People Physics Book
People Physics Book
People Physics Book
3rd edition
Authors
James H. Dann, Ph.D.
James J. Dann
Illustrator
Jason P. Murphy
Contributors and Consultants
Byron J Philhour
Kimberly M. Knestrick
Mark Abruzzese
2006 James H. Dann, James J. Dann. All rights reserved.
Textbook Website
http://scipp.ucsc.edu/outreach/index2.html
Each discovery, each advance, each increase in the sum of human riches, owes its being to the
physical and mental travail of the past and the present. By what right then can any one whatever
appropriate the least morsel of this immense whole and say This is mine, not yours?
Peter Kropotkin (1842 1921)
"One ought to be ashamed to make use of the wonders of science embodied in a radio set, while
appreciating them as little as a cow appreciates the botanical marvels in the plant she munches.
Albert Einstein (1879 1955)
Dedication of the book is to two physicists who gave us particular inspiration. Their contributions to
experimental and theoretical physics are all the more remarkable given that they worked as Jews in the
Germany and Italy of the 1930s:
1. Bruno Rossi, author of Optics and Momenti Nella Vita di uno Scienziato.
2. Adolph Dannenbaum, author of Die Dampfmaschine und ihre Steuerung (text on thermodynamics).
JHD would like to dedicate this book to Aaron, Nisha, and Ashaan. Special thanks goes to Laurel Reitman
for fruitful discussions and Keith Mansfield for fruitful discussions and lunch.
The authors would like to thank all the honors and AP Physics students at Natomas High School in
Sacramento and St. Ignatius in San Francisco in the years 2000-5 for trying out all the early versions of the
big ideas, key concepts, and many of the problems.
We also thank our fellow physics teachers at both schools for their immense help and contributions.
Write to us and request permission, and include a description of how you will use the
book. We will very likely respond immediately and enthusiastically. Please include this
introductory material in your textbook, so that others can learn about our project.
Most print and copy shops will be able to handle .pdf documents of the sort produced by
Adobe Acrobat and read by the Adobe Reader. You can simply tell your printer about our
website and ask them to download the text from there.
The book can be printed very cheaply at a copy store. In the past we have used 20#
standard white paper in a coil bind with clear vinyl pages on the front and back. Only the
first page of the book (the cover) is in color; the rest are in black & white. The cost per
unit can be as low as $18. Please do not charge more than cost for your students. This
produces a light flexible book students can write in and carry to class.
You can choose which of the chapters you want to include in your version of the
textbook. Each chapter is independently page-numbered with an even number of pages,
so that new chapters always start on the right-hand page. You can use our table of
contents, or edit it to include just the chapters you choose.
We want this book to be useful and dynamic. Please provide comments, constructive
criticism, alternative and additional chapters.
AP Physics Exams
We think this book will be especially helpful for students preparing for the AP Physics B test.
All material currently tested is in this book. Students planning to take the test should cover all
chapters prior to the test except chapters 16, 20, 21, 22, and 23. Those chapters can be left for
after the test or as enrichment. Also it is recommended that Chapters 9 and 15 be covered lightly
since these topics are not tested in the detail that our book covers them.
For the AP Physics C (mechanics) test the book also is an excellent preparation. Chapters 1-10
and 25 need be covered thoroughly. For the AP physics C (electromagnetism) test the book is not
sufficient; it can be used however, for some basic concepts and provide practice in solving
circuits. (Use Chapters 12-16.)
Physics Concepts
California standard
Kinematics
Newtons Laws
Universal gravitation and centripetal motion
Relativistic and quantum effects
Two dimensional trajectories
Statics
Conservation of energy
Conservation of momentum
Energy and momentum
Springs and capacitors
Heat and thermodynamics
Waves and harmonic motion
Light waves
Characteristics of Waves
Electric Circuits
Transistors
Magnetism
Electric Forces and Fields
1a
1 b. c ,d
1 e, f, g, l
1h
1 I, j
1 k, m
2 a, b, c
2 d, e, f
2g
2h
3 a, b, c, d, e, f, g
4 a, b, c, d
4e
4f
5 a, b, c
5d
5 f, g, h, j, n
5 e, k, l, m, o
Chapter(s) in
Peoples Physics
Book
3
5
6
20, 24
4
6, 12
2
7
8
10. 15
19
11
17
11. 17
13
16
14
12
Table of Contents
0.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
Appendices
A.
B.
Every answer to a physics problem must include units. Even if a problem explicitly asks
for a speed in meters per second (m/s), the answer is 5 m/s, not 5.
When youre not sure how to attack a problem, you can often find the appropriate
equation by thinking about which equation will provide an answer with the correct units.
For instance, if you are looking to predict or calculate a distance, use the equation where
all the units cancel out, with only a unit of distance remaining.
This textbook uses SI units (La Systme International dUnits).
When converting speeds from one set of units to another, remember the following rule of
thumb: a speed measured in mi/hr is about double the value measured in m/s (i.e., 10 m/s
is equal to about 20 MPH). Remember that the speed itself hasnt changed, just our
representation of the speed in a certain set of units.
If a unit is named after a person, it is capitalized. So you write 10 Newtons, or 10 N,
but 10 meters, or 10 m.
Vectors are arrows that represent quantities with direction. In this textbook, vectors will
be written in bold. For instance, the force vector will be written as F in this textbook.
Your teacher will likely use F to represent vectors. Dont let this confuse you: F
represents the same concept as F.
Vectors can be added together in a simple way. Two vectors can be moved (without
changing their directions) to become two legs of a parallelogram. The sum of two vectors
is simply the diagonal of the parallelogram:
A
A+B
Ch 1-1
Key Equations
Key Applications
The late, great physicist Enrico Fermi used to solve problems by making educated guesses. For
instance, say you want to guesstimate the number of cans of soda drank by everybody in San
Francisco in one year. Youll come pretty close if you guess that there are about 800,000 people
in S.F., and that each person drinks on average about 100 cans per year. So, 80,000,000 cans are
consumed every year. Sure, this answer is wrong, but it is likely not off by more than a factor of
10 (i.e., an order of magnitude). That is, even if we guess, were going to be in the ballpark of
the right answer. That is always the first step in working out a physics problem.
Type of measurement
Fundamental units
length or position
d, x, L
meters (m)
time
seconds (s)
velocity or speed
v, u
mass
kilograms (kg)
force
Newtons (N)
energy
E, K, U, Q
Joules (J)
power
Watts (W)
electric charge
q, e
Coulombs (C)
temperature
Kelvin (K)
electric current
Amperes (A)
electric field
magnetic field
Tesla (T)
magnetic flux
Webers (Wb)
tau
pi
beta
phi*
omega*
gamma
omega
lambda
delta *
rho
sigma *
epsilon
upper case
Ch 1-2
2. Estimate or measure the amount of time that passes between breaths when you are sitting at
rest.
a.
b.
Convert his weight into pounds (you may have to do some research online)
Convert his weight in stones into a mass in kilograms
7. If the speed of your car increases by 10 mi/hr every 2 seconds, how many mi/hr is the speed
increasing every second? State your answer with the units mi/hr/s.
8. A tortoise travels 15 meters (m)
west, then another 13 centimeters
(cm) west. How many meters total
has she walked?
Ch 1-3
9. A tortoise, Bernard, starting at point A travels 12 m west and then 150 millimeters (mm) east.
How far west of point A is Bernard after completing these two motions?
10. 80 m + 145 cm + 7850 mm = X mm. What is X?
11. A square has sides of length 45 mm. What is the area of the square in mm2?
12. A square with area 49 cm2 is stretched so that each side is now twice as long. What is the area
of the square now? Include a sketch.
13. A rectangular solid has a square face with sides 5 cm in length, and a length of 10 cm. What
is the volume of the solid in cm3? Sketch the object, including the dimensions in your sketch.
14. As you know, a cube with each side 4 m in length has a volume of 64 m3. Each side of the
cube is now doubled in length. What is the ratio of the new volume to the old volume? Why
is this ratio not simply 2? Include a sketch with dimensions.
15. What is the ratio of the mass of the Earth to the mass of a single proton? (See equation
sheet.)
16. A spacecraft can travel 20 km/s. How many km can this spacecraft travel in 1 hour (h)?
17. A dump truck unloads 30 kilograms (kg) of garbage in 40 s. How many kg/s are being
unloaded?
18. The lengths of the sides of a cube are doubling each second. At what rate is the volume
increasing?
19. Estimate the number of visitors to Golden Gate Park in San Francisco in one year. Do your
best to get an answer that is right within a factor of 10.
20. Estimate the number of water drops that fall on San Francisco during a typical rainstorm.
21. What does the formula a = F / m tell you about the units of the quantity a (whatever it is)?
22. Add the following vectors using the parallelogram method.
a.
b.
Ch 1-4
c.
d.
e.
f.
For adding more than two vectors, simply add any two then add the third. Order is not
important.
Ch 1-5
Ch 1-6
Key Equations
K = mv 2
Kinetic energy
Ug = mgh
Gravitational
potential energy
Key Concepts
The energy of motion is kinetic energy, K. Whenever an object is in motion it has kinetic
energy. The faster it is going, the more energy it has.
The energy due to gravity is called gravitational potential energy, Ug, which gets higher
the farther off the ground you are.
Molecules have chemical potential energy due to the bonds between the electrons; when
these bonds are broken, energy is released which can be transferred into kinetic and/or
potential energy. 1 food Calorie is equal to 4180 Joules of stored chemical potential
energy.
Energy can be transformed from one kind into the other; if the total energy at the end of
the process appears to be less than at the beginning, the lost energy has been transferred
to another system, often by heat or sound waves.
Ch 2-1
Key Applications
In roller coaster problems, the gravitational potential energy at the top of one hill turns
into kinetic energy at the next valley. It turns back into potential energy as you round the
next hill, and so on. However, some of the energy is lost to the tracks and air as heat,
which is why the second rise is often not as big as the first.
In pole-vaulter problems, the athletes body breaks down the food molecules to change
some of the bonding energy into energy that is used to power the body. This energy goes
on to turn into kinetic energy as the athlete gains speed. The kinetic energy can be
changed into potential energy as the athlete gains height.
In pendulum problems, the potential energy at the highest point in a pendulums swing
changes to kinetic energy when it reaches the bottom and then back into potential energy
when it reaches the top again. At any in-between point there is a combination of kinetic
energy and potential energy, but the total energy remains the same.
2. You hike up to the top of Granite Peak in the Trinity Alps to think about physics.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Do you have more potential or kinetic energy at the top of the mountain than you did at
the bottom? Explain.
Do you have more, less, or the same amount of energy at the top of the mountain than
when you started? (Lets assume you did not eat anything on the way up.) Explain.
How has the total energy of the Solar System changed due to your hike up the mountain?
Explain.
If you push a rock off the top, will it end up with more, less, or the same amount of
energy at the bottom? Explain.
For each of the following types of energy, describe whether you gained it, you lost it, or
it stayed the same during your hike:
i. Gravitational potential energy
ii. Energy stored in the atomic nuclei in your body
iii. Heat energy
iv. Chemical potential energy stored in the fat cells in your body
v. Sound energy from your footsteps
Ch 2-2
5.
