Notes AP Physics 2
Notes AP Physics 2
Class Notes
Mr. Bigler
Lynn English High School
September 2015
http://www.mrbigler.com/AP-Physics-2
Copyright © 2006–2015 Mr. Bigler.
This document is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
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ISBN-13: 978-1517428266
ISBN-10: 1517428262
Physics Notes Page 3
This is a set of class notes for AP Physics 2: Algebra-Based. This hardcopy is provided so that
you can fully participate in class discussions without having to worry about writing everything
down.
For AP Physics 2, we are using the textbook Physics Fundamentals, by Vincent P. Coletta
(Physics Curriculum & Instruction, Inc., 2010). These notes are meant to complement the
textbook discussion of the same topics. In some cases, the notes and the textbook differ in
method or presentation, but the physics is the same. There may be errors and/or omissions in
the textbook. There are certainly errors and omissions in these notes, despite my best efforts
to make them clear, correct, and complete.
As we discuss topics in class, you will almost certainly want to add your own notes to these. If
you have purchased this copy, you are encouraged to write directly in it, just as you would write
in your own notebook. However, if this copy was issued to you by the school and you intend to
return it at the end of the year, you will need to write your supplemental notes on separate
paper. If you do this, be sure to write down page numbers in your notes, to make cross-
referencing easier.
You should bring these notes to class every day, because lectures and discussions will follow
these notes, which will be projected onto the SMART board.
Mathematics ..................................................................................................................... 49
Index................................................................................................................................ 447
Add Important Cornell Notes Page: 7
Notes/Cues Here Unit: Introduction
Cornell Notes
Unit: Introduction
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
how to take advantage of the Cornell note-taking system
Language Objectives:
Understand the term Cornell Notes and be able to describe how Cornell
Notes are different from ordinary note-taking.
Notes:
The Cornell note-taking system was developed about fifty years ago at Cornell
University. I think it’s a great way to get more out of your notes. I think it’s an
especially useful system for adding your comments to someone else’s notes
/(such as mine).
3. The bottom section (2 inches) is officially for you to add a 1–2 sentence
summary of the page in your own words. This is a good idea. However,
because the rest of the page is my notes, not yours, you may also want to
use that space for anything else you want to remember that wasn’t in the
pre-printed notes.
Notes:
If you read a textbook the way you would read a novel, you probably won’t
remember much of what you read. Before you can understand anything, your
brain needs enough context to know how to file the information. This is what
Albert Einstein was talking about when he said, “It is the theory which decides
what we are able to observe.”
When you read a section of a textbook, you need to create some context in your
brain, and then add a few observations to solidify the context before reading in
detail.
René Descartes described this process in 1644 in the preface to his Principles of
Philosophy:
"I should also have added a word of advice regarding the manner of reading this work, which
is, that I should wish the reader at first go over the whole of it, as he would a romance,
without greatly straining his attention, or tarrying at the difficulties he may perhaps meet
with, and that afterwards, if they seem to him to merit a more careful examination, and he
feels a desire to know their causes, he may read it a second time, in order to observe the
connection of my reasonings; but that he must not then give it up in despair, although he
may not everywhere sufficiently discover the connection of the proof, or understand all the
reasonings—it being only necessary to mark with a pen the places where the difficulties
occur, and continue reading without interruption to the end; then, if he does not grudge to
take up the book a third time, I am confident that he will find in a fresh perusal the solution
of most of the difficulties he will have marked before; and that, if any remain, their solution
will in the end be found in another reading."
You shouldn’t need to use more than about one sheet of paper (both sides) per
10 pages of reading!
Notes:
If you were to copy down a math problem and look at it a few days or weeks
later, chances are you’ll recognize the problem, but you won’t remember how
you solved it.
If you want to take good notes on how to solve a problem, you need your notes
to show what you did at each step.
For this problem, a two-column description would look like the following:
Step Description/Explanation
m = 25 kg
vo = 0
v = 3.5 ms Define variables.
t = 1.5 s
F = quantity desired
F = ma Choose a formula that contains F. See if we have the
other variables.
No. We need to find a before we can solve
the problem.
Choose a formula that contains a. See if we have the
v = vo + at other variables.
Yes.
3.5 = 0 + a (1.5)
3.5 = 1.5a
Substitute v, vo and t into the 1st equation and solve
3.5 1.5
a for a.
1.5 1.5
2.33 = a
F = ma
Substitute m and a into the 2nd equation and solve
F = (25)(2.33)
for F.
F = 58.33
F = 58.33 N Include the units and box the final answer.
The purpose of this chapter is to teach skills necessary for designing and
carrying out laboratory experiments, recording data, and writing summaries
of the experiment in different formats.
Designing & Performing Experiments discusses strategies for coming up
with your own experiments and carrying them out.
Accuracy & Precision, Uncertainty & Error Analysis, and Recording and
Analyzing Data discuss techniques for working with the measurements
taken during laboratory experiments.
Keeping a Laboratory Notebook and Formal Laboratory Reports discuss
ways in which you might communicate (write up) your laboratory
experiments.
Calculating uncertainty (instead of relying on significant figures) is a new and
challenging skill that will be used in lab write-ups throughout the year.
Notes:
The scientific method is a fancy name for “figure out what happens by trying it.”
In the middle ages, “scientists” were called “philosophers.” These were church
scholars who decided what was “correct” by arguing and debating with each
other.
During the Renaissance, scientists like Galileo Galilei and Leonardo da Vinci
started using experiments instead of argument to decide what really happens in
the world.
Steps:
1. Observe something interesting.
2. Figure out and perform an experiment that will have different outcomes
depending on the parameter(s) being tested.
3. Repeat the experiment, varying your conditions as many ways as you can.
4. If possible, come up with a model that explains and predicts the behavior
you observed. This model is called a theory.
Note that the word “theory” in science has a different meaning from the word
“theory” in everyday language. In science, a theory is a model that:
Has never failed to explain a collection of related observations
Has never failed to successfully predict the outcomes of related
experiments
For example, the theory of evolution has never failed to explain the process of
changes in organisms because of factors that affect the survivability of the
species.
Notice also that the word “hypothesis” does not appear anywhere in the
description of the scientific method. It is possible (and sometimes useful) to
have a hypothesis before performing an experiment, but an experiment is just as
valid and just as useful whether or not a hypothesis was involved.
For example, the Law of Gravity states that objects attract other objects based
on their mass and distance from each other. It is a law and not a theory because
the Law of Gravity does not explain why masses attract each other.
Atomic Theory states that matter is made of atoms, and that those atoms are
themselves made up of smaller particles. The interactions between the particles
that make up the atoms (particularly the electrons) are used to explain certain
properties of the substances. This is a theory because it gives an explanation for
why the substances have the properties that they do.
Note that a theory cannot become a law any more than a definition can become
a measurement.
Notes:
Most high school physics experiments are relatively simple to understand, set up
and execute—much more so than in chemistry or biology. This makes physics
well-suited for teaching you how to design experiments.
independent variable: the conditions you are setting up. These are the numbers
you pick. Because you pick the numbers, they are independent of what
happens in the experiment. For example, if you are dropping a ball from
different heights to find out how long it takes to hit the ground, you are
choosing the heights, so height is the independent variable.
dependent variable: the things that happen in the experiment. These are the
numbers you measure, which are dependent on what happens in the
experiment. For example, if you are dropping a ball from different heights to
find out how long it takes to hit the ground, you are measuring the time,
which depends on the height. This means time is the dependent variable.
If someone asks what you independent and dependent variables are, the
question simply means, “What did you do (independent variable)?” and “What
did you measure (dependent variable)?”
If you want to find out under what conditions something happens, what you’re
really testing is whether or not it happens under different sets of conditions that
you can test. In this case, you need to test three situations:
1. A situation in which you are sure the thing will happen, to make sure you
can observe it. This is your positive control.
2. A situation in which you sure the thing cannot happen, to make sure your
experiment can produce a situation in which it doesn’t happen and you
can observe its absence. This is your negative control.
3. The condition you want to test to see whether or not the thing happens.
The condition is your independent variable, and whether or not the thing
happens is your dependent variable.
Quantitative Experiments
If the goal of your experiment is to quantify (find a numerical relationship for)
the extent to which something happens (the dependent variable), you need to
figure out a set of conditions in which you can measure the thing that happens.
Once you know that, you need to figure out how much you can change the
parameter you want to test (the independent variable) and still be able to
measure the result. This gives you the highest and lowest values of your
independent variable. Then perform the experiment using a range of values for
the independent value that cover the range from the lowest to the highest (or
vice-versa).
F = ma
Notice that we have figured out that we can measure mass directly, but we need
some way to figure out the acceleration. This means that our experiment to
determine the force consists of two steps:
1. Measure the mass.
2. Perform an experiment to determine the acceleration.
3. Calculate the force on the object from the mass and the acceleration.
So now we need a formula for acceleration. That formula turns out to be:
d v ot 12 at 2
Notes:
Science relies on making and interpreting measurements, and the accuracy and
precision of these measurements affect what you can conclude from them.
precision: for a single measurement, how finely the measurement was made.
(How many decimal places it was measured to.) For a group of
measurements, how close the measurements are to each other.
The first set is both accurate (the average is close to the center) and precise (the
data points are all close to each other.)
The second set is precise (close to each other), but not accurate (the average is
not close to the correct value). This is an example of systemic error—some
problem with the experiment caused all of the measurements to be off in the
same direction.
The third set is accurate (the average is close to the correct value), but not
precise (the data points are not close to each other). This is an example of
random error—the measurements are not biased in any particular direction, but
there is a lot of scatter.
The fourth set is neither accurate nor precise, which means that there are
significant random and systematic errors present.
For another example, suppose two classes estimate Mr. Bigler’s age. The first
class’s estimates are 73, 72, 77, and 74 years old. These measurements are fairly
precise (close together), but not accurate. (Mr. Bigler is actually about 50 years
old.) The second class’s estimates are 0, 1, 97 and 98. This set of data is
accurate (because the average is 49, which is close to correct), but the set is not
precise because the individual values are not close to each other.
Notes:
In science, unlike mathematics, there is no such thing as an exact answer.
Ultimately, every quantity is limited by the precision and accuracy of the
measurements that it came from. If you can only measure a quantity to within
10%, that means any number that is derived from that measurement can’t be
any better than ±10%.
Error analysis is the practice of determining and communicating the causes and
extents of possible errors or uncertainty in your results. Error analysis involves
understanding and following the uncertainty in your data from the initial
measurement to the final report.
Absolute Error
Absolute error (or absolute uncertainty) refers to the uncertainty in the actual
measurement, such as (3.64 ± 0.22) cm.
Relative Error
Relative error shows the error or uncertainty as a fraction of the measurement.
(Percent error, which you used in chemistry last year, is related to relative error.)
uncertainty
The formula for relative error is R.E.
measuredvalue
While this would be the correct formula to use when possible, often we have too
few data points (small values of n), which causes the formula to predict a much
larger uncertainty than we probably actually have.
If the variable x represents the measured quantity, you would express your
result as:
r
reported value = x
3
Note that we are treating 3 as a constant. Whenever you have more than one
but fewer than ten data points, find the range and divide it by 3 to get the
estimated uncertainty.
Example:
Suppose you measured a mass on a balance and the reading drifted between
3.46 g and 3.58 g:
3.46 3.58
x 3.52
2
r 3.58 3.46 0.12
r 0.12
u 0.07
3 1.732
You would record the balance reading as (3.52 ± 0.07) g.
When you have only one data point, the standard uncertainty is the limit of how
precisely you can measure it (including any estimated digits). This will be your
best educated guess, based on how closely you think you actually measured the
quantity.
Digital Measurements
For digital equipment, if the reading is stable (not changing), look up the
published precision of the instrument in its user’s manual. (For example, many
balances used in high schools have a readability of 0.01 g but are only precise to
within ± 0.02 g.) If there is no published value (or the manual is not available),
assume the uncertainty is ± 1 in the last digit.
In the above experiment, you should record the volume as 32.0 ± 0.1 mL. It
would be inadequate to write the volume as 32 mL. (Note that the zero at the
end of the reading of 32.0 mL is not extra. It is necessary because you measured
the volume to the nearest 0.1 mL and not to the nearest 1 mL.)
When estimating, you can generally assume that the estimated digit has an
uncertainty of ±1. This means the uncertainty of the measurement is usually
1 10 of the finest markings on the equipment.
The advantage to “crank three times” is that it’s easy to understand and you are
therefore less likely to make a mistake. The disadvantage is that it can become
unwieldy when you have multi-step calculations.
The answer with its uncertainty is (0.9287 0.1596) kgs2m , which we can
round to (0.93 0.16) kgs2m .
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes:
205.2 kgsm
2
1 2
The result of the calculation is: 2 (12.2)(5.8) 2
2 2
2 .
If we rounded our answer of 24 650 ± 1 010 to 25 000 ± 1 000, it would agree with
the number we got by using the rules for significant figures.
Note, however, that our answer of 24 650 ± 1 010 suggests that the actual value
is between 23 640 and 25 660, whereas the answer based on significant figures
suggests that the actual value is between 24 000 and 26 000. This is why
scientists frown upon use of “sig figs” instead of genuine error analysis. If you
insist on using sig figs, it is better to report answers to one more sig fig than the
problem calls for, in order to minimize round-off answers in your results.
Doing the calculation with sig figs would give us an answer of 48, which implies
48 ± 1. Again, this is in the ballpark of the actual uncertainty, but you should
notice (and be concerned) that the sig figs method underrepresents the actual
uncertainty by a factor of 3.5!
Notes:
A laboratory notebook serves two important purposes:
1. It is a legal record of what you did and when you did it.
2. It is a diary of what you did in case you want to remember the details
later.
Recording Data
Write something about what you did on the same page as the data, even if
it is a very rough outline. Your procedure notes should not get in the way
of actually performing the experiment, but there should be enough
information to corroborate the detailed summary of the procedure that
you will write afterwards. (Also, for evidence’s sake, the sooner after the
experiment that you write the detailed summary, the more weight it will
carry in court.)
Keep all of the raw data, whether you will use it or not.
Don’t discard a measurement, even if you think it is wrong. Record it
anyway and put a “?” next to it. You can always choose not to use the data
point in your calculations (as long as you give an explanation).
Never erase or delete a measurement. The only time you should ever cross
out recorded data is if you accidentally wrote down the wrong number.
Record all digits. Never round off original data measurements. If the last
digit is a zero, you must record it anyway!
For analog readings (e.g., ruler, graduated cylinder, thermometer),
estimate and record one extra digit.
Always write down the units with each measurement!
Record every quantity that will be used in a calculation, whether it is
changing or not.
Don’t convert in your head before writing down a measurement. Record
the original data in the units you measured it in, and convert in a separate
step.
Integrity of Data
Your data are your data. In classroom settings, people often get the idea that
the goal is to report an uncertainty that reflects the difference between the
measured value and the “correct” value. That idea certainly doesn’t work in real
life—if you knew the “correct” value you wouldn’t need to make measurements!
In all cases—in the classroom and in real life—you need to determine the
uncertainty of your own measurement by scrutinizing your own measurement
procedures and your own analysis. Then you judge how well they agree.
If your results disagree with well-established results, you should look for and
comment on possible problems with your procedure and/or measurements that
could have caused the differences you observed. You must never fudge your
data to improve the agreement.
In physics class this year, you will record data on loose paper, but in the same
format as you would use for a laboratory notebook. (Otherwise, the teacher
would need to take home three bushels of lab notebooks weighing more than
100 pounds to grade for every lab experiment.)
The format we will use is meant to follow an outline of the actual experiment.
Don’t worry too much about following the format exactly. It is much more
important that the information you have is complete and recorded correctly
than it is to follow the format.
Objective
This should be a one or two-sentence description of what you are trying to
determine or calculate by performing the experiment.
Experimental Plan
Your experimental plan is a short description (usually a few sentences) that
explains:
what you are going to do (each of your independent variables and what
you are going to do with them)
what you are going to measure or observe (your dependent variables)
how you are going to calculate or interpret the results.
If you were keeping an actual notebook, your notebook would be the only place
you are allowed to write anything during the experiment. However, because you
are not keeping a physics notebook this year, the piece of paper with your
original data serves the same purpose.
Procedure
This is a detailed description of exactly what you did. You need to include:
A labeled sketch of your experimental set-up, even if the experiment is
simple. The sketch will serve to answer many questions about how you set
up the experiment and most of the key equipment you used.
A list of any equipment that you used other than what you labeled in your
sketch.
A step-by-step description of everything you did. The description needs to
include the actual values of quantities you used in the experiment (your
independent variables). For a repeated procedure, write the steps once,
then list the differences from one trial to the next. E.g., “Repeat steps 1–4
using distances of 1.5 m, 2.0 m, 2.5 m, and 3.0 m.”
For a high school lab, it is usually sufficient to present a single data table that
includes your measurements for each trial and the quantities you calculated
from them. However, if you have other data or observations that you recorded
during the lab, they must be listed here.
Conclusions
Your conclusion should be worded the same way as your objective, this time
including your calculated results with their uncertainties. You do not need to
mention sources of uncertainty in your conclusions unless you believe they were
significant enough to create some doubt about your results.
Notes:
A formal laboratory report serves one important purpose: to communicate the
results of your experiment to other scientists outside of your laboratory or
institution.
A formal report is a significant undertaking. In a research laboratory, you might
submit as many as one or two articles to a scientific journal in a year. Some
college professors require students to submit lab reports in journal article
format.
Introduction
Your introduction is actually an entire research paper on its own, with citations.
(For a high school lab report, it should be 1–3 pages; for scientific journals, 5–
10 pages is not unheard of.) Your introduction needs to describe any general
background information that another scientist might not know, plus all of the
background information that specifically led up to your experiment. The
introduction is usually the most time-consuming part of the report to write.
Also unlike the lab notebook write-up, your Materials and Methods section
needs to give some explanation of your choices of the values of your
independent variables (what you actually did).
Discussion
This section is similar to the Analysis section in the lab notebook write-up, but
with some important differences.
Your discussion is essentially a long essay discussing your results and what they
mean. You need to introduce and present a table with your calculated values
and your uncertainty. After presenting the table, you should discuss the results,
uncertainties, and sources of uncertainty in detail. If your results relate to other
experiments, you need to discuss the relationship and include citations for those
other experiments.
Your discussion needs to include all of the formulas that you used as part of your
discussion, but you do not need to show your work for each calculation.
Conclusions
Your conclusions should start by presenting the same information that you
included in the same section in your lab notebook write-up. However, in the
formal report, you should mention significant sources of uncertainty, and
suggest how future experiments might follow up on or expand on your
experiment.
Works Cited
As with a research paper, you need to include a complete list of bibliography
entries for the references you cited in your introduction and/or discussion
sections.
Introduction: Mathematics
Unit: Mathematics
Topics covered in this chapter:
Standard Assumptions in Physics ....................................................... 52
Assigning & Substituting Variables ..................................................... 55
The Metric System .............................................................................. 62
Scientific Notation............................................................................... 67
Right Triangle Trigonometry ............................................................... 70
Vectors ................................................................................................ 72
Vectors vs. Scalars in Physics .............................................................. 76
Vector Multiplication .......................................................................... 79
Logarithms .......................................................................................... 83
Notes:
Many of us have been told not to make assumptions. There is a popular
expression that states that “when you assume, you make an ass of you and me”:
ass|u|me
In science, particularly in physics, this adage is crippling. Assumptions are part of
everyday life. When you cross the street, you assume that the speed of cars far
away is slow enough for you to walk across without getting hit. When you eat
your lunch, you assume that the food won’t cause an allergic reaction. When
you run down the hall and slide across the floor, you assume that the friction
between your shoes and the floor will be enough to stop you before you crash
into your friend.
If you are not sure whether you can make a particular assumption, you should
ask the teacher. If this is not practical (such as an open response problem on a
standardized test), you should decide for yourself whether or not to make the
assumption, and explicitly state what you are assuming as part of your answer.
Notes:
Math is a language. Like other languages, it has nouns (numbers), pronouns
(variables), verbs (operations), and sentences (equations), all of which must
follow certain rules of syntax and grammar.
This means that turning a word problem into an equation is translation from
English to math.
Mathematical Operations
You have probably been taught translations for most of the common math
operations:
word meaning word meaning word meaning
and, more than
percent
(but not + ÷ 100 is at least ≥
(“per” + “cent”)
“is more than”)
less than
change in x, is more
(but not − Δx >
difference in x than
“is less than”)
of × is = is at most ≤
per, out of ÷ is less than <
Any time you see a number in a word problem that has a unit you recognize
(such as one listed in this table), notice which quantity the unit is measuring and
label the quantity with the appropriate variable.
Be especially careful with uppercase and lowercase letters. In physics, the same
uppercase and lowercase letter may be used for completely different quantities.
The variable for force is “F”, so the diagram would look like this:
In order to distinguish between the forces and make the diagram easier to
understand, we add subscripts to the variables:
Fg mg right
It is important that the subscript g on the left does not get confused with the
variable g on the right. Otherwise, the following error might occur:
Fg mg
Fg mg wrong!
F m
Another common use of subscripts is the subscript “0” to mean “initial”. For
example, if an object is moving slowly at the beginning of a problem and then it
speeds up, we need subscripts to distinguish between the initial velocity and the
final velocity. Physicists do this by calling the initial velocity “vo” where the
subscript “0” means “at time zero”, i.e., at the beginning of the problem, when
the “time” on the “problem clock” would be zero. The final velocity is simply “v ”
without the zero.
We have units of N and kg, and we’re looking for acceleration. We need to look
these up in our reference tables.
Now that we have the variables, we find a formula that relates them. From the
second formula box in Table E (“Mechanics Formulas and Equations”) on page 4
of our reference tables, we find that:
F = ma
So we substitute:
30 1.5 a
20 a
Again from Table D, we find that acceleration has units of meters per second
squared, so our final answer is 20 sm2 .
Notes:
A unit is a specifically defined measurement. Units describe both the type of
measurement, and a base amount.
For example, 1 cm and 1 inch are both lengths. They are used to measure the
same dimension, but the specific amounts are different. (In fact, 1 inch is exactly
2.54 cm.)
The number and the units are both necessary to describe any measurement. You
always need to write the units. Saying that “12 is the same as 12 g” would be as
ridiculous as saying “12 is the same as 12 × 3”.
Each of these base units is defined in some way that could be duplicated in a
laboratory anywhere on Earth (except for the kilogram, which is defined by a
physical object that is locked in a vault in the village of Sevres, France). All other
metric units are combinations of one or more of these seven.
