Physics 101

What we did today!

Tues. Apr. 26th & Thurs. Ap. 28th
Digital Optical Communications -- see websites listed below


Basic components of digital optical communication system:

Optical Components needed to accomplish above: Additional electro-optical components may be necessary to send multiple messages at one time down the same fiber.  These include: Looking closely at requirements:    Once a digital number is assigned to the amplitude, a computer then programs the modulator to turn the laser beam off and on mimicking the 0s and 1s of the binary number.

Special LInks to get you started:

Fiber Optic Communications
http://www.beyonddiscovery.org/content/view.page.asp?I=2306  
Note:  Go to the "What are fiber optics?  AT&T Link at bottom of page for good introduction

http://www.commspecial.com/fiberguide-print.htm
http://www.netoptics.com/5.html

Solitons and Amplifiers in Arial-based Optical Communications:

http://www.williamson-labs.com/com-optical.htm
 
 

CD Players 


How a CD player works

Digitization -- A Real World Example -- your CD player:

 

DIGITIZATION:  Taking an analog signal (a phone message for instance) and converting it to a digital signal in which binary code is used.   This means that each amplitude of a signal is converted to a 16 or 24 bit number (16 or 24 0s and 1s representing the amplitude).

Digitization of Sound Waves:

       A sound wave is sampled at 44 kHz and at each time interval the height of the wave is measured.  It is then given a value that reflects its
relative amplitude to a zero value. This amplitude is turned into a binary number.

       Binary numbers are determined by how many powers of 2 you need to make up the particular amplitude that portion of the sound wave had. So 4 bit binary number only goes up to a maximum amplitude value of 15 which comes from 1 x 2^3 + 1 x 2^2 + 1 x 2^1+ 1 x 2^0.  Here 4 powers of 2 were used producing a digital signal of 1111.  In CDs, for example, every amplitude is represented by a 16 or 24 bit number which uses 16 (or 24) powers of 2 to find the amplitude. This means that the maximum amplitude can be given a value of over 65000 (3 million).

For some more info:

http://computer.howstuffworks.com/bytes2.htm

Once a digital number is assigned to the amplitude, a computer designs the CD master disc for
pressing the ones we buy.  A series of bumps
are put on the master disc which will translate to pits on the final CD.  The CD is made by
pressing the master disc onto the plastic one, coating it with aluminum and then adding a final coat
of plastic.

The CD:

      The CD has pits and lands about 0.5 microns wide on tracks and the tracks are spaced about
1.6 microns apart.  The height is around 150 nm or so.

        A diode laser beam is focused onto the CD from below. It makes a spot  around 0.8 microns
in diameter (thus the inter track spacing).  When the beam is reflected off the CD, it is sent to a
detector.  Here the size of the signal (due to the amplitude of the light) is used to determine if
there is a pit, a land, or a transition between a pit and a land occuring. Transitions are marked by a
big change in reflected signal size and thus are given the designation of a 1while lands and pits
keep the same reflectance and are given the designation of 0.

 Playback:

        The computer chip reads the 16 1s and 0s off from the detector and translates them into an
amplitude (this occurs in the Digital to Analog
Converter [DAC]). The amplitudes are put together to form a wave which is smoothed via a low
pass filter and sent off to the amplifier for the
speakers again as an analog signal.

Website on CD players:

http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cd.htm
http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/dvd3.htm

Digital Communications -- CDs, DVDs, and Fiber Optics -- Homework Sheet:   Click Here

Thurs. Ap. 14th - April 21st

CH. 20 -- Light and Refraction of Light & Other Cool Optics  

Light's Particle Nature:
Planck was the physicist who derived the theoretical expression which describes the intensity of light
given off as a function of wavelength for a given temperature black body radiator.  It was based on the
idea that each electron could only give off energy in discrete amounts rather than any and all energies.

                    E = h f           c = l f = 3 x 108 m /s

In order to describe spectra, scientists had to model the atom with different energy levels so that light
could be absorbed or emitted in discrete amounts also.  The photons which interact with the atoms have
to have just the right amount of energy to get the electron to jump from one orbital to another (or one
energy level to another) or the photons are not absorbed or emitted.  This idea came from Einstein
when he studied the photoelectric effect.