Before a run, you eat an apple with 1,000,000 Joules of binding energy.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
550,000 Joules of binding energy are wasted during digestion. How much remains?
Some 95% of the remaining energy is used for the basic processes in your body (which
is why you can warm a bed at night!). How much is available for running?
Lets say that, when you run, you lose 25% of your energy overcoming friction and air
resistance. How much is available for conversion to kinetic energy?
Lets say your mass is 75 kg. What could be your top speed under these idealized
circumstances?
But only 10% of the available energy goes to KE, another 50% goes into heat exhaust
from your body. Now you come upon a hill if the remaining energy is converted to
gravitational potential energy. How high do you climb before running out of energy
completely?
6. A car goes from rest to a speed of v in a time t. Sketch a schematic graph of kinetic energy
vs. time. You do not need to label the axes with numbers.
7. A 1200 kg car traveling with a speed of 29 m/s drives horizontally off of a 90 m cliff.
a.
b.
Ch 2-3
c.
Make a graph displaying the kinetic, gravitational potential, and total energy of the car at
each 10 m increment of height as it drops
8. A roller coaster begins at rest 120 m above the ground at point A, as shown above. Assume
no energy is lost from the coaster to frictional heating, air resistance, sound, or any other
process. The radius of the loop is 40 m.
a.
b.
9. A pendulum has a string with length 1.2 m. You hold it at an angle of 22 degrees to the
vertical and release it. The pendulum bob
has a mass of 2.0 kg.
a.
b.
c.
Ch 2-4
c.
Ch 2-5
Ch 2-6
Scalars
t = time (s)
d = distance (m) = |x1| + |x2| +
v = speed (m/s) = | v |
Symbols
(anything) = final value initial value
(anything)0 = value of that quantity at time t = 0
Key Equations
The Big Three
vavg = x / t
aavg = v / t
Key Concepts
When you begin a problem, define a positive (+x) direction and negative (x) direction.
For instance the positive direction can be towards the right and the negative direction
towards the left. Use these directions consistently with velocity v and acceleration a.
Be sure you understand the difference between average velocity (measured over a long
period of time) and instantaneous velocity (measured at a single moment in time).
Gravity near the Earth pulls an object downwards toward the surface of the Earth with an
acceleration of 9.8 m/s2 ( 10 m/s2). In the absence of air resistance, all objects will fall
with the same acceleration. Air resistance can cause low-mass, large area objects to
accelerate more slowly.
Deceleration is the term used when an objects speed is decreasing due to an acceleration
in the opposite direction of its velocity.
Ch 3-1
The Big Three equations allow you to draw the position and velocity of something as a
function of time. This is a nice way to visualize motion. x(t) produces a parabola in t,
while v(t) produces a straight line in t. The slope of a x(t) graph equals the instantaneous
velocity. The slope of a v(t) graph equals the acceleration.
At first, you might get frustrated trying to figure out which of the Big Three equations to
use for a certain problem, but dont worry, this comes with practice. Making a table that
identifies the variables given in the problem and the variables you are looking for can
sometimes help.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
What is the difference between distance d and displacement x? Write a few sentences
explaining this.
Does the odometer reading in a car measure distance or displacement?
Imagine a fox darting around in the woods for several hours. Can the displacement x of
the fox from his initial position ever be larger than the total distance d he traveled?
Explain.
What is the difference between acceleration and velocity? Write a paragraph that would
make sense to a 5th grader.
Give an example of a situation where an object has an upward velocity but a downward
acceleration.
What is the difference between average and instantaneous velocity? Make up an
example involving a trip in a car that demonstrates your point.
If the position of an object is increasing linearly with time (i.e., x is proportional to t),
what can we say about its acceleration? Explain your thinking.
If the position of an object is increasing non-linearly with time (i.e., x is not
proportional to t), what can we say about its velocity? Explain your thinking.
2. A cop passes you on the highway. Which of the following statements must be true at the
instant he is passing you? You may choose more than one answer.
a.
b.
c.
3. If a car is slowing down from 50 MPH to 40 MPH , but the x position is increasing, which of
the following statements is true? You may choose more than one.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Ch 3-2
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
6. In the picture below, a ball starting at rest rolls down a ramp, goes along at the bottom, and
then back up a smaller ramp. Ignore friction and air resistance. Sketch the vertical position
vs. time and vertical speed vs. time graphs that accurately describe this motion. Label your
graphs with the times indicated in the picture.
v0 = 0
t=0s
t=4s
t=3s
t=8s
t=6s
7. Draw the position vs. time graph that corresponds to the velocity vs. time graph below. You
may assume a starting position x0 = 0. Label both axes of your graph with appropriate values.
Velocity
2 m/s
2
10
Time (s)
3 m/s
Ch 3-3
8. Two cars are heading right towards each other but are 12 km apart. One car is going 70
km/hr and the other is going 50 km/hr. How much time do they have before they collide head
on?
9. The following data represent the first 30 seconds of actor Crispin Glovers drive to work.
Time (s)
Position (m)
Distance (m)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
0
10
30
30
20
50
80
0
10
30
30
40
70
120
a. Sketch the graphs of position vs. time and distance vs. time. Label your x and y axes
appropriately.
b. Why is there a discrepancy between the distance covered and the change in position
during the time period between t = 25 s and t = 30 s?
c. What do you think is going on between t = 10 s and t = 15 s?
d. What is the displacement between t = 10 s and t = 25 s?
e. What is the distance covered between t = 10 s and t = 25 s?
f. What is the average velocity during the first 30 seconds of the trip?
g. What is the average velocity between the times t = 20 s and t = 30 s?
h. During which time interval(s) was the velocity negative?
i. Sketch the velocity vs. time and speed vs. time graphs. Label your x and y axes
appropriately.
10. Sketchy LeBaron, a used car salesman, claims his car is able to go from 0 to 60 mi/hr in 3.5
seconds.
a. What is the average acceleration of this car? Give your answer in m/s2. (Hint: you will
have to perform a conversion.)
b. How much distance does this car cover in these 3.5 seconds? Express your answer twice:
in meters and in feet.
c. What is the speed of the car in mi/hr after 2 seconds?
11. Michael Jordan had a vertical jump of about 48 inches.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Ch 3-4
12. You are sitting on your bike at rest. Your brother comes running at you from behind at a
speed of 2 m/s. At the exact moment he passes you, you start up on your bike with an
acceleration of 2 m/s2.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Draw a picture of the situation, defining the starting positions, speeds, etc.
At what time t do you have the same speed as your brother?
At what time t do you pass your brother?
Draw another picture of the exact moment you catch your brother. Label the drawing
with the positions and speeds at that moment.
e. Sketch a position vs. time graph for both you and your brother, labeling the important
points (i.e., starting point, when you catch him, etc.)
f. Sketch a speed vs. time graph for both you and your brother, labeling the important
points (i.e., starting point, when you catch him, etc.)
13. You are standing at the foot of the Bank of America building in San
Francisco, which is 52 floors (237 m) high. You launch a ball straight up
in the air from the edge of the foot of the building. The initial vertical
speed is 70 m/s. (For this problem, you may ignore your own height,
which is very small compared to the height of the building.)
a.
b.
c.
14. Measure how high you can jump vertically on Earth. Then, figure out how high you would be
able to jump on the Moon, where acceleration due to gravity is 1/6th that of Earth. Assume
you launch upwards with the same speed on the Moon as you do on the Earth.
15. A car is smashed into a wall during Weavervilles July 4th Destruction Derby. The car is
going 25 m/s just before it strikes the wall. It comes to a stop 0.8 seconds later. What is the
average acceleration of the car during the collision?
16. A helicopter is traveling with a velocity of 12 m/s directly
upward. Directly below the helicopter is a very large and
very soft pillow. As it turns out, this is a good thing,
because the helicopter is lifting a large man. When the
man is 20 m above the pillow, he lets go of the rope.
a. What is the speed of the man just before he lands on
the pillow?
b. How long is he in the air after he lets go?
c. What is the greatest height reached by the man above
the ground? (Hint: this should be greater than 20 m.
Why?)
d. What is the distance between the helicopter and the
man three seconds after he lets go of the rope?
Ch 3-5
17. You are speeding towards a brick wall at a speed of 55 MPH. The brick wall is only 100 feet
away.
a.
b.
c.
18. What acceleration should you use to increase your speed from 10 m/s to 18 m/s over a
distance of 55 m?
19. You drop a rock from the top of a cliff. The rock takes 3.5 seconds to reach the bottom.
a. What is the initial speed of the rock?
b. What is the magnitude (i.e. numerical value) of the acceleration of the rock at the
moment it is dropped?
c. What is the magnitude of the acceleration of the rock when it is half-way down the cliff?
d. What is the height of the cliff?
20. An owl is flying along above your farm with positions and velocities given by the formulas
x(t) = 5.0 + 0.5t + ()(0.3)t2
v(t) = 0.5 + (0.3)t
0.0 s
5m
.5 m/s
1.0 s
5.65 m
.8 m/s
2.0 s
6.6 m
1.1 m/s
3.0 s
4.0 s
5.0 s
6.0 s
7.0 s
8.0 s
9.0 s
10.0 s
Ch 3-6
d. Plot the x and t points on the following graph. Then, connect your points with a smoothly
curving line. Be careful and neat and use pencil.
32 m
2m
10 s
1s
e. Use the formula to calculate the speed of the owl in m/s at t = 5 seconds.
f. Lightly draw in a tangent to your curve at the t = 5 s point. Then, measure the slope of
this tangent by measuring the rise (in meters) and the run (in seconds). What is the slope
in m/s?
g. Were your answers to the last two parts the same? If so, why? If not, why not?
h. Fill in the following table. This is going to be harder to do, because you are given x or v
and are expected to find t. You may have to use the quadratic formula!
t
v
2.6 m/s
17.1 m
3.14 m/s
31.4 m
5.41 m/s
Ch 3-7
21. For each of the following graphs, write a few sentences about what kind of motions were
made. Try to use the words we have defined in class (speed, velocity, position, acceleration)
in your description.
position
a.
time
position
b.
time
position
c.
time
velocity
d.
time
Ch 3-8
Note: the initial velocity v0 can be separated into v0x = v0cos and v0y = v0sin, where is the
angle between the velocity vector and the horizontal.
Key Concepts
In projectile motion, the horizontal displacement of an object is called its range.
At the top of its flight, the vertical speed of an object in projectile motion is zero.
To work these problems, separate the Big Three equations into two sets (as shown
above): one set for the y-direction (vertical direction), and one set for the x-direction
(horizontal direction). The x-direction and y-direction dont talk to each other. They
are separate dimensions. Keep them separate.
The only variable that can go into both sets of equations is time. The time is the same for
the two directions.
Since, in the absence of air resistance, there is no acceleration in the x-direction, the
velocity in the x-direction does not change over time. This is a counter-intuitive notion
for many. (Air resistance will cause the x-velocity to decrease slightly or significantly
depending on the object. But this factor is ignored for the time being.)
