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PHYS 201 Introductory Physics I

PHYS 201 Introductory Physics I. Corequisite: PHYS 201L (lab) Prerequisite: MATH 117 Precalculus Instructor: Dr. Johnny B. Holmes title: Professor of Physics office: CW 103 phone: 321-3448 e-mail: jholmes@cbu.edu homepage: facstaff.cbu.edu/~jholmes.

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PHYS 201 Introductory Physics I

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  1. PHYS 201Introductory Physics I Corequisite: PHYS 201L (lab) Prerequisite: MATH 117 Precalculus Instructor: Dr. Johnny B. Holmes title: Professor of Physics office: CW 103 phone: 321-3448 e-mail: jholmes@cbu.edu homepage: facstaff.cbu.edu/~jholmes

  2. Biology and Physics: Two Cultures “In general, physicists stress reasoning from a few fundamental principles – usually mathematically formulated – and seek to build understanding from the simplest possible models.  They view the world quantitatively and pay much attention to constraints, such as conservation laws, that hold regardless of a system’s internal details.  Biologists, on the other hand, focus on real examples and emphasize structure–function relationships; they rarely stress quantitative reasoning.  The systems they deal with are almost always highly complex, with many interacting parts that lead to emergent phenomena.  Biologists recognize that their discipline is subject to the historical constraint that natural selection can only act on pre-existing molecules, cells, and organisms, so their reasoning often depends more strongly on what exists than on ‘fundamental’ abstract principles or simplified pictures.” From article by Dawn Meredith and Edward Redish in Physics Today, July 2013 issue, page 39.

  3. Need for Physics in the Life Sciences “… The life sciences have grown explosively as new techniques, new instruments, and a growing understanding of biological mechanisms have enabled biologists to better understand the physiochemical processes of life at all scales, from the molecular to the ecological.  Quantitative measurements and modeling are emerging as key biological tools. …” From article by Dawn Meredith and Edward Redish in Physics Today, July 2013 issue, page 38.

  4. Formulas and Equations Physics involves chugging and plugging into equations to get numerical answers, but physics involves more than that. Equations show how different things are related, i.e., how some things change based on how other things change. Equations allow us to not only calculate, but to predict and to explain. Note: Equations in physics won’t use the familiar x and y of math, but instead will use physical quantities like P (for pressure), v (for velocity), T (for temperature), etc.

  5. PHYS 201Introductory Physics I • Description of motion in 3 dimensions • Causes of motion: forces • Causes of rotation: torques • Concept and types of energy; concept of power • Concept of momentum: collisions (and explosions) • Pressure and fluid flow • Heat and methods of heat transfer • Sound: what is it and what do we hear

  6. PHYS 202 (next semester)Introductory Physics II • Electricity and basic electric circuits (e.g., voltage, currents, and EKG’s) • Magnetism and generation of electricity & use in instruments (e.g. mass spec, MRI) • Light: what it is, how it works, and how we see (e.g., lenses, microscopes, and spectroscopes) • Atoms and atomic theory: basis of chemistry • Radioactivity: what it is and how we measure it • Nuclear physics (e.g., nuclear weapons, nuclear power)

  7. Introduction to PHYS 201 Grading (explained in the syllabus) • 5: 5 tests, each counts as one grade • 1: 1 set of 9 regular collected homework problems which counts as one grade • 2: 21 computer homework programs in two sets, each set counts as one grade • 3: final exam, which counts as 3 grades Total: 11 grades, final grade will be based on the average of these 11 grades.

  8. Absences • If you miss 3 or fewer classes, your lowest single score will be dropped (not counting homework scores). If the final is lowest, it will count only 2 instead of 3 times. Thus, if you have 3 or fewer class absences, the total will be based on the remaining 10 grades.

  9. Regular Homework (RH) • There are 9 regular collected homework problems for the semester. These must be done and written up using the 7 step paradigm described in the syllabus. This paradigm is not good for the problems with obvious solutions, but is good for those problems that do not have obvious solutions. It is also a good way of communicating your thinking.

  10. Regular Homework (RH) I want to and I can (motivation) Draw a diagram and record your knowns Indicate what you are looking for Brainstorm – how are what you are looking for related to what you know? Plan your attack – write down the equations Execute the attack – include all units Is your answer reasonable?

  11. Computer Homework (CH) • The computer homework problems are designed to give you graded practice. They emphasize getting the answer right the first time. If you get an answer wrong, the computer will tell you right away, and often tell you how to get it right. It is your task to actually get them correct. A random number generator will change the numbers so you will have to learn how to do them and not just remember the right answers.

  12. Tests • The tests emphasize familiarity, recognition and speed. The material on the tests should be somewhat familiar. You should be able to recognize the type of problem, the basic principles involved, and determine which techniques to apply.

  13. Tests – cont. This course emphasizes basic principles and problem solving, not memorization. To reduce the perceived need to memorize, you are permitted to bring to each test one 8.5” x 11” sheet of paper with information on one side. You may bring two of these sheets to the final. (Writing on one side only). Warning: These sheets are meant to be a help, not a complete crutch. As you make up your sheets, ask yourself if you will be able to answer questions like the ones you are preparing for on a national (e.g. MCAT, OAT, DAT, GRE) test without these sheets. If you do plan on taking such nationally normed tests, you should be able to use your sheets as a review to study from.