How does light act?  Light travels from one place to another as a wave; it interferes with itself, it diffracts going
through an aperture (small hole).  It interacts with matter via absorption and emission as a particle.  It reflects off
of surfaces of materials, refracts (or bends) when it enters a material with a different index of refraction (related to
density),  and can be absorbed by the material. This is known as wave- particle duality of light.

Polarization:  What's Behind Those Polaroid Glasses?  - Polarizing Squares and Cellophane Sheet

Polarization of light tells us in what direction the light is oscillating or wiggling (remember light as a wave goes up and down in some direction).  Linearly polarized light has the electric field oscillating in a particular direction like vertically or horizontally.  Lasers often produce polarized light.  Light from the sun or a lightbulb is unpolarized.  This means that the direction the electric field is oscillating in changes so rapidly over time that you can not deteremine a particular direction of polarization.




A polarizer like the 2 you have in your kits, only allows light that is oscillating in one direction to pass through it.

The polarizing sheets and cellophane are great tools to use to figure out how sunglasses work.  Light from the sun strikes the earth.  It reflects off everything it encounters.  This reflected light is polarized more along one direction than another.  The reflected sun light is more horizontally polarized than vertically.

Law of Reflection:
The angle of incidence of the light ray is equal to the angle of reflection of the
ray off a material.
 




                                                                 Qincident  = Qreflected

Mirrors utilize the law of reflection and lenses utilize the law of refraction.

Flat Mirrors:  Provide an image of a person which is upright, on the other side of the mirror, but reversed right to left.

Concave Mirrors: Will focus light.  They also make an image which is inverted if you stand beyond the focal point of the mirror but is upright and huge if you stand within the focal point.

Convex Mirrors:  Will diverge light (spread it out).  They also make images on the opposite side of the mirror which are smaller and upright.

Law of Refraction:  Snell's Law.
The index of refraction of two materials and the angle at which a light ray will  propagate through those two media are related through Snell's Law.  A ray with incident angle, Q, traveling through a material with index, n1, will refract at an angle, f, in a material of index, n2.
 




                                         n1 sin Q =  n2  sin f







Lenses:
There are two main type of lenses -- converging and diverging -- also known as convex and
concave respectively.  When light rays travel through these lenses they are bent (refracted) because of the
difference in index of refraction of the air and the glass of the lenses.  Upon exiting the lenses, the light rays are
bent away from the normal line and because of the curvature of the lenses this produces different efffects.  For a
converging lens (with convex surfaces), parallel input rays are bent so that they converge to a single point (thus
the name).  For a diverging lens (with concave surfaces), parallel input rays are bent so that they spread out
away from the lens as the exit (again the beam will diverge).

See this link for more information:  link to miniexperiments and other lens info

Eyeballs and Glasses:
    Myopic eyes are near sighted. This means that the lens creates an image too close to the eye's lens for objects that are far away (so that the image is in front of the retina).  The eyeball is slightly distended.  Correction for such an eyeball requires a diverging lens.
    Hyperopic eyes are far sighted.  This means that the lens creates an image too far from the eye's lens for nearby objects (so that the image is behind the retina).  The eyeball is slightly squashed.  Correction for such a difficulty requires a converging lens.
    Contact lenses use differing indices of refraction as well as curvature to correct for vision problems, while glasses only use curvature.

Eyeballs and Cameras both Image objects.  For more information, Click Here

Total Internal Reflection -- Fiber Optics:
    Light coming from a high index material like glass into a low index material like air undergoes refraction (bending away from the normal line) until it reaches a critical angle.  Then it can no longer exit the glass and is totally reflected within the material (total internal reflection).  This is how light propagates (travels) down fibers.  It is sent into the fiber at angles greater than the critical angle and thus reflects and bounces its way down the fiber.  The fiber can be bent as long as it does not become so tightly bent that the angle for total internal reflection is lost.  Then the light would escape.