The y-direction motion must include the acceleration due to gravity, and therefore the
velocity in the y-direction changes over time.
The shape of the path of an object undergoing projectile motion is a parabola.
We will ignore air resistance in this chapter. Air resistance will tend to shorten the range
of the projectile motion by virtue of producing an acceleration opposite to the direction of
motion.
Ch 4-1
2. Decide if each of the statements below is True or False. Then, explain your reasoning.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
3. Imagine the path of a soccer ball in projectile motion. Which of the following is true at the
highest point in its flight?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
vx
vx
vx
vx
vx
= 0, vy
> 0, vy
= 0, vy
> 0, vy
= 0, vy
= 0, ax
= 0, ax
= 0, ax
= 0, ax
> 0, ax
= 0, and ay
= 0, and ay
= 0, and ay
= 0, and ay
= 0, and ay
=0
=0
= 9.8 m/s2
= 9.8 m/s2
= 9.8 m/s2
4. A hunter with an air blaster gun is preparing to shoot at a monkey hanging from a tree. He is
pointing his gun directly at the monkey. The monkeys got to think quickly! What is the
monkeys best chance to avoid being smacked by the rubber ball?
a.
b.
c.
d.
The monkey should stay right where he is: the bullet will pass beneath him due to
gravity.
The monkey should let go when the hunter fires. Since the gun is pointing right at him,
he can avoid getting hit by falling to the ground.
The monkey should stay right where he is: the bullet will sail above him since its vertical
velocity increases by 9.8 m/s every second of flight.
The monkey should let go when the hunter fires. He will fall faster than the bullet due to
his greater mass, and it will fly over his head.
Ch 4-2
5. You are riding your bike in a straight line with a speed of 10 m/s. You accidentally drop your
calculator out of your backpack from a height of 2.0 m above the ground. When it hits the
ground, where is the calculator in relation to the position of your backpack? (Neglect Air
resistance.)
a.
b.
c.
d.
6. A ball of mass m is moving horizontally with speed vo off a cliff of height h, as shown. How
much time does it take the rock to travel from the edge of the cliff to the ground?
a.
hvo
b.
h / vo
c.
hvo / g
2h / g
d.
e.
vo
h
2h / g
c.
d=?
v = 52 m/s
20
30
vx = ?
12 m
vx = 8 m/s
14 m
b.
d.
?
12 m
vy = ?
vy = 12 m/s
v=?
Ch 4-3
8. Draw in the x- and y-velocity components for each dot along the path of the cannonball. The
first one is done for you.
vy
vx
9. A stone is thrown horizontally at a speed of 8.0 m/s from the edge of a cliff 80 m in height.
How far from the base of the cliff will the stone strike the ground?
10. A toy truck moves off the edge of a table that is 1.25 m high and lands 0.40 m from the base
of the table.
a.
b.
How much time passed between the moment the car left the table and the moment it hit
the floor?
What was the horizontal velocity of the car when it hit the ground?
11. A hawk in level flight 135 m above the ground drops the fish it caught. If the hawks
horizontal speed is 20.0 m/s, how far ahead of the drop point will the fish land?
12. A pistol is fired horizontally toward a target 120 m away but at the same height. The bullets
velocity is 200 m/s. How long does it take the bullet to get to the target? How far below the
target does the bullet hit?
13. A bird, traveling at 20 m/s, wants to hit
a waiter 10 m below with his dropping
(see image). In order to hit the waiter,
the bird must release his dropping
some distance before he is directly
overhead. What is this distance?
20 m/s
10 m
Ch 4-4
14. Jeff Chandler of the San Francisco 49ers kicked a field goal with an initial velocity of 20 m/s
at an angle of 60.
a.
b.
How long is the ball in the air? Hint: you may assume that the ball lands at same height
as it starts at.
What are the range and maximum height of the ball?
15. A racquetball thrown from the ground at an angle of 45 and with a speed of 22.5 m/s lands
exactly 2.5 s later on the top of a nearby building. Calculate the horizontal distance it traveled
and the height of the building.
16. Donovan McNabb throws a football. He throws it with an initial velocity of 30 m/s at an
angle of 25. How much time passes until the ball travels 35 m horizontally? What is the
height of the ball after 0.5 seconds? (Assume that, when thrown, the ball is 2 m above the
ground).
17. Pedro Feliz throws a baseball with a horizontal component of velocity of 25 m/s. After 2
seconds, the ball is 40 m above the ground. Calculate the horizontal distance it has traveled
by this time, its initial vertical component of velocity, and its initial angle of projection. Also,
is the ball on the way up or the way down at this moment in time?
18. Barry Bonds hits a 125 m (450) home run that lands in the stands at an altitude 30 m above
its starting altitude. Assuming that the ball left the bat at an angle of 45 from the horizontal,
calculate how long the ball was in the air.
19. A golfer can drive a ball with an initial speed of 40.0 m/s. If the tee and the green are
separated by 100 m, but are on the same level, at what angle should the ball be driven? (Hint:
you should use 2cos(x)sin(x) = sin(2x) at some point.)
20. How long will it take a bullet fired from a cliff at an initial velocity of 700 m/s, at an angle
30 below the horizontal, to reach the ground 200 m below?
21. A diver in Hawaii is jumping off a cliff 45 m high, but she notices that there is an
outcropping of rocks 7 m out at the base. So, she must clear a horizontal distance of 7 m
during the dive in order to survive. Assuming the diver jumps horizontally, what is his/her
minimum push-off speed?
22. If Jason Richardson can jump 1.0 m high on Earth, how high can he jump on the moon
assuming same initial velocity that he had on Earth (where gravity is 1/6 that of Earths
gravity)?
Ch 4-5
23. James Bond is trying to jump from a helicopter into a speeding Corvette to capture the bad
guy. The car is going 30.0 m/s and the helicopter is flying completely horizontally at 100 m/s.
The helicopter is 120 m above the car and 440 m behind the car. How long must James Bond
wait to jump in order to safely make it into the car?
100 m/s
120 m
30 m/s
440 m
3m
40 m
25. In a football game a punter kicks the ball a horizontal distance of 43 yards (39 m). On TV,
they track the hang time, which reads 3.9 seconds. From this information, calculate the angle
and speed at which the ball was kicked.
(Note for non-football watchers: the projectile starts and lands at the same height. It goes 43
yards horizontally in a time of 3.9 seconds)
Ch 4-6
To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction: or, the mutual
actions of two bodies upon each other are always equal, and directed to
contrary parts.
Key Concepts
An object will not change its state of motion (i.e., accelerate) unless an unbalanced force
acts on it. Equal and oppositely directed forces do not produce acceleration.
If no unbalanced force acts on an object the object remains at constant velocity or at rest.
The force of gravity is called weight and equals mg, where g is the acceleration due to
gravity of the planet (g = 9.8 m/s2, downward, on Earth).
Your mass does not change when you move to other planets, because mass is a measure
of how much matter your body contains, and not how much gravitational force you feel.
To calculate the net force on an object, you need to calculate all the individual forces
acting on the object and then add them as vectors. This requires some mathematical skill.
Newtons 3rd Law states for every force there is an equal but opposite reaction force. To
distinguish a third law pair from merely oppositely directed pairs is difficult but very
important. Third law pairs must obey three rules: they must be of the same type of force,
Ch 5-1
they are exerted on two different objects and they are equal in magnitude and oppositely
directed. Example: A block sits on a table. The Earths gravity on the block and the
force of the table on the block are equal and opposite. But these are not third law pairs,
because they are both on the same object and the forces are of different types. The proper
third law pairs are: (1) earths gravity on block/blocks gravity on earth and (2) table
pushes on block/ block pushes on table.
If youre asked to evaluate a vector, you may state the x and y components of the vector,
or a magnitude and an angle with respect to the horizontal.
Key Equations
a = Fnet / m
FN
Fsp = k(x)
FT
f s sFN
f k = kFN
Ultimately, many of these contact forces are due to attractive and repulsive electromagnetic forces
between atoms in materials.
Ch 5-2
Ch 5-3
c. Consider making a second FBD to do this component work, so that your first FBD doesn't get
too messy.
5. Add up all the x-forces and x-components.
a. Remember that all the rightward forces add with a plus (+) sign, and that all the leftward
forces add with a minus () sign.
b. Don't forget about the x-components of any forces that are at an angle!
c. When you've added them all up, call this "the sum of all x forces" or "the net force in the xdirection."
6. Add up all the y-forces and y-components.
a. Remember that all the upward forces add with a (+) sign, all the downward forces add with a
() sign.
b. Don't forget about the y-components of any forces that are at an angle!
c. When you've added them all up, call this "the sum of all y forces" or "net force in the ydirection"
7. Use Newton's Laws twice.
a. The sum of all x-forces, divided by the mass, is the object's acceleration in the x-direction.
b. The sum of all y-forces, divided by the mass, is the object's acceleration in the y-direction.
c. If you happen to know that the acceleration in the x-direction or y-direction is zero (say the
object is just sitting on a table), then you can plug this in to Newtons 2nd Law directly.
d. If you happen to know the acceleration, you can plug this in directly too.
8. Each body should have a FBD.
a. Draw a separate FBD for each body.
b. Set up a f = ma equation based on the FBD for each body.
c. Newtons Third Law will tell you which forces on different bodies are the same in
magnitude.
d. Your equations should equal your unknown variables at this point.
Ch 5-4
10. Explain the normal force in terms of the microscopic forces between molecules in a surface.
11. A stone with a mass of 10 kg is sitting on the ground, not moving.
a. What is the weight of the stone?
b. What is the normal force acting on the stone?
12. The stone from the last question is now being pulled horizontally along the ground at constant
speed in the positive x direction. Is there a net force on the stone?
13. A spring with spring constant k = 400 N/m has an uncompressed length of 0.23 m. When
fully compressed, it has a length of 0.15 m. What force is required to fully compress the
spring?
Ch 5-5
14. Measuring velocity is hard: for instance, can you tell how fast youre going around the Sun
right now? Measuring acceleration is comparatively easy you can feel accelerations.
Heres a clever way to determine your acceleration. As you accelerate your car on a flat
stretch, you notice that the fuzzy dice hanging from your rearview mirror are no longer
hanging straight up and down. In fact, they are making a 30 angle with respect to the
vertical. What is your acceleration? (Hint: Draw a FBD. Consider both x and y equations.)
17. Break the force vector F on the right into its x and y
components, Fx and Fy.
y
25 N
55o
Ch 5-6
18. For both figures below, find the net force and its direction (i.e., the magnitude of F = F 1 + F2
and the angle it makes with the x-axis). Draw in F.
F1 = 30 N
15
F2 = 30 N
30
F1 = 30 N
30
20
F2 = 30 N
19. Andreas and Kaya are pulling a wagon. Andreas is pulling with a force of 50 N towards the
northeast. Kaya is pulling with a force of 50 N towards the southeast. The wagon has a mass
of 23 kg. What are the acceleration and direction of motion of the wagon?
20. Laura and Alan are pulling a wagon. Laura is pulling with a force of 50 N towards the
northeast. Alan is pulling with a force of 50 N directly east. The wagon has a mass of 23 kg.