For example:
Velocity (speed) is a change in distance over a period of time, which would have
units of distance/time (m/s).
These prefixes can be used in combination with any metric unit, and they work
just like units. “35 cm” means “35 times c times m” or “(35)( 1 )(m)”. If you
100
multiply this out, you get 0.35 m.
For example, standard atmospheric pressure is 101 325 Pa. This same number
could be written as 101.325 kPa or 0.101 325 MPa.
There is a popular geek joke based on the ancient Greek heroine Helen of Troy.
She was said to have been the most beautiful woman in the world, and she was
an inspiration to the entire Trojan fleet. She was described as having “the face
that launched a thousand ships.” Therefore a milliHelen must be the amount of
beauty required to launch one ship.
The prefix “m” means 10−3 and “μ” means 10−6. The prefix is getting smaller by 3
decimal places, so the number needs to get bigger by 3 decimal places. The
answer is therefore 250 μg.
As you can see, when the prefix got smaller, the number had to get bigger in
order for the value to remain equal to 0.000 25 g.
There are two measurement systems used in physics. In the MKS, or “meter-
kilogram-second” system, units are derived from the S.I. units of meters,
kilograms, seconds, moles, Kelvins, amperes, and candelas. In the cgs, or
“centimeter-gram-second” system, units are derived from the units of
centimeters, grams, seconds, moles, Kelvins, amperes, and candelas. The
following table shows some examples:
S.I. S.I.
Quantity MKS Unit cgs Unit
Equivalent Equivalent
kgm gcm
force newton (N) s2
dyne (dyn) s2
kgm2 gcm2
energy joule (J) s2
erg s2
In this class, we will use exclusively MKS units. This means you only have to learn
one set of derived units. However, you can see the importance, when you solve
physics problems, of making sure all of the quantities are in MKS units before
you plug them into a formula!
Scientific Notation
Unit: Mathematics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Skills:
Be able to convert numbers to and from scientific notation.
Be able to enter numbers in scientific notation correctly on your calculator.
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Notes:
Scientific notation is a way of writing a very large or very small number in
compact form. The value is always written as a number between 1 and 10
multiplied by a power of ten.
For example, the number 1 000 would be written as 1 × 103. The number
0.000 075 would be written as 7.5 × 10−5. The number
602 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 would be written as 6.02 × 1023. The number
0.000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 663 would be written as
6.6 × 10−34.
(Note: in science, large numbers are typeset with a space after every three digits,
both before and after the decimal point. To avoid confusion, commas are not
used because in some countries, the comma is used as a decimal point.)
Scientific notation is really just math with exponents, as shown by the following
examples:
5.6 10 3 5.6 1 000 5 600
1 1 2.17
2.17 10 2 2.17 2
2.17 0.0217
10 100 100
Significant figures are easy to use with scientific notation: all of the digits before
the “×” sign are significant. The power of ten after the “×” sign represents the
(insignificant) zeroes, which would be the rounded-off portion of the number. In
fact, the mathematical term for the part of the number before the “×” sign is the
significand.
Adding & Subtracting: adjust one or both numbers so that the power of ten is
the same, then add or subtract the significands.
3.50 10 2.7 10 3.50 10 0.27 10
6 7 6 6
Multiplying & dividing: multiply or divide the significands. If multiplying, add the
exponents. If dividing, subtract the exponents.
6.2 10 8 6.2
10 810 2.0 10 2
3.1 10 10
3.1
Exponents: raise the significand to the exponent. Multiply the exponent of the
power of ten by the exponent to which the number is raised.
3.00 10
8 2
3.002 108
2
9.00 10 82 9.00 1016
Scientific calculators all have some kind of scientific notation button. The
purpose of this button is to enter numbers directly into scientific notation and
make sure the calculator stores them as a single number instead of a math
equation. (This prevents you from making PEMDAS errors when working with
numbers in scientific notation on your calculator.) On most Texas Instruments
calculators, such as the TI-30 or TI-83, you would do the following:
What you type What the calculator shows What you would write
Important note: many high school students are afraid of the EE button because
it is unfamiliar. If you are afraid of your EE button, you need to get over it and
start using it anyway. However, if you insist on clinging to your phobia, you need
to at least use parentheses around all numbers in scientific notation, in order to
minimize the likelihood of PEMDAS errors in your calculations.
Notes:
In physics, it is often necessary to combine vertical and horizontal quantities into
a single quantity, or to split a quantity into its vertical and horizontal
components.
If we have the following triangle:
side “h” (the longest side, opposite the right angle) is the hypotenuse.
side “o” is the side of the triangle that is opposite (across from) angle θ.
side “a” is the side of the triangle that is adjacent to (connected to) angle θ
(and is not the hypotenuse).
There are a lot of stupid mnemonics for remembering which sides are involved in
which functions. My favorite of these is “Oh hell, another hour of algebra!”
a
cos whichmeans a h cos
h
o
s in whichmeans o h s in
h
Vectors
Unit: Mathematics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
what a vector is
Skills:
adding & subtracting vectors
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “vector,” “scalar,” and
“magnitude.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Notes:
vector: a quantity that has both a magnitude (value) and a direction.
scalar: a quantity that has a value but does not have a direction. (A scalar is
what you think of as a “regular” number, including its unit.)
magnitude: the scalar part of a vector (i.e., the number and its units, but without
the direction). If you have a force of 25 N to the east, the magnitude of the
force is 25 N.
The mathematical operation of taking the magnitude of a vector is
represented by two double vertical bars (like double absolute value bars)
around the vector. For example, if F is 25 N to the east, then F 25 N
Vectors are represented graphically using arrows. The length of the arrow
represents the magnitude of the vector, and the direction of the arrow
represents the direction of the vector:
magnitude 10 magnitude 15
magnitude 7
direction: 0° direction: +180°
direction: +90° (up)
(to the right) (to the left)
*
nˆ is pronounced “n hat”
If the vectors are not in the same direction, we move them so they start from the
same place and complete the parallelogram. If they are perpendicular, we can
add them using the Pythagorean theorem:
The same process applies to adding vectors that are not perpendicular:
However, the trigonometry needed for the calculations is more involved and is
not necessary for an algebra-based physics course.
Notice that v x remains constant, but v y changes (because of the effects of
gravity).
Notes:
In physics, most numbers represent quantities that can be measured or
calculated from measurements. Most of the time, there is no concept of a
“deficit” of a measured quantity. For example, quantities like mass, energy, and
power can only be nonnegative, because in classical mechanics there is no such
thing as “anti-mass,” “anti-energy,” or “anti-power.”
A rule of thumb that works most of the time in this class is:
Scalar quantities. These are almost always positive. (Note, however, that we
will encounter some exceptions during the year. An example is electric
charge, which can be positive or negative.)
The answer is positive. Earlier, we defined positive as “up”, so the answer tells
us that the displacement is upwards from the starting point.
The answer is negative. Remember that “down” was positive, which means “up”
is the negative direction. This means the displacement is upwards from the
starting point, as before.
Remember: in any problem you solve, the choice of which direction is positive
vs. negative is arbitrary. The only requirement is that every vector quantity in
the problem needs to be consistent with your choice.
Vector Multiplication
Unit: Mathematics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Skills:
dot product & cross product of two vectors
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Notes:
With scalar (ordinary) numbers, there is only one way to multiply them, which
you learned in elementary school. Vectors, however, can be multiplied in three
different ways.
For example, in physics, work (a scalar quantity) is the dot product of the vectors
force and displacement (distance):
W F d Fd cos
2
pronounced “A dot B”
where the magnitude is AB sin θ, and the vector n̂ is the direction. (AB sin θ is a
scalar. The unit vector n̂ is what gives the vector its direction.)
The direction of the cross product is a little difficult to make sense out of. You
can figure it out using the “right hand rule”:
3
pronounced “A cross B”
The torque produced by a force F acting at a radius r is given by the equation:
τ r F rF sin nˆ
Thus, if you are tightening or loosening a nut or bolt that has right-handed
(standard) thread, the torque vector will be in the direction that the nut or bolt
moves.
Vector Jokes
Now that you understand vectors, here are some bad vector jokes:
Q: What do you get when you cross an elephant with a bunch of grapes?
A: sin θ n̂
Q: What do you get when you cross an elephant with a mountain climber?
A: You can’t do that! A mountain climber is a scalar (“scaler,” meaning
someone who scales a mountain).
Logarithms
Unit: Mathematics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
what logarithms represent and an intuitive understanding of logarithmic
quantities
Skills:
use logarithms to solve for a variable in an exponent
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Notes:
The logarithm may well be the least well-understood function encountered in
high school mathematics.
The simplest logarithm to understand is the base-ten logarithm. You can think of
the (base-ten) logarithm of a number as the number of zeroes after the number.
x log10(x)
5
100 000 10 5
10 000 104 4
1 000 103 3
100 102 2
10 101 1
1 100 0
0.1 10−1 −1
0.01 10−2 −2
0.001 10−3 −3
0.000 1 10−4 −4
0.000 01 10−5 −5
As you can see from the above table, the logarithm of a number turns a set of
numbers that vary exponentially (powers of ten) into a set that vary linearly.
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes:
Notice that the distance from 1 to 10 is the same as the distance from 10 to 100
and from 100 to 1000. In fact, the relative distance to every number on the
number line is equal to the logarithm of the number.
This is a powerful tool in solving for the exponent in an equation. This is, in fact,
precisely the purpose of using logarithms in most mathematical equations.
1
x dx l n(x)
The number “e” is often called the exponential function. In an algebra-based
physics class, the exponential function appears in some equations whose
derivations come from calculus, notably some of the equations relating to
resistor-capacitor (RC) circuits.
Fluid mechanics is the study of behaviors that are specific to fluids (liquids
and gases).
Pressure is the property that is central to the topic of fluid mechanics.
Hydrostatics and Buoyancy describe and give equations for the effects of
gravity on pressure.
Gas Laws describes behaviors and equations involving temperature,
pressure and volume, as related to gases.
Fluid Motion & Bernoulli’s Law describes the effects of fluid motion on
pressure.
Textbook:
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 11: Fluids (pp. 257–294)
Pressure
Unit: Pressure & Fluid Mechanics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
pressure
Skills:
calculate pressure as an applied force
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “pressure” as it applies to situations
in physics.
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to pressure and hydraulics.
F
P
A
Air pressure can be described relative to a total vacuum (absolute pressure), but
is more commonly described relative to atmospheric pressure (gauge pressure):
absolute pressure: the total pressure on a surface. An absolute
pressure of zero means there is zero force on the surface.
against the air outside the tires with a pressure of 30 psi. A flat tire
would have a gauge pressure of zero.
Sample Problem
Q: What is the pressure caused by a force of 25 N acting on a piston with an
area of 0.05 m2?
F 25 N
A: P 500 Pa
A 0.05 m2
Homework Problems
1. A person wearing snow shoes does not sink into the snow of the tundra,
whereas the same person without snow shoes sinks into the snow.
Explain.
3. A carton of paper has a mass of 22.7 kg. The area of the bottom is
0.119 m2. What is the pressure between the carton and the floor?
Answer: 1 869 Pa
4. A 1000 kg car rests on four tires, each inflated to 2.2 bar. What surface
area does each tire have in contact with the ground? (Assume the weight
is evenly distributed on each wheel.)
Answer: 0.0111 m2
6. A student with a mass of 50. kg is lying on the floor of the classroom. The
area of the student that is in contact with the floor is 0.6 m2. What is the
pressure between the student and the floor? Express your answer both
in pascals and in bar.
Answer: 817 Pa or 0.00817 bar
7. The same student, with a mass of 50 kg, is lying on a single nail has a
cross-sectional area of 0.1 mm2 1 10 7 m2 . What is the pressure (in
bar) that the student exerts on the head of the nail?
Answer: 49 000 bar
8. The same student, with a mass of 50 kg, is lying on a bed of nails that
contains 2 500 nails evenly spread over an area of 0.84 m2. If the student
is in contact with 1 800 of the nails, what is the pressure (in bar) between
the student and each nail?
Answer: 27 bar
Hydraulic Pressure
Unit: Pressure & Fluid Mechanics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
hydraulic pressure
Skills:
calculate the force applied by a piston given the force on another piston
and areas of both in a hydraulic system
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “hydraulic pressure.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to hydraulic pressure.
Conservation of energy tells us that the work done by F 1 must equal the work
done by F 2, which means F 1 must act over a considerably larger distance than F 2.
This also makes sense when you consider the volume of fluid transferred as a
fraction of both the smaller and larger cylinders.
This is how hydraulic brakes work in cars. When you step on the brake pedal,
the hydraulic pressure is transmitted to the master cylinder and then to the slave
cylinders. The master cylinder is much smaller in diameter than the slave
cylinders, which means the force applied to the brake pads is considerably
greater than the force from your foot.
Sample Problem
Q: In a hydraulic system, a force of 25 N will be applied to a piston with an area
of 0.50 m2. If the force needs to lift a weight of 500. N, what must be the
area of the piston supporting the 500. N weight?
F1 F2 25 500. 25A2 (500)(0.50)
A:
A1 A2 0.50 A2 25A2 250
A2 10. m2
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes:
Hydrostatic Pressure
Unit: Pressure & Fluid Mechanics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
hydrostatic pressure
Skills:
calculate pressure exerted by a column of fluid
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “hydrostatic pressure.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to hydrostatic pressure.
The force of gravity pulling down on the molecules in a fluid creates pressure.
The more fluid there is above a point, the higher the pressure at that point.
Fg mg
P
A A
where:
P = pressure
g = acceleration due to gravity ( 9.8 m
s2
on Earth)
A = area of the surface the fluid is pushing on
mg mg V m gV
P
A A V V A
Then, recognizing that density, ρ*, is mass divided by volume, we can substitute:
gV
P
A
Finally, if the volume of an object is the area of the base times the height (h), we
can rewrite the equation as:
gAh
P gh
A
*
Note that physicists use the Greek letter ρ (“rho”) for density. You need to pay careful
attention to the difference between the Greek letter ρ and the Roman letter “p”.
P Po gh
where:
Po = pressure above the fluid (if relevant)
ρ = density of the fluid (this is the Greek letter “rho”)
g = acceleration due to gravity ( 9.8 m
s2
on Earth)
h = height of the fluid above the point of interest
Sample Problem
Q: What is the water pressure in the ocean at a depth of 25 m? The density of
sea water is 1025 mkg3 .
2. The specifications for the wet/dry vacuum cleaner that Mr. Bigler used
for his hovercraft state that it is capable of creating enough of a pressure
difference to lift a column of water to a height of 1.5 m at 20°C. How
much pressure can the vacuum cleaner apply?
Answer: 14 700 Pa
Buoyancy
Unit: Pressure & Fluid Mechanics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
Buoyancy & Archimedes’ Principle
Skills:
Calculate the buoyant force on an object
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “displace” and “buoyant” or
“buoyancy.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to buoyancy.
The hydrostatic pressure is stronger at the bottom of the object than at the top,
which causes a net upward force on the object.
2. The weight of the fluid displaced equals the buoyant force (FB).
3. The net force on the object, if any, is the difference between its weight
and the buoyant force: Fnet Fg FB .
which means:
Fg FB FN
This concept is known as Archimedes’ Principle, named for the ancient Greek
scientist who discovered it.
m
A:
V
35 000 000 kg
1 025 mkg3
V
V 34 146m3
FB Vd g
FB (1 025 mkg3 )(34 146 m3 )(9.8 sm2 )
FB 3.43 × 108 N .
2. The SS United Victory was a cargo ship launched in 1944. The ship had a
mass of 15 200 tonnes fully loaded. (1 tonne = 1 000 kg). The density of
kg
sea water is 1 025 . What volume of sea water did the SS United
m3
Victory displace when fully loaded?
Answer: 14 829 m3
3. 3. An empty box is 0.11 m per side. It will slowly be filled with sand that
kg
has a density of 3 500 . What volume of sand will cause the box to sink
m3
kg
in water? (Assume water has a density of 1 000 . You may neglect the
m3
weight of the box.)
Answer: 3.80 10 4 m3
Gas Laws
Unit: Pressure & Fluid Mechanics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
Boyle’s Law (pressure vs. volume)
Amontons’ Law (pressure vs. temperature)
Charles’ Law (temperature vs. volume)
Avogadro’s Principle (number of particles vs. volume)
ideal gas law
combined gas law
Skills:
Solve problems using the gas laws
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “pressure,” “volume,” and
“temperature,” and “ideal gas.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems using the combined gas law and the ideal
gas law.
Most gases behave ideally except at temperatures and pressures near the
vaporization curve on a phase diagram. (I.e., gases stop behaving ideally
when conditions are close to those that would cause the gas to condense to
a liquid or solid.)
Boyle’s Law
In 1662, British physicist and chemist Robert Boyle published his findings that the
pressure and volume of a gas were inversely proportional. If temperature and
the number of particles of gas are constant, then for an ideal gas:
P1 V1 P2 V2
(Note that by convention, gas laws use subscripts “1” and “2” instead of “i” and
“f”.)
Amontons’ Law
In 1702, French physicist Guillaume Amontons discovered that the pressure and
temperature of a gas were directly proportional. If volume and the number of
particles are constant, then for an ideal gas:
P1 P2
T1 T2
(This law is often erroneously attributed to the French chemist Joseph Louis Gay-
Lussac.)
Avogadro’s Principle
In 1811, Italian physicist Amedeo Avogadro (whose full name was Lorenzo
Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro di Quaregna e di Cerreto) published the
principle that equal volumes of an ideal gas at the same temperature and
pressure must contain equal numbers of particles:
V1 V2
N1 N2
Because it is usually more convenient to work with moles of gas (n) rather than
particles (N), we can rewrite Avogadro’s principle as:
V1 V2
n1 n2
P1V1 P2V2
constant R
n1T1 n2T2
If pressure is in Pa, volume is in m3, and temperature is in Kelvin, the value of the
constant kB turns out to be 1.38 10 23 KJ . This number is called Boltzmann’s
constant, named for the German physicist Ludwig Boltzmann. Physicists usually
use the variable kB to represent Boltzmann’s constant.
The gas constant, R, is equal to Boltzmann’s constant times the conversion from
moles to particles (Avogadro’s constant):
Note, however, that in most problems, the number of particles or moles of gas
remains constant. This means n1 = n2 and we can cancel it from the equation,
which gives:
P1V1 P2V2
T1 T2
This equation is called the “combined gas law”, which is used to solve most
“before/after” problems involving ideal gases.
P1V1 P2V2
which simplifies to P1V1 P2V2 (Boyle’s Law)
T1 T2
PV PV
kB and R
NT nT
Multiplying both sides of the first equation by NT gives the ideal gas law using
particles:
PV NkBT
Multiplying both sides of the second equation by nT gives the more common
form of the ideal gas law, using moles:
PV nRT
where:
P = absolute pressure (Pa)
V = volume (m3)
N = number of particles (or molecules) of gas
n = number of moles of gas
The left side of the equation, PV , represents the work that the gas can do on its
surroundings. This is because:
F FV
P , which means PV Fd W
A A
The right side of the equation, nRT , represents the number of moles (n ) times
the average kinetic energy of each particle (T ), which equals the total kinetic
energy of the particles. (The gas constant, R, combines Boltzmann’s constant
and the conversion from particles to moles. Think of it as the number that
makes the units work out correctly.)
In other words, the work that a gas can do equals the total kinetic energy of its
particles.
Note that for the units to work out correctly (because of the units of
Boltzmann’s constant), pressure must be in Pa, volume must be in m3, and
temperature must be in Kelvin.
100 000 Pa
P = 1.20 bar 120 000 Pa
1 bar
V = V (because we don’t’ know it yet)
N = 2.1 1024
m kg
kB = 1.38 10 23 s2 K
2
Then we substitute these numbers into the ideal gas law and solve:
PV Nk BT
(120 000 Pa)V (2.10 1024 )(1.38 10 -23 kgs2mK )(308 K)
2
We have two temperatures (25°C and 35°C), and two pressures (1.5 bar
and the new pressure that we’re looking for).
2. Find the action being done on the gas (“heated”). Anything that was true
about the gas before the action is time “1”, and anything that is true
about the gas after the action is time “2”.
P 1 = 1.5 bar P2 = P2
3. Set up the formula. We can cancel volume (V), because the problem
doesn’t mention it:
P1 V1 P2 V2 P P
which gives us 1 2 (Amontons’ Law)
T1 T2 T1 T2
4. H2 gas was cooled from 150.°C to 50.°C. Its new pressure is 75 000 Pa.
What was its original pressure?
Answer: 98 220 Pa
5. A sample of air has a volume of 60.0 mL at 1.00 bar and 0.0°C. What
volume will the sample have at 55.0°C and 0.95 bar?
Answer: 75.88 mL
c. If the diver uses air at the rate of 8.0 L/min, how long will the diver’s
air last?
112.5 min
velocity of a fluid: the average velocity of a particle of fluid as the fluid flows past
a reference point.
then the cross-sectional area (A ) times the fluid velocity (v ) at point 1 equals the
cross-sectional area times the fluid velocity at point 2:
A1v1 A2v2
Of course, most of an airplane’s lift comes from the fact that the wing is inclined
with an angle of attack relative to its direction of motion.
The air moving across the top of the paper causes a decrease in pressure, which
causes the paper to lift.
If the fluid in the pipe is flowing at 5.2 ms at the inlet, then how fast is it
flowing at the outlet?
Answer: 22.6 ms
This chapter is about heat as a form of energy and the ways in which heat
affects objects, including how it is stored and how it is transferred from one
object to another.
Heat & Temperature describes the concept of heat as a form of energy
and how heat energy is different from temperature.
Heat Transfer, Energy Conversion and Efficiency describe how to calculate
the rate of the transfer of heat energy from one object to another.
Specific Heat Capacity & Calorimetry describes different substances’ and
objects’ abilities to store heat energy. Phase Changes & Heating Curves
addresses the additional calculations that apply when a substance goes
through a phase change (such as melting or boiling).
Thermal Expansion describes the calculation of the change in size of an
object caused by heating or cooling.
New challenges specific to this chapter include looking up and working with
constants that are different for different substances.
Notes:
heat: energy that can be transferred by moving atoms or molecules via transfer
of momentum.
Note that heat is the energy itself, whereas temperature is a measure of the
quality of the heat—the average of the kinetic energies of the individual
molecules:
2. If you wait long enough, all of the molecules will have the same
temperature (i.e., the same average kinetic energy).