  14. Math Review Three of the first six computer homework programs deal with a review of math: Linear Equations, Simultaneous Equations, and Quadratic Equations. You should be able to do these right now. The sooner you do these programs, the better. The due dates for these programs have been spaced out over the first week only to even out the homework load.

  15. Math Review #1:Linear Equations Review: One Equation: ax + dy = c (we know a, d, and c; we don’t know x and y). This is one equation in two unknowns. There are lots of correct answers to this.Example: 5x + 3y = 35. Several possible answers are:(x=4, y=5), (x=7, y=0), (x=-5, y=20).

  16. Review: One Equation: ax + dy = ccan be written in the normal form y = mx + b where m = -a/d and b = +c/d. Thus the equation 5x + 3y = 35becomes y = (-5/3)x + (35/3)y Every point on this line satisfies the equation (x=4, y=5), (x=7, y=0), (x=-5, y=20). 10 -5 5 x -10

  17. Math Review #2:Simultaneous Equations • However, if we have two equations with two unknowns, then there is usually just one possible answer: Example: 5x + 3y = 35 AND 2x - y = 3 . • In this case, we can solve for one unknown (say y) in terms of x. Using the second equation: y = 2x - 3 .

  18. Math Review #2:Simultaneous Equations 5x + 3y = 35 AND 2x - y = 3 . • Using this relation for y: y = 2x - 3 in the other (first) equation yields: 5x + 3(2x - 3) = 35, or 5x + 6x - 9 = 35, or 11x = 44, or x = 44/11 = 4 = x. Now we can use this value for x in the y = 2x - 3 to get y = 2(4) - 3 = 5 = y.

  19. Math Review #2:Simultaneous Equations 5x + 3y = 35 AND 2x - y = 3 . • Check of our answer: (x=4, y=5) 5x + 3y = 35, or 5(4) + 3(5) = 35, or 20+15 = 35which checks out; and 2x - y = 3, or 2(4) -5 = 3, or 8 - 5 = 3 which also checks out. Hence we have our solution.

  20. Math Review #2:Simultaneous Equations 5x + 3y = 35 AND 2x - y = 3 . Graphically, each equation graphs as a straight line, and the y single solution(in our case, x=4, y=5)is the intersection of the two lines x 10 -5 5 -10

  21. Math Review #2:Simultaneous Equations The computer homework program on Simultaneous Equations has up to three equations with three unknowns. You can proceed the same way. 1. Use one equation to eliminate one of the three unknowns in the other two equations. 2. Then use one of these two equations to eliminate a second unknown from the last equation. 3. Then use the last equation to solve for the remaining one unknown.

  22. Math Review #3a:Angles Because space is three dimensional (we’ll talk about this soon), we need angles. What is an angle? How do you measure an angle?

  23. Math Review #3a: Angles How do you measure an angle? 1) in circles (cycles, rotations, revolutions) 2) in degrees - but what is a degree? Why do they break the circle into 360 equal degrees? 3) in radians - but why use a weird number like 2p for a circle? Why does p have the weird value of 3.1415926535… ?

  24. Math Review #3a: Angles Full circle = 360o (Comes from year - full cycle of seasons is broken into 365 days; but 365 is awkward number; use “nicer” number of 360.) Full circle = 2p radians (Comes from definition of angle measured in radians: q = arclength / radius = s / r) s q r

  25. Math Review #3b:Trig Besides angles, we will need the functions associated with angles. The trig functions are based on a right triangle: 

  26. Math Review #3b: Trig • sin() = opposite/hypotenuse = y/r • cos() = adjacent/hypotenuse = x/r • tan() = opposite/adjacent = y/x • (The hypotenuse is the side opposite the right angle.) r y  x

  27. What is Physics? First of all, Physics is a Science. So our first question should be: What is a Science?

  28. Science • What is a science? • Physics is a science. Biology is a science. • Is Psychology a science? • Is Political Science a science? • Is English a science? What makes a field of inquiry into a science?

  29. Scientific Method What makes a field of inquiry into a science? • Any field that employs the scientific method can be called a science. So what is the Scientific Method? • What are the “steps” to this “method”?

  30. Scientific Method 1. Define the “problem”: what are you studying? 2. Gather information (data). Ideally, your experiments should be repeatable. 3. Hypothesize (try to make “sense” of the data by trying to guess why it works or what law it seems to obey). This hypothesis should suggest how other things should work. So this leads to the need to: 4. TEST, but this is really gathering more information (really, back to step 2).

  31. Scientific Method Is the scientific method really a never ending loop, or do we ever reach “THE TRUTH” ? Consider: can we “observe” or “measure” perfectly? If not, then since observations are not perfect, can we perfectly test our theories? If not, can we ever be “CERTAIN” that we’ve reached the whole “TRUTH” ?