What are the acceleration and direction of motion of the wagon?
Ch 5-7
23. The man is hanging from a rope wrapped around a pulley and
attached to both of his shoulders. The pulley is fixed to the wall. The
rope is designed to hold 500 N of weight; at higher tension, it will
break. Lets say he has a mass of 80 kg. Draw a free body diagram
and explain (using Newtons Laws) whether or not the rope will
break.
24. Now the man ties one end of the rope to the ground and is
held up by the other. Does the rope break in this situation?
What precisely is the difference between this problem and the
one before?
25. For a boy who weighs 500 N on Earth what are his mass
and weight on the moon (where g = 1.6 m/s2)?
26. A woman of mass 70.0 kg weighs herself in an elevator.
a. If she wants to weigh less, should she weigh herself
when accelerating upward or downward?
b. When the elevator is not accelerating, what does the
scale read (i.e. what is the normal force that the scale
exerts on the woman)?
c. When the elevator is accelerating upward at 2.00
m/s2, what does the scale read?
27. A crane is lowering a box of mass 50 kg with an
acceleration of 2.0 m/s2.
a. Find the tension FT in the cable.
b. If the crane lowers the box at a
constant speed, what is the tension
FT in the cable?
28. The large box on the table is 30 kg and
is connected via a rope and pulley to a
smaller 10 kg box, which is hanging.
The 10 kg mass is the highest mass
you can hang without moving the box
on the table. Find the coefficient of
static friction S.
Ch 5-8
40
70
31. The physics professor holds an eraser up
against a wall by pushing it directly against the
wall with a completely horizontal force of 20 N.
The eraser has a mass of 0.5 kg. The wall has
coefficients of friction S = 0.8 and K = 0.6.
a. Draw a free body diagram for the eraser.
b. What is the normal force FN acting on the
eraser?
c. What is the frictional force FS equal to?
d. What is the maximum mass m the eraser could
have and still not fall down?
e. What would happen if the wall and eraser
were both frictionless?
Ch 5-9
32. A tractor of mass 580 kg accelerates up a 10 incline from rest to a speed of 10 m/s in 4 s. For
all of answers below, provide a magnitude and a direction
a. What net force Fnet has
been applied to the
tractor?
b. What is the normal
force, FN on the tractor?
c. What is the force of
gravity Fg on the
tractor?
d. What force has been
applied to the tractor so
that it moves uphill?
e. What is the source of
this force?
Ch 5-10
34. For the following situation, identify the 3rd law force pairs on the associated free body
diagrams. Label each member of one pair A, each member of the next pair B, and so on.
The spring is stretched so that it is pulling the block of wood to the right.
FN
wall
Fspring
Ffriction
Fspring
block o
wood
Fg
Ffriction
Fg
Earth
FN
Draw free body diagrams for the situation below. Notice that we are pulling the bottom block
out from beneath the top block. There is friction between the blocks! After you have drawn
your FBDs, identify the 3rd law force pairs, as above.
wall
lil
guy
block o
wood
Earth
Ch 5-11
35. Spinal implant problem this is a real life bio-med engineering problem!
Heres the situation: both springs are compressed by an amount xo. The rod of length L is fixed to
both the top plate and the bottom plate. The two springs, each with spring constant k, are wrapped
around the rod on both sides of the middle plate but are free to move, because they are not
attached to the rod or the plates. The middle plate has negligible mass, and is constrained in its
motion by the compression forces of the top and bottom springs.
The medical implementation of this device is to screw the top plate to one vertebrae and the
middle plate to the vertebrae directly below. The bottom plate is suspended in space. Instead of
fusing broken vertebrates together, this implant allows movement somewhat analogous to the
natural movement of functioning vertebrae. Below you will do the exact calculations that an
engineer did to get this device patented and available for use at hospitals.
a. Find the force, F, on the middle plate for the region of its movement x xo . Give your
answer in terms of the constants given. (Hint: In this region both springs are providing
opposite compression forces.)
b. Find the force, F, on the middle plate for the region of its movement x xo . Give your
answer in terms of the constants given. (Hint: In this region, only one spring is in contact
with the middle plate.)
c. Graph F vs. x. Label the values for force for the transition region in terms of the constants
given.
Ch 5-12
36. You design a mechanism for lifting boxes up an inclined plane by using a vertically hanging
mass to pull them, as shown in the figure below.
The pulley at the top of the incline is massless and frictionless. The larger mass, M, is
accelerating downward with a measured acceleration a. The smaller masses are mA and mB ;
the angle of the incline is , and the coefficient of kinetic friction between each of the masses
and the incline has been measured and determined to be K.
a. Draw free body diagrams for each of the three masses.
b. Calculate the magnitude of the frictional force on each of the smaller masses in terms of
the given quantities.
c. Calculate the net force on the hanging mass in terms of the given quantities.
d. Calculate the magnitudes of the two tension forces TA and TB in terms of the given
quantities.
e. Design and state a strategy for solving for how long it will take the larger mass to hit the
ground, assuming at this moment it is at a height h above the ground. Do not attempt to
solve this: simply state the strategy for solving it.
Ch 5-13
37. You build a device for lifting objects, as shown below. A rope is attached to the ceiling and
two masses are allowed to hang from it. The end of the rope passes around a pulley (right)
where you can pull it downward to lift the two objects upward. The angles of the ropes,
measured with respect to the vertical, are shown. Assume the bodies are at rest initially.
25
30
TA
TC
TB
m1
m2
a. Suppose you are able to measure the masses m1 and m2 of the two hanging objects as well
as the tension TC. Do you then have enough information to determine the other two
tensions, TA and TB? Explain your reasoning.
b. If you only knew the tensions TA and TC, would you have enough information to
determine the masses m1 and m2? If so, write m1 and m2 in terms of TA and TC. If not,
what further information would you require?
38. A stunt driver is approaching a cliff at very
high speed. Sensors in his car have measured
the acceleration and velocity of the car, as well
as all forces acting on it, for various times.
The drivers motion can be broken down into
the following steps:
Step 1: The driver, beginning at rest, accelerates his car on a horizontal road for ten
seconds. Sensors show that there is a force in the direction of motion of 6000 N, but
additional forces acting in the opposite direction with magnitude 1000 N. The mass
of the car is 1250 kg.
Step 2: Approaching the cliff, the driver takes his foot of the gas pedal (There is no further
force in the direction of motion.) and brakes, increasing the force opposing motion
from 1000 N to 2500 N. This continues for five seconds until he reaches the cliff.
Step 3: The driver flies off the cliff, which is 44.1 m high, and begins projectile motion.
a. Ignoring air resistance, how long is the stunt driver in the air?
b. For Step 1:
i.
Draw a free body diagram, naming all the forces on the car.
ii. Calculate the magnitude of the net force.
iii. Find the change in velocity over the stated time period.
iv. Make a graph of velocity in the x-direction vs. time over the stated time period.
v. Calculate the distance the driver covered in the stated time period. Do this by
finding the area under the curve in your graph of (iv). Then, check your result by
using the equations for kinematics.
c. Repeat (b) for Step 2.
d. Calculate the distance that the stunt driver should land from the bottom of the cliff.
Ch 5-14
39. You are pulling open a stuck drawer with an electronic device that measures force. You
measure the following behavior. The drawer has a weight of 7 N.
Force
3.2 N
2.6 N
time
41. A tug of war erupts between you and your sweetie. Assume your mass is 60 kg and the
coefficient of friction between your feet and the ground is 0.5 (good shoes). Your sweeties
mass is 85 kg and the coefficient of friction between his/her feet and the ground is 0.35
(socks). Who is going to win? Explain, making use of a calculation.
42. A block has a little block hanging out to its side, as shown:
As you know, if the situation is left like this, the little block will just fall. But if we accelerate
the leftmost block to the right, this will create a normal force between the little block and the
big block, and if there is a coefficient of friction between them, then the little block wont
slide down.
a. The mass of the little block is 0.15 kg. What frictional force is required to keep it from
falling? (State a magnitude and direction.)
b. If both blocks are accelerating to the right with an acceleration a = 14.0 m/s2, what is the
normal force on the little block provided by the big block?
c. What is the minimum coefficient of static friction required?
Ch 5-15
Ch 5-16
FG = Gm1m2 / r 2
Key Concepts
v
An orbital period, T, is the time it takes to make one
complete rotation.
If a particle travels a distance 2r in an amount of
FC, a
time T, then its speed is distance over time or 2r/T.
An object moving in a circle has an instantaneous
velocity vector tangential to the circle of its path.
The force and acceleration vectors point to the center
of the circle.
Net force and acceleration always have the same
direction.
Centripetal acceleration is just the acceleration
provided by centripetal forces.
Geosynchronous orbit is when a satellite completes one orbit of the Earth every 24 hours,
staying above the same spot on Earth.
Ch 6-1
Key Applications
To find the maximum speed that a car can take a corner on a flat road without skidding
out, set the force of friction equal to the centripetal force.
To find the tension in the rope of a swinging pendulum, remember that it is the sum of the
tension and gravity that produces a net upward centripetal force. A common mistake is
just setting the centripetal force equal to the tension.
To find the speed of a planet or satellite in an orbit, set the force of gravity equal to the
centripetal force.
Ch 6-2
2. You buy new tires for your car in order to take turns a little faster (uh, not advised always
drive slowly). The new tires double your coefficient of friction with the road. With the old
tires you could take a particular turn at a speed vo. What is the maximum speed you can now
take the turn without skidding out?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
4vo
2vo
vo
2vo
Straight upwards
Straight downwards
Directly right
Directly left
It will stop
Ch 6-3
6. Suppose you are spinning a child around in a circle by her arms . The radius of her orbit
around you is 1 meter. Her speed is 1 m/s. Her mass is 25 kg.
a. What is the tension in your arms?
b. In her arms?
7. A racecar is traveling at a speed of 80.0 m/s on a circular racetrack of radius 450 m.
a.
b.
c.
8. The radius of the Earth is 6380 km. Calculate the velocity of a person standing at the equator
due to the Earths 24 hour rotation. Calculate the centripetal acceleration of this person and
express it as a fraction of the acceleration g due to gravity. Is there any danger of flying
off?
9. Neutron stars are the corpses of stars left over after supernova explosions. They are the size
of a small city, but can spin several times per second. (Try to imagine this in your head.)
Consider a neutron star of radius 10 km that spins with a period of 0.8 seconds. Imagine a
person is standing at the equator of this neutron star.
a.
b.
Calculate the centripetal acceleration of this person and express it as a multiple of the
acceleration g due to gravity (on Earth).
Now, find the minimum acceleration due to gravity that the neutron star must have in
order to keep the person from flying off.
10. Calculate the force of gravity between the Sun and the Earth. (The relevant data are included
in Appendix B.)
Ch 6-4
11. Calculate the force of gravity between two human beings, assuming that each has a mass of
80 kg and that they are standing 1 m apart. Is this a large force?
12. Prove g is approximately 10 m/s2 on Earth by following these steps:
a.
b.
Calculate the force of gravity between a falling object (for example an apple) and that of
Earth. Use the symbol mo to represent the mass of the falling object.