Rayleigh Scattering:  Short wavelengths scatter more than long wavelengths.
    What makes the sky blue during the day?
    Why is the sky red at sunrise and sunset?
    What is the color of clouds and how is it produced?


Ch. 20 HW
Review:  Draw a diagram for each Q 7,12,24,27,30 & explain Qs36-38
Qs 2,3,6,8,10,13,25,28,29
Problems 1-3
Extra Problems:  Click for Link

NOTE:  With diverging lenses, the focal length is negative in calculations.  ALSO, in extra problem #12 change part C) from 39.87 degrees to 39.86 degrees.



Thurs. Mar. 31 & TUes. APril 5th

Atoms & Lasers -- Ch. 21



What's coming this semester -- Nanotechnology, optical communications -- all based on knowledge of the ATOM

We have spectra -- how do we explain them?


RUTHERFORD's EXPERIMENT




At the turn of the century, we had the picture of an atom called the Raisin Pudding Model where the atom was the pudding with the electrons being the raisins.

The result of Rutherford's experiment (done by graduate student, Geiger, and undergraduate student, Marsden) was that the picture of the atom had to be changed.  He went back to Newton's Principia and came up with the planetary model of the atom.  This was then modified by Bohr and others as we move toward the quantum mechanical picture of the atom.

            Structure of the atom:  nucleus with protons and neutrons & cloud of electrons surrounding it

            Atoms have an energy level structure which is made up of the various allowed energies an electron can have if it is excited by thermal means (heat) or collisions or by light.

            The "orbit" we talk about for electrons is a classical picture which does not take into account the quantum nature of atoms.  The radius of the orbit is actually the most probable position of the electron, however the electron can be all over the place within the orbital cloud.





              When atoms absorb energy, they jump from a lower energy level to a higher one.  When atoms jump from a high energy level to a lower one, they emit a photon of light whose energy is equal to the difference between the upper and lower energies.  In other words, light can only be emitted or absorbed if it is JUST ENOUGH to make the electron have the correct amount of energy for the new energy level.




How is light made?
Excitation of electrons to high energy levels is followed by electrons dropping
to their ground (or un-excited states)  This means they give up energy to make the transition and that energy is
given off in the form of photons.  Photons are packets of light energy that have just the right amount of energy to
shift the electron from one energy level to the other.



 Atoms of every element have a different number of protons, neutrons, and electrons in it.  You are
going to look at gases in this experiment.  The electrons in the gas tubes are excited by electrical current
flowing through them.  When the electrons give up the extra energy and go back to their original orbit
around the nucleus, they give off light of a certain color.  Only colors relating to the allowed energies
of the electron are given off.  Each element has its own set of allowed energies for its electrons and the
photons which are emitted form a SPECTRUM which is unique to that atom.  So, like a finger print,
we can identify what element is in the tube by recording what colors of light are given off by the hot
gas.



Light's Wave Nature:
Light propagates from one place to another as a wave.  It has wave properties of diffraction,
interference, reflection, and refraction.

Wave Properties:

Wavelength, lambda
Frequency, f
Period, T                      T = 1/f

Wavelength * Frequency = Speed of Wave

Speed of light, c

Interference of Waves:  Two waves superimpose on each other.  The amplitudes at a given location are added to find the resulting waveform.  Amplitudes above the equilibrium point are positive and those below the equilibrium point are negative.

Constructive Interference:  Occurs when both waves are in phase with each other.
Destructive Interference:  Occurs when each wave is out of phase with the other, by 180 degrees.

Light's Particle Nature:
Planck was the physicist who derived the theoretical expression which describes the intensity of light
given off as a function of wavelength for a given temperature black body radiator.  It was based on the
idea that each electron could only give off energy in discrete amounts rather than any and all energies.

                    E = h f           c = l f = 3 x 108 m /s

In order to describe spectra, scientists had to model the atom with different energy levels so that light
could be absorbed or emitted in discrete amounts also.  The photons which interact with the atoms have
to have just the right amount of energy to get the electron to jump from one orbital to another (or one
energy level to another) or the photons are not absorbed or emitted.  This idea came from Einstein
when he studied the photoelectric effect.