However, the total heat (energy) contained in an object depends on the mass as
well as the temperature, in the same way that the total energy of the water
going over a waterfall depends on the amount of water as well as the height:
E.g., if a metal block is heated, we would most likely define the system to be the
block, and the surroundings to be everything outside of the block.
A positive value of Q means heat is flowing into the system. Because the heat is
transferred from the molecules outside the system to the molecules in the
system, the temperature of the system increases, and the temperature of the
surroundings decreases.
A negative value of Q means heat is flowing out of the system. Because the heat
is transferred from the molecules in the system to the molecules outside the
system, the temperature of the system decreases, and the temperature of the
surroundings increases.
This can be confusing. Suppose you set a glass of ice water on a table. When
you pick up the glass, your hand gets colder because heat is flowing from your
hand (which is part of the surroundings) into the system (the glass of ice water).
This means the system (the glass of ice water) is gaining heat, and the
surroundings (your hand, the table, etc.) are losing heat. The value of Q would
be positive in this example.
In simple terms, you need to remember that your hand is part of the
surroundings, not part of the system.
Heat Transfer
Unit: Heat & Thermodynamics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-6, HS-PS3-2
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 3.1
Knowledge/Understanding:
heat transfer via conduction, radiation & convection
Skills:
calculate heat transfer using Fourier’s Law of Heat Conduction
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “conduction,” “convection,”
“radiation,” “conductor,” and “insulator.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to Fourier’s Law of Heat
Conduction.
conductor: an object that allows heat to pass through itself easily; an object with
high thermal conductivity.
insulator: an object that does not allow heat to pass through itself easily; a poor
conductor of heat; an object with low thermal conductivity.
Q T
kA
t L
where:
The minus sign is because heat transfer is calculated assuming that the system is
the heat source. (Heat is moving out of the system, so we use a negative
number.)
For insulation (the kind you have in the walls and attic of your home), the
effectiveness is measured by the “R value”, where:
L
Ri
k
and therefore:
Q 1
A T
t Ri
The industry uses this definition because most people think larger numbers are
better. Therefore a larger “R value” means less heat is transferred (lost) through
the insulation, which means the insulation is doing a better job of preventing the
heat loss.
A: Q kA T
t L
Q 65 25
(120)(0.010)
30 0.0050
Q
9600
30
Q 288 000 J 288 kJ
(Note that because the quantities of heat that we usually measure are large,
values are often given in kilojoules or megajoules instead of joules.)
Q: Suppose your house has 15 cm-thick insulation, with an R value of 16, the
temperature inside your house is 21°C and the temperature outside is 0.0°C.
How much heat is lost through one square meter of insulation over an 8-hour
(28 800 s) period?
L k 1
A: An R value of 16 means 16 , which means .
k L 16
Q T k
kA AT
t L L
Q 1
(1)(21)
28800 16
Q
1.3125
28800
Q 37800 J 37.8 kJ
2. A cast iron frying pan is 5.0 mm thick. If it contains boiling water (100°C),
how much heat will be transferred into your hand if you place your hand
against the bottom for two seconds?
(Assume your hand has an area of 0.0040 m2, and that body temperature
is 37°C.)
Answer: −8 064 J or −8.064 kJ
3. A plate of metal has thermal conductivity k and thickness L. One side has
a temperature of Th and the other side has a temperature of Tc, derive an
expression for the cross-sectional area A that would be needed in order
to transfer a certain amount of heat, Q, through the plate in time t.
QL
Answer: A
kt (Th Tc )
Energy Conversion
Unit: Heat & Thermodynamics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS3-1
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
conversion of energy between forms
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe the law of conservation of energy, using appropriate
academic language.
We can use the law of conservation of energy to estimate the amount of energy
converted to heat in a completely inelastic collision.
After the collision, the velocity of the ball and the wall are both zero. This means
the kinetic energy of the ball after the collision is zero. Because energy must be
conserved, this means all of the kinetic energy from the ball must have been
converted to heat.
E k 21 mv2
E k ( 21 )(0.150)(20.0)2 30.0 J
E k 12 mv2
E k ( 12 )(1.15)(2.61)2 3.91 J
This means there is 30.0 – 3.91 = 26.1 J of kinetic energy that is “missing” after
the collision. This “missing” energy is mostly converted to heat. If you could
measure the temperature of the “splat ball” and the wood extremely accurately
before and after the collision, you would find that both would be warmer as a
result of the “missing” 26.1 J of energy.
Notes:
Different objects have different abilities to hold heat. For example, if you enjoy
pizza, you may have noticed that the sauce holds much more heat (and burns
your mouth much more readily) than the cheese or the crust.
The amount of heat that a given mass of a substance can hold is based on its
specific heat capacity.
specific heat capacity (C): a measure of the amount of heat required per gram of
a substance to produce a specific temperature change in the substance.
Cp: specific heat capacity, measured at constant pressure. For gases, this means
the measurement was taken allowing the gas to expand as it was heated.
Cv: specific heat capacity, measured at constant volume. For gases, this means
the measurement was made in a sealed container, allowing the pressure to
rise as the gas was heated.
Because problems involving heat often involve large amounts of energy, specific
heat capacity is often given in kilojoules per kilogram per degree Celsius.
You need to be careful with the units. If the mass is given in kilograms (kg), your
specific heat capacity will have units of kgkJC and the heat energy will come out
J
in kilojoules (kJ). If mass is given in grams, you will use units of g C
and the heat
energy will come out in joules (J).
To solve the problems, assume that both objects end up at the same
temperature. The heat lost by the hot object Qh equals the heat gained by the
cold object Qc . (However, remember that Qh will be negative because the hot
object is losing heat.)
Qc mcCc Tc
Qh mhChTh
Qc Qh
mcCc Tc mhChTh
Notice that there are six quantities that you need: the two masses ( mh and
mc ), the two specific heat capacities ( C h and C c ), and the two temperature
changes ( Th and Tc ). (You might be given initial and final temperatures for
either or both, in which case you’ll need to subtract.) The problem will give you
all but one of these and you will need to find the missing one.
Don’t fret about the negative sign. The value of Th will be negative (because it
is cooling off), and the two minus signs will cancel.
3. Plug each set of numbers into the equation Q mC T . (I.e., you’ll have
two separate Q mC T equations.)
a. Remember that for the substance that is cooling off, heat is going
out of the system, which means the equation will be Q mC T .
4. Use the fact that Q is the same for both equations to solve for the
unknown quantity. This will involve doing one of the following:
a. Calculate the value of Q from one equation and use it in the other
equation.
b. If you need to find the final temperature, set the two mCT
expressions (or mC(Tf Ti ) expressions) equal to each other.
A: The heat gained by the water equals the heat lost by the aluminum.
Q mC T
Q (0.100 kg)(4.18 kgkJK )(10C)
Q 4.18 kJ
Q mC T
4.18 kJ (0.050 kg)(0.897 kgkJK ) T
4.18 (0.0449)(T )
4.18
T 93.2C
0.0449
The temperature of the aluminum was −93°C (i.e., it went down by 93°C)
T T f Ti
93.2 30 Ti
Ti 123.2C
A: Once again, the heat lost by the copper equals the heat gained by the water.
Qc Qw
mcC c Δ Tc mwC w Δ Tw
(0.025)(0.385)(Tf 95) (0.075)(4.18)(Tf 25)
(0.009 625)(Tf 95) (0.3138)(Tf 25)
(0.009 625 Tf 0.9144) 0.3138 Tf 7.845
0.009 625 Tfl 0.9144 0.3138 Tf 7.845
0.009 625 Tf 0.009 625 Tf
0.9144 0.3234 Tf 7.845
7.845 7.845
8.759 0.3234 Tf
8.759
27C Tf
0.3234
Note that because the specific heat of the water is so much higher than that
of copper, and because the mass of the water was larger than the mass of
the copper, the final temperature ended up much closer to the initial water
temperature.
Homework Problems
You will need to look up specific heat capacities in Table H of your reference
tables on page 435.
1. 375 kJ of heat is added to a 25.0 kg granite rock. How much does the
temperature increase?
Answer: 19.0°C
solid: molecules are rigidly connected. A solid has a definite shape and volume.
gas: molecules are not connected. A gas has neither a definite shape nor a
definite volume. Gases will expand to fill whatever space they occupy.
phase change: when an object or substance changes from one phase to another
through gaining or losing heat.
Breaking bonds requires energy. Forming bonds releases energy. This is true for
the bonds that hold a solid or liquid together as well as for chemical bonds
(regardless of what your biology teacher may have told you!)
I.e., you need to add energy to turn a solid to a liquid (melt it), or to turn a liquid
to a gas (boil it). Energy is released when a gas condenses or a liquid freezes.
(E.g., ice in your ice tray needs to give off heat in order to freeze. Your freezer
needs to remove that heat in order to make this happen.)
The reason evaporation causes cooling is because the system (the water) needs
to absorb heat from its surroundings (e.g., your body) in order to make the
change from a liquid to a gas (vapor). When the water absorbs heat from you
and evaporates, you have less heat, which means you have cooled off.
heat of vaporization (ΔHvap): the amount of heat required to vaporize (boil) one
kilogram of a substance. This is also the heat released when one kilogram of
kJ
a gas condenses. For example, the heat of vaporization of water is 2260 kg .
The heat required to boil a sample of water is therefore:
Q mHvap m(2260 kg
kJ
)
In the “solid” portion of the curve, the sample is solid water (ice). As heat is
added, the temperature increases. The specific heat capacity of ice is 2.11 kgkJC ,
so the heat required is:
Qsolid mC T m(2.11 kgkJC )(T )
In the “melting” portion of the curve, the sample is a mixture of ice and water.
As heat is added, the ice melts, but the temperature remains at 0°C until all of
kJ
the ice is melted. The heat of fusion of ice is 334 kg , so the heat required is:
In the “liquid” portion of the curve, the sample is liquid water. As heat is added,
the temperature increases. The specific heat capacity of liquid water is
4.184 kgkJC , so the heat required is:
In the “gas” portion of the curve, the sample is water vapor (steam). As heat is
added, the temperature increases. The specific heat capacity of steam is
approximately 2.08 kgkJC (at 100°C; the specific heat capacity of steam decreases
as the temperature increases), so the heat required is:
Qgas mC T m(2.08 kgkJC )(T )
1. Sketch the heating curve for the substance over the temperature range in
question. Be sure to include the melting and boiling steps as well as the
heating steps.
Qtotal Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5
Qtotal 0.791 5.010 6.27 33.90 0.936 46.91 kJ
Thermal Expansion
Unit: Heat & Thermodynamics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-6
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
thermal expansion in solids, liquids and gases
Skills:
calculate changes in length and volume for solids and liquids
calculate changes in volume for gases
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “thermal expansion.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to thermal expansion of solids,
liquids and gases.
When a substance is heated, the particles it is made of move farther and faster.
This causes the particles to move farther apart, which causes the substance to
expand.
A few materials are known to contract with increasing temperature over specific
temperature ranges. One well-known example is liquid water, which contracts
as it heats from 0°C to 4°C. (Water expands as the temperature increases above
4°C.)
Length: L Li T
Volume: V Vi T
where:
L changeinlength(m) V changeinvolume(m3 )
Li initiallength(m) Vi initialvolume(m3 )
linearcoëfficient of thermalexpans ion(C -1 )
volumetriccoëfficient of thermalexpans ion(C -1 )
T temperature change
Bridges often have expansion joints in order to leave room for sections of the
bridge to expand or contract without damaging the bridge or the roadway:
L (1.9 10 5 )(0.40)(955)
L 0.0073 m
Q: A typical mercury thermometer contains about 0.22 cm3 (about 3.0 g) of
mercury. Find the change in volume of the mercury in a thermometer when
it is heated from 25°C to 50.°C.
A: For mercury, 1.82 10 4 C 1 .
V Vi T
V (1.82 10 4 )(0.22)(25)
V 0.00091 cm3
If the distance from the 25°C to the 50°C mark is about 3.0 cm, we could use
this information to figure out the bore of the thermometer:
V r 2 h
0.00091 (3.14)r 2 (3.0)
r 2 9.66 10 5
r 9.66 10 5 0.0098 cm
The bore is the diameter, which is twice the radius, so the bore of the
thermometer is 0.020 cm or about 0.20 mm.
1. A brass rod is 27.50 cm long at 25°C. How long would the rod be if it
were heated to 750.°C in a flame?
Answer: 27.88 cm
3. A 15.00 cm long bimetal strip is aluminum on one side and copper on the
other. If the two metals are the same length at 20.0°C, how long will
each be at 800.°C?
4. A glass volumetric flask is filled with water exactly to the 250.00 mL line
at 50.°C. What volume will the water occupy after it cools down to
20.°C?
Answer: 248.45 mL
For an ideal gas, the change in volume for a change in temperature (provided
that the pressure and number of molecules are kept constant) is given by
Charles’ Law:
Vi V f
Ti T f
where volume can be any volume unit (as long as it is the same on both sides),
but temperature must be in Kelvin.
Vi V f
Ti T f
250 V f
298 368
Vf = 308.7 = 310 mL
Homework Problems
1. A sample of argon gas was cooled, and its volume went from 380. mL to
250. mL. If its final temperature was −45.0°C, what was its original
temperature?
Answer: 347 K or 74°C
Thermodynamics
Unit: Heat & Thermodynamics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-6
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
definition of thermodynamics
conservation of energy & conversion of energy
Skills:
calculate energy changes between internal energy and PV work
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “thermodynamics.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to conversion of heat energy into
mechanical work.
As with gas laws, the topic of thermodynamics is studied by both chemists and
physicists. Chemists tend to be more concerned with heat produced and
consumed by chemical changes and reactions. Physicists tend to be more
concerned with the conversion between thermal energy (regardless of how it is
produced) and other forms of energy, particularly mechanical.
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes:
enthalpy: the “usable” heat content of an object or system; the heat that can be
converted to other forms of energy.
internal energy (U): the energy of a system due to the kinetic energy of its
particles.
Particles have kinetic energy. If we add heat energy to a system, the energy
causes the individual particles to move faster, i.e., they gain kinetic energy. This
energy is the internal energy of the system.
Because temperature is the average kinetic energy of the particles in a system,
the internal energy of a system is related to temperature via the following
equation:
3 3 3 3
U NkBT nRT and U NkB T nRT
2 2 2 2
where:
U = internal energy
N = number of particles
kB = Boltzmann’s constant
T = temperature
n = number of moles
R = gas constant
Zeroth Law
The zeroth law says that if you have multiple systems in thermal equilibrium (the
heat transferred from “A” to “B” is equal to the heat transferred from “B” to
“A”), then the systems must have the same temperature. The consequences of
this are:
If we have three (or more) systems “A,” “B,” and “C,” and A is in thermal
equilibrium with B, and B is in thermal equilibrium with C, this means that
A, B, and C must all have the same temperature, and A is therefore in
thermal equilibrium with C. (This is akin to the transitive property of
equality in mathematics.)
If an object with a higher temperature (a “hotter” object) is in contact with
an object with a lower temperature (a “colder” object), heat will flow from
the object with higher temperature to the object with lower temperature
until the temperatures are the same (the objects are in thermal
equilibrium).
According to the First Law, the internal energy of a system increases (U 0) if
heat is added to the system (Q 0) or if work is done on the system (W 0) .
The internal energy decreases if the system gives off heat or the system does
work on its surroundings. In equation form, the First law looks like this:
U Q W
The First Law simply the law of conservation of energy—the change in internal
energy comes from the heat added to or removed from the system combined
with the work done on or by the system.
(Recall that the work-energy theorem tells us that one newton-meter of work is
equivalent to one joule of energy.)
Second Law
The Second law tells us that heat energy cannot flow from a colder system to a
hotter one unless work is done on the system. This is why your coffee gets cold
and your ice cream melts.
One consequence of this law is that no machine can work at 100% efficiency; all
machines generate some heat, and some of that heat is always lost to the
surroundings.
For example, when an egg falls to the floor and breaks, gravitational potential
energy is converted to a combination of enthalpy (the measurable increase in
temperature of the egg), and entropy (heat energy that is radiated to the
environment and “lost”). Over time, the heat in the egg is also radiated to the
environment and “lost” as the egg cools off. Ultimately, all of the gravitational
potential energy is converted to entropy, which is the heat energy that is
dissipated and cannot be recovered.
Another consequence of the Second law is that over time, systems (and the
universe) tend toward greater entropy. The only way to reduce the entropy of a
system is to do work on it.
Another way to look at entropy vs. time is the idea that the Second Law defines
the positive direction for time. If all we had were Newton’s Laws, then there
would be no difference between time going forward and time going backward.
For example, imagine a ball that goes up and then falls down. If we reversed
time, the ball falling down would become the ball going up, and the ball going up
would become the ball falling down. However, because entropy can only
increase over time, the Second law states that time moves in the direction of
entropy increase.
Pressure-Volume Diagrams
Unit: Heat & Thermodynamics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-6
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
understand and interpret P-V diagrams
Skills:
determine changes in heat, work, internal energy and entropy from
P-V diagrams
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “isochoric,” “isobaric,” and
“adiabatic.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to the action of heat engines.
Notes:
P-V diagram: a graph that shows changes in pressure vs. changes in volume.
From mechanics, recall that work is the force that it took to move an object a
given distance:
W F dx F d Fx
If the force is applied by a gas that is expanding, then the change in volume
caused by the pressure is responsible for the work:
W PdV PV
We will look at the effects of changes in pressure vs. volume in four types of
systems: isobaric (constant pressure), isochoric (constant volume), isothermal
(constant temperature), and adiabatic (no heat loss).
W PV
U Q W Q (PV )
U Q PV
We can rearrange the above to show that Q U PV . We can then rewrite
3
U as NkB T and PV as NkB T (from the ideal gas law), which yields:
2
3
Q NkB T NkB T
2
5 5
Q NkB T nRT
2 2
The reason for the negative sign in the equation W PV is because if work is
done on the system (W 0) , then the work compresses the gas (V 0) . If
work is done on the surroundings by the system (W 0) , it is done by the gas
expanding (V 0) . Thus W and V must have opposite signs.
W 0
U Q W Q 0
U Q
Note that because work is done by the force from the expanding gas, if there is
no volume change, then the gas does not expand, and therefore does no work.
Another way to think of a constant volume change is that if you add heat to a
rigid container of gas, none of the energy can be converted to work, so all of it
must be converted to an increase in internal energy (i.e., an increase in
temperature).
An example is any
“slow” process, such as
breathing out through a
wide open mouth.
3
U NkB T
2
U 0 Q W
W Q
isotherm: a line of constant temperature on
a graph.
For the isochoric process, there is no change in volume, which means the gas
does no work (because it cannot push against anything). Therefore W = 0.
The total work for process #1 is therefore 200 J.
We can also remember that work is the area under a PV graph, which gives:
For process #2, the area is the 200 J square plus the area of the triangle,
which is 12 bh 12 (2 10 3 )(1 10 5 ) 100 J . Therefore,
−200 J + (−100 J) = −300 J.
For process #3, the area under the curve is W (2 10 5 )(2 10 3 ) 400 J .
Heat Engines
Unit: Heat & Thermodynamics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-6
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
definition of a heat engine
different types of heat engines
Skills:
calculate the energy produced by a heat engine
calculate the efficiency of a heat engine
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “heat engine,” “enthalpy,”
“entropy”.
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to the action of heat engines.
A heat engine operates by taking heat from a hot place (heat source), converting
some of that heat into work, and dumping the rest of the heat into a cooler
reservoir (heat sink).
A large number of the machines we use—most notably cars—employ heat
engines.
This means:
Qin Qout Wout
Of course, a heater can operate under the same principle, by putting the cooling
coils inside the room to be heated and having the expansion, which cools the
refrigerant, occur outside the room. This cycle is the most efficient type of heat
engine. The cycle is called the Carnot cycle, named after the French physicist
Nicolas Carnot.
Recall that on a PV diagram, a curve that moves from left to right represents
work done by the gas on the surroundings. (Work is leaving the system, so
W 0 .) A curve that moves from right to left represents work done on the gas
by the surroundings. (Work is entering the system so W 0 .)
A clockwise cycle means more work is done going to the right than to the left,
which means there is a net flow of work out of the system (i.e., the heat is being
used to do work). (A counterclockwise cycle would represent a refrigerator.)
From 1 2 heat is added to the gas at constant volume. The temperature of the
gas goes up, but no work is done.
Notice that the work done by the gas on the surroundings is at a higher
temperature than the work done on the gas. (Isotherms are hyperbolas. The
work done by the gas follows a higher isotherm.)
3. The spark plug creates a spark, which combusts the gases. This increases
the temperature in the cylinder to approximately 250°C, which causes the
gas to expand (power stroke).
4. The piston raises again, forcing the exhaust gases out of the cylinder
(exhaust).
Note that, at the end of the cycle, the gas is hotter than its original temperature.
The hot gas from the cylinder is dumped out the exhaust pipe, and fresh (cool)
gas and fuel is added.
The energy to move the piston for the intake and exhaust strokes is provided by
the power strokes of the other pistons.
Assume that a heat engine starts with a certain temperature, which means a
certain internal energy (U ). The engine takes heat from a heat source at the
incoming temperature Tin , does work (W ) , and exhausts heat at the higher
temperature Tout . Assuming the internal energy of the machine itself stays
constant, this means U 0 . Therefore, from the First law:
U 0 Q W
0 Qin Qout W
W Qin Qout
A 100% efficient heat engine would turn all of the heat into work, and would
exhaust no heat ( Qout 0 , which would mean W Qin ). Of course, real
engines cannot do this, so we define efficiency, e, as the ratio of work out to
heat in, i.e.:
ΔW Qin Qout Qin Qout Qout
e 1
Qin Qin Qin Qin Qin
Sample Problem
Q: 80. J of heat is injected into a heat engine, causing it to do work. The engine
then exhausts 20. J of heat into a cool reservoir. What is the efficiency of the
engine?
Qout usableheatout
Qin totalenergyin
“Usable heat out” means heat that is not lost to the environment. For example,
if the boiler or furnace in your house is 70% efficient, that means 70% of the
energy from the gas or oil that it burned was used to heat the steam, hot water
or hot air that was used to heat your house. The other 30% of the energy heated
the air in the boiler or furnace, and that heat was lost to the surroundings when
the hot air went up the chimney.