Now divide that force by the objects mass to find the acceleration g of the object.
13. Our Milky Way galaxy is orbited by a few hundred globular clusters of stars, some of the
most ancient objects in the universe. Globular cluster M13 is orbiting at a distance of 26,000
light-years (one light-year is 9.461015 m) and has an orbital period of 220 million years. The
mass of the cluster is 106 times the mass of the Sun.
a.
b.
c.
What is the amount of centripetal force required to keep this cluster in orbit?
What is the source of this force?
Based on this information, what is the mass of our galaxy? If you assume that the galaxy
contains nothing but Solar-mass stars (each with an approximate mass of 21030 kg),
how many stars are in our galaxy?
14. Calculate the centripetal acceleration of the Earth around the Sun.
15. You are speeding around a turn of radius 30.0
m at a constant speed of 15.0 m/s.
a.
b.
16. Calculate the gravitational force that your pencil or pen pulls on you. Use the center of your
chest as the center of mass (and thus the mark for the distance measurement) and estimate all
masses and distances.
a.
b.
If there were no other forces present, what would your acceleration be towards your
pencil? Is this a large or small acceleration?
Why, in fact, doesnt your pencil accelerate towards you?
17. A digital TV satellite is placed in geosynchronous orbit around Earth, so it is always in the
same spot in the sky.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Using the fact that the satellite will have the same period of revolution as Earth,
calculate the radius of its orbit.
What is the ratio of the radius of this orbit to the radius of the Earth?
Draw a sketch, to scale, of the Earth and the orbit of this digital TV satellite.
If the mass of the satellite were to double, would the radius of the satellites orbit be
larger, smaller, or the same? Why?
Ch 6-5
18. A top secret spy satellite is designed to orbit the Earth twice each day (i.e., twice as fast as the
Earths rotation). What is the height of this orbit above the Earths surface?
19. Two stars with masses 3.001031 kg and 7.001030 kg are orbiting each other under the
influence of each others gravity. We want to send a satellite in between them to study their
behavior. However, the satellite needs to be at a point where the gravitational forces from the
two stars are equal. The distance between the two stars is 2.01010 m. Find the distance from
the more massive star to where the satellite should be placed. (Hint: distance from the
satellite to one of the stars is the variable.)
20. Calculate the mass of the Earth using only: (i) Newtons Universal Law of Gravity; (ii) the
Moon-Earth distance (Appendix B); and (iii) the fact that it takes the Moon 27 days to orbit
the Earth.
21. A student comes up to you and says, I can visualize the force of tension, the force of friction,
and the other forces, but I cant visualize centripetal force. As you know, a centripetal force
must be provided by tension, friction, or some other familiar force. Write a two or three
sentence explanation, in your own words, to help the confused student.
22. A space station was established far from the
gravitational field of Earth. Extended stays in
zero gravity are not healthy for human beings.
Thus, for the comfort of the astronauts, the
station is rotated so that the astronauts feel
there is an internal gravity. The rotation speed
is such that the apparent acceleration of
gravity is 9.8 m/s2. The direction of rotation is
counter-clockwise.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Ch 6-6
p = mv
F = p/t
pi = pf
The momentum vector points in the same direction as the velocity vector, but
its length depends on both the mass and the speed of the object. To get the
magnitude, just multiple the mass by the speed.
Note that p/t = mv/t = ma. This is just Newtons 2nd Law!
The sum of all the momenta before a collision equals the sum of all the
momenta after the collision. When adding up momenta, be sure to add
them as vectors, and to include all the objects in the system.
Key Concepts
Momentum is a vector that points in the direction of the velocity vector. The magnitude
of this vector is the product of mass and speed.
The total momentum of the universe is always the same and is equal to zero. The total
momentum of an isolated system never changes.
Momentum can be transferred from one body to another. In an isolated system in which
momentum is transferred internally, the total initial momentum is the same as the total
final momentum.
Momentum conservation is especially important in collisions, where the total momentum
just before the collision is the same as the total momentum after the collision.
The force imparted on an object is equal to the change in momentum divided by the time
interval over which the objects are in contact.
Internal forces are forces for which both Newtons 3rd Law force pairs are contained
within the system. For example, consider a two-car head-on collision. Define the system
Ch 7-1
as just the two cars. In this case, internal forces include that of the fenders pushing on
each other, the contact forces between the bolts, washers, and nuts in the engines, etc.
External forces are forces that act on the system from outside. In our previous example,
external forces include the force of gravity acting on both cars (because the other part of
the force pair, the pull of gravity the Earth experiences coming from the cars, is not
included in the system) and the forces of friction between the tires and the road.
If there are no external forces acting on a system of objects, the initial momentum of the
system will be the same as the final momentum of the system. Otherwise, the final
momentum will change by p = Ft. We call a change in momentum, p, an impulse.
Key Applications
Two cars collide head-on two subatomic particles collide in an accelerator a bird
slams into a glass office building: all of these are examples of one-dimensional (straight
line) collisions. For these, pay extra attention to direction: define one direction as positive
and the other as negative, and be sure everybody gets the right sign.
A firecracker in mid-air explodes two children push off each other on roller skates
an atomic nucleus breaks apart during a radioactive decay: all of these are examples of
disintegration problems. The initial momentum beforehand is zero, so the final
momentum afterwards must also be zero.
A spacecraft burns off momentum by colliding with air molecules as it descends hail
stones pummel the top of your car a wet rag is thrown at and sticks to the wall: all of
these are examples of impulse problems, where the change in momentum of one object
and the reaction to the applied force are considered. What is important here is the rate:
you need to come up with an average time t that the collision(s) last so that you can
figure out the force F = p/t. Remember as well that if a particle has momentum p, and
it experiences an impulse that turns it around completely, with new momentum p, then
the total change in momentum has magnitude 2p. It is harder to turn something totally
around than just to stop it!
A car going south collides with a second car going east an inflatable ball is thrown
into the flow of a waterfall a billiard ball strikes two others, sending all three off in
new directions: these are all examples of two-dimensional (planar) collisions. For these,
you get a break: the sum of all the momenta in the x direction have to remain unchanged
before and after the collision independent of any y momenta, and vice-versa. This is a
similar concept to the one we used in projectile motion. Motions in different directions
are independent of each other.
Momenta vectors add just like any other vectors. Refer to the addition of vectors material
in Chapter 1.
Ch 7-2
2. You jump off of the top of your house and hope to land on a wooden deck below. Consider
the following possible outcomes:
I.
You hit the deck, but it isnt wood! A camouflaged trampoline slows you down over a
time period of 0.2 seconds and sends you flying back up into the air.
II. You hit the deck with your knees locked in a straight-legged position. The collision time
is 0.01 seconds.
III. You hit the deck and bend your legs, lengthening the collision time to 0.2 seconds.
IV. You hit the deck, but it isnt wood! It is simply a piece of paper painted to look like a
deck. Below is an infinite void and you continue to fall, forever.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Ch 7-3
5. You punch the wall with your fist. Clearly your fist has momentum before it hits the wall. It
is equally clear that after hitting the wall, your fist has no momentum. But momentum is
always conserved! Explain.
6. An astronaut is using a drill to fix the gyroscopes on the Hubble telescope. Suddenly, she
loses her footing and floats away from the telescope. What should she do to save herself?
7. You look up one morning and see that a 30 kg chunk of asbestos from your ceiling is falling
on you! Would you be better off if the chunk hit you and stuck to your forehead, or if it hit
you and bounced upward? Explain your answer.
8. A 5.00 kg firecracker explodes into two parts: one part has a mass of 3.00 kg and moves at a
velocity of 25.0 m/s towards the west. The other part has a mass of 2.00 kg. What is the
velocity of the second piece as a result of the explosion?
9. A firecracker lying on the ground explodes, breaking into two pieces. One piece has twice
the mass of the other. What is the ratio of their speeds?
10. You throw your 6.0 kg skateboard down the street, giving it a speed of 4.0 m/s. Your friend,
the Frog, jumps on your skateboard from rest as it passes by. Frog has a mass of 60 kg.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Ch 7-4
14. An astronaut is 100 m away from her spaceship doing repairs with a 10.0 kg wrench. The
astronauts total mass is 90.0 kg and the ship has a mass of 1.00 x 104 kg.
If she throws the wrench in the opposite direction of the spaceship at 10.0 m/s how long
would it take for her to reach the ship?
15. A place kicker applies an average force of 2400 N to a football of .040 kg The force is
applied at an angle of 20.0 degrees from the horizontal. Contact time is .010 sec.
a. Find the velocity the ball upon leaving the foot.
b. Assuming no air resistance find the time to reach the goal posts 40.0 m away.
c. The posts are 4.00 m high. Is the kick good? by how much?
9 kg
0 m/s
2 kg
3 m/s
4 kg
2 m/s
16. In the above picture, the carts are moving on a level, frictionless track. After the collision all
three carts stick together. Determine the direction and speed of the combined carts after the
collision. (Assume 3-significant digit accuracy.)
17. Your authors Italian cousin crashed into a
tree. He was originally going 35 km/hr.
Assume it took 0.4 seconds for the tree to
bring him to a stop. The mass of the cousin
and the car is 450 kg.
a. What average force did he experience?
Include a direction in your answer.
b. What average force did the tree
experience? Include a direction in your
answer.
c. Express this force in pounds.
d. How many gs of acceleration did he
experience?
Ch 7-5
18. The train engine and its four boxcars are coasting at 40 m/s. The engine train has mass of
5,500 kg and the boxcars have masses, from left to right, of 1,000 kg, 1,500 kg, 2,000 kg, and
3,000 kg. (For this problem, you may neglect the small external forces of friction and air
resistance.)
a. What happens to the speed of the train when it releases the last boxcar? (Hint: think
before you blindly calculate.)
b. If the train can shoot boxcars backwards at 30 m/s relative to the trains speed, how many
boxcars does the train need to shoot out in order to obtain a speed of 58.75 m/s?
Ch 7-6
20. Zorans spacecraft, with mass 12,000 kg, is traveling to space. The structure and capsule of
the craft have a mass of 2,000 kg; the rest is fuel. The rocket shoots out 0.10 kg/s of fuel
particles with a velocity of 700 m/s with respect to the craft.
a. What is the acceleration of the rocket in the first second?
b. What is the average acceleration of the rocket during the first ten minutes have passed?
21. In Sacramento a 4000 kg SUV is traveling 30 m/s south on Truxel crashes into an empty
school bus, 7000 kg traveling east on San Juan. The collision is perfectly inelastic.
a. Find the velocity of the wreck just after collision
b. Find the direction in which the wreck initially moves
22. A 3 kg ball is moving 2 m/s in the positive xdirection when it is struck dead center by a 2
kg ball moving in the positive y-direction.
After collision the 3 kg ball moves at 1 m/s 30
degrees from the positive x-axis.
a. To 2-significant digit accuracy fill out the
following table:
3 kg ball px
3 kg ball py
2 kg ball px
2 kg ball py
Momentum
before
Momentum after
collision
b. Find the velocity and direction of the 2 kg ball.
c. Use the table to prove momentum is conserved.
d. Prove that kinetic energy is not conserved.