How does light act?  Light travels from one place to another as a wave; it interferes with itself, it diffracts going
through an aperture (small hole).  It interacts with matter via absorption and emission as a particle.  It reflects off
of surfaces of materials, refracts (or bends) when it enters a material with a different index of refraction (related to
density),  and can be absorbed by the material. This is known as wave- particle duality of light.

Laser -- Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of
Radiation

http://www.llnl.gov/nif/library/aboutlasers/how.html
http://science.howstuffworks.com/laser.htm



The recipe for a laser & Energy levels for Gain Medium

Recipe:
1.  Two mirrors are required.  One with 100% reflectivity and the other with less than 100%
reflectivity.
2.  A gain medium -- a material which has an energy level structure with an upper lasing level that is
long lived to make an inversion (more electrons in the upper lasing level than the lower lasing level).  This is the material whose electrons are excited in order to make the amplification of the
light.  These may be gases (argon, HeNe), solids (YAG), semiconductors, or liquids (dye lasers).
3.  Pump -- a mechanism for pumping electrons in the gain medium up into the upper lasing level.
This may be done with a flashlamp, electrical current, or another laser.
4.  Spontaneous emission -- spontaneous emission occurs when an electron in an excited state
jumps back down to a lower energy level giving off a photon.  The photon can go in  any direction
and has no particular phase.
5. Spontaneous emission occurs in direction of the mirrors and is caught between the mirrors --
bouncing back and forth from mirror to mirror, traveling through the gain medium.
6.  Stimulated emission -- stimulated emission occurs when a photon "tickles" or interacts with an
electron in the upper lasing energy level, stimulating it to emit a photon and jump to the lower lasing
level.  The stimulated photon is emitted in the EXACT same direction as the initial photon and with
the EXACT same phase.  THEREFORE, the total wave (electric field) that is traveling in the laser
cavity is now increased in amplitude (constructive interference).
7.  We have Amplified the light going through the gain medium when bunches of electrons make this
stimulated transition down to the lower lasing energy level.




Energy Levels for Gain Medium

The best energy level system is the FOUR level system.

The highest energy level has a short lifetime (electrons will leave quickly from this state) and the
electrons are excited there by the pump.
The upper lasing energy level is the next lowest in energy.  Electrons quickly drop to the upper
lasing level from the highest level.
The upper lasing level has a long lifetime (electrons will stay there awhile).
The lower lasing level has a short lifetime (electrons drop to lowest energy level from here).  We
don't want many electrons in the lower lasing level or else they could absorb light from the cavity and
decrease the total amplitude of the laser light.

CH. 21 HW
Review 11,14,15,17,23,28
Qs 6,7,9-12,15-17
Es  1,2

Thurs. Mar. 24 & Tues. Mar. 29

Waves -- Ch. 14



Doppler Effect -- if the source of the sound is moving OR you are moving relative to the source

Sounds coming toward you are heard at a higher pitch -- higher frequency.

Sounds heading away from you are heard at a lower pitch -- lower frequency.





It is possible to use Radar to get information on how fast your car is moving and on the speed and size of weather events as well as information on stars rotational rates... all through the Doppler shifting of various types of waves.



Earthquakes

S waves -- Secondary or Transverse waves
P waves -- Primary or Longitudinal waves'
L waves -- Surface waves which travel along the outer shell of the earth eminating from epicenter of quake

P waves travel throughout the earth at 1-5 miles per second, even through the molten core (pressure waves can shift the material in the longitudinal direction and transfer the energy to the next portion of the molten outer core).
S waves do not travel through the molten rock (the material is not able to shift transversely and return to its original position).


How Earthquakes work:  http://science.howstuffworks.com/earthquake.htm

Earthquake News:  


Wave Properties:  Indonesia


Waves:

Wavelength, lambda
Frequency, f
Period, T                      T = l/f

Wavelength * Frequency = Speed of Wave

Speed of light, c

Interference of Waves:  Two waves superimpose on each other.  The amplitudes at a given location are added to find the resulting waveform.  Amplitudes above the equilibrium point are positive and those below the equilibrium point are negative.