Older boilers and furnaces (pre-1990s) were typically 70% efficient. Newer
boilers and furnaces are around 80% efficient, and high-efficiency boilers and
furnaces that use heat exchangers to collect the heat from the exhaust air before
it goes up the chimney can be 90−97% efficient.
The refrigerant is the same substance, which means mC is the same for the input
as for the output, and it drops out of the equation.
It is a little counter-intuitive that a higher temperature difference means the
heat pump is more efficient, but you should think about the fact that the job of
the heat pump is to move heat between one side and the other. In other words,
the more heat you pump into the refrigerant, the higher its temperature will be
when it leaves the system, and therefore the more efficiently the pump is
moving heat. Conversely, if Tout Tin , then the heat pump is not moving any
heat and the efficiency is zero.
Sample Problem
Q: Refrigerant enters a heat pump at 20.°C (293 K) and exits at 300.°C (573 K).
What is the Carnot efficiency of this heat pump?
A: Carnot’s equation states that:
Tin 293
1 1
Tout 573
1 0.51 0.49
I.e., this heat pump is 49% efficient.
This chapter discusses electricity and magnetism, how they behave, and how
they relate to each other.
Electric Change, Coulomb’s Law, and Electric Fields describe the behavior
of individual charged particles and how to calculate the effects of these
particles on each other.
Electric Current & Ohm’s Law describes equations and calculations
involving the flow of charged particles (electric current).
Textbook:
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 17: The Electric Field (pp. 427–456)
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 18: Electric Potential (pp. 457–492)
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 19: Electric Current (pp. 493–517)
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 20: Direct Current Circuits (pp. 518–549)
Topics from this chapter assessed on the SAT Physics Subject Test:
Electric Fields, Forces, and Potentials, such as Coulomb’s law, induced
charge, field and potential of groups of point charges, and charged particles
in electric fields
Capacitance, such as parallel-plate capacitors and time-varying behavior in
charging/ discharging
Circuit Elements and DC Circuits, such as resistors, light bulbs, series and
parallel networks, Ohm’s law, and Joule’s law
1. Electric Charge 7. Current
2. Electric Force 8. Resistance
3. Electric Field 9. Energy, Power, and Heat
4. Electric Potential 10. Circuits
5. Conductors and Insulators 11. Capacitors
6. Voltage
Electric Charge
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 5.1, 5.4
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
electric charge
properties of electric charges
conductors vs. insulators
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “electricity,” “charge,” “current,”
“conductor,” “insulator,” and “induction.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
positive charge: the charge of a proton. Originally defined as the charge left on a
piece of glass when rubbed with silk. The glass becomes positively charged
because the silk pulls electrons off the glass.
negative charge: the charge of an electron. Originally defined as the charge left
on a piece of amber (or rubber) when rubbed with fur (or wool). The amber
becomes negatively charged because the amber pulls the electrons off the
fur.
static electricity: stationary electric charge, such as the charge left on silk or
amber in the above definitions.
Charge Density
The amount of electric charge on a surface is called the charge density. As with
density (in the mass/volume sense), the variable used is usually the Greek letter
rho, with a subscript q indicating charge (ρq). Charge density can be expressed in
terms of length, area, or volume, which means, the units for charge density can
be mC , mC2 , or mC3 .
Charging by Induction
induction: when an electrical charge on one object causes a charge in a second
object.
If the negatively-charged rod above were touched to the sphere, some of the
charges from the rod would be transferred to the sphere at the point of contact,
and the sphere would acquire an overall negative charge.
Grounding
For the purposes of our use of electric charges, the ground (Earth) is effectively
an endless supply of both positive and negative charges. Under normal
circumstances, if a charged object is touched to the ground, electrons will move
to neutralize the charge, either by flowing from the object to the ground or from
the ground to the object.
In buildings, the metal pipes that bring water into the building are often used to
ground the electrical circuits. The metal pipe is a good conductor of electricity,
and carries the unwanted charge out of the building and into the ground outside.
Coulomb’s Law
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-4, HS-PS3-5
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 5.4
Skills:
understand & solve problems using Coulomb’s Law
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe Coulomb’s Law using appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to Coulomb’s Law.
kq q kq1q2
Fe 12 2 d̂ 12 Fe
d d2
(vector form) (scalar form)
where:
Fe = electrostatic force of repulsion between electric charges. A positive value
of Fe denotes that the charges are repelling (pushing away from) each
other; a negative value of Fe denotes that the charges are attracting
(pulling towards) each other.
This formula is Coulomb’s Law, named for its discoverer, the French physicist
Charles-Augustin de Coulomb.
A: The charge of a single proton is 1.60 × 10−19 C, and the charge of a single
electron is −1.60 × 10−19 C.
The value of the force is negative, which signifies that the force is attractive.
Electric Fields
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: HS-PS3-2
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Skills:
drawing electric field lines
calculating electric field strength
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “electric field.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to electric fields.
Notes:
force field: a region in which an object experiences a force because of some
intrinsic property of the object that enables the force to act on it. One
example is a gravitational field. Objects that have mass (the intrinsic
property) experience a force (gravity) when they are within a gravitational
field (near the surface of the Earth). Force fields are vectors, which means
they have both a magnitude and a direction.
electric field: an electrically charged region that exerts a force on any charged
particle within the region.
The simplest electric field is the region around a single charged particle:
Field lines are vectors that show the directions of force on an object. In an
electric field, the object is a positively-charged particle. This means that the
direction of the electric field is from positive to negative, i.e., field lines go
outward in all directions from a positively-charged particle, and inward from all
directions toward a negatively-charged particle.
If a positive and a negative charge are near each other, the field lines go from
the positive charge toward the negative charge:
(Note that even though this is a two-dimensional drawing, the field itself is
three-dimensional. Some field lines come out of the paper from the positive
charge and go into the paper toward the negative charge, and some go behind
the paper from the positive charge and come back into the paper from behind
toward the negative charge.
Coulomb’s Law tells us that the force on the charge is due to the charges from
the electric field:
kq q
Fe 12 2
d
If the positive and negative charges on the two surfaces that make the electric
field are equal, the force is the same everywhere in between the two surfaces.
(This is because as the particle gets farther from one surface, it gets closer to the
other.) This means that the force on the particle is related only to the charges
that make up the electric field and the charge of the particle.
We can therefore describe the electric field ( E ) as the force between the electric
field and our particle, divided by the charge of our particle:
F
E or F qE
q
Sample Problem:
Q: A proton has a velocity of 1 10 5 ms when it is
at point P in a uniform electric field that has an
intensity of 1 10 4 NC . Calculate the force
(magnitude and direction) on the proton, and
sketch its path.
Voltage is a scalar quantity and is measured in volts (V). (This is perhaps the only
instance in physics where the variable and unit symbol for the quantity are the
same.)
1 V 1 NCm 1 CJ
Note that voltage is always measured between two points; there is no such
thing as a voltage at one point. When we say that a battery supplies 1.5 V, we
mean that this is the electric potential difference between the battery’s positive
and negative terminals.
Note also that the net flow of charged particles through a wire
is very slow. The electrons continually collide with one
another in all directions:
The total voltage in a circuit is usually determined by the power supply that is
used for the circuit (usually a battery in DC circuits).
work (W ): recall from mechanics that work (W ) equals power times time, and is
measured in either newton-meters (N·m) or joules (J):
V 2t
W P t V I t I 2R t Vq
R
direct current: electric current flows through the circuit, starting at the positive
terminal of the battery or power supply, and ending at the negative terminal.
Batteries supply direct current. A typical AAA, AA, C, or D battery supplies
1.5 volts DC.
alternating current: electric current flows back and forth in one direction and
then the other, like a sine wave. The current alternates at a particular
frequency. In the U.S., household current is 110 volts AC with a frequency of
60 Hz.
Alternating current requires higher voltages in order to operate devices, but has
the advantage that the voltage drop is much less over a length of wire than with
direct current.
Electrical Components
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-6
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 5.3
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
recognize common components of electrical circuits
Language Objectives:
Recognize and be able to name and draw symbols for each of the electrical
components described in this section.
Notes:
electrical component: an object that performs a specific task in an electric circuit.
A circuit is a collection of components connected together so that the tasks
performed by the individual components combine in some useful way.
Carries current
wire
in a circuit.
Connection
junction between two
or more wires.
Supplies
battery current at a
fixed voltage.
Resists flow of
resistor
current.
Provides
potentiometer
variable
(rheostat,
(adjustable)
dimmer)
resistance.
Allows current
to flow in only
diode
one direction
(from + to −).
Opens / closes
switch
circuit.
Provides light
incandescent
(and
lamp (light)
resistance).
Increases or
inductor
decreases
(transformer)
voltage.
Measures
voltmeter voltage
(volts).
Measures
ammeter current
(amperes).
Measures
ohmmeter resistance
(ohms).
Opens circuit if
too much
fuse
current flows
through it.
Neutralizes
ground
charge.
(clamps to water pipe)
voltage: the observed potential difference between two points in a circuit. The
voltage of a battery usually means the voltage under load.
ideal model
Note that this is a model; the actual situation is more complex, because in
addition to the resistivity of the battery's component materials, the difference
between the internal voltage and the supplied voltage also depends on factors
such as electrolyte conductivity, ion mobility, and electrode surface area.
The following table shows the nominal voltage and internal resistance of
common Duracell (coppertop) dry cell batteries of different sizes. These
numbers are given by the manufacturer for a new battery at room temperature
(25°C):
Size AAA AA C D 9V
VNL (V) 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 9
Rint (mΩ) 250 120 150 137 1 700
The internal resistance can be used to calculate the maximum current that a
battery could theoretically supply. If you were to connect a wire from the
positive terminal of a battery to the negative terminal, the only resistance in the
circuit should be the battery’s internal resistance.
The theoretical maximum current that the battery can supply is therefore the
current that would be supplied when the only resistance is the battery’s internal
resistance, and can be calculated from Ohm’s Law:
V
Imax
Rint
Circuits
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 5.3
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how resistance limits current in a circuit
the difference between series and parallel circuits
Language Objectives:
Explain why resistors are necessary in electric circuits.
Understand and correctly use the terms “series” and “parallel” as applied
to electric circuits.
open circuit: a circuit that has a gap such that current cannot flow from the
positive terminal to the negative terminal.
short circuit: a circuit in which the positive terminal is connected directly to the
negative terminal with no load (resistance) in between.
An electric circuit needs a power supply (often a battery) that provides current at
a specific difference in electric potential (voltage), and one or more components
that use the energy provided by the battery.
If the circuit is broken, current cannot flow and the chemical reactions inside the
battery stop.
Of course, as circuits become more complex, the diagrams reflect this increasing
complexity. The following is a circuit diagram for a metal detector:
series: Components in series lie along the same path, one after the other.
In a series circuit, all of the current flows through every component, one after
another. If the current is interrupted anywhere in the circuit, no current will
flow. For example, in the following series circuit, if any of light bulbs A, B, C, or D
is removed, no current can flow and none of the light bulbs will be illuminated.
Because some voltage is “used up” by each bulb in the circuit, each additional
bulb means the voltage is divided among more bulbs and is therefore less for
each bulb. This is why light bulbs get dimmer as you add more bulbs in series.
Christmas tree lights used to be wired in series. This caused a lot of frustration,
because if one bulb burned out, the entire string went out, and it could take
several tries to find which bulb was burned out.
In a parallel circuit, the current divides at each junction, with some of the current
flowing through each path. If the current is interrupted in one path, current
can still flow through the other paths. For example, in the following parallel
circuit, if any of light bulbs A, B, C, or D is removed, current still flows through
the remaining bulbs.
Because the voltage across each branch is equal to the total voltage, all of the
bulbs will light up with full brightness, regardless of how many bulbs are in the
circuit. (However, the total current will increase with each additional branch.)
Note that complex circuits may have some components that are in series with
each other and other components that are in parallel.
Notes:
Current
Because there is only one path, all of the current flows through every
component. This means the current is the same through every component in
the circuit:
Itotal I1 I2 I3 ...
In the above circuit, there are two batteries, one that supplies 6 V and one that
supplies 3 V. The voltage from A to B is +6 V, the voltage from A to D is −3 V (note
that A to D means measuring from negative to positive), and the voltage from D
to B is (+3 V) + (+6 V) = +9 V.
Resistance
If there are multiple resistors, each one contributes to the total resistance and
the resistances add:
Rtotal R1 R2 R3 ...
In the above circuit, the resistance between points B and D is 10Ω + 15Ω = 25Ω.
Power
In all circuits (series and parallel), any component that has resistance dissipates
power whenever current passes through it. The total power consumed by the
circuit is the sum of the power dissipated by each component:
Ptotal P1 P2 P3 ...
Calculations
You can calculate the voltage, current, resistance, and power of each component
and the entire circuit using the equations:
V2
V IR P V I I 2R
R
“Solving” the circuit for these quantities is much like solving a Sudoku puzzle.
You systematically decide which variables (for each component and/or the entire
circuit) you have enough information to solve for. Each result enables you to
determine more and more of the, until you have found all of the quantities you
need.
Unit R1 R2 Total
Voltage (V ) V 9V
Current (I ) A
Resistance (R ) Ω 10 Ω 15 Ω
Power (P ) W
Unit R1 R2 Total
Voltage (V ) V 9V
Current (I ) A
Resistance (R ) Ω 10 Ω 15 Ω 25 Ω
Power (P ) W
Now, we know two variables in the “Total” column, so we use V = I R to find the
current. Because this is a series circuit, the total current is also the current
through R1 and R2.
V IR
9 (I )(25)
9
I 0.36 A
25
R1 R2 Total
Voltage (V ) 9V
Current (I ) 0.36 A 0.36 A 0.36 A
Resistance (R ) 10 Ω 15 Ω 25 Ω
Power (P )
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes.
R1 R2 Total
Voltage (V ) 3.6 V 5.4 V 9V
Current (I ) 0.36 A 0.36 A 0.36 A
Resistance (R ) 10 Ω 15 Ω 25 Ω
Power (P )
V2
Finally, we can fill in the power, using P = V I, P = I 2R, or P :
R
R1 R2 Total
Voltage (V ) 3.6 V 5.4 V 9V
Current (I ) 0.36 A 0.36 A 0.36 A
Resistance (R ) 10 Ω 15 Ω 25 Ω
Power (P ) 1.30 W 1.94 W 3.24 W
Notes:
Parallel Circuits
The following circuit shows a battery and three resistors in parallel:
Current
The current divides at each junction (as indicated by the arrows). This means the
current through each path must add up to the total current:
Itotal I1 I2 I3 ...
Power
Just as with series circuits, in a parallel circuit, any component that has
resistance dissipates power whenever current passes through it. The total
power consumed by the circuit is the sum of the power dissipated by each
component:
Ptotal P1 P2 P3 ...
Resistance
If there are multiple resistors, the effective resistance of each path becomes less
as there are more paths for the current to flow through. The total resistance is
given by the formula:
1 1 1 1
...
Rtotal R1 R2 R3
Sample Problem
Suppose we are given the following circuit:
R1 R2 R3 Total
Voltage (V ) 12 V
Current (I )
Resistance (R ) 4Ω 3Ω 2Ω
Power (P )
The first thing we can do is use V = I R to find the current through each resistor:
R1 R2 R3 Total
Voltage (V ) 12 V 12 V 12 V 12 V
Current (I ) 3A 4A 6A 13 A
Resistance (R ) 4Ω 3Ω 2Ω
Power (P )
V IR
12 13 R
12
R 0.923
13
1 1 1 1
Rtotal R1 R2 R3
1 1 1 1
Rtotal 4 3 2
1 3 4 6 13
Rtotal 12 12 12 12
12
Rtotal 0.923
13
Now we have:
R1 R2 R3 Total
Voltage (V ) 12 V 12 V 12 V 12 V
Current (I ) 3A 4A 6A 13 A
Resistance (R ) 4Ω 3Ω 2Ω 0.923 Ω
Power (P )
Batteries in Parallel
One question that has not been answered yet is what happens when batteries
are connected in parallel.
If the batteries have the same voltage, the potential difference (voltage) remains
the same, but the total current is the combined current from the two batteries.
We need to simplify the resistor network to find the total resistance. Then we
can use the total voltage and total resistance to find the total current.
Now, we simplify the network just like a math problem—start with the inside
parentheses and work your way out.
Step 4: Now we can combine the parallel 40Ω and 35Ω resistors into a single
equivalent resistance:
1 1 1
Rtotal 40 35
1
0.0250 0.0286 0.0536
Rtotal
1
Rtotal 18.7
0.0536
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes.
Step 5: Add the two resistances in series to get the total combined resistance of
the circuit:
18.7 + 25 = 43.7 Ω
Step 6: Now that we know the total voltage and resistance, we can use Ohm’s
Law to find the current:
V IR
40 I (43.7)
40
I 0.92 A
43.7
Once we know the total current, voltage, and resistance in the circuit, we can
use Ohm’s Law (V = I R ) along with the equations for series and parallel circuits
(and sub-circuits) to find the current and voltage for each resistor as we did in
the previous section.
Kirchhoff’s Rules
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 5.3
Knowledge & Understanding:
Understand Kirchhoff’s junction rule and Kirchhoff’s loop rule.
Skills:
Use Kirchhoff’s rules to determine voltage, current and resistance in
complex circuits.
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe how to measure voltage, current and resistance in an
electric circuit, using appropriate academic language.
Kirchhoff’s junction rule: the total current coming into a junction must equal the
total current coming out of the junction.
The junction rule is based on the concept that electric charge cannot be
created or destroyed. Current is simply the flow of electric charge, so any
charges that come into a junction must also come out of it.
The loop rule is based on the concept that voltage is the difference in electric
potential between one location in the circuit and another. If you come back
to the same point in the circuit, the difference in electric potential between
where you started and where you ended (the same place) must be zero.
Therefore, any increases and decreases in voltage around the loop must
cancel.
The junction rule tells us that the current flowing into junction J1 must equal the
current flowing out. If we assume current I1 flows into the junction, and currents
I2 and I3 flow out of it, then I1 I2 I 3 .
We know that the voltage across both resistors is 12 V. From Ohm’s Law we can
determine that the current through the 3 Ω resistor is I2 4 A , and the current
through the 4 Ω resistor is I 3 3 A . The junction rule tells us that the total
current must be I1 I2 I 3 4 A 3 A 7 A .
If we start at point A and move counterclockwise around the loop (in the
direction of the arrow), the voltage should be zero when we get back to point A.
For this example, we are moving around the circuit in the same direction that the
current flows, because that makes the most intuitive sense. However, it
wouldn’t matter if we moved clockwise instead—just as with vector quantities,
we choose a positive direction and assign each quantity to a positive or negative
number accordingly, and the math tells us what is actually happening.
Starting from point A, we first move through the 6 V battery. We are moving
from the negative pole to the positive pole of the battery, so the voltage
increases by +6 V. When we move through the second battery, the voltage
increases by +3 V.
I1 I 2 I 3
By closer inspection, we can see that the direction for I2 is probably going to be
wrong. This means we expect that I2 will come out to a negative number.
As we inspect our way around the loop, there are two rules for determining the
voltage across each component:
1. Voltage across a battery is positive if the loop direction is from negative
to positive (the “forward” direction).
Voltage across a battery is negative if the loop direction is from positive
to negative (the “backward” direction).
2. Voltage across a resistor is negative if the loop direction is with the
current (the resistor is “using up” voltage).
Voltage across a resistor is positive if the loop direction is against the
current (we are traveling from a place where the electric potential is
lower to a place where it is higher).
Now we inspect our way around each loop, writing the equations for the
voltages:
Now that we know the current and resistance, we can find the voltage drop
across each resistor using Ohm’s Law.
Again, the negative sign shows that the voltage drop (from positive to negative)
is in the opposite direction from what we originally chose.
Notes:
Analyzing an electrical circuit means figuring out the potential difference
(voltage), current, and/or resistance in each component of a circuit. In order to
analyze actual circuits, it is necessary to be able to measure these quantities.
Measuring Voltage
Suppose we want to measure the electric potential (voltage)
across the terminals of a 6 V battery. The diagram would look like
this:
The reading of −6 V indicates that the current is actually flowing in the opposite
direction from the way the voltmeter is measuring—from the black (−) lead to
the red (+) lead.
As with the voltage example above, if you switched the leads, the reading would
be −3 A instead of +3 A.
It is sometimes easier and/or more reliable to measure the voltage and current
and calculate resistance using Ohm’s Law (V = IR).
Capacitance
Unit: Electrostatics & DC Circuits
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
what capacitance is and how it occurs
properties of capacitors
Skills:
perform calculations in circuits containing capacitors
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “capacitor” and “capacitance.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
When a voltage is applied to the circuit, one side of the capacitor will acquire a
positive charge, and the other side will acquire an equal negative charge. This
process is called charging the capacitor.
No current actually flows through the capacitor, but as it charges, the positive
charges that accumulate on one side of the capacitor repel positive charges from
the other side into the rest of the circuit. This means that an uncharged
capacitor acts like a wire when it first begins to charge.
If you disconnect the battery and reconnect the capacitor to a circuit that allows
the capacitor to discharge, charges will flow out of the capacitor and through the
circuit. This means that a fully-charged capacitor in a circuit without a separate
power supply acts like a battery when it first begins to discharge.
Toys from joke shops that shock people use simple battery-and-capacitor
circuits. The battery charges the capacitor gradually over time until a significant
amount of charge has built up. When the person grabs the object, the person
completes a circuit that discharges the capacitor, resulting in a sudden,
unpleasant electric shock.
This type of capacitor is named after is called a Leyden jar, after the city of
Leiden (Leyden) where van Musschenbroek lived.
Because the thickness of the jar is more or less constant, the Leyden jar behaves
like a parallel plate capacitor.
Shortly after the invention of the Leyden jar, Daniel Gralath discovered that he
could connect several jars in parallel to increase the total possible stored charge.
Benjamin Franklin compared this idea with a “battery” of cannon. (The original
meaning of the term “battery” was a collection of cannon for the purpose of
battering the enemy.) The term is now used to describe a similar arrangement
of electrochemical cells.
Franklin’s most famous experiment was to capture the charge from a lightning
strike in Leyden jars, proving that lightning is an electric discharge.
Thus one farad is one coulomb per volt. Note, however, that one farad is a
ridiculously large amount of capacitance. The capacitors in most electrical
circuits are in the millifarad (mF) to picofarad (pF) range.
Capacitance is the theoretical limit of the charge that a capacitor could store if
the charge were allowed to build up over an infinite amount of time.
