Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlexis Richards Modified over 9 years ago
1
Introduction Welcome to Phys 211!
2
2 6/14/04 Lecturer Nick Conklin Email: nbc109@psu.edunbc109@psu.edu Phone: 865-6107 Office: 212 Osmond Hours: M & Th: 2:15-3:15pm (or by appointment)
3
3 6/14/04 Teaching Assistants M. Singh (recitation section 1) J. Qualls (recitation section 2) V. Taveras (lab) S.-C. Yoon (lab) They will give you their office hours and contact info
4
4 6/14/04 Course Website: http://class.phys.psu.edu/p211su/ Syllabus Schedule Lecture notes and labs Discussion forum Grades
5
5 6/14/04 Text Fundamentals of Physics; Halliday, Resnik and Walker (5th or 6th edition). We will cover Chapters 1-14 and 16-17 Lab manual May purchase at bookstore or downloaded from http://class.phys.psu.edu/211labs/labManual.pdf
6
6 6/14/04 Lectures Twice a week M Th 12:45-2:00 (119 Osmond) Will introduce concepts and ideas My notes will be available on the course website prior to class. I recommend you print them in advance and “flush them out” in class Still need to read the book!
7
7 6/14/04 Recitation Meets twice a week (check your schedule for time and place) You must register for a recitation section You may only attend the section for which you are registered Will build problem solving skills
8
8 6/14/04 Lab Wed 12:45-03:35 (312 Osmond) Bring a copy of the lab with you (either from the course website, or a lab manual purchased from the bookstore) It helps to read through the lab before class Physics is an experimental science!
9
9 6/14/04 Homework We will be using a web based homework system called WebAssign http://webassign.net/psu/student.html You will need to purchase access (either on-line or in the bookstore) First assignment due: Wed, June 23 @ 5pm
10
10 6/14/04 Exams 2 midterms and a final Midterm 1: Tues, July 6 Midterm 2: Tues, July 27 Final: University Assigned These will be graded by hand, so you will receive partial credit for your work
11
11 6/14/04 Grading Your grade will be assigned based on the following components: Final Exam30 % Midterm 120% Midterm 220 % Homework10% Lab7% Pre/post lab8% Recitation5%
12
12 6/14/04 Grade Cutoffs A<=100% A-< 93% B+< 90% B< 87% B-< 83% C+< 80% C< 77% D< 70% F< 60% These boundaries may be lowered if necessary, but they will never be raised
13
13 6/14/04 Absences If you must miss a lab or other activity due to illness, emergency, or an approved PSU activity, follow the policy on the course web site under ‘Excuses’ Contact your TA promptly
14
14 6/14/04 Caution We will be going very fast. If you have trouble, get help right away from: Myself Your TA The course website
15
15 6/14/04 So why should you study physics? Describes how the world works Problem solving skills Physics is phun!
16
16 6/14/04 This week: Tues: Recitation Look at problems 1.5, 1.10, 1.11, 1.18, 1.25 Wed: Lab Th: Lecture Fri: Recitation Look at problems 2.5, 2.10, 2.13, 2.23
17
Chapter 1 Measurement
18
18 6/14/04 International System (SI) Units Base Units: Length Meter (m) Time Second (s) Mass Kilogram (kg) NOTE: pounds are not a unit of mass
19
19 6/14/04 SI Units (cont.) Derived Units Velocity: m/s Accleration: m/s 2 Force: kg m/s 2 [N] Momentum: kg m/s Energy: kg m 2 /s 2 [J] Etc…
20
20 6/14/04 Units (cont.) Useful way of checking your answer Common thing to screw up (ask NASA)! If you have no idea how to solve a problem, try dimensional analysis!
21
21 6/14/04 Changing Units 2.0 min = ? sec 5.0 km/hr = ? m/s
22
22 6/14/04 Common Unit Conversions 1 m =1.09 yd 1 in = 2.54 cm 1 mi = 1.61 km 1 light-yr = 9.45*10 15 m 1 day = 86,400 s 1 yr = 3.16*10 7 s
23
23 6/14/04 Scientific Notation Should be review, but… 10 2 = 100 10 -2 = 0.01 So then 1.234 x 10 3 = 1234
24
24 6/14/04 Common Prefixes mega (M) = 10 6 killo (k) = 10 3 centi (c) = 10 -2 milli (m) = 10 -3 1 MB = 1,000,000 Bytes 1 km = 1000 m 100 cm = 1 m 1000 mm = 1 m
25
25 6/14/04 Topics not covered in HRW (but should be) Difference between accuracy and precision: Accuracy: closeness to true value = 3.14 Precision: number of digits to which answer is specified = 3.14159265358979323846264 … One does not imply the other!
26
26 6/14/04 Accuracy and Precision (cont) Can be very precise and very inaccurate Hubble mirror Manufactured to very high precision, but quite wrong Photo from: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/712418.stm Before and after the installation of corrective optics
27
27 6/14/04 Significant Figures Shouldn’t give a misleadingly precise answer Only report answer to precision of least precisely known quantity Example: 5.000 / 3.0 = 1.7, not 1.6666666666667 Won’t be enforced in this class, but you’ll probably encounter it later
28
Chapter 2 Straight Line Motion
29
29 6/14/04 Kinematics Webster’s: A branch of dynamics that deals with aspects of motion apart from considerations of mass and force This chapter only deals with 1-D motion Treat every object like a particle
30
30 6/14/04 Position An object’s location is measured with respect to an origin Must define a positive and negative direction Position is a function of time: x(t) x = 0 x 1 = 5
31
31 6/14/04 Displacement x = x(t 2 ) – x(t 1 ) = x 2 – x 1 Displacement is a vector Direction and magnitude 0 x 1 = 5x 2 = -3 A change in position is called a displacement
32
32 6/14/04 Average Velocity Rate of change in position over time t Velocity is also a vector Speed is a scalar (magnitude only)
33
33 6/14/04 Example: A flea is sitting on your ruler. You see it run from the 15 cm mark to the 10 cm mark in 2.5 seconds. What is it’s displacement and velocity? x = -5.0 cm = -0.05 m v avg = 2.0 cm/s = -0.02 m/s
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.