Constructive Interference:  Occurs when both waves are in phase with each other.
Destructive Interference:  Occurs when each wave is out of phase with the other, by 180 degrees.

CH. 14 HW
Qs 3,4,5,10,11-14,19
Ps 1-5


Thurs. Mar.  10

Ch. 8 -- Energy


Main Ideas:

                           Power = Work/Time

This describes how quickly you do the work.  The quicker it is done the more power is required.

Conservation of Energy states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, it
simply changes states (or types of energy).

Conservation of Mechanical Energy states that a system that is isolated can exhibit
conservation of mechanical energy. That is the total energy of the system comes from the sum of PE and KE and as the system

evolves:

                               KE + PE = Constant.

In-Class Demonstrations and Calculations of W and
Conservation of Mechanical Energy.
 

Examples of Conservation of Energy:

 (1)  A 1 kg pendulum swings from a starting position of 50 cm above equilibrium. What is its speed at the bottom of its
swing?

(2)  The same pendulum swings to 15 cm above equilibrium.  What is its speed there?

Mini Experiment

Bouncing Balls & Roller Coaster Experiments

1.      Bouncing Ball:  Ball, meter stick

a.       Choose a height to start from.  hi =

b.      Drop ball.

c.       Record height ball returns to.  hf =

d.      Calculate the following quantities:  PE before, PE after, Speed ball hits ground with.

e.       Is mechanical energy conserved during fall?  After return bounce?  What happens to the energy of the ball?

f.        Choose another height to start from.  Then calculate how fast the ball is moving part of the way through the fall (for instance, drop ball from 75 cm and see how fast it is moving at 30 cm)

 

2.      Roller Coaster Problem:  Loop-de-loop, car or ball, meter stick

<>a.       Make necessary measurements to calculate the following: 

PE at top, Speed of car/ball at bottom, Speed of car/ball at top of loop

 

CH. 8 Homework
Qs 4,5,11,13,15
Ps 6,13,15,16
Extra Problems




Tues. March 1

Ch. 8 -- Energy


Main Ideas:

Work:    Can be defined in a number of ways.  It is related to changing the state of
motion of an object, changing an objects position, and/or changing its state of energy.

                                   W =  F d  = DKE  = DPE

F is force, d is distance, KE is kinetic energy, and PE is potential energy.  Applying a force over a distance can increase the
speed of an object or change its potential energy.

                                    KE = 1/2 m v2

Is energy due to motion of an object.  Any object in motion will exhibit KE.  It is a
scalar quantity NOT a vector quantity.

                                     PE = m g h

Is energy due to position above or below a reference height.  PE can be negative if
work must be done on the object to move it to your reference height.

******* This is how far the Exam #2 will go *********

 
For Exam #2:  Qs 2,6,9
Ps 1,2,8 --
Plus, Extra Problem:  Sister walks by at 0.5 m/s with 2 cookies,  If the little brother (20 kg) can catch her, he can have a cookie.  How much work must he do in order to catch her?



Thurs. Feb. 17th & Thurs. FEb 24th

CH. 6 -- Momentum
Some Basic Ideas:






Information on the Neutrino Discovery and Recent Experiments:

http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/~psoler/P1X_neutrino_2004_1.pdf

Other Neutrino News:  http://www.physorg.com/news346.html


Main Equations:

Linear Momentum                                   p = mv

Newton's Second Law                              F = (pf - pi) / t

Impulse                                                 F Dt = D(mv)

        In order to change an object's momentum, you must apply a force for a period of
time.  If you increase the time, you can decrease the necessary force.

Conservation of Linear Momentum           p(before) = p(after)

Fermi Lab:  <http://www.fnal.gov:80/> Go see how conservation of momentum and
energy are used in real life!

Angular Momentum                                L = mvr

Conservation of Angular Momentum   L(before) = L(after)
 

        Momentum is a vector quantity defined as   p = mv where p and v are
        vectors.