Note that Qmax is often labeled Qo. Be careful—in this case, the subscript 0 does
not mean at time = 0.
When a capacitor is fully charged, the distance between the plates can be so
small that a spark could jump from one plate to the other, shorting out and
discharging the capacitor. In order to prevent this from happening, the space
between the plates is often filled with a chemical (often an oil) called a
Notes:
Capacitors in Parallel
When capacitors are connected in parallel:
C eq C1 C 2 C 3
Note that the segment of the circuit that goes from the right side of C 1 to the
left side of C 2 is isolated from the rest of the circuit. Current does not flow
through a capacitor, which means charges cannot enter or leave this segment.
Because charge is conserved (electrical charges cannot be created or destroyed),
this means the negative charge on C 1 (which is Q1 ) must equal the positive
charge on C 2 (which is Q2 ).
By applying this same argument across each of the capacitors, all of the charges
across capacitors in series must be equal. (Note that this is true regardless of
whether or not C 1 , C 2 and C 3 have the same capacitance.)
Therefore:
V V1 V2 V3
Q Q Q 1 1 1
V Q
C1 C2 C 3 C1 C2 C 3
V 1 1 1 1
Q C eq C 1 C 2 C 3
Generalizing this relationship, when capacitors are arranged in parallel, the total
capacitance is the sum of the capacitances of the individual capacitors:
1 1 1 1
C eq C 1 C 2 C 3
Sample Problem:
Simplify the following circuit:
1 1 1 1 1 2 1
C eq C 1 C 2 4 4 4 2
1 1
; C eq 2 μF
C eq 2
1 1 1 1 1 2 1
C eq C 1 C 2 8 8 8 4
1 1
; C eq 4 μF
C eq 4
C eq C1 C 2 2 4 6 μF
In an RC circuit, the amount and direction of current change with time as the
capacitor charges or discharges. The amount of time it takes for the capacitor to
charge or discharge is determined by the combination of the capacitance and
resistance in the circuit. This makes RC circuits useful for intermittent (i.e., with
a built-in delay) back-and-forth switching. Some common uses of RC circuits
include:
clocks
windshield wipers
pacemakers
synthesizers
Assuming the capacitor starts discharged, when the switch is closed a current of
V 12 V
Io 2.4 A
R 5Ω
starts flowing through the circuit, and the capacitor begins to charge. The
charge starts at Q 0 , but increases exponentially until it approaches its
maximum value of:
Q max CV (2F)(12V) 24 C
As the charge in the capacitor increases, the current flowing through the circuit
decreases exponentially:
(Note that the graphs are not to scale; the y-axis scale and units are necessarily
different for charge and current.)
where:
I = current (A) e = base of exponential
Io = initial current (just after function = 2.71828…
switch was closed) (A) t = time since switch was
Q = charge (C) closed (s)
Qmax = (theoretical) maximum R = resistance (Ω)
charge stored by C = capacitance (F)
capacitor at the circuit’s
voltage (C)
The RC term in the exponent is the time constant (τ) for the circuit. Larger
values of RC mean the circuit takes longer to charge the capacitor. The following
table shows the rate of decrease in current in the charging circuit and the rate of
increase in charge on the capacitor as a function of time:
I Q
e RC 1 e
t t
RC
t
Io Qmax
0 1 0
¼ RC 0.78 0.22
½ RC 0.61 0.39
0.69 RC 0.5 0.5
RC 0.37 0.63
2 RC 0.14 0.86
4 RC 0.02 0.98
10 RC 4.5 10 5 1
Note that the half-life of the charging and discharging process is approximately
0.69 RC.
Note also that while Qmax depends on the voltage applied, the rate of charging
and discharging depend only on the resistance and capacitance in the circuit.
When the switch is in the “charge” position, the battery charges the capacitor.
When the switch is flipped to the “discharge” position, the battery is switched
out and the circuit contains only the capacitor and the resistor.
When this happens, the capacitor discharges (loses its charge). The capacitor
acts as a temporary voltage source, and current temporarily flows out of the
positively-charged end of the capacitor through the resistor.
The driving force for this temporary current is the repulsion from the stored
charges in the capacitor. As charge leaves the capacitor there is less repulsion,
which causes the voltage and current to decrease exponentially along with the
charge. The equations for discharging a capacitor are therefore identical in form:
V (t ) Vo e
t
RC
Q(t ) Qo e
t
RC
I (t ) I o e
t
RC
Again the time constant, RC, is the relative amount of time it takes for the charge
remaining in the capacitor and the voltage and current in the circuit to decay.
(Refer to the table on page 266.)
When the switch is closed, the charge in the capacitor climbs to 86% of its
maximum value in 50 ms. What is the capacitance of the capacitor?
0.05
0.14 e 1000C
0.05 0.05
l n(0.14) l n(e 1000C
)
1000 C
0.05
1.97
1000 C
1970 C 0.05
0.05
C 2.5 10 5 F 25 μF
1970
This chapter discusses electricity and magnetism, how they behave, and how
they relate to each other.
Magnetism describes properties of magnets and what causes objects to
be magnetic. Electricity & Magnetism describes how electricity and
magnetism affect each other.
Textbook:
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 21: The Electric Field (pp. 550–587)
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 22: Electromagnetic Induction and AC Circuits
(pp. 588–627)
Topics from this chapter assessed on the SAT Physics Subject Test:
Magnetism, such as permanent magnets, fields caused by currents,
particles in magnetic fields, Faraday’s law, and Lenz’s law.
1. Permanent Magnets
2. Magnetic Force on Charges
3. Magnetic Force on Current-Carrying Wires
4. The Magnetic Field Due to a current
5. Motional EMF
6. Faraday’s Law
Skills learned & applied in this chapter:
Working with material-specific constants from a table.
Magnetism
Unit: Magnetism & Electromagnetism
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
what magnetism is and how it occurs
properties of magnets
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “magnet” and “magnetic field.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
A magnet has two ends or “poles”, called “north” and “south”. If a magnet is
allowed to spin freely, the end that points toward the north on Earth is called the
north end of the magnet. The end that points toward the south on Earth is
called the south end of the magnet. (The Earth’s magnetic poles are near, but
not in exactly the same place as its geographic poles.)
If you were to cut a magnet in half, each piece would be a magnet with its own
north and south pole:
If two electrons share an orbital, they have opposite spins. (Note that the
electrons are not actually spinning. “Spin” is the term for an intrinsic property of
certain subatomic particles.) This means that if one electron aligns itself with a
magnetic field, the other electron in the same orbital becomes aligned to oppose
the magnetic field, and there is no net force.
However, if an orbital has only one electron, that electron is free to align with
the magnetic field, which causes an attractive force between the magnet and the
magnetic material. For example, as you may remember from chemistry, the
electron configuration for iron is:
unpaired electrons
1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d
The inner electrons are paired up, but four of the electrons in the 3d sublevel are
unpaired, and are free to align with an external magnetic field.
paramagnetic: a material that has electrons that can align with a magnetic field.
Paramagnetic materials have relatively high magnetic permeabilities.
Because the core of the Earth is in constant motion, the Earth’s magnetic field is
constantly changing. The exact location of the Earth’s magnetic north and south
poles varies by about 80 km over the course of a day because of the rotation of
the Earth. Its average location (shown on the map of Northern Canada below)
drifts by about 50 km each year:
In this picture, the blue and red areas represent regions with strong localized
magnetic fields. On Mars, a compass could not be used in the ways that we use
a compass on Earth; if you took a compass to Mars, the needle would point
either toward or away from each these regions.
Jupiter, on the other hand, has a planetary magnetic field twenty times as strong
as that of Earth. This field may be caused by water with dissolved electrolytes or
by liquid hydrogen.
For obvious reasons, the Earth’s magnetic pole near the north pole is called the
Earth’s “north magnetic pole” or “magnetic north pole”. Similarly, the Earth’s
magnetic pole near the south pole is called the Earth’s “south magnetic pole” or
“magnetic south pole”.
However, because the north pole of a magnet points toward the north, the
Earth’s north magnetic pole (meaning its location) must therefore be the south
pole of the giant magnet that is the Earth.
Similarly, because the south pole of a magnet points toward the south, the
Earth’s south magnetic pole (meaning its location) must therefore be the north
pole of the giant Earth-magnet.
Unfortunately, the term “magnetic north pole,” “north magnetic pole” or any
other similar term almost always means the magnetic pole that is in the north
part of the Earth. There is no universally-accepted way to name the poles of the
Earth-magnet.
Electromagnetism
Unit: Magnetism & Electromagnetism
NGSS Standards: HS-PS2-5
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 5.6
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how a charge moving through a magnetic field produces a force
how this property can be used to make electric motors, generators, and
transformers
Skills:
calculate the force on a wire produced by a current moving through a
magnetic field
calculate the voltage and current changes in a step-up or step-down
transformer
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “electromagnet,” “motor,”
“generator,” and “transformer.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to the behavior of electric current
in a magnetic field.
If the rod or wire is part of a closed loop (circuit), then the induced ε produces a
current around the closed loop. From Ohm’s Law IR , we get:
vBL
I
R R
Moving Charges
The force, F on a charge q moving through a magnetic field B with a velocity v
is given by the equation:
F q (v B) and F q v B sin
Recall that current is just a flow of charges, which means that an electric current
moving through a magnetic field creates a force on the wire carrying the current.
Q d
Recall that I and v , where is the length (distance) of the wire
t t t
that passes through the magnetic field. This means that qv I , which we can
use to create an equivalent equation:
F (I B) and F I B sin
Note that the direction of the cross products v B and I B can be determined
using the right-hand rule.
1 T 1 V2s 1 ANm 1 J
1 Ckgs 1 CNms 1 kg
m Am2 As2
In the above diagram, the battery has voltage V, the resistor has resistance R,
and the length of wire passing through the magnetic field is ℓ.
The magnetic field strength is B, and the field itself is denoted by the symbols
which denote a magnetic field going into the page. (A field
coming out of the page would be denoted by instead. Think of
the circle as an arrow inside a tube. The dot represents the tip of the arrow
facing toward you, and the “X” represents the fletches (feathers) on the tail of
the arrow facing away from you.)
For example, suppose we were given the following for the above diagram:
B 4.0 10 5 T
V 30 V
R 5
2m
If the current is going upward through the magnetic field, and the magnetic field
is pointing into the paper, then the right-hand rule tells us that the force would
be directed to the left.
This time, we use the right-hand rule with our thumb pointing in the direction of
the current, and our fingers curl in the direction of the magnetic field.
o I
B
2 r
and that the force on a charged particle due to a magnetic field is:
FB q(v B)
Particles that enter a mass spectrometer must have the correct velocity in order
for the mass spectrometer to be able to separate the particles properly. Before
the particles enter the mass spectrometer, they first pass through a particle
sorter, which applies opposing electric and magnetic forces to the particle:
If the particles are moving too quickly, the magnetic force is stronger and the
particles are deflected upwards. If the particles are moving too slowly, the
electric force is stronger and the particles are deflected downwards. Particles
with the desired velocity experience no net force and are not deflected.
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes.
One of the most common uses of a solenoid is for electric door locks.
Because the iron core is not a permanent magnet, the electromagnet only works
when current is flowing through the circuit. When the current is switched off,
the electromagnet stops acting like a magnet and releases whatever
ferromagnetic objects might have been attracted to it.
When encoded information is read from the disk, the moving magnetic regions
produce a changing electric field that causes an electric current in the disk head.
A commutator is used to reverse the direction of the current as the loop turns,
so that the combination of attraction and repulsion always applies force in the
same direction.
The current on the input side (primary) generates a magnetic field in the iron
ring. The magnetic field in the ring generates a current on the output side
(secondary).
In this particular transformer, the coil wraps around the output side more times
than the input. This means that each time the current goes through the coil, the
magnetic field adds to the electromotive force (voltage). This means the voltage
will increase in proportion to the increased number of coils on the output side.
However, the magnetic field on the output side will produce less current with
each turn, which means the current will decrease in the same proportion:
# turns in V I
in out
# turns out Vout I in
Pin Pout
The particle is first selected for the desired velocity, as described on page 283.
Then the particle enters a region where the only force on it is from the applied
magnetic field. (In the example below, the magnetic field is directed out of the
page.)
The magnetic field applies a force on the particle perpendicular to its path. As
the particle’s direction changes, the direction of the applied force changes with
it, causing the particle to move in a circular path.
FB Fc
mv 2
qvB
r
mv 2 mv
r
qv B qB
Thus if the particles are all ions with the same charge and are selected for having
the same speed, the radius of the path will be directly proportional to the mass
of the particle.
One of the new skills learned in this chapter is visualizing and drawing
representations of how light is affected as it is reflected off a mirror or
refracted by a lens. This can be challenging because the behavior of the light
rays and the size and location of the image changes depending on the
location of the object relative to the focal point of the mirror or lens.
Another challenge is in drawing precise, to-scale ray tracing drawings such
that you can use the drawings to accurately determine properties of the
image, or of the mirror or lens.
Electromagnetic Waves
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 6.1, 6.2
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
know the regions of the electromagnetic spectrum
Skills:
calculate frequency & wavelength for electromagnetic waves
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “electromagnetic spectrum” and
“visible spectrum.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to energy produced by a wave of a
given frequency.
Recall that the speed of a wave equals its frequency times its wavelength:
c f
The waves that make up the electromagnetic spectrum are shown in the
diagram below:
In this diagram, energy increases from left to right, i.e., higher frequency
waves carry more energy.
visible spectrum: wavelengths of light that can be detected by the human eye.
This corresponds with wavelengths from roughly 400 nm to 700 nm.
Sample problem:
Q: What is the wavelength of a radio station that broadcasts at 98.5 MHz?
A: c f
3.00 10 (9.85 10 7 )
8
3.00 10 8
3.05 m
9.85 10 7
Q: What would be a good length for a car antenna that might be used to listen
to this radio station?
A: 3.05 m (about 10 feet) is too long for a car antenna. Somewhere between
half a meter and a meter is a good range.
1
4 wave would be 0.76 m (76 cm), which would be a good choice.
Color
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): 6.1, 6.2
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how different colors of light are reflected or absorbed
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “color,” “pigment,” “primary
color,” “secondary color,” “primary pigment,” and “secondary pigment.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Light with frequencies/wavelengths in the part of the spectrum that the eye can
detect is called visible light.
Rod cells resolve the physical details of images. Cone cells are responsible for
distinguishing colors. Rod cells can operate in low light, but cone cells need
much more light. This is why we cannot see colors in low light.
red
blue
green
For example, light with a wavelength of 400–450 nm appears blue to us, because
most of the response to this light is from the S cells, and our brains are wired to
perceive this response as blue color. Light with a wavelength of around 500 nm
would stimulate mostly the M cells and would appear green. Light with a
wavelength of around 570 nm would stimulate the M and L cells approximately
equally. When green and red receptors both respond, our brains perceive the
color as yellow.
primary color: light that excites only one type of cone cell. The primary colors of
light are red, green, and blue.
secondary color: light that is a combination of exactly two primary colors. The
secondary colors of light are cyan, magenta, and yellow.
pigment: a material that changes the color of reflected light by absorbing light
with specific wavelengths.
primary pigment: a material that absorbs light of only one primary color (and
reflects the other two primary colors). The primary pigments are cyan,
magenta, and yellow. Note that these are the secondary colors of light.
secondary pigment: a pigment that absorbs two primary colors (and reflects the
other). The secondary pigments are red, green, and blue. Note that these
are the primary colors of light.
On this graph, the x-axis is the fraction (from 0–1) of red light, the y-axis is the
fraction of green light, and the fraction of blue is implicit (1 – (red + green)).
Notice that equal fractions (0.33) of red, green and blue light would produce
white light.
To show the effects of mixing two colors, plot each color’s position on the graph
and connect them with a line. The linear distance along that line shows the
proportional effects of mixing. (E.g., the midpoint would represent the color
generated by 50% of each of the source colors.) This method is how fireworks
manufacturers determine the mixtures of different compounds that will produce
the desired colors.
Chromaticity is not covered on the AP Physics 2 exam.
Reflection
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
parallelism of light waves
Skills:
angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “reflection,” “specular reflection,”
“diffuse reflection,” “real image,” “virtual image,” “angle of incidence,” and
“angle of reflection.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems involving angles of incidence and
reflection.
real image: a reflected image that is created by photons (rays of light) that
converge. Because light is reflected back from a mirror (i.e., light cannot pass
through it), a real image is one that appears in front of the mirror. A real
image created by a mirror looks like a hologram.
A rule of thumb that works for both mirrors and lenses is that a real image is
produced by the convergence of actual rays of light. A virtual image is our
perception of where the rays of light appear to have come from.
When light waves strike a surface at an angle (measured from the perpendicular
or “normal” direction), they are reflected at the same angle away from the
perpendicular. The most common statement of this concept is “The angle of
incidence equals the angle of reflection.”
If the photons of light from the source are parallel when they strike the surface,
they will also be parallel when they reflect from the surface. This results in a
reflected image that appears to be the same size, shape, and distance from the
surface as the original object.
Light striking a rough surface will illuminate the surface. However, because the
reflected light rays are not parallel, the reflected light does not create a reflected
image of the object.
Mirrors
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how convex and concave mirrors reflect images
Skills:
calculating the focal point and the height and location of images reflected
by mirrors
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “mirror,” “convex,” “concave,”
“focal point,” “principal axis,” and “magnification.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to convex, concave, and flat
mirrors.
focal point: the point at which parallel rays striking a mirror converge.
principal axis: the imaginary line where a ray of light is reflected back along its
incident (incoming) path. Most physics problems represent the principal axis
as horizontal, but it can actually be any direction.
If the mirror is flat, the reflection is the same size and the same distance from
the mirror as the actual object. However, the image appears reversed
horizontally, but not vertically.
It would seem that the mirror “knows” to reverse the image horizontally but not
vertically. (Of course this is not true. If you want the mirror to reverse the
image vertically, all you need to do is put the mirror on the floor.) What is
actually happening is that light is reflected straight back from the mirror.
Anything that is on your right will also be on the right side of the image (from
your point of view; if the image were actually a person, this would be the other
person’s left). Anything that is on top of you will also be on top of the image as
you look at it.
What the mirror is doing is the same transformation as flipping a polygon over
the y-axis. The reversal is actually front-to-back (where “front” means closer to
the mirror and “back” means farther away from it).
In a concave mirror (curved inwards), the reflected rays converge (get closer
together). When this happens, it makes the reflection appear larger.
Focal Points
The focal point or focus of a mirror is the point where the rays of reflected light
converge. For a spherical mirror (one in which the shape of the mirror is the
surface of a sphere), the focus is halfway between the surface of the mirror and
the center of the sphere. This means the distance from the mirror to the focus
(f ) is half of the radius of curvature (rc ):
rc
f or rc 2 f
2
(Note: many textbooks use the variables do, di, and df for distances to the object,
image, and focus, respectively. These notes use the variables so, si, and f in order
to be consistent with the equation sheet provided by the College Board for the
AP Physics 2 exam.)
2. A ray of light that hits the mirror parallel to the principal axis is reflected
directly toward or away from the focus.
3. If you draw a pair of rays from the top of the object as described by #1
and #2 above, the intersection will be at the top of the image of the
object.
For a concave mirror, the equations are exactly the same as for a convex mirror.
However, for a concave mirror, the image changes, depending on where the
object is relative to the center of curvature and the focus, as is shown by ray
tracing in each the following cases.
If the object is closer to the mirror than the focus, you see a virtual image
(behind the mirror) that is upright (right-side-up), and larger than the original:
If the object is between the focus and the center of curvature, you would see a
real (in front of the mirror) image that is behind the object, inverted (upside-
down), and larger:
If the object is at the center of curvature, you would see a real, inverted image
that is the same size and same distance from the mirror as the object:
Equations
The distance from the mirror to the focus (sf ) can be calculated from the
distance to the object (so ) and the distance to the image (si ), using the following
equation:
1 1 1
so si f
Distances for the image (si ) and focus (f ) are positive in front of the mirror
(where a real image would be), and negative behind the mirror (where a virtual
image would be).
The height of the image (hi ) can be calculated from the height of the object (ho )
and the two distances (si and so ), using the following equation:
hi s
M i
ho so
A positive value for hi means the image is upright (right-side-up), and a negative
value for hi means the image is inverted (upside-down).
magnification: the ratio of the size of the image to the size of the object.
If M > 1, the image is larger than the object. (For example, if M = 2, then the
image is twice as large as the object.) If M = 1, the object and image are the
same size. If M < 1, the image is smaller. Finally, note that in a mirror, virtual
images are always upright, and real images are always inverted.
1 1 1
so s i f 1 14
1 1 1 si 45
9 si 5 45
si 3.2 cm
5 1 9 14
45 si 45
The value of −3.2 cm means the image is a virtual image located 3.2 cm
behind the mirror.
Now that we know the distance from the mirror to the image, we can
calculate the height of the image (hi ):
hi s
i (5)(3.2) 9 hi
ho so
16
hi 3.2 hi 1.8 cm
9
5 9
The image is 1.8 cm high. Because the height is a positive number, this
means the image is upright (right-side-up).
Refraction
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
what refraction is and why it happens
higher index of refraction bends light toward the normal (perpendicular)
how & why rainbows occur
Skills:
solve problems using Snell’s Law
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “refraction,” “index of refraction,”
“prism,” and “critical angle.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to Snell’s Law.
index of refraction: a number that relates the velocity of light in a medium to the
velocity of light in a vacuum.
When the waves slow down, they are bent toward the normal (perpendicular),
as in the following diagram:
Index of Index of
Substance Substance
Refraction Refraction
vacuum 1.00000 quartz 1.46
air (0°C
1.00029 glass (typical) 1.52
and 1 atm)
NaCl (salt)
water (20°C) 1.333 1.54
crystals
polystyrene (#6
acetone 1.357 1.55
plastic)
ethyl alcohol 1.362 diamond 2.42
These values are for yellow light with a wavelength of 589 nm.
For light traveling from one medium into another, the ratio of the speeds of light
is related to the ratio of the indices of refraction, as described by Snell’s Law
(named for the Dutch astronomer Willebrord Snellius):
s in1 v1 n2
s in 2 v2 n1
n1 s i n 1 n2 s i n 2
n1 s i n(45) (1.33) s i n(65)
(1.33) s i n65 (1.33)(0.906)
n1 1.70
s i n45 0.707
If light passes through a prism (from air into the prism and back out) and the two
interfaces are not parallel, the different indices of refraction for the different
wavelengths will cause the light to spread out.