  32. Scientific Method If we can’t get to “THE TRUTH”, then why do it at all? We can make better and better observations, so we should be able to know that we are getting closer and closer to “THE TRUTH”. Is it possible to get “close enough”? Look at our applications (engineering): is our current understanding “good enough” to make air conditioners?

  33. Physics Now Physics is a science, but so are Chemistry and Biology. How does Physics differ from these others? It differs in the first step of the method: what it studies. Physics tries to find out how things work at the most basic level. This entails looking at: space, time, motion (how location in space changes with time), forces (causes of motion), and the concept of energy.

  34. Metric System Since physics is a science, and science deals with observations, physics deals with MEASUREMENTS. How do we MEASURE? What do we use as the standard for our measurements? In this course we will look at common units of measurement as well as the METRIC units of measurement.

  35. Metric System:Basic quantities • Some measurements are basic, and some are combinations of other more basic ones: • What are the basics: (MKS system) • length (in Meters) • amount of “stuff” called mass (in Kilograms) • time (in Seconds) • What are some of the combinations: • speed (distance per time) • area (distance times another distance) • lots of other things

  36. Prefixes The metric unit for length is the meter. We can indicate a multiple of meters or a fraction of meters by using prefixes: • centi (cm) = .01 meters = 10-2 m • milli (mm) = .001 meters = 10-3 m • micro (m) = .000001 meters = 10-6 m • nano (nm) = .000000001 meters = 10-9 m • pico (pm) = .000000000001 meters = 10-12 m

  37. Prefixes – cont. (The prefixes on this page will not be used in this course, but you may run into them in future courses.) • femto: (fg) = 10-15 grams • atto: (ag) = 10-18 grams • zepto (zg) = 10-21 grams • yocto (yg) = 10-24 grams

  38. Prefixes For bigger values we have: • kilo (km) = 1,000 meters = 103 m • mega (Mm) = 1,000,000 meters = 106 m • giga (Gm) = 1,000,000,000 meters = 109 m • tera (Tm) = 1,000,000,000,000 meters = 1012 m These prefixes can be applied to many different units, not just meters. These will be used throughout the course.

  39. Time How do we measure time? year month week day hour minute second

  40. Time Year: time to make one cycle through seasons Month: time for moon to make one cycle through its phases Week: 7 days (one for each “planetary” body visible to naked eye: SATURNday, SUNday, MOONday, etc.) Day: time for sun to make one cycle across the sky Hour: Break day into day and night; break each of these into 12 parts - like year is broken into 12 months. Minute: a minute piece of an hour (1/60th) Second: a minute piece of a minute - or second minute piece of an hour.

  41. Length What units do we use to measure length?

  42. Length Foot (whose foot?) Inch (length of a section of your finger) Mile (1,000 double paces of a Roman legion) League (3 miles), fathom (6 feet) , chain (100 links either 20 yards or 100 feet, or 10 yards in football) , etc. Meter The meter was originally defined as one ten-millionth (0.0000001 or 10-7) of the distance, as measured over the earth's surface in a great circle passing through Paris, France, from the geographic north pole to the equator. One meter is now defined as the distance traveled by a ray of electromagnetic (EM) energy through a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 (3.33564095 x 10-9) of a second. (We’ll worry about MASS later.)

  43. Position Before we can analyze motion, which is how something’s position changes with time, we need to analyze position. How do we locate something (that is, indicate its position)?

  44. One Dimension In one dimension, we can specify the position with one number: the distance from some specified starting place. Example: A mark on a rope can be specified by how far that mark is from one end of the rope.

  45. Two Dimensions In two dimensions, we have more options in specifying the location of an object. Example: where is Memphis? • We could use a rectangular system (x,y) that specifies how far North (y) and how far East (x) it is from some specified location. • We could also use a polar system (r,)that specifies how far it is (r, straight line distance) along with the direction (, angle from due North).

  46. Two and Three Dimensions Notice that both systems need TWO numbers - hence the TWO DIMENSIONS. With THREE dimensions, we need three numbers and we have even more options. Example: Locate an airplane in the sky. Some of the options are: rectangular (x,y,z), spherical (r,,), cylindrical (r,,z).

  47. Number of spatial dimensions • It is easy to see the need for three dimensions. Do we need FOUR? • What would a fourth dimension be like? • Experimentally, what do we find for the space that we live in - how many spatial dimensions do we have? • Most of the time in this course we will work in two dimensions - many cases can be reduced to this and it is mathematically easier. • Open versus Closed Universe?

  48. Vectors How do we work with a quantity that needs two (or more) numbers to specify it (like position does)? We can work either with a group of numbers sometimes put in parenthesis, or we can work with unit vectors that we add together: (x,y) or x*x + y*y(where x indicates the x direction, and x indicates how far in that direction).

  49. Vectors • The individual numbers in the vector are called components of the vector. • There are two common ways of expressing a vector in two dimensions: rectangular and polar.

  50. Vectors Rectangular (x,y) is often used on city maps. Streets generally run East-West or North-South. The distance East or West along a street gives one distance, and the distance along the North-South street gives the second distance - all measured from some generally accepted origin. Example: In Memphis, the origin is Madison & Front. Madison is the dividing street between North and South, and Front is the dividing street between East and West.

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