Peoples Physics Book
Ch 7-7
23. Students are doing an experiment on the lab table. A steel ball is rolled down a small
ramp and allowed to hit the floor. Its impact point is carefully marked. Next a second
ball of the same mass is put upon a set screw and a collision takes place such that both
balls go off at an angle and hit the floor. All measurements are taken with a meter stick
on the floor with a co-ordinate system such that just below the impact point is the origin.
The following data is collected:
(1) no collision: 41.2 cm
(2) target ball: 37.3 cm in the direction of motion and 14.1 cm perpendicular to the
direction of motion
a. From this data predict the impact position of the other ball
b. One of the lab groups declares that the data on the floor alone demonstrate to a 2%
accuracy that the collision was elastic. Show their reasoning.
c. Another lab group says they cant make that determination without knowing the
velocity the balls have on impact. They ask for a timer. The instructor says you dont
need one; use your meter stick. Explain.
d. Design an experiment to prove momentum conservation with balls of different
masses, giving apparatus, procedure and design. Give some sample numbers.
Ch 7-8
When any two bodies in the universe interact, they can exchange energy, momentum or both.
The law of conservation of energy states that in any closed system (including the universe) the total
quantity of energy remains fixed. Energy is transferred from one form to another but none is lost or
gained. If energy is put into a system from the outside or vice versa it is often in the form of work,
which is a transfer of energy between bodies. (Calculated as force times displacement, provided the
force is in the direction of displacement)
The law of conservation of momentum states that in any closed system (including the universe) the
total quantity of momentum is invariant. Momentum can be transferred from one body to another but
none is lost or gained. If a system has its momentum changed from the outside it is caused by an
impulse, which transfers momentum from one body to another. (Calculated as force multiplied by
time of impact)
Key Equations
J = Nm = kgm/s
K = mv 2
Ug = mgh
Usp = k(x)2
W = FX x
P = E/t
J = p = Ft
ptot,initial = ptot,final
Ch 8-1
Key Concepts
Impulse is how momentum is transferred from one system to another. You can always
determine the impulse by finding the changes in momentum, which are done by forces
acting over a period of time. If you graph force vs. time of impact the area under the
curve is the impulse.
Work is simply how much energy was transferred from one system to another system.
You can always find the work done on an object (or done by an object) by determining
how much energy has been transferred into or out of the object through forces. If you
graph force vs. distance the area under the curve is work. (The semantics take some
getting used to: if you do work on me, then you have lost energy and I have gained
energy.)
Key Applications
When working a problem that asks for height or speed, energy conservation is almost
always the easiest approach.
Potential energy of gravity, Ug, is always measured with respect to some arbitrary zero
height defined to be where the gravitational potential energy is zero. You can set this
height equal to zero at any altitude you like. Be consistent with your choice throughout
the problem. Often it is easiest to set it to zero at the lowest point in the problem.
When using the equation Etot,initial = Etot,final to solve a problem, it is important to know
which side of the equation the kinetic and potential energy, work, heat, etc., go on. To
figure this out, think about what kind of energy the person or object had in the beginning
(initial) and what kind it had in the end (final).
Some problems require you to use both energy conservation and momentum
conservation. Remember, in every collision, momentum is conserved. Kinetic energy, on
the other hand, is not always conserved, since some kinetic energy may be lost to heat.
If a system involves no energy losses due to heat or sound, no change in potential energy
and no work is done by anybody to anybody else, then kinetic energy is conserved.
Collisions where this occurs are called elastic. In elastic collisions, both kinetic energy
and momentum are conserved. In inelastic collisions kinetic energy is not conserved;
only momentum is conserved.
Sometimes energy is lost when crushing an object. For instance, if you throw silly
putty against a wall, much of the energy goes into flattening the silly putty (changing
intermolecular bonds). Treat this as lost energy, similar to sound, chemical changes, or
heat. In an inelastic collision, things stick, energy is lost, and so kinetic energy is not
conserved.
When calculating work, use the component of the force that is in the same direction as
the motion. Components of force perpendicular to the direction of the motion dont do
work. (Note that centripetal forces never do work, since they are always perpendicular to
the direction of motion.)
When calculating impulse the time to use is when the force is in contact with the body.
Ch 8-2
2. A rock with mass m is dropped from a cliff of height h. What is its speed when it gets to the
bottom of the cliff?
a.
mg
b.
2g
h
2gh
c.
d.
e.
gh
None of the above
3. Two cats, Felix and Meekwad, collide. Felix has a mass of 2 kg and an initial velocity of 10
m/s to the west. Meekwad has a mass of 1 kg and is initially at rest. After the collision, Felix
has a velocity of 4 m/s to the west and Meekwad has a velocity of 12 m/s to the west. Verify
that momentum was conserved. Then, determine the kinetic energies of the system before and
after the collision. What happened?! (All numbers are exact.)
4. You are at rest on your bicycle at the top of a hill that is 20 m tall. You start rolling down the
hill. At the bottom of the hill you have a speed of 22 m/s. Your mass is 80 kg. Assuming no
energy is gained by or lost to any other source, which of the following must be true?
a.
b.
c.
d.
5. A snowboarder, starting at rest at the top of a mountain, flies down the slope, goes off a jump
and crashes through a second-story window at the ski lodge. Retell this story, but describe it
using the language of energy. Be sure to describe both how and when the skier gained and
lost energy during her journey.
6. An airplane with mass 200,000 kg is traveling with a speed of 268 m/s.
a.
A wind picks up, which causes the plane to lose 1.20 X 108 J per second.
b.
Ch 8-3
7. A roller coaster begins at rest 120 m above the ground, as shown. Assume no friction from
the wheels and air, and that no energy is lost to heat, sound, and so on. The radius of the loop
is 40 m.
a.
b.
c.
8. In the picture above, a 9.0 kg baby on a skateboard is about to be launched horizontally. The
spring constant is 300 N/m and the spring is compressed 0.4 m. For the following questions,
ignore the small energy loss due to the friction in the wheels of the skateboard and the
rotational energy used up to make the wheels spin.
a.
b.
c.
What is the speed of the baby after the spring has reached its uncompressed length?
After being launched, the baby encounters a hill 7 m high. Will the baby make it to the
top? If so, what is his speed at the top? If not, how high does he make it?
Are you finally convinced that your authors have lost their minds? Look at that picture!
Ch 8-4
25 m
1,000 N/m
10 m
9. When the biker is at the top of the ramp shown above, he has a speed of 10 m/s and is at a
height of 25 m. The bike and person have a total mass of 100 kg. He speeds into the
contraption at the end of the ramp which slows him to a stop.
a.
b.
What is his initial total energy? (Hint: set Ug = 0 at the very bottom of the ramp.)
What is the length of the spring when it is maximally compressed by the biker? (Hint:
the spring does not compress all the way to the ground so there is still some gravitational
potential energy. It will help to draw some triangles.)
10. An elevator in an old apartment building in Switzerland has four huge springs at the bottom
of the shaft to cushion its fall in case the cable breaks. The springs have an uncompressed
height of about 1 meter. Estimate the spring constant necessary to stop this elevator,
following these steps:
a.
b.
c.
First, guesstimate the mass of the elevator with a few passengers inside.
Now, estimate the height of a five-story building.
Lastly, use conservation of energy to estimate the spring constant.
11. You are driving your buddy to class in a car of mass 900 kg at a speed of 50 m/s. You and
your passenger each have 80 kg of mass. Suddenly, a deer runs out in front of your car. The
coefficient of friction between the tires and the freeway cement is k = 0.9. In addition there
is an average force of friction of 6000 N exerted by air resistance, friction of the wheels and
axles, etc. in the time it takes the car to stop.
a.
b.
Ch 8-5
12. You are skiing down a hill. You start at rest at a height 120 m above the bottom. The slope
has a 10.0 grade. Assume the total mass of skier and equipment is 75.0 kg.
a.
b.
Ignore all energy losses due to friction. What is your speed at the bottom?
If, however, you just make it to the bottom with zero speed what would be the average
force of friction, including air resistance?
13. Two horrific contraptions on frictionless wheels are compressing a spring (k = 400 N/m) by
0.5 m compared to its uncompressed (equilibrium) length. Each of the 500 kg vehicles is
stationary and they are connected by a string. The string is cut! Find the speeds of the masses
once they lose contact with the spring.
14. You slide down a hill on top of a big ice block as shown in the diagram. Your speed at the top
of the hill is zero. The coefficient of kinetic friction on the slide down the hill is zero (k = 0).
The coefficient of kinetic friction on the level part just beneath the hill is 0.1 (k = 0.1).
a.
b.
20 m
15
x = ?
Ch 8-6
15. A 70 kg woman falls from a height of 2.0 m and lands on a springy mattress.
a.
b.
If the springs compress by 0.5 m, what is the spring constant of the mattress?
If no energy is lost from the system, what height will she bounce back up to?
18. The 20 g bullet shown below is traveling to the right with a speed of 20 m/s. A
1.0 kg block is hanging from the ceiling from a rope 2.0 m in length.
a.
b.
19. You are playing pool and you hit the cue ball with a
speed of 2 m/s at the 8-ball (which is stationary).
Assume an elastic collision and that both balls are the
same mass. Find the speed and direction of both balls
after the collision, assuming neither flies off at any
angle.
Ch 8-7
21. Ball A is traveling along a flat table with a speed of 5.0 m/s, as shown below. Ball B, which
has the same mass, is initially at rest, but is knocked off the table in an elastic collision with
Ball A. Find the horizontal distance that Ball B travels before hitting the floor.
22. Manrico (80.0 kg) and Leonora (60.0 kg) are figure skaters. They are moving toward each
other. Manricos speed is 2.00 m/s; Leonoras speed is 4.00 m/s. When they meet, Leonora
flies into Manricos arms.
a.
b.
c.
23. Aida slides down a 20.0 m high hill on a frictionless sled (combined mass 40.0 kg). At the
bottom of the hill, she collides with Radames on his sled (combined mass 50.0 kg). The two
children cling together and move along a horizontal plane that has a coefficient of kinetic
friction of 0.10.
a.
b.
c.
24. A pile driver lifts a 500 kg mass a vertical distance of 20 m in 1.1 sec. It uses 225 kW of
supplied power to do this.
a.
b.
c.
25. Investigating a traffic collision, you determine that a fast-moving car (mass 600 kg) hit and
stuck to a second car (mass 800 kg) which was initially at rest. The two cars slid a distance of
30.0 m over rough pavement with a coefficient of friction of 0.60 before coming to a halt.
What was the speed of the first car? Was the driver above the posted 60 MPH speed limit?
Ch 8-8
26. Force is applied in the direction of motion to a 15.0 kg cart on a frictionless surface. The
motion is along a straight line and when t = 0, then x = 0 and v = 0. (The displacement and
velocity of the cart are initially zero.) Look at the following graph:
Force (N)
20
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
10
time (s)
27. Force is applied in the direction of motion to a 4.00 kg cart on a frictionless surface. The
motion is along a straight line and when t = 0, v = 0 and x = 0. look at the following graph:
Force
20 N
3m
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
8m
10 m
displacement
Ch 8-9
28. You are to design an experiment to measure the average force an archer exerts on the bow as
she pulls it back prior to releasing the arrow. The mass of the arrow is known. The only lab
equipment you can use is a meter stick.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Give the procedure of the experiment and include a diagram with the quantities to be
measured shown.