When light is bent by a prism, the ratio of indices of refraction is the inverse of
the ratio of wavelengths. Thus we can expand Snell’s Law as follows:
s i n1 v1 1 n2
s i n2 v2 2 n1
critical angle (θc): the angle beyond which total internal reflection occurs.
n2
c s in1
n1
The speaker stands behind a clear piece of glass. The image of the speech is
projected onto the glass. The text is visible to the speaker, but not to the
audience.
The second rainbow appears above the first because the angle of light exiting the
raindrop is greater—varying from 50° for red light to 52.5° for violet light.
Note also that the sky is brighter inside the rainbow. Because red light reflects at
all angles greater than or equal to 40°, red light is therefore a component of all
of the colors inside the red band of the rainbow. The same is true for each of the
other colors; inside of the violet band, all wavelengths of visible light are present,
and the result is white light. Outside of the red band, no visible light is refracted,
which causes the sky outside the rainbow to appear darker.
Because the second rainbow is reversed, the sky will be brighter outside the
second rainbow.
Polarization
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how and under what circumstances light can be polarized
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “polarized” or “polarization.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
One example is light reflecting off a wet road. When the sun shines on a wet
road at a low angle, the reflected light is polarized parallel to the surface (i.e.,
horizontally). Sunglasses that are polarized vertically (i.e., that allow only
vertically polarized light to pass through) will effectively block most or all of the
light reflected from the road.
Another example is the light of a rainbow. When sunlight reflects off the inside
of a raindrop, the angle of incidence is very close to Brewster’s angle. This
causes the light that exits the raindrop to be polarized in the same direction as
the bows of the rainbow (i.e., horizontally at the top). This is why you cannot
see a rainbow through polarized sunglasses!
Note that if you place two polarizers on top of each other and turn them so they
polarize in different directions, no light can get through. This is called crossed
polarization.
Lenses
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how lenses work
the difference between convex & concave lenses
Skills:
calculate the focus, and the location and size of the image
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “lens,” “convex,” “concave,”
“principal axis,” “focus,” “vertex,” “real image,” “virtual image,” “upright,”
and “inverted.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems involving convex and concave lenses.
Lenses are different from mirrors in that light passes through them, which means
they operate by refraction instead of reflection.
upright image: an image that is oriented in the same direction as the object.
(“right-side-up”)
inverted image; an image that is oriented in the opposite direction from the
object. (“upside-down”)
2. Light passing through any part of the lens other than the vertex is
refracted through the focus :
Notice that the light is refracted twice, once upon entering the lens and a
second time upon entering the air when it exits. For convenience, we
usually draw the ray trace as if the light is refracted once when it crosses
the center of the lens:
The magnification (M ) is the ratio of the height of the image (hi ) to the height of
the object (ho ), which is equal to the ratio of the distance of the image (si ) to
distance of the object (so ).
hi s
M i
ho so
As with mirrors, the distance to the image is defined to be positive for a real
image, and negative for a virtual image. However, note that with lenses the real
image is caused by the rays of light that pass through the lens, which means a
real image is behind a lens, where as a real image is in front of a mirror.
Note also that for lenses, this means that the positive direction for the object
and the positive for the image are opposite.
As with mirrors, the distance from the vertex of the lens to the focus (f ) is
defined by the equation:
1 1 1
si so f
The most familiar use of convex lenses is as a magnifying glass. Note how the
bending of the light rays makes the object appear larger
Note also that the lens bends all of the light. Your eyes cannot see the unbent
light rays, which means you cannot see the actual object in its actual location;
you only see the image.
If the object is farther away from the lens than the focus, the image is real (on
the opposite side of the lens) and inverted (upside-down):
If the object is closer than the focus, the image is virtual (on the same side of the
lens) and upright (right-side-up):
For a concave lens, the image is always virtual (on the same side of the lens) and
upright (right-side-up):
“Farsighted” means only objects far away from the eye are in focus; the viewer is
unable to focus on close objects. This happens because the ciliary muscles
cannot contract enough to bring the focal point of the lens for light coming from
nearby objects onto the retina. Farsightedness is corrected by eyeglasses with
convex lenses, which move the focal point forward to the retina.
The image from the objective lens is then refracted by the eyepiece. The
eyepiece creates a much larger virtual image, which is what the eye sees.
Diffraction
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how light spreads from a slit
how a diffraction grating works
Skills:
calculate the distance between colored bands for a diffraction grating
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “diffraction” and “diffraction
grating.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems relating to diffraction gratings.
If we shine light through a slit whose thickness is approximately the same order
of magnitude as the wavelength, the light can only hit the wall in specific
locations.
In the following diagram, light travels the same distance for paths 1 and 2—the
same number of wavelengths. Light waves hitting this point will add
constructively, which makes the light brighter.
However, for paths 3 and 4, path 4 is ½ wavelength longer than path 3. Light
taking path 4 is ½ wavelength out of phase with light from path 3. The waves
add destructively (cancel), and there is no light:
Farther up or down the right side will be alternating locations where the
difference in path length results in waves that are in phase (constructive
interference = bright spots), vs. out-of-phase (destructive interference = dark
spots).
The patterns of light surrounding the center are the points where the waves of
light add constructively.
Notice that blue and violet light (with the shortest wavelengths) is diffracted the
least and appears closest to the center, whereas red light is diffracted more and
appears farther away. This is because shorter waves need to turn less far to fit
through the slits than longer waves.
d sin m m
where:
m = the number of waves that equals the difference in the lengths of the
two paths (integer)
θm = the angle of emergence (or angle of deviation) in order for light from
one slit to add constructively to light from a neighboring slit that is m
wavelengths away.
d = the distance between the slits
λ = the wavelength of the light
A: For our diffraction grating, 5 000 lines per cm equals 500 000 lines per meter.
1
d 2 10 6 m
500 000
5.32 10 7 4.05 10 7
s in 0.266 s in 0.203
2 10 6 and 2 10 6
s in1 (0.266) 15.4 s in1 (0.203) 11.7
Scattering
Unit: Light & Optics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
why the sky is blue
why the sun looks red at sunset
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “scattering.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Rayleigh scattering is responsible for the color of the sky. Small particles (0.5–
1 micron) scatter visible light as it passes through Earth’s atmosphere. Because
light at the blue and violet end of the spectrum is about five times as likely to be
scattered as light at the red end of the spectrum, the majority of the scattered
light in our atmosphere is blue.
This is also why the sun appears yellow during the day—the combination of red,
orange, yellow and green light appears yellow to us.
Water vapor molecules are much larger—ranging in size from 2–5 microns. For
these larger particles, the probability of scattering is approximately the same for
all wavelengths, which is why clouds appear white.
At sunset, because the angle of the sun is much lower, the light must pass
through much more of the atmosphere before we see it. By the time the light
gets to our eyes, all of the colors are removed by scattering except for the
extreme red end of the spectrum, which is why the sun appears red when it sets.
This chapter discusses the particles that atoms and other matter are made
of, how those particles interact, and the process by which radioactive decay
can change the composition of a substance from one element into another.
The Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom describes the first attempts to use
quantum mechanics to describe the behavior of the electrons in an atom.
The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom describes the evolution of
atomic theory from the Bohr model to the present day.
Fundamental Forces describes the four natural forces that affect
everything in the universe. The strong nuclear force and the weak
nuclear force are particularly relevant to this chapter.
The Standard Model and Particle Interactions describe properties of and
interactions between the particles that all matter is made of.
One of the challenging aspects of this chapter is that it describes process that
happen on a scale that is much too small to observe directly. Another
challenge is the fact that the Standard Model continues to evolve. Many of
the connections between concepts that make other topics easier to
understand have yet to be made in the realm of atomic & particle physics.
Textbook:
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 28: Quantum Concepts (pp. 798–817)
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 29: The Atom (pp. 818–853)
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 30: Nuclear Physics and Elementary Particles
(pp. 854–894)
Skills:
calculate the kinetic energy of electrons emitted and the work function
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “photoelectric effect,” and “work
function.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems involving the photoelectric effect.
Kmax h( f fo )
The quantity hfo is called the “work function” of the atom, and is denoted by the
variable . Thus the kinetic energy equation can be rewritten as:
Kmax hf
Values of the work function for different elements range from about 2.3–6 eV.
(1 eV 1.6 10 19 J)
Skills:
calculate the frequency/wavelength of light emitted using the Rydberg
equation
calculate the energy associated with a quantum number using Bohr’s
equation
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “electron,” “nucleus,” and
“spectral lines.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems using the Rydberg and Bohr equations.
Notes:
Significant Developments Prior to 1913
Discovery of the Electron (1897): J.J. Thompson determined that cathode rays
were actually particles emitted from atoms that the cathode was made of.
These particles had an electrical charge, so they were named “electrons”.
There are several series of spectral lines for hydrogen, each of which
converge at different wavelengths. Rydberg described the Balmer series in
terms of a pair of integers (n1 and n2, where n1 < n2), and devised a single
formula with a single constant (now called the Rydberg constant) that relates
them.
1 1 1
RH 2 2
vac n
1 n2
me e 4
The value of Rydberg’s constant is 10 973 731.6 m 1 1.1 10 7 m 1
8 o2 h 3 c
where me is the rest mass of the electron, e is the elementary charge, εo is
the permittivity of free space, h is Planck’s constant, and c is the speed of
light in a vacuum.
Series Wavelength n1 n2
Lyman 91 nm 1 2→∞
Balmer 365 nm 2 3→∞
Paschen 820 nm 3 4→∞
“Old” Quantum Theory (ca. 1900): sub-atomic particles obey the laws of
classical mechanics, but that only certain “allowed” states are possible.
RH
En
n2
Although the Bohr model worked well for hydrogen, the equations could not be
solved exactly for atoms with more than one electron, because of the additional
effects that electrons exert on each other (such as the Coulomb force, F kqd12q2 ).
Notes:
Louis de Broglie
In 1924, French physicist Louis de Broglie suggested that, like light, electrons can
act as both a particle and a wave. He theorized that the reason that only integer
values for quantum numbers were possible was because as the electron orbits
the nucleus, its path must be an integer multiple of the wavelength:
Notice that there is a region close to the nucleus where the electron is unlikely to
be found, and a ring a little farther out where there is a much higher probability
of finding the electron.
Schrödinger was awarded the Nobel prize in physics in 1933 for this discovery.
Fundamental Forces
Unit: Modern Physics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
fundamental forces
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Notes:
weak force (or “weak nuclear force”): the force that causes protons and/or
neutrons in the nucleus to become unstable and leads to beta nuclear decay.
This happens because the weak force causes an up or down quark to change
flavor. (This process is described in more detail in the Standard Model of
particle physics.)
electromagnetic force: the force between electrical charges. If the charges are
the same (“like charges”)—both positive or both negative—the particles
repel each other. If the charges are different (“opposite charges”)—one
positive and one negative—the particles attract each other.
gravity: the force that causes masses to attract each other. Usually only
observable if one of the masses is very large (like a planet).
Relative
Force Effective Distance
Strength
Strong 1 Diameter of the nucleus
Weak 10−6 to 10−7 1
/3 diameter of the nucleus
1
Electromagnetic /137 ∞, but gets smaller as (distance)2
Gravity 10−39 ∞, but gets smaller as (distance)2
Notes:
The Standard Model is a theory of particle physics that:
identifies the particles that matter is comprised of
describes properties of these particles, including their mass, charge, and
“spin”
describes interactions between these particles
The Standard Model dates to the mid-1970s, when the existence of quarks was
first experimentally confirmed. Physicists are still discovering new particles and
relationships between particles, so the model and the ways it is represented are
evolving, much like its cousin the Periodic Table of the Elements was evolving at
the turn of the twentieth century. The table and the model described in these
notes represent our understanding, as of the early twenty-first century. By the
middle of this century, the Standard Model may evolve to a form that is
substantially different from the way we represent it today.
The Standard Model in its present form does not incorporate dark matter, dark
energy, or gravitational attraction.
u c t γ H0
charge → +⅔ +⅔ +⅔ 0 0
spin → ½ ½ ½ 1 0
up quark charm quark top quark photon Higgs boson
4.8 MeV/c² 104 MeV/c² 4.2 GeV/c² 0 MeV/c²
d s b g
−⅓ −⅓ −⅓ 0
quarks
½ ½ ½ 1
down quark strange quark bottom quark gluon
< 2.2 eV/c² < 0.17 MeV/c² < 15.5 MeV/c² 91.2 GeV/c²
νe νμ ντ Z0
0 0 0 0
½ ½ ½ 1
gauge bosons
electron neutrino muon neutrino tau neutrino Z boson
0.511 MeV/c² 105.7 MeV/c² 1.777 GeV/c² 80.4 GeV/c²
leptons
e μ τ W±
−1 −1 −1 ±1
½ ½ ½ 1
electron muon tau W boson
Fermions
The three columns on the left side of the table are fermions. Fermions are
described by Fermi-Dirac statistics and obey the Pauli exclusion principle.
Fermions are the building blocks of matter. They have a spin of ½, and each
fermion has its own antiparticle. The antiparticle of a fermion is identical to its
corresponding particle, but has a charge of the opposite sign. Antiparticles have
the same name as the corresponding particle with the prefix “anti-“; for
example, the antiparticle of a tau neutrino is a tau antineutrino. (Note, however,
that for historical reasons an antielectron is usually called a positron.)
Quarks
Quarks are fermions that interact via the strong force. Because protons and
neutrons (which make up most of the mass of an atom) are made of three
quarks each, quarks are the subatomic particles that make up most of the
ordinary matter in the universe. (Dark matter, which accounts for 84.5% of the
total matter in the universe, is made from other types of subatomic particles.)
Color Charge
All electrons and fermions (particles that have half-integer spin quantum
numbers) must obey the Pauli Exclusion Principle, which states that the particles
cannot have identical sets of quantum numbers. For electrons, (as you learned
in chemistry), if two electrons share the same orbital, they need to have
opposite spins. This does not mean that the electron is physically spinning.
Rather, it means that there is some property of the electrons’ energy that needs
to be different for the two electrons in order for them to have non-matching sets
of quantum numbers, and we call that property “spin.”
In the case of quarks, all quarks have a spin of 1 2 , so in order to satisfy the
Pauli Exclusion Principle, if a proton or neutron contains three quarks, there has
to be some other quantum property that has different values for each of those
quarks. This property is called “color charge” (or sometimes just “color”). Just
like “spin” is the name of a property of energy that has nothing to do with actual
spinning, “color” is another property that has nothing to do with actual color. (In
fact, quarks couldn’t possibly have actual color—the wavelengths of visible light
are thousands of times larger than quarks!)
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes.
Quarks can exchange color charge by emitting a gluon that contains one color
and one anticolor. Another quark absorbs the gluon, and both quarks undergo
color change. For example, suppose a blue quark emits a blue antigreen gluon:
You can imagine that the quark sent away its own blue color (the “blue” in the
“blue antigreen” gluon). Because it also sent out antigreen, it was left with
green so it became a green quark. Meanwhile, the antigreen part of the gluon
finds the green quark and cancels its color. When this happens, the blue from
the blue antigreen gluon causes the receiving quark to become blue. After the
interaction, the particle once again has one red, one green, and one blue quark,
which means color charge is conserved.
Again, keep in mind that quark colors are just names for quantum states and are
not actual colors.
Flavors
The different types of quarks are called “flavors.”
Quarks that carry a positive charge ( 2 3 ) are called “up-type” quarks. These
include the flavors:
up quark
charm quark
top quark
Protons and neutrons are made from three quarks each, which may be up or
down quarks. A proton contains two up quarks and one down quark; the total
charge is 2 3 2 3 1 3 1 , which is why a proton has a +1 charge. A neutron
contains one up quark and two down quarks; the total charge is
2 1 1 0 , which is why a neutron has no charge.
3 3 3
Leptons
Leptons are fermions that do not carry color charge (i.e., do not interact via the
strong force). Electron-like leptons carry an electric charge of −1:
electron
muon
tau
The four fundamental forces of nature (the strong force, the weak force, the
electromagnetic force, and the gravitational force) are mediated by gauge
bosons. Mass is created by the Higgs boson.
Each of the fundamental bosons is its own antiparticle, except for the W − boson
(whose antiparticle is the W+ boson).
(Note that the graviton is not actually part of the Standard Model. It is included
here for completeness. The existence of the graviton is theorized but has not
yet, as of late-2014, been confirmed.)
Baryons
The most well-known baryons are protons and neutrons, each comprised of
three quarks. Protons are made of two up quarks and one down quark, and
carry a charge of +1. Neutrons are made of one up quark and two down quarks,
and carry a charge of zero.
Notes:
In particle physics, the Standard Model describes the types of particles found in
nature, their properties, and how they interact. The following diagram shows
which types of particles can interact with which other types.
In the following diagram, we start (at the left) with an electron (e−) and photon
(γ). The two come together, and the electron absorbs the photon.
In the following diagram, we start (at the left) with a positron (e+) and photon (γ).
(Note that the arrow pointing to the left indicates a positively-charged particle.)
The two come together, and the positron absorbs the photon.
In the following image, we start with an electron (e−) and positron (e+) (coming in
from the left). They exchange a photon (γ) between them. (Note that the
diagram does not make it clear which particle emits the photon and which one
absorbs it.) Then the two particles exit.
come together and annihilate each other, producing a photon (γ). (You can tell
this because for a length of time, nothing else exists except for the photon.)
Then the photon pair-produces a new electron/positron pair.
In the following diagram, an electron (e−) and positron (e+) annihilate each other
as above, but this time the photon produces a muon (μ−)/antimuon (μ+) pair.
(Again, note that the muon, which has a negative charge, has the arrow pointing
to the right. The antimuon, which has a positive charge, has the arrow pointing
to the left.)
Finally, in the following diagram, an electron (e−) and positron (e+) annihilate
each other, producing a photon (γ). The photon pair-produces a bottom quark
(b) and an antibottom quark ( b ), which radiate gluons (g).
Radioactive Decay
Unit: Modern Physics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS1-8
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding:
types of radioactive decay
types of particles & emissions created by radioactive decay
Skills:
determining the products of radioactive decay
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “radioactive decay,” “nuclear
instability,” “alpha decay,” “beta decay,” “gamma rays,” and “penetrating
power.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Note that when this happens, the nucleus ends up with a different number of
protons. This causes the atom to literally turn into an atom of a different
element. When this happens, the physical and chemical properties
instantaneously change into the properties of the new element!
excess
excess protons;
neutrons; β−
β+ decay and
decay likely
electron capture
likely
92 U 90Th 2 He
238 234 4
Atoms are most likely to undergo alpha decay if they have an otherwise
stable proton/neutron ratio but a large atomic number.
Alpha decay has never been observed in atoms with an atomic number less
than 52 (tellurium), and is rare in elements with an atomic number less than
73 (tantalum).
Note that a neutron consists of one up quark and two down quarks (udd),
and a proton consists of two up quarks and one down quark (uud). When β−
decay occurs, the weak force causes one of the quarks changes its flavor
from down to up, which causes the neutron (uud) to change into a proton
(udd). Because a proton was gained, the atomic number increases by one.
However, because the proton used to be a neutron, the mass number does
not change. For example:
15 P16 S -1 e
32 32 0
Atoms are likely to undergo β− decay if they have too many neutrons and not
enough protons to achieve a stable neutron/proton ratio. Almost all isotopes
that are heavier than isotopes of the same element within the band of
stability (because of the “extra” neutrons) undergo β− decay.
Note that a β− particle is assigned an atomic number of −1. This does not
mean an electron is some sort of “anti-proton”. The −1 is just used to make
the equation for the number of protons work out in the nuclear equation.
12 Mg11 Na 1 e
23 23 0
Atoms are likely to undergo β+ decay if they have too many protons and not
enough neutrons to achieve a stable neutron/proton ratio. Almost all
isotopes that are lighter than the isotopes of the same element that fall
within the band of stability (“not enough neutrons”) undergo β+ decay.
12 Mg 1 e11 Na
23 0 23
Note that β+ decay and electron capture produce the same products.
Electron capture can sometimes (but not often) occur without β+ decay.
However, β+ decay is always accompanied by electron capture.
Atoms are likely to undergo electron capture (and usually also β+ decay) if
they have too many protons and not enough neutrons to achieve a stable
neutron/proton ratio. Almost all isotopes that are lighter than the isotopes
of the same element that fall within the band of stability undergo electron
capture, and usually also β+ decay.
All of the types of radioactive decay mentioned in these notes also produce γ
rays. This means to be complete, we would add gamma radiation to each of
the radioactive decay equations described above:
92 U 90Th 2 He 0 γ
238 234 4 0
15 P16 S -1 e 0 γ
32 32 0 0
12 Mg 11 Na 1 e 0 γ
23 23 0 0
12 Mg 1 e11 Na 0 γ
23 0 23 0
lightest heaviest
fastest slowest
most penetrating power least penetrating power
Note also that denser substances (such as lead) do a better job of blocking
and absorbing radioactive emissions. This is why lead is commonly used as
shielding for experiments involving radioactive substances.
Nuclear Equations
Unit: Modern Physics
NGSS Standards: HS-PS1-8
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Skills:
write & solve nuclear equations
Language Objectives:
Set up and solve word problems involving nuclear equations.
Notes:
nuclear equation: a chemical equation describing the process of an isotope
undergoing radioactive decay. For example:
92 U 90Th 2 He
238 234 4
In a nuclear equation, the number of protons (atomic number) and the total
mass (mass number) are conserved on both sides of the arrow. If you look at the
bottom (atomic) numbers, and replace the arrow with an = sign, you would have
the following:
92 = 90 + 2
Similarly, if you look at the top (mass) numbers, and replace the arrow with an =
sign, you would have:
238 = 234 + 4
Answer:
0
A β− particle is an electron, which we write as 1 e in a nuclear equation.
131 0
This means I decays into some unknown particle plus 1 e . The
equation is:
53 I p X -10e
131 m
We can write the following equations for the atomic and mass numbers:
Atomic #s: 53 = p + −1 p = 54; therefore X is Xe
Mass #s: 131 = m + 0 m = 131
131
Therefore, particle X is 54 Xe So our final answer is:
131 0
The two products of decay in this reaction are 54 Xe and 1 e .
Answer:
The two equations are:
Atomic #s: 86 = 84 + p p = 2; therefore X is He
Mass #s: 212 = 208 + m m = 4
Therefore, particle X is 42 He , which means it is an α particle.