        Momentum is a conserved quantity when there are no external forces
        acting on a system.

        Elastic Collisions are ones in which both momentum and kinetic energy
        are conserved.

        Inelastic collisions are ones in which only momentum is conserved.

MINI EXPERIMENT

Main Ideas:
Example problems on conservation of momentum -- group work

Experiment:  Momentum Conservation
             2 Carts on Track, Stop watches

Estimate the relative masses of the two cars (individually and with masses on
one).

Draw a picture of the situation.

Estimate the speed of one car through experimentation.

Calculate the speed of 2nd car (or both for inelastic) using conservation of
momentum.

3 cases:

a)  Elastic collision with both cars same mass.
b) Elastic collision with one car has 1 metal bar on it.
c)  Inelastic collision with 2nd car intially at rest with metal bar on it.
 





Tues. Feb. 15th

CH. 4 -- Newton's Laws

Some SCIENCE NEWS


Iran
Nixes Demand to Stop Building Reactor
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/ap/20050213/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_nuclear

NEW YORK REGION | February 11, 2005

Antiterror Test to Follow Winds and Determine Airborne Paths
By IAN URBINA

A team of about 50 scientists and emergency planners will release a harmless gas to study how air might flow through New York City in the event of a terrorist attack.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/11/nyregion/11gas.html?ex=1108962000&en=98296dfb1da056ab&ei=5070

TECHNOLOGY | February 10, 2005

Open-Source Practices for Biotechnology
By ANDREW POLLACK

Researchers have devised a method of creating genetically modified crops that does not infringe on patents, and they will be making the technique available to others to use.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/10/technology/10gene.html?ex=1108962000&en=ba7eb48fe2895b9b&ei=5070

SCIENCE | February 10, 2005

2004 Was Fourth-Warmest Year Ever Recorded
By ANDREW C. REVKIN

Last year was the fourth warmest since systematic temperature measurements began around the world in the 19th century, NASA scientists said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/10/science/10warm.html?ex=1108962000&en=5c23f128b1e0c8f4&ei=5070

TECHNOLOGY | February 12, 2005

Toshiba to Make Chips for Toyota Hybrid Cars - Paper
By REUTERS

TOKYO (Reuters) - Toshiba Corp., the world's fifth-largest chip maker, will start supplying Toyota Motor Corp. with microchips that control key functions of hybrid cars by the end of the year, a Japanese newspaper said on Sunday.

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/technology/tech-tech-japan-toshiba.html?ex=1108962000&en=665b71efce07202b&ei=5070

Astronauts Testing Repair Techniques
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050212/ap_on_sc/space_shuttle



Thurs.  Feb. 10

CH. 4 -- Newton's Laws
The Life of Newton














Equations:

F = ma                  F = D(mv)/Dt

In  Class Work:
              Define Newton's 3 Laws

              Give examples of each as you would explain them to a friend.

Focus in on Newton's Laws:

1.  First and Second Law:  The NET force is the important quantity.  If there is a NET
force, there is an acceleration.  If there is NO NET force, there is no acceleration; BUT there can still be motion (constant speed in  straight line).

2.  Examples of Places where net force must be considered:

Falling objects and air resistance.
Pushing objects across a surface and friction force.

3.  Third Law:  Action and Reaction Pairs, Which forces need to be largest to get an
object to accelerate in a  particular direction.

Examples of Newton's Laws -- Net force and terminal velocity

Units of Force, Weight, Mass

CH. 4 Homework
Qs 1,5,6,8,11,13,14,16,20,22,23,25
Ps 1-3,5,6,8



Tuesday, Feb. 1st
CH. 3 -- Projectile Motion and Circular Motion

Projectile Motion:
 

              Motion can be separated into its vertical and horizontal components.

        Vertical motion controlled by gravitational forces and any air resistance that occurs.
        An object undergoing horizontal motion feels no unbalanced forces (once thrown/shot
        object is released).
        Equations of motion can be chosen for each type of motion.

