quarter grades at 90% and the final exam at 10%. The average for the entire year will be the average of both semesters. Q1 = 22.5% Q2 = 22.5% Midterm = 5% Q3 = 22.5% Q4 = 22.5% Final = 5%