Notes:
mass defect: the difference between the actual mass of an atom, and the sum of
the masses of the protons, neutrons, and electrons that it contains.
binding energy: the energy that holds the nucleus of an atom together through
the strong nuclear force
where E is the binding energy, m is the mass defect, and c is the speed of light
(3 × 108 m/s, which means c 2 is a very large number).
For example:
A proton has a mass of 1.6726 10 27 kg .
A neutron has a mass of 1.6749 10 27 kg .
An electron has a mass of 9.1094 1031 kg .
238
92 U has 92 protons, 146 neutrons, and 92 electrons. This means the total mass
238
of one atom of 92 U should be:
238
The actual observed mass of one atom of 92 U is 238.0003 amu.
The mass defect is therefore 3.9850 1025 3.9520 1025 3.2989 1027 kg .
You can figure out how much energy is produced by spontaneous radioactive
decay by calculating the difference in the sum of the binding energies of the
atoms before and after the decay.
Half-Life
Unit: Modern Physics
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Comprehension:
understand what half-life means
Skills:
solve problems having to do with:
o amount of radioactive material remaining
o length of time elapsed, based on amount of material remaining
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “half-life”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems involving the half-life of a radioactive
substance.
For any given atom, there is a certain probability, P, that it will undergo
radioactive decay in a given amount of time. The half-life, τ, is how much time it
would take to have a 50% probability of the atom decaying. If you start with n
atoms, after one half-life, half of them (0.5n) will have decayed.
Because n is decreasing, the number of atoms (and consequently also the mass)
remaining after any specific period of time follows the exponential decay
function:
A Ao ( 21 )n
where A is the amount you have now, Ao is the amount you started with, and n
is the number of half-lives that have elapsed.
Because the number of half-lives equals the total time elapsed (t ) divided by the
half-life (τ), we can replace n t and rewrite the equation as:
t t
1 A 1
A Ao or
2 Ao 2
If you want to find either A or Ao , you can plug the values for t and τ into the
above equation.
A: A0 = 228 g
A=A
τ = 28.1 years (from the “Selected Radioisotopes” table in your reference
tables)
t = 112.4 years
t
1
A A0
2
112.4
1 28.1
A (228)
2
4
1
A (228)
2
1
A (228)
16
A 14.25 g
Or use a chart:
# years 0 28.1 56.2 84.3 112.4
# half lives 0 1 2 3 4
amount left 228 g 114 g 57 g 28.5 g 14.25 g
Sample problem:
Q: If you started with 64 g of 131I, how long would it take until there was only 4 g
remaining? The half-life (τ) of 131I is 8.07 days.
64
A: 16 which is a power of 2, so we can simply make a table:
4
# half lives 0 1 2 3 4
amount
64 g 32 g 16 g 8g 4g
remaining
a 3 = 21 (3 a3 3 21 2.76)
62 = c (62 = 36)
However, we can’t do this if a and c are constants and we need to solve for b, as
in the expression:
3b = 17
To solve for b, we need to get b out of the exponent. We do this by taking the
logarithm of both sides:
b l og(3) l og(17)
l og(17)
b
l og(3)
1.23
b 2.58
0.477
It doesn’t matter which base you use; using ln instead of log gives the same
result:
b l n(3) l n(17)
l n(17)
b
l n(3)
2.83
b 2.58
1.10
Sample problem:
Q: If you started with 64 g of 131I, how long would it take until there was only
5.75 g remaining? The half-life (τ) of 131I is 8.07 days.
64
A: We have 5.75 g remaining. However, 11.13 , which is not a power of
5.75
two. This means we don’t have an integer number of half-lives, so we need
to use logarithms:
t
A 1
Ao 2
t 1
l ogA l ogAo l og
2
t 1
l og5.75 l og64 l og
8.07 2
t
0.7597 1.8062 (0.3010)
8.07
1.0465 0.03730 t
28.1 da ys t
Notes:
Fission
fission: splitting of the nucleus of an atom, usually by bombarding it with a high-
speed neutron.
When atoms are split by bombardment with neutrons, they can divide in
hundreds of ways. For example, when 235U is hit by a neutron, it can split more
than 200 ways. Three examples that have been observed are:
0 n 92 U 37 Rb 55 Cs 2 01n
1 235 90 144
0 n 92 U 35 Br 57 La 3 0 n
1 235 87 146 1
0 n 92 U 30 Br 62 Sm 4 0 n
1 235 72 160 1
Note also that the neutron/proton ratio of 235U is about 1.5. The stable
neutron/proton ratio of each of the products would be approximately 1.2. This
means that almost all of the products of fission reactions have too many
neutrons to be stable, which means they will undergo β− decay.
The fuel is the radioactive material (such as 235U) that is undergoing fission. The
graphite in the core of the reactor is used to absorb some of the neutrons. The
moveable control rods are adjusted so they can absorb some or all of the
remaining neutrons as desired. If the control rods are all the way down, all of
the neutrons are absorbed and no heating occurs. When the reactor is in
operation, the control rods are raised just enough to make the reaction proceed
at the desired rate.
Nuclear fusion reactions occur naturally on stars (such as the sun), and are the
source of the heat and energy that stars produce.
On the sun, fusion occurs between atoms of deuterium (2H) to produce helium:
1 H 1 H 2 He
2 2 4
The major challenge in building nuclear fusion reactors is the high temperatures
produced—on the order of 106–109 °C. In a tokamak fusion reactor, the starting
materials are heated until they become plasma—a sea of highly charged ions
and electrons. The highly charged plasma is kept away from the sides by
powerful electromagnets.
MIT has a smaller tokamak reactor at its Plasma Science & Fusion Center. The
MIT reactor is able to conduct fusion reactions lasting for only a few seconds; if
the reaction continued beyond this point, the current in the electromagnets that
is necessary to generate the high magnetic fields required to confine the
reaction would become hot enough to melt the copper wire and fuse the coils of
the electromagnet together.
After each “burst” (short fusion reaction), the electromagnets in the MIT reactor
need to be cooled in a liquid nitrogen bath (−196°C) for fifteen minutes before
the reactor is ready for the next burst.
Notes:
While most people think of the dangers and destructive power of nuclear
radiation, there are a lot of other uses of radioactive materials:
Power Plants: nuclear reactors can generate electricity in a manner that does
not produce CO2 and other greenhouse gases.
Cancer Therapy: nuclear radiation can be focused in order to kill cancer cells in
patients with certain forms of cancer. Radioprotective drugs are now
available that can help shield non-cancerous cells from the high-energy
gamma rays.
This chapter describes changes to the properties of objects when they are
moving at speeds near the speed of light.
Relative Motion and Relative Velocities describes relationships between
objects that are moving with different velocities.
The Speed of Light describes some familiar assumptions we have about
our universe that do not apply at speeds near the speed of light.
Length Contraction & Time Dilation and the Energy-Momentum Relation
describe calculations involving changes in the length, time, mass, and
momentum of objects as their speeds approach the speed of light.
Textbook:
Physics Fundamentals Ch. 27: Relativity (pp. 765–797)
Relative Motion
Unit: Special Relativity
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Objectives:
the theory and concept of relativity
Skill Objectives:
describe how a situation appears in different frames of reference
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the terms “relativity” and “reference frame”
(“frame of reference”).
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section, using
appropriate academic language.
Vocabulary:
relativity: the concept that motion can be described only with respect to an
observer, who may be moving or not moving relative to the object under
consideration.
If the streetcar is moving at a constant velocity and the track is smooth, the
passengers may not notice that they are moving until they look out of the
window.
In the reference frame of a person standing on the ground, the trolley and the
passengers on it are moving at approximately 30 miles per hour.
In the reference frame of the trolley, the passengers sitting in the seats are
stationary (not moving), and the ground is moving past the trolley at
approximately 30 miles per hour.
Of course, you might want to say that the person on the ground has the
“correct” reference frame. However, despite what you might prefer, neither
answer is more correct than the other. Either reference frame is valid, which
means either description of what is moving and what is stationary is equally
valid.
Principle of Relativity
There is no experiment you can do that would allow you to determine
conclusively whether or not you are moving uniformly.
Consider a fast airplane (such as a supersonic jet) flying from Boston to San
Francisco. Imagine that the plane takes exactly three hours to fly to San
Francisco, which is the same as the time difference between the two locations.
Seen from outside the Earth, the situation might look like this:
4. The jet, the Earth and the Sun are all moving, because the sun is revolving
around the Milky Way galaxy with a speed of about 220 000 ms .
5. The jet, the Earth, the Sun, and the entire Milky Way galaxy are all
moving through space toward the Great Attractor (a massive region of
visible and dark matter about 150 million light-years away from us) with a
speed of approximately 1 000 000 ms .
6. It is not clear whether there might be multiple Great Attractors, and what
their motion might be relative to each other, or relative to some yet-to-
be-discovered entity.
Regardless of which objects are moving with which velocities, if you are on the
airplane and you drop a ball, you would observe that it falls straight down. In
relativistic terms, we would say “In the reference frame of the moving airplane,
the ball has no initial velocity, so it falls straight down.”
Relative Velocities
Unit: Special Relativity
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
understand how relative velocity depends on both the motion of an object
and the motion of the observer
Skills:
calculate relative velocities
Language Objectives:
Understand and correctly use the term “relative velocity.”
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section using
appropriate academic language.
Set up and solve word problems involving relative velocities.
Notes:
Because the observation of motion depends on the reference frames of the
observer and the object, calculations of velocity need to take these into account.
A second student holds a meter stick and times how long it takes the wave to
travel from one end of the meter stick to the other. The wave would take 0.5 s
to travel the length of the meter stick, and the student would calculate a velocity
1m
of 2 ms .
0.5 s
In this situation, you could use the velocities of the moving student and the wave
and solve for the amount of time it would take for the wave and the end of the
ruler to reach the same point. The calculation for this would be complicated,
and the answer works out to be 0.33 s, which gives a velocity of 3 ms .
The easier way to calculate this number is to realize that the velocity of the wave
relative to the moving student is simply the sum of the velocity vectors. The
velocity of the wave relative to the moving student is therefore 2 ms 1 ms 3 ms .
This 3 ms is called the relative velocity, specifically the velocity of the wave
relative to the moving student.
If the student and the wave were moving with the same velocity (magnitude and
direction), the relative velocity would be zero and the wave would appear
stationary to the moving student.
Notes:
If the principle of relativity is true, it must be true for all measurements and all
reference frames, including those involving light.
In 1864, physicist James Clerk Maxwell united four calculus equations involving
magnetic and electric fields into one unified theory of light. The four equations
were:
1. Gauss’s Law (which describes the relationship between an electric field
and the electric charges that cause it).
2. Gauss’s Law for Magnetism (which states that there are no discrete North
and South magnetic charges).
3. Faraday’s Law (which describes how a magnetic field creates an electric
field).
4. Ampère’s Law (which describes how an electric current can create a
magnetic field), including Maxwell’s own correction (which describes how
a changing electric field can also create a magnetic field).
Both o and o are physical constants, which do not depend on the reference
frame. Maxwell theorized that the speed of light in a vacuum must therefore
also be a physical constant, and it therefore cannot depend on the reference
frame that is used to measure it.
This means:
1. Light travels at a constant velocity, regardless of whether the light is
produced by something that is moving or stationary.
2. The velocity of light is the same in all reference frames. This means a
photon of light moves at the same velocity, regardless of whether that
velocity is measured by an observer who is stationary or by an observer
who is moving.
If the wave in the above relative velocity examples was a beam of laser light
instead of a Slinky, and the observer was running at a relativistic speed (meaning
a speed close to the speed of light), the velocity of the light, both students would
measure exactly the same velocity for the light!
Because the speed of light (in a vacuum) is a constant, we use the variable c
(which stands for “constant”) to represent it in equations.
Note, however, that while the speed of light does not depend on the reference
frame, it does depend on the medium it is traveling through. Light travels with a
velocity of 2.997 924 58 10 8 ms through a vacuum (empty space). However,
when light travels through matter, (e.g., air, glass, plastic, etc.), the velocity can
be substantially slower.
Notes:
Based on Maxwell’s conclusions, if an observer were somehow running with a
relativistic speed of light toward an oncoming beam of light, the student should
measure the same velocity of light as a stationary observer:
Because velocity depends on distance and time, if the velocity of light cannot
change, then as the observer approaches the speed of light, this means the
distance and/or time must change!
For most people, the idea that distance and time depend on the reference frame
is just as strange and uncomfortable as the idea that the speed of light cannot
depend on the reference frame.
The ratio of Lo to L is named after Lorentz and is called the Lorentz factor (γ):
1
2
1v
c2
Lo Lo 1
L or
L 1v
2
c2
Notice that in the stationary reference frame, the pulses of light must travel
farther because of the motion of the mirror and detector. Because the speed of
light is constant, the longer distance takes a longer time.
This conclusion has significant consequences. For example, events that happen
in two different locations could be simultaneous in one reference frame, but
occur at different times in another reference frame!
Using arguments similar to those for length contraction, the equation for time
dilation turns out to be:
t 1
t t or
t v2
1
c2
where:
t = time difference between two events in stationary reference frame
Δt = time difference between two events in moving reference frame
v = velocity of moving reference frame
c = velocity of light
2GM
t t 1
rc 2
where:
t = time difference between two events in stationary reference frame
Δt = time difference between two events in moving reference frame
2GM
A black hole is an object whose radius is smaller than . This would result in
c2
2GM
a negative value for 1 , which would make t imaginary. The
rc 2
consequence of this is that time is imaginary (does not pass) on a black hole, and
therefore light cannot escape. This critical value for the radius is called the
Schwarzschild radius, named for the German astronomer Karl Schwarzschild who
first solved Einstein’s field equations exactly in 1916 and postulated the
existence of black holes.
The Schwarzschild radius would be approximately 3.0 km for the Sun, and
approximately 9.0 mm for the Earth.
In 2014, a new atomic clock was built at the University of Colorado at Bolder,
based on the vibration of strontium atoms in a network of crisscrossing laser
beams. The new clock, accurate to better than one second per five billion years,
is precise enough to measure differences in time caused by differences in the
gravitational pull of the Earth near Earth surface. This clock would run
measurably faster on a shelf than on the floor because of the differences in the
Earth’s gravitational field strength.
Use this space for summary and/or additional notes.
A: L = 25 m
Lo = 420 m
c = 2.998 10 8 m
s
Lo 1
L 1v
2
c2
420 1
25 1 v
2
8 2
(2.998 10 )
25 2
0.0595 1 v 8 2
420 (2.998 10 )
v2
(0.0595) 0.00354 1
2
8.988 1016
v2
1 0.00354 0.99646
8.988 1016
v 2 (0.99646)(8.988 1016 )
v 2 8.956 1016
v 8.956 1016 2.993 10 8 m
s
2.993 10 8
0.998 c
2.998 10 8
Energy-Momentum Relation
Unit: Special Relativity
NGSS Standards: N/A
MA Curriculum Frameworks (2006): N/A
Knowledge/Understanding Goals:
how and why mass changes at relativistic speeds
the relationship between energy, momentum, and mass
Language Objectives:
Accurately describe and apply the concepts described in this section,
including Albert Einstein’s famous equation E = mc2, using appropriate
academic language.
Notes:
The momentum of an object also changes according to the Lorentz factor as it
approaches the speed of light:
p 1
p po or
po 1v
2
c2
where:
p = momentum of object in moving reference frame
po = momentum of object in stationary reference frame
v = velocity of moving reference frame
c = velocity of light
p mov
Note that as the velocity of the object approaches the speed of light, the
2
denominator of the Lorentz factor, 1 v 2 approaches zero, which means that
c
the Lorentz factor approaches infinity.
E 2 (pc)2 (mc2 )2
This equation gives results that are consistent with length contraction, time
dilation and relativistic mass.