                Vertical:    dy = 1/2 a t2       Vfy = Viy ± at

                Horizontal:  dx = Vix t
 

When a ball is thrown up in the air, it experiences vertical motion.

When a ball is rolled across a table, it experiences horizontal motion.

When a ball is thrown across the room, it experiences BOTH vertical and
horizontal motion.
 

              Galileo showed that we can look at each of the above motions separately.

              Angles for projectile motion -- In class demo/ experiment --

What angle is the best to use for shooting a dart gun if one wants to have the dart travel the
farthest in the horizontal direction?
 

        What angle gives the longest range for horizontal distance when vertical motion is
        ignored?  Why?
        What angle gives the longest time of flight in the vertical direction when horizontal
        motion is ignored?  Why?
        Combining these factors -- what do you get?
 

CH. 3 Homework:
 Qs 2,3,9,10 (graph all 4 in order on a single graph A->D),13,14 (graph motion), 15, 16
Probs 2,15,17-19 (graph these 3), 21,22 

Tues. Jan. 11, 2005

Physics 101:  In-class Discussion Questions

 

1.)  How do you define:  science and technology?

 

 

2.)  How do you feel about science?

 

 

3.)  What do you think science might do for you in your lifetime?

 

 

4.)  How is science funded?

 

 

5.)  How is a good experiment conducted?

 

 

6.) How is science reported?

 

 

7.) What new advances have occurred recently in science?

 

 

8.)  What new advances have occurred recently in technology?

 

 

 

Thursday, January 13th

TSUNAMI NEWS








How a tsunami forms:
www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/earth/tsunami2.html

 

Tsunami news in brief

Monday January 10, 2005
The Guardian
   (http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1386504,00.html)

· The Bush administration is expected to increase its $350m (£190m) commitment to the region to nearly $1bn in an emergency budget request to be submitted to Congress, lawmakers and congressional aides said.

· Survivors in the jungles of the Andaman and Nicobar islands are running out of food and water, Manoranjan Bhakta, the Indian MP who represents the devastated archipelago, said. The tsunami is thought to have killed more than 6,000 people on the islands.

· Kuwait pledged $100m in aid yesterday, 10 times its original pledge.

· A shirt autographed by Manchester United players fetched about £20,000 at a charity auction held by the Hong Kong FA.

· A service honouring tsunami victims was held at Berlin's main cathedral yesterday. Sixty Germans are confirmed dead and more than 700 are missing.

· The singer Gloria Estefan announced plans to raise $100,000 at a concert next month at Donald Trump's exclusive Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

· The US air force helped move 122 homeless cats and one dog whose owners were killed on Phi Phi island, Thailand. The pets were flown to Bangkok


Homework

CH. 1   Qs  5,6
Prob. 3c, 3d, 4c, 4d

CH. 2 Qs 1, 3-5, 7, 9
Prob. 4,5



Ch. 1 - Looking for trends and predicting outcomes

Graphing
Excell
Slope -- by hand
Trendline
Predictions

Note:  Investigations at the end of the chapters might give you an idea of a topic for your notebook !

Tuesday, January 18

<>Ch. 2 - Vector Addition, Scientific Notation, Equations (relationships between variables)

Ch. 3 -- Motion

Astronomers: Exploring the universe

 



Stonehenge






Ptolmeic View of Solar System & Copernican View of Solar System






Galileo Galilei --





Astronomy

Solving the puzzles of Saturn and Titan

Cassini-Huygens Mission Facts

Cassini Spacecraft

Huygens Spacecraft

Cassini Huygens Images

Other images


Military Support
Birth of experimental science (the scientific method)

MOTION


Key Concepts:

Speed -- average and instantaneous

Velocity

Vector Quantities



Thursday, January 20, 2005
CH. 3 -- MOTION

Acceleration - average and due to gravity

Free fall and Air resistance -- Terminal velocity

Terminal Velocity -- Free fall and air resistance

Mini-experiment In Class

Equipment:  Meter sticks & stop watches

Using the above tools and the people in your group.  Measure the
following quantities.

a)  Average speed of a person walking at constant pace.

b)  Average acceleration of person starting from stop to a run.

c)  Your response time when dropping a ruler between fingers
 

Experimental Procedure:   Describe below how you would do the
above 3 measurements.