Give sample calculations using realistic numbers.
What is the single most important inherent error in the experiment?
Explain if this error would tend to make the force that it measured greater or lesser than
the actual force and why.
29. Molly eats a 500 kcal (2.09 x 106 J) power bar before the big pole vault. The bars energy
content comes from changing chemical bonds from a high to a low state and expelling gases.
However, 25.0% of the bars energy is lost expelling gases and 60.0% is needed by the body
for various biological functions.
a.
b.
c.
d.
30. A new fun foam target on wheels for archery students has been invented. The arrow of mass,
m, and speed, v0, goes through the target and emerges at the other end with reduced speed,
v0/2. The mass of the target is 7m. Ignore friction and air resistance.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Ch 8-10
Ch 9-1
There are analogies to the Big Three equations that work for rotational motion just like
they work for linear motion.
As before: once you have the acceleration you can predict the motion. Just as linear
accelerations are caused by forces, angular accelerations are caused by torques.
Torques produce angular accelerations, but just as masses resist acceleration (due to
inertia), there is an inertia that opposes angular acceleration. The measure of this inertial
resistance depends on the mass, but more importantly on the distribution of the mass in
the body. The moment of inertia, I, is the rotational version of mass. Values for the
moment of inertia of common objects are given in problem 2. Torques have only two
directions: those that produce clockwise (CW) and those that produce counterclockwise
(CCW) rotations. The angular acceleration or change in would be in the direction of
the torque.
Imagine spinning a fairly heavy disk. To make
it spin, you dont push towards the disk center
that will just move it in a straight line. To spin
it, you need to push along the side, much like
when you spin a basketball. Thus, the torque
you exert on a disk to make it accelerate
depends only on the component of the force
perpendicular to the radius of rotation: = rF.
Many separate torques can be applied to an
object. The angular acceleration produced is
= net / I.
The angular momentum of a spinning object is
L = I. Torques produce a change in angular
momentum with time: = L/t
F
Table of Analogies
Linear motion
Rotational motion
Rotational unit
radians
radians/second
radians/second2
Meter-Newton
kgmeters2
a = Fnet / m
= net / I
Radians/sec
p = mv
L = I
kgmeters2/sec
F = p/t
= L/t
K = mv
K = I
Meter-Newton
Joules
Ch 9-2
Key Equations (These are simpler than they look: many are familiar equations in new rotational language!)
d = r
v = r
( = /t)
a = r
( = /t)
a C = -mv/r = r2
mv /r!
= 2/T
(t) = 0 + 0t + t2
(t) = 0 + t
2 = 02 + 2()
= net / I
L = I
= L/t
K = I2
Ch 9-3
The wood plug, shown below, has a lower moment of inertia than the steel plug because
it has a lower mass.
rotation axis
rotation axis
wood plug
a.
steel plug
Even though they have the same mass, the plug on the right has a higher moment of inertia
(I), than the plug on the left, since the mass is distributed at greater radius.
rotation axis
rotation axis
wood plug
b.
Which of the plugs would have a greater angular momentum if they were
spinning with the same angular velocity? Explain.
2.
Drawing
Disk
Moment of Inertia
MR2
Ring
MR2
Rod or plank
/12ML2
Rod or plank
/3ML2
/5MR2
Sphere
Satellite
MR2
a.
Calculate the moment of inertia of the Earth about its spin axis.
b.
Calculate the moment of inertia of the Earth as it revolves around the Sun.
c.
Calculate the moment of inertia of a hula hoop with mass 2 kg and radius 0.5 m.
d. Calculate the moment of inertia of a rod 0.75 m in length and mass 1.5 kg rotating
about one end.
e.
Repeat d., but calculate the moment of inertia about the center of the rod.
Ch 9-4
3. Imagine standing on the North Pole of the Earth as it spins. You would barely notice it, but
you would turn all the way around over 24 hours, without covering any real distance.
Compare this to people standing on the equator: they go all the way around the entire
circumference of the Earth every 24 hours! Decide whether the following statements are
TRUE or FALSE. Then, explain your thinking.
a. The person at the North Pole and the person at the equator rotate by 2 radians in 86,400
seconds.
b. The angular velocity of the person at the equator is 2/86400 radians per second.
c. Our angular velocity in San Francisco is 2/86400 radians per second.
d. Every point on the Earth travels the same distance every day.
e. Every point on the Earth rotates through the same angle every day.
f. The angular momentum of the Earth is the same each day.
g. The angular momentum of the Earth is 2/5MR2.
h. The rotational kinetic energy of the Earth is 1/5MR22.
i. The orbital kinetic energy of the Earth is 1/2MR22, where R refers to the distance from
the Earth to the Sun.
4. You spin up some pizza dough from rest with an angular acceleration of 5 rad/s2.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
How many radians has the pizza dough spun through in the first 10 seconds?
How many times has the pizza dough spun around in this time?
What is its angular velocity after 5 seconds?
What is providing the torque that allows the angular acceleration to occur?
Calculate the moment of inertia of a flat disk of pizza dough with mass 1.5 kg and radius
0.6 m.
Calculate the rotational kinetic energy of your pizza dough at t = 5 s and t = 10 s.
5. Your bike brakes went out! You put your feet on the wheel to slow it down. The rotational
kinetic energy of the wheel begins to decrease. Where is this energy going?
6. Consider hitting someone with a Wiffle ball bat. Will it hurt them more if you grab the end or
the middle of the bat when you swing it? Explain your thinking, but do so using the
vocabulary of moment of inertia (treat the bat as a rod), angular momentum (imagine the bat
swings down in a semi-circle), and torque (in this case, torques caused by the contact forces
the other persons head and the bat are exerting on each other).
7. Why does the Earth keep going around the Sun? Shouldnt we be spiraling farther and farther
downward towards the Sun, eventually falling into it? Why do low-Earth satellites eventually
spiral down and burn up in the atmosphere, while the Moon never will?
8. If most of the mass of the Earth were concentrated at the core (say, in a ball of dense iron),
would the moment of inertia of the Earth be higher or lower than it is now? (Assume the total
mass stays the same.)
9. Two spheres of the same mass are spinning in your garage. The first is 10 cm in diameter and
made of iron. The second is 20 cm in diameter but is a thin plastic sphere filled with air.
Which is harder to slow down? Why? (And why are two spheres spinning in your garage?)
Ch 9-5
10. A game of tug-o-war is played but with a twist (ha!). Each team has its own rope attached
to a merry-go-round. One team pulls clockwise, the other counterclockwise. Each pulls at a
different point and with a different force, as shown.
200 N
1.2 m
400 N
2.6 m
a. Who wins?
b. By how much? That is, what is the net torque?
c. Assume that the merry-go-round is weighted down with a large pile of steel plates. It is
so massive that it has a moment of inertia of 2000 kgm2. What is its angular
acceleration?
d. How long will it take the merry-go-round to spin around once completely?
11. You have two coins; one is a standard U.S. quarter, and the other is a coin of equal mass and
size, but with a hole cut out of the center.
a. Which coin has a higher moment of inertia?
b. Which coin would have the greater angular momentum if they are both spun at the same
angular velocity?
12. A wooden plank is balanced on a pivot, as shown below. Weights are placed at various places
on the plank.
0.50 m
A: 2.00 kg
0.30 m
1.00 m
B: 1.50 kg
C: 1.39 kg
Ch 9-6
13. A star is rotating with a period of 10.0 days. It collapses with no loss in mass to a white
dwarf with a radius of .001 of its original radius.
a. What is its initial angular velocity?
b. What is its angular velocity after collapse?
14. For a ball rolling without slipping with a radius of 0.10 m, a moment of Inertia of 25.0 kg-m2,
and a linear velocity of 10.0 m/s calculate the following:
a.
b.
c.
d.
15. A merry-go-round consists of a uniform solid disc of 225 kg and a radius of 6.0 m. A single
80 kg person stands on the edge when it is coasting at 0.20 revolutions /sec. How fast would the
device be rotating after the person has walked 3.5 m toward the center. (The moments of inertia
of compound objects add.)
Ch 9-7
17. Two painters are on the fourth floor of a Victorian house on a scaffold, which weighs 400 N.
The scaffold is 3.00 m long, supported by two ropes, each located 0.20 m from the end of the
scaffold. The first painter of mass 75.0 kg is standing at the center; the second of mass, 65.0
kg, is standing 1.00 m from one end.
a. Draw a free body diagram,
showing all forces and all torques.
(Pick one of the ropes as a pivot
point.)
b. Calculate the tension in the two
ropes
c. Calculate the moment of inertia
for rotation around the pivot point,
which is supported by the rope
with the least tension. (This will
be a compound moment of inertia
made of three components.)
d. Calculate the instantaneous
angular acceleration assuming the
rope of greatest tension breaks.
18. A horizontal 60 N beam. 1.4 m in length has a 100 N weight on the end. It is supported by a
cable, which is connected to the horizontal beam at an angle of 37 degrees at 1.0 m from the
wall. Further support is provided by the wall hinge, which exerts a force of unknown
direction but which has a vertical (friction) component and a horizontal (normal) component.
a. Find the tension in the cable
b. Find the two components of the force on the hinge (magnitude and direction)
c. Find the coefficient of friction of wall and hinge.
Ch 9-8
19. On a busy intersection a 3.00 m beam of 150 N is connected to a post at an angle upwards of
20.0 degrees to the horizontal. From the beam straight down hang a 200 N sign 1.00 m from
the post and a 500 N signal light at the end of the beam. The beam is supported by a cable
which connects to the beam 2.00 m from the post at an angle of 45.0 degrees measured from
the beam; also by the hinge to the post which has horizontal and vertical components of
unknown direction.
a. Find the tension in the cable
b. Find the magnitude and direction of the horizontal and vertical forces on the hinge.
c. Find the total moment of inertia around the hinge as the axis.
d. Find the instantaneous angular acceleration of the beam if the cable were to break.
Ch 9-9
20. There is a uniform rod of mass 2.0 kg of length 2.0 m. It has a mass of 2.6 kg at one end. It
is attached to the ceiling .40 m from the end with the mass. The string comes in at a 53
degree angle to the rod.
a. Calculate the total torque on the rod.
b. Determine its direction of rotation
c. Explain, but dont calculate, what happens to the angular acceleration as it rotates
toward a vertical position.
21. The medieval catapult consists of a 200 kg beam with a heavy ballast at one end and a
projectile of 75.0 kg at the other end. The pivot is located 0.5 m from the ballast and a force
with a downward component of 550 N is applied by prisoners to keep it steady until the
commander gives the word to release it. The beam is 4.00 m long and the force is applied
0.900 m from the projectile end. Consider the situation when the beam is perfectly
horizontal.
a. Draw a free-body diagram labeling all torques
b. Find the mass of the ballast
c. Find the force on the horizontal support
d. How would the angular acceleration change as the beam moves from the horizontal to
the vertical position. (Give a qualitative explanation.)
a. In order to maximize range at what angle should the projectile be released?
b. What additional information and/or calculation would have to be done to determine the
range of the projectile?