For an object at rest, its momentum is zero, and the equation reduces to the
familiar form:
E 2 0 (mc2 )2
E mc2
Magnetic constant, k
o 1 10-7 T m
4 A
xcm
mi xi U g mgy Rs Ri
FM I sin B
mi i
2
net
1 1 1
T B B A
I I f Rp i Ri
m C p C i
rF rF sin Ts 2 B B cos A
k i
L I
1 1 B
Tp 2
g Cs i Ci t
L t
mm o I
Fg G 12 2 B Bv
r 2 R
K 12 I 2
Fg
Fs k x g
m
m1m2
U s 12 kx 2 Ug G
r
Appendix: AP Physics 2 Equation Tables Page: 429
FLUID MECHANICS AND THERMAL PHYSICS WAVES AND OPTICS
m A area v
V f d separation
F force
c f frequency or
F h depth
P n focal length
A k thermal conductivity v
h height
P Po gh n1 sin 1 n2 sin 2
K kinetic energy L distance
L thickness 1 1 1
Fb Vg M magnification
m mass s i so f
m an integer
n number of moles h s n index of refraction
A1v1 A2v2 M i i
N number of molecules ho so s distance
P pressure v speed
P1 gy 1 12 v 12 L m
wavelength
Q energy transferre d to a
P2 gy 2 12 v 22 angle
system by heating d sin m
T temperature
Q kA T
t time
t L
U internal energy
PV nRT Nk BT GEOMETRY AND TRIGONOMETRY
3k T V volume
K 2 B A area
v speed Rectangle
W PV A bh C circumfere nce
W work done on a system
V volume
y height
Triangle S surface area
U Q W density
A bh b base
h height
Circle length
A 1 bh w width
2
MODERN PHYSICS r radius
E energy Right triangle
E hf
f frequency Rectangular solid c 2 a 2 b2
V wh a
K max hf K kinetic energy sin
m mass c
h b
p momentum Cylinder cos
p V r 2 c
wavelength
a
E mc 2
work function S 2r 2r 2 tan
b
Sphere
V 43 r 3
S 4r 2
Appendix: Reference Tables Page: 431
(electric) permittivity of a vacuum o 8.854 187 82 10-12 A2 s4 8.85 10 12 A2 s4
kgm3 kgm3
mee4
Rydberg constant RH 10 973731.6m1 1.1 107 m1
8εo2h3c
*
standard atmospheric pressure at sea level 101 325 Pa ≡ 1.01325 bar 100 000 Pa ≡ 1.0 bar
ms
r
I mr 2
0 ω0t 21 α t 2 v average velocity
F Fnet ma
Fg mg a accelerati on m2
s
Forces & F f s FN F f k FN
f frequency Hz 1s
Dynamics Gm1 m2
Fg a c centripeta l accelerati on m2 Solid Cylinder:
r2 s
I 12 mr 2
x cm
mi x i F force (N)
F f force due to friction (N)
mi
m Fg force due to gravity (N)
I r 2 dm mr 2
Rotational 0 FN normal force (N)
Dynamics mv 2 Fc centripeta l force (N)
Fc ma c
r
m mass (kg)
τ r F rF sin r F
τ τ net Iα g acceler ation due to gravity m2 Hoop About Diameter:
s I 12 mr 2
2
1
T G gravitatio nal constant Nm2
2
f kg
Simple m L r radius (m)
Ts 2 Tp 2
Harmonic k g r radius (vector)
Motion
Fs kx coefficient of friction (dimensionless)
θ angle (, rad) Hollow Sphere:
U s 12 kx 2
angular velocity rad
s I 23 mr 2
k spring constant
p mv N
mi v i m f v f m
x displacement of spring (m)
Momentum J p Fnet t L length of pendulum (m)
L r p Iω L rp sin I τ torque (N m)
L τ t K kinetic energy (J) Solid Sphere:
U potential energy (J) I 25 mr 2
W F d Fd cos Flld
h height (m)
W
Gm1 m2 Q heat (J)
Ug mgh P power (W)
r
W work (N m) Rod About the Middle:
Energy, p2
E k 12 mv 2 T (time) period (Hz)
1 mr 2
I 12
Work & 2m
Power p momentum (N s)
E k 12 I 2
J impulse (N s)
Etotal U E k Q
L angular momentum (N m s)
W K U Rod About the End:
W I 13 mr 2
P F v Fv cos
t
Appendix: Reference Tables Page: 435
Table G. Heat and Thermal Physics Formulas and Equations
F 1.8(C) 32 change
Temperature F Fahrenheit temperatur e (F)
K C 273.15
C Celsius temperatur e (C)
K Kelvin temperatur e (K)
Q m C T
Q heat (J, kJ)
Qmelt m H fus
m mass (kg)
Qboil m Hvap
C specific heat capacity (C
kJ
kg C p const. pressure; C v const. volume)
C p Cv R
T temperatur e (K)
L Li T t time (s)
Heat
V Vi T L length (m)
V1 V2 Q
kA
T k coëfficient of thermal conductivity msJC , mWC
T1 T2 t L V volume (m ) 3
kq1q2 1 q1 q 2
Fe
r 2 4 o r 2
Fe Q 1 q V
E E
q oA 4 o r 2 r
Electrostatic Charges
W q E d qEd cos
& Electric Fields
W 1 q
V E d
q 4 o r change
kq1q2 Fe force due to electric field (N)
UE qV UE
r k electrostatic constant
Nm2
C2
q point charge (C)
Q V Q charge (C)
I
t R E electric field NC , mV
V2 V voltage electric potential difference (V)
P V I I 2R
R W work (N m)
V 2t d distance (m)
W QH P t V I t I 2 R t
R r radius (m)
Circuits I current (A)
R
A t time (s)
Q
V R resistance ()
C
P power (W)
A
C k o QH heat (J)
d
ρ resistivity ( m)
Ucapacitor 21 QV 21 CV 2
length (m)
I I1 I 2 I 3 A cross - sectional area (m2 )
V V1 V2 V3 Vi U potential energy (J)
C capacitance (F)
Req R1 R2 R3 Ri
Series Circuits
1 1 1 1 1
v velocity (of moving charge or wire) ms
B magnetic field (T)
C total C1 C 2 C 3 Ci
o magnetic permeabili ty of free space
Ptotal P1 P2 P3 Pi
r radius (distance) from wire
I I1 I 2 I 3 I i
V V1 V2 V3
1 1 1 1 1
Parallel Circuits
Req R1 R2 R3 Ri
Ctotal C1 C2 C 3 C i
Ptotal P1 P2 P3 Pi
Appendix: Reference Tables Page: 437
Table J. Electricity & Magnetism Formulas & Equations
change
FM q (v B) FM q v B sin Fe force due to electric field (N)
FM (I B) FM I B sin k electrostatic constant
Nm2
C2
V (v B) V v Bsin q point charge (C)
o I V voltage electric potential difference (V)
Magnetism B
2 r emf electromot ive force (V)
B B A BAcos r radius (m)
B I current (A)
Bv
t length (m)
t time (s)
A cross - sectional area (m2 )
# turnsin V I
in out
v velocity (of moving charge or wire) ms
Electromagnetic I in
# turnsout Vout B magnetic field (T)
Induction
Pin Pout o magnetic permeabili ty of free space
B magnetic flux
Table K. Resistor Color Code Table L. Symbols Used in Electrical Circuit Diagrams
Color Digit Multiplier Component Symbol Component Symbol
0
black 0 × 10
1
wire battery
brown 1 × 10
]2
red 2 × 10
3 switch ground
orange 3 × 10
4
yellow 4 × 10
5 fuse resistor
green 5 × 10
6
blue 6 × 10 variable resistor (rheostat,
7 voltmeter
violet 7 × 10 potentiometer, dimmer)
8
gray 8 × 10
9 ammeter lamp (light bulb)
white 9 × 10
gold ± 5%
ohmmeter capacitor
silver ± 10%
diode
f
1 v velocity of wave ms
T f frequency (Hz)
Waves FT λ wavelength (m)
v wave on a string
T period (of time) (s)
v v FT tension (force) on string (N)
fdopplershifted f wave detector
v wave v source
μ elastic modulus of string kg
m
u c t γ H0
charge → +⅔ +⅔ +⅔ 0 0
spin → ½ ½ ½ 1 0
up quark charm quark top quark photon Higgs boson
4.8 MeV/c² 104 MeV/c² 4.2 GeV/c² 0 MeV/c²
d s b g
−⅓ −⅓ −⅓ 0
quarks
½ ½ ½ 1
down quark strange quark bottom quark gluon
< 2.2 eV/c² < 0.17 MeV/c² < 15.5 MeV/c² 91.2 GeV/c²
νe νμ ντ Z0
0 0 0 0
½ ½ ½ 1
gauge bosons
e μ τ W±
−1 −1 −1 ±1
½ ½ ½ 1
electron muon tau W boson
Appendix: Reference Tables Page: 443
Table Y. Geometry & Trigonometry Formulas
A 12 bh
Triangles c2 a2 b2 2ab cos C
a b c
sin A sin B sin C
c 2 a 2 b2
a opposite
sin
c hypotenuse
b adjacent
cos
Right Triangles c hypotenuse
sin a opposite
tan
cos b adjacent
b c cos θ a , b, c length of a side of a triangle
a c sin θ angle
Rectangles, A area
Parallelograms and A bh C circumfere nce
Trapezoids
S surface area
Rectangular Solids V wh
V volume
C 2 r b base
Circles
A r2 h height
S 2 r 2 r 2 2 r ( r ) length
Cylinders
V r 2 w width
r radius
S 4 r 2
Spheres
V 4 r3
3
Appendix: Reference Tables Page: 444
Table Z. Values of Trigonometric Functions
degree radian sine cosine tangent degree radian sine cosine tangent
0° 0.000 0.000 1.000 0.000
1° 0.017 0.017 1.000 0.017 46° 0.803 0.719 0.695 1.036
2° 0.035 0.035 0.999 0.035 47° 0.820 0.731 0.682 1.072
3° 0.052 0.052 0.999 0.052 48° 0.838 0.743 0.669 1.111
4° 0.070 0.070 0.998 0.070 49° 0.855 0.755 0.656 1.150
5° 0.087 0.087 0.996 0.087 50° 0.873 0.766 0.643 1.192
6° 0.105 0.105 0.995 0.105 51° 0.890 0.777 0.629 1.235
7° 0.122 0.122 0.993 0.123 52° 0.908 0.788 0.616 1.280
8° 0.140 0.139 0.990 0.141 53° 0.925 0.799 0.602 1.327
9° 0.157 0.156 0.988 0.158 54° 0.942 0.809 0.588 1.376
10° 0.175 0.174 0.985 0.176 55° 0.960 0.819 0.574 1.428
11° 0.192 0.191 0.982 0.194 56° 0.977 0.829 0.559 1.483
12° 0.209 0.208 0.978 0.213 57° 0.995 0.839 0.545 1.540
13° 0.227 0.225 0.974 0.231 58° 1.012 0.848 0.530 1.600
14° 0.244 0.242 0.970 0.249 59° 1.030 0.857 0.515 1.664
15° 0.262 0.259 0.966 0.268 60° 1.047 0.866 0.500 1.732
16° 0.279 0.276 0.961 0.287 61° 1.065 0.875 0.485 1.804
17° 0.297 0.292 0.956 0.306 62° 1.082 0.883 0.469 1.881
18° 0.314 0.309 0.951 0.325 63° 1.100 0.891 0.454 1.963
19° 0.332 0.326 0.946 0.344 64° 1.117 0.899 0.438 2.050
20° 0.349 0.342 0.940 0.364 65° 1.134 0.906 0.423 2.145
21° 0.367 0.358 0.934 0.384 66° 1.152 0.914 0.407 2.246
22° 0.384 0.375 0.927 0.404 67° 1.169 0.921 0.391 2.356
23° 0.401 0.391 0.921 0.424 68° 1.187 0.927 0.375 2.475
24° 0.419 0.407 0.914 0.445 69° 1.204 0.934 0.358 2.605
25° 0.436 0.423 0.906 0.466 70° 1.222 0.940 0.342 2.747
26° 0.454 0.438 0.899 0.488 71° 1.239 0.946 0.326 2.904
27° 0.471 0.454 0.891 0.510 72° 1.257 0.951 0.309 3.078
28° 0.489 0.469 0.883 0.532 73° 1.274 0.956 0.292 3.271
29° 0.506 0.485 0.875 0.554 74° 1.292 0.961 0.276 3.487
30° 0.524 0.500 0.866 0.577 75° 1.309 0.966 0.259 3.732
31° 0.541 0.515 0.857 0.601 76° 1.326 0.970 0.242 4.011
32° 0.559 0.530 0.848 0.625 77° 1.344 0.974 0.225 4.331
33° 0.576 0.545 0.839 0.649 78° 1.361 0.978 0.208 4.705
34° 0.593 0.559 0.829 0.675 79° 1.379 0.982 0.191 5.145
35° 0.611 0.574 0.819 0.700 80° 1.396 0.985 0.174 5.671
36° 0.628 0.588 0.809 0.727 81° 1.414 0.988 0.156 6.314
37° 0.646 0.602 0.799 0.754 82° 1.431 0.990 0.139 7.115
38° 0.663 0.616 0.788 0.781 83° 1.449 0.993 0.122 8.144
39° 0.681 0.629 0.777 0.810 84° 1.466 0.995 0.105 9.514
40° 0.698 0.643 0.766 0.839 85° 1.484 0.996 0.087 11.430
41° 0.716 0.656 0.755 0.869 86° 1.501 0.998 0.070 14.301
42° 0.733 0.669 0.743 0.900 87° 1.518 0.999 0.052 19.081
43° 0.750 0.682 0.731 0.933 88° 1.536 0.999 0.035 28.636
44° 0.768 0.695 0.719 0.966 89° 1.553 1.000 0.017 57.290
45° 0.785 0.707 0.707 1.000 90° 1.571 1.000 0.000
8
Appendix: Reference Tables Page: 445
Table BB. Greek
Table AA. Some Exact and Approximate Conversions
Alphabet
Length 1 cm ≈ width of a small paper clip Α α alpha
1 inch (in.) ≡ 2.54 cm Β β beta
length of a US dollar bill = 6.14 in. = 15.6 cm Γ γ gamma
12 in. ≡ 1 foot (ft.) ≈ 30 cm Δ δ delta
3 ft. ≡ 1 yard (yd.) ≈ 1m Ε ε epsilon
1m = 0.3048 ft. = 39.37 in. Ζ ζ zeta
1 km ≈ 0.6 mi. Η η eta
5,280 ft. ≡ 1 mile (mi.) ≈ 1.6 km Θ θ theta
Ι ι iota
Mass/ 1 small paper clip ≈ 0.5 gram (g) Κ κ kappa
US 1¢ coin (1983– Λ λ lambda
Weight = 2.5 g
present)
US 5¢ coin = 5g Μ μ mu
1 oz. ≈ 30 g Ν ν nu
one medium-sized Ξ ξ xi
≈ 1N ≈ 3.6 oz.
apple
1 pound (lb.) ≡ 16 oz. ≈ 454 g Ο ο omicron
1 pound (lb.) ≈ 4.45 N Π π pi
1 ton ≡ 2000 lb. ≈ 0.9 tonne Ρ ρ rho
1 tonne ≡ 1000 kg ≈ 1.1 ton Σ σ sigma
Τ τ tau
1
Volume 1 pinch = ≤ /8 teaspoon (tsp.) Υ υ upsilon
1 mL ≈ 10 drops Φ ϕ phi
1 tsp. ≈ 5 mL ≈ 60 drops Χ χ chi
3 tsp. ≡ 1 tablespoon (Tbsp.) ≈ 15 mL Ψ ψ psi
2 Tbsp. ≡ 1 fluid ounce (fl. oz.) ≈ 30 mL Ω ω omega
8 fl. oz. ≡ 1 cup (C) ≈ 250 mL
16 fl. oz. ≡ 1 U.S. pint (pt.) ≈ 500 mL
20 fl. oz. ≡ 1 Imperial pint (UK) ≈ 600 mL
2 pt. ≡ 1 U.S. quart (qt.) ≈ 1L
4 qt. (U.S.) ≡ 1 U.S. gallon (gal.) ≈ 3.8 L
4 qt. (UK) ≡ 5 qt.
≡ 1 Imperial gal. (UK) ≈ 4.7 L
(U.S.)
m mi.
Speed 1 /s ≈ 2.24 /h
mi. km m
60 /h ≈ 100 /h ≈ 27 /s
Power 1 hp ≈ 746 W
1 kW ≈ 1.34 hp
Index
acceleration, 21, 22, 43, 51, 53, 56, 61, 63, 77, 78, 97, 98, diffraction grating, 342, 344, 345, 346
104, 407 diode, 220
accuracy, 23, 25, 50 light-emitting, 190, 220
alpha decay, 376, 379 direction, 23, 24, 53, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 80, 81,
alpha particle, 379, 384, 402 82, 131, 197, 206, 207, 213, 217, 220, 250, 252, 254,
amplitude, 360 275, 279, 280, 282, 288, 295, 307, 308, 310, 319, 326,
angle of incidence, 307, 308, 314, 330 329, 330, 332, 333, 334, 347, 407, 412
angle of reflection, 307, 308, 314 displace, 100, 105
assumptions, 52, 53, 54, 106, 403 displacement, 77, 78, 80, 82, 209
band of stability, 378, 380, 381, 382 distance, 17, 21, 22, 56, 62, 63, 80, 94, 163, 195, 204, 211,
battery, 195, 198, 211, 214, 217, 220, 222, 223, 224, 225, 280, 309, 311, 312, 316, 317, 318, 332, 335, 342, 343,
226, 227, 234, 235, 239, 250, 281 345, 363, 377, 384, 416, 417, 420
beta decay, 376 efficiency, 129, 189, 191, 192
beta minus, 380 electric field, 195, 206, 207, 208, 209, 211, 275, 279, 413
beta plus, 381 electric potential, 51, 211, 212, 213, 214, 221, 226, 250,
beta particle, 384 365
bimetal strip, 162 electricity
binding energy, 387, 388, 389 static electricity, 197
Bohr model, 349, 351, 355, 358 electromagnet, 279, 285, 287, 288, 400
boson, 369 electron, 197, 203, 205, 222, 273, 353, 355, 358, 359, 360,
buoyancy, 100, 101 365, 368, 373, 374, 375, 380, 382, 386, 388
calorimetry, 143, 146, 147 electron capture, 382
capacitance, 216, 217 energy, 51, 53, 66, 76, 94, 110, 115, 127, 128, 129, 130,
capacitor, 198, 220 131, 133, 134, 140, 141, 142, 144, 153, 167, 168, 169,
cgs, 66 172, 189, 190, 191, 194, 198, 199, 211, 214, 216, 226,
charge, 56, 76, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 269, 273, 296, 298, 299, 300, 350, 351, 355, 358, 362,
203, 205, 207, 208, 209, 211, 214, 216, 217, 220, 221, 365, 383, 387, 388, 389, 399, 401, 402,404, 413, 424,
279, 280, 350, 355, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 370, 375, 425, 426
379 conservation of energy, 140, 141
circuit, 194, 195, 202, 214, 217, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, kinetic, 115, 128, 130, 131, 133, 140, 141, 142, 425
224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 234, 235, potential, 140, 211, 214
236, 237, 241, 242, 243, 244, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, enthalpy, 130, 168, 169
269, 287, 290, 402 entropy, 129, 130, 168, 169, 172
parallel, 195, 225, 229, 230, 234, 235, 236, 237, 243, expand, 47, 53, 140, 143, 152, 159, 160, 162, 323
251 fermion, 366
series, 228, 230, 231, 232, 235, 237, 239, 253 ferromagnetic, 274, 290
coëfficient of thermal expansion, 160 Feynman diagram, 373
collision, 141, 142 fission, 350, 396, 397, 398
elastic, 53, 110, 141 focal point, 295, 310, 312, 333, 339, 340
inelastic, 141, 142 focus, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 332, 333, 334,
color, 297, 301, 303, 304, 305, 346, 348, 365, 368 335, 337, 338, 339, 340
combined gas law, 109, 112, 113 force, 10, 21, 22, 51, 58, 59, 61, 63, 66, 72, 73, 80, 82, 89,
concave, 310, 312, 315, 332, 333, 338, 340 90, 91, 93, 94, 96, 97, 100, 101, 102, 104, 105, 107,
conduction, 128, 134, 137 121, 140, 196, 199, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 214,
conductivity, 135, 137, 138, 215, 223, 288 222, 273, 279, 280, 282, 288, 289, 290, 349, 358, 362,
conductor, 134, 135, 196, 198, 202 368, 369, 371, 377, 378, 380, 387,407
contract, 53, 159, 160, 162, 339, 340 net force, 10, 101, 102, 273, 407
convection, 128, 134, 135, 136 normal force, 58
convex, 310, 312, 315, 318, 332, 333, 336, 337, 340 frequency, 51, 217, 296, 298, 299, 300, 301, 355
Cornell Notes, 7 friction, 52, 53, 54, 58
current, 51, 63, 193, 195, 196, 197, 198, 203, 212, 213, fundamental forces, 362, 363, 369
214, 217, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 228, 229, fuse, 195, 221, 400
230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 241, fusion, 152, 153, 154, 350, 396, 399, 400
242, 243, 244, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 269, 270, 279, gamma ray, 296, 376, 383, 384, 401, 402
280, 281, 282, 285, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 400, 413 gas, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 128, 140,
alternating, 212, 217 143, 144, 152, 153, 155, 165, 190, 191, 192
direct, 212, 217 generator, 190, 198, 279, 285, 289
diamagnetic, 274 gluon, 369, 373
diffraction, 297, 342, 344, 345, 346
Index Page: 448
gravity, 53, 58, 59, 71, 75, 87, 96, 97, 98, 104, 206, 362, position, 274, 405
369 potentiometer, 220
half-life, 350, 390, 391, 393, 394, 395, 402 power, 51, 64, 67, 68, 76, 190, 195, 212, 214, 216, 217,
heat, 56, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 137, 222, 223, 225, 226, 230, 231, 233, 234, 235, 237, 239,
138, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 350, 376, 384, 393, 395, 401
152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 167, 168, 169, 185, 190, precision, 23, 25, 30, 31, 50
191, 192, 389, 397, 399 pressure, 53, 56, 64, 87, 89, 90, 91, 93, 94, 96, 97, 98, 101,
heat of fusion, 129, 152, 153, 154 109, 110, 111, 112, 114, 115, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123,
heat of vaporization, 152, 153, 155 124, 140, 143, 144, 165, 236, 397
heat transfer, 128, 129, 134, 137, 192 absolute, 90, 114
heating curve, 152, 154, 156 gauge, 90, 91
Higgs boson, 369 hydraulic, 93, 94
hydrostatic, 96, 101, 121 primary color, 301, 304, 305
ideal gas law, 109, 114, 115, 116 prism, 319, 323
image projectile, 75
inverted, 316, 317, 333 propagation, 14, 347, 396
real, 307, 308, 317, 332, 333, 335 quantum, 349, 355, 358, 359, 360
upright, 333 quark, 362, 367, 368, 370, 371, 375, 377, 380, 382
virtual, 307, 308, 315, 317, 318, 332, 333, 335, 341 radiation, 128, 134, 135, 296, 350, 383, 401
induction, 196, 199 radioactive decay, 349, 350, 376, 378, 379, 380, 381, 383,
inductor, 221, 279, 285, 290, 291 385, 386, 387, 389, 390
insulator, 134, 135, 196, 199 rainbow, 326, 327, 328, 330
interference, 297, 343 reflection, 307, 308, 309, 311, 312, 314, 316, 324, 325,
Kelvin, 51, 63, 112, 113, 115, 116, 165, 166 326, 327, 332
laws of thermodynamics, 169 critical angle, 319, 324, 326
length contraction, 404, 416, 421, 426 diffuse, 307
lens, 295, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341 internal reflection, 324, 325, 326, 327
principal axis, 310, 313, 314, 332, 333 specular, 307
vertex, 332, 333, 334, 335, 373 refraction, 319, 321, 323, 325, 326, 330, 332
lift, 94, 106, 107, 123 index of refraction, 319, 321, 323, 325, 326
liquid, 110, 128, 130, 152, 153, 154, 160, 165, 192, 277, relative error, 25, 26, 33, 34, 36, 37, 43
400 relativistic mass, 425, 426
magnet, 255, 264, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 278 relativity, 405, 413
magnetic field, 255, 269, 270, 271, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, resistance, 51, 53, 195, 212, 214, 215, 217, 220, 221, 222,
279, 280, 281, 282, 285, 287, 288, 289, 290, 298, 413 223, 224, 225, 226, 230, 231, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238,
magnetic permeability, 274, 287, 288, 414 241, 242, 243, 244, 250, 254, 281
magnetism, 193, 255, 269, 271, 365 resistivity, 215, 222, 223
magnification, 310, 317, 335 resistor, 220, 223, 224, 226, 235, 237, 241, 242, 243, 251,
magnitude, 72, 73, 76, 80, 81, 82, 206, 209, 279, 343, 365, 281
412 resultant, 72, 74, 81, 82
mass defect, 387, 388 scalar, 72, 73, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 204, 211, 214, 216
medium, 197, 199, 298, 303, 319, 320, 321, 323, 324, 347, scattering, 347, 348
348, 415 scientific notation, 50, 67, 68, 69
metric system, 62, 63, 64 using your calculator, 69
cgs, 66 secondary color, 301, 304, 305
MKS, 66, 215 significant figures, 13, 34, 35, 40, 51
mirror, 295, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, solid, 51, 110, 128, 130, 152, 153, 154, 165, 239
317, 318, 324, 332, 335, 420 specific heat capacity, 143, 144, 146, 154, 155
MKS, 66, 215 spectrum, 296, 298, 299, 301, 303, 323, 326, 348, 356
momentum, 51, 56, 110, 130, 131, 134, 142, 403, 424, speed, 51, 52, 56, 63, 296, 297, 298, 300, 365, 379, 380,
425, 426 381, 388, 396, 403, 407, 408, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417,
motor, 190, 198, 279, 285, 288 418, 419, 420, 423, 424, 425
neutrino, 366, 368 spring, 373
paramagnetic, 274 standard model, 364, 365
period, 63, 138, 391 strong force, 288, 362, 368, 369, 371, 377, 387
phase change, 127, 152, 153 surroundings, 115, 130, 132, 153, 169, 190, 191
photon, 369, 373, 374, 375, 414, 417 switch, 195, 221, 226, 252
pigment, 301, 305 system, 7, 9, 62, 63, 64, 66, 94, 128, 130, 132, 133, 148,
plasma, 153, 399 153, 168, 169, 172, 356
polarization, 297, 329, 330 Taking Notes
polarized light, 297, 329, 330 Reading & Taking Notes from a Textbook, 8
Index Page: 449
telescope, 341 unit vector, 73, 81, 204
temperature, 50, 53, 56, 63, 87, 106, 109, 110, 111, 112, velocity, 10, 21, 22, 56, 59, 75, 77, 78, 80, 120, 121, 122,
113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 123, 124, 141, 142, 280, 319, 320, 321, 384, 405, 406,
133, 134, 135, 137, 138, 142, 143, 144, 146, 147, 148, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418,
149, 150, 154, 155, 156, 157, 159, 160, 162, 165, 169, 419, 421, 422, 424, 425
192, 223, 402 voltage, 51, 195, 211, 212, 214, 217, 220, 221, 222, 223,
tension, 58 224, 226, 228, 229, 230, 231, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237,
thermal conductivity, 135, 137, 138 238, 239, 241, 243, 244, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 279,
thermal equilibrium, 130, 133, 169 281, 285, 290, 291, 365
thermal expansion, 53, 129, 130, 159, 160, 162, 167 wave, 217, 296, 298, 299, 300, 301, 307, 319, 320, 324,
thermodynamics, 128, 167, 169 342, 350, 356, 359, 360, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414
thermometer, 31, 39, 130, 133, 163 electromagnetic, 135, 295, 296, 298, 299, 300, 329, 413
time dilation, 404, 416, 421, 426 transverse, 296
torque, 82 wavelength, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 303, 321, 323,
trigonometry, 49, 51, 70, 71, 74 343, 345, 346, 355, 359
uncertainty, 13, 14, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, weak force, 362, 369, 377, 378, 380
35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 43, 44, 47, 51 weight, 39, 94, 96, 97, 101, 102, 107
units, 11, 39, 49, 51, 56, 57, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 66, 72, 90, wire, 195, 217, 220, 223, 235, 279, 280, 281, 282, 288, 400
113, 115, 116, 121, 135, 144, 199, 215, 365 work, 8, 33, 40, 41, 47, 51, 64, 68, 69, 80, 94, 115, 116,
vector, 61, 70, 71, 72, 73, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 140, 169, 209, 211, 212, 214, 216, 217, 222, 242, 288,
204, 209, 213, 279 289, 332, 380
cross product, 14, 51, 79, 81, 82, 280 work-energy theorem, 115, 211
dot product, 51, 79, 80, 209