How many trials would you do? Why?

Data:   Record data below and show calculations of speed,
acceleration, and response time.

Analysis:  Are the values you calculated reasonable?  why or why
not?

What are possible sources of error?

Looking back would you change your experiment in any way?
How?



Tuesday,January 25th & Thursday, January 27th

Graphing:  Key Concepts:
Distance vs. Time Graph
Velocity vs. Time Graph
Acceleration vs. Time Graph
Reading Graphs & Creating Graphs

What does each type of graph look like for the following
situations:

        Constant Motion -- the distance increases with time (straight line with some slope, the steepness of the line is related to the speed), the speed stays the same regardless of time (straight horizontal line), the acceleration is zero

        Acceleration -- The distance increases or decreases with time but the slope changes (as you speed up the slope increases, as you slow down the slope of the curve decreases) thus you see a curved line on distance graph, the speed incresases of decreases with time in a linear fashion (straight line with some slope corresponding to acceleration), the acceleration is a constant at all times (straight horizontal line (non-zero, may be positive or negative))

        No Motion -- the distance remains the same regardles of time (straight horizontal liine), all other graphs are at zero (no speed and acceleration)

        Changing Acceleration -- all graphs are more complicated, distance changes with time in a curved fashion and so does speed, accelearation is changing with time (straight line at some angle)
 

Graphing of Scenerios
Ex. Dog runs ambles down street at constant pace, sees a cat and speeds up
to chase it at a full run, cat ducks into doorway and dog must decelerate to
a stop.

Ex.  Hawk sitting in tree, sees a mouse, dives going faster and faster to a high speed,
swoops across the field, grabs for mouse but misses, flies dejectedly at a lower speed
to a fence post, lands on post feeling sorry for itself.

Identify types of motion in scenerio, make 3 qualitative graphs of the
motion (d vs t, v vs t, and a vs t)



Tuesday, Feb. 1st
CH. 3 -- Projectile Motion and Circular Motion

Projectile Motion:
 

              Motion can be separated into its vertical and horizontal components.

        Vertical motion controlled by gravitational forces and any air resistance that occurs.
        An object undergoing horizontal motion feels no unbalanced forces (once thrown/shot
        object is released).
        Equations of motion can be chosen for each type of motion.

                Vertical:    dy = 1/2 a t2       Vfy = Viy ± at

                Horizontal:  dx = Vix t
 

When a ball is thrown up in the air, it experiences vertical motion.

When a ball is rolled across a table, it experiences horizontal motion.

When a ball is thrown across the room, it experiences BOTH vertical and
horizontal motion.
 

              Galileo showed that we can look at each of the above motions separately.

              Angles for projectile motion -- In class demo/ experiment --

What angle is the best to use for shooting a dart gun if one wants to have the dart travel the
farthest in the horizontal direction?
 

        What angle gives the longest range for horizontal distance when vertical motion is
        ignored?  Why?
        What angle gives the longest time of flight in the vertical direction when horizontal
        motion is ignored?  Why?
        Combining these factors -- what do you get?
 

CH. 3 Homework:
 Qs 2,3,9,10 (graph all 4 in order on a single graph A->D),13,14 (graph motion), 15, 16
Probs 2,15,17-19 (graph these 3), 21,22 

Graphing of Scenerios  -- More Practice

Ex. Dog runs ambles down street at constant pace, sees a cat and speeds up
to chase it at a full run, cat ducks into doorway and dog must decelerate to
a stop.

Ex.  Hawk sitting in tree, sees a mouse, dives going faster and faster to a high speed,
swoops across the field, grabs for mouse but misses, flies dejectedly at a lower speed
to a fence post, lands on post feeling sorry for itself.

Identify types of motion in scenerio, make 3 qualitative graphs of the
motion (d vs t, v vs t, and a vs t)