Ch 9-10
The oscillating object does not lose any energy in SHM. Friction is assumed to be zero.
In harmonic motion there is always a restorative force, which acts in the opposite
direction of the velocity. The restorative force changes during oscillation and depends on
the position of the object. In a spring the force is given by Hookes Law, -kx; in a
pendulum it is the component of gravity along the path, or directly opposite that of the
velocity.
Objects in simple harmonic motion do not obey the Big Three equations of motion
because the acceleration is not constant. As a spring compresses, the force (and hence
acceleration) increases. As a pendulum swings, the tangential component of the force of
gravity changes, so the acceleration changes.
The period, T, is the amount of time for the harmonic motion to repeat itself, or for the
object to go one full cycle. In SHM, T is the time it takes the object to return to its exact
starting point and starting direction.
The frequency, f, is the number of cycles an object goes through in 1 second. Frequency
is measured in Hertz (Hz). 1 Hz = 1 cycle per sec.
The amplitude, A, is the distance from the equilibrium (or center) point of motion to
either its lowest or highest point (end points). The amplitude, therefore, is half of the total
distance covered by the oscillating object. The amplitude can vary in harmonic motion
but is constant in SHM.
The kinetic energy and the speed are at a maximum at the equilibrium point, but the
potential energy and restorative force is zero there.
At the end points the potential energy is at a maximum, while the kinetic energy and
speed are zero. At the end points the restorative force and acceleration are at a maximum.
In SHM since energy is conserved the most fruitful method of calculating position and
velocity is to set the total energy equal to the sum of kinetic and potential energies. In
most problems this will be far easier than using the Big Two. Similarly force and
acceleration are best calculated by using F = ma.
Ch 10-1
Key Equations
T=1/f
Tsp = 2
Tp = 22 L
m
k
Ch 10-2
Ch 10-3
8. The effective k of the diving board shown here is 800 N/m. (We say effective because it
bends in the direction of motion instead of stretching like a spring, but otherwise behaves the
same.) A pudgy diver is bouncing up and down at the end of the diving board, as shown. The
y vs t graph is shown below.
y (m)
2
0.6
1.6
3.6
time (s)
-2
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
What is the distance between the lowest and highest points of oscillation?
What is the y-position of the diver at times t = 0 s, t = 2 s, and t = 4.6 s?
Estimate the mans period of oscillation.
What is the divers mass?
Write the sinusoidal equation of motion for the diver.
Ch 10-4
9. The Sun tends to have dark, Earth-sized spots on its surface due to kinks in its magnetic field.
The number of visible spots varies over the course of years. Use the graph of the sunspot
cycle above to answer the following questions. (Note that this is real data from our sun, so it
doesnt look like a perfect sine wave. What you need to do is estimate the best sine wave that
fits this data.)
a. Estimate the period T in years.
b. When do we expect the next solar maximum?
10. The pendulum of a small clock is 1.553 cm long. How many times does it go back and forth
before the second hand goes forward one second?
11. On the moon, how long must a pendulum be if the period of one cycle is one second? The
acceleration of gravity on the moon is 1/6 th that of Earth.
12. A spider of 0.5 g walks to the middle of her web. The web sinks by 1.0 mm due to her
weight. You may assume the mass of the web is negligible.
a.
b.
c.
d.
If a small burst of wind sets her in motion, with what frequency will she oscillate?
How many times will she go up and down in one s? In 20 s?
How long is each cycle?
Draw the x vs t graph of three cycles, assuming the spider is at its highest point in the
cycle at t = 0 s.
Ch 10-5
13. A mass on a spring on a frictionless horizontal surface undergoes SHM. The spring constant
is 550 N/m and the mass is 0.400 kg. The initial amplitude is 0.300 m.
a. At the point of release find:
i. the potential energy
ii. the horizontal force on the mass
iii. the acceleration as it is released
b. As the mass reaches the equilibrium point find:
i. the speed of the mass
ii. the horizontal force on the mass
iii. the acceleration of the mass
c. At a point .150 m from the equilibrium point find:
i. the potential and kinetic energy
ii. the speed of the mass
iii. the force on the mass
iv. the acceleration of the mass
d. Find the period and frequency of the harmonic motion.
14. A pendulum with a string of 0.750 m and a mass of 0.250 kg is given an initial amplitude
by pulling it upward until it is at a height of 0.100 m more than when it hung vertically. This
is point P. When it is allowed to swing it passes through point Q at a height of .050 m above
the equilibrium position, the latter of which is called point R.
a. Draw a diagram of this pendulum motion and at points P, Q, and R draw velocity
and acceleration vectors. If they are zero state that also.
b. At point P calculate the potential energy.
c. At point R calculate the speed of the mass
d. At point Q calculate the speed of the mass
e. If the string were to break at points P, Q and R draw the path the mass would
take until it hit ground for each point.
f. Find the tension in the string at point P.
g. Find the tension in the string at point R
h. Find the period of harmonic motion.
Ch 10-6
A medium is the substance through which the wave travels. For example, water acts as
the medium for ocean waves, while air molecules act as the medium for sound waves.
When a wave passes through a medium, the medium is only temporarily disturbed. When
an ocean wave travels from one side of the Mediterranean Sea to the other, no actual
water molecules move this great distance. Only the disturbance propagates (moves)
through the medium.
An object oscillating with frequency f will create waves which oscillate with the same
frequency f.
The speed v and wavelength of a wave depend on the nature of the medium through
which the wave travels.
There are two main types of waves we will consider: longitudinal waves and transverse
waves.
In longitudinal waves, the vibrations of the medium are in the same direction as the wave
motion. A classic example is a wave traveling down a line of standing dominoes: each
domino will fall in the same direction as the motion of the wave. A more physical
example is a sound wave. For sound waves, high and low pressure zones move both
forward and backward as the wave moves through them.
In transverse waves, the vibrations of the medium are perpendicular to the direction of
motion. A classic example is a wave created in a long rope: the wave travels from one
end of the rope to the other, but the actual rope moves up and down, and not from left to
right as the wave does.
Water waves act as a mix of longitudinal and transverse waves. A typical water molecule
pretty much moves in a circle when a wave passes through it.
Most wave media act like a series of connected oscillators. For instance, a rope can be
thought of as a large number of masses (molecules) connected by springs (intermolecular
forces). The speed of a wave through connected harmonic oscillators depends on the
Ch 11-1
distance between them, the spring constant, and the mass. In this way, we can model
wave media using the principles of simple harmonic motion.
The speed of a wave on a string depends on the material the string is made of, as well as
the tension in the string. This fact is why tightening a string on your violin or guitar will
change the sound it produces.
The speed of a sound wave in air depends subtly on pressure, density, and temperature,
but is about 343 m/s at room temperature.
Key Equations
T=1/f
v = f
fn = nv /2L;
fn = nv / 4L
Key Applications
Constructive interference occurs when two waves combine to create a larger wave. This
occurs when the peaks of two waves line up.
Destructive interference occurs when two waves combine and cancel each other out. This
occurs when a peak in one wave lines up with a trough in the other wave.
When waves of two different frequencies interfere, a phenomenon known as beating
occurs. The frequency of a beat is the difference of the two frequencies.
When a wave meets a barrier, it reflects and travesl back the way it came. The reflected
wave may interfere with the original wave. If this occurs in precisely the right way, a
standing wave can be created. The types of standing waves that can form depend strongly
on the speed of the wave and the size of the region in which it is traveling.
A typical standing wave is shown below. This is the motion of a simple jump-rope.
Nodes are the places where the rope doesnt move at all; antinodes occur where the
motion is greatest.
node
Ch 11-2
Higher harmonics can also form. Note that each end, where the rope is attached, must
always be a node. Below is an example of a rope in a 5th harmonic standing wave.
antinode node
Importantly, each of the above standing wave examples can also apply to sound waves in
a closed tube, electromagnetic waves in a wire or fiber optic cable, and so on. In other
words, the standing wave examples can apply to any kind of wave, as long as nodes are
forced at both ends by whatever is containing/reflecting the wave back on itself.
If a node is forced at one end, but an antinode is forced at the other end, then a different
spectrum of standing waves is produced. For instance, the fundamental standing sound
wave produced in a tube closed at one end is shown below. In this case, the amplitude of
the standing wave is referring to the magnitude of the air pressure variations.
For this standing wave, the wavelength is = 4L. Since v = f,
the frequency of oscillation is f = v / 4L. In general, the
frequency of oscillation is f = nv / 4L, where n is always odd.
L
When a source of a wave is moving towards you, the apparent frequency of the wave you
detect is higher than that emitted. For instance, if a car approaches you while playing a note
at 500 Hz, the sound you hear will be slightly higher. This familiar phenomenon is known
as the Doppler Effect. The opposite occurs for a receding wave or if the observer moves or
both move. There is a difference in the quantitative effect, depending on who is moving.
(See the formulas under key equations above.) Note that these equations are for sound
waves only. While the effect is similar for light and electromagnetic waves the formulas
are not exactly the same as for sound.
Ch 11-3
a (m/s )
Time t (sec)
An earthquake can be thought of as a whole bunch of different waves all piled up on top of
each other.
a. Estimate (using a ruler) the approximate period of oscillation T of the minor aftershock
which occurs around t = 40 sec.
b. Convert your estimated period from part (a) into a frequency f in Hz.
c. Suppose a wave with frequency f from part (b) is traveling through concrete as a result of
the earthquake. What is the wavelength of that wave in meters? (The speed of sound in
concrete is approximately v = 3200 m/s.)
Ch 11-4
5. The length of the western section of the Bay Bridge is 2.7 km.
a. Draw a side-view of the western section of the Bay Bridge and identify all the nodes in
the bridge.
b. Assume that the bridge is concrete (the speed of sound in concrete is 3200 m/s). What is the
lowest frequency of vibration for the bridge? (You can assume that the towers are equally
spaced, and that the central support is equidistant from both middle towers. The best way to
approach this problem is by drawing in a wave that works.)
c. What might happen if an earthquake occurs that shakes the bridge at precisely this
frequency?
6. The speed of sound v in air is approximately 331.4 m/s + 0.6T, where T is the temperature of
the air in Celsius. The speed of light c is 300,000 km/sec, which means it travels from one
place to another on Earth more or less instantaneously. Lets say on a cool night (air
temperature 10 Celsius) you see lightning flash and then hear the thunder rumble five
seconds later. How far away (in km) did the lightning strike?
7. Human beings can hear sound waves in the frequency range 20 Hz 20 kHz. Assuming a
speed of sound of 343 m/s, answer the following questions.
a. What is the shortest wavelength the human ear can hear?
b. What is the longest wavelength the human ear can hear?
8. The speed of light c is 300,000 km/sec.
a. What is the frequency in Hz of a wave of red light ( = 0.7 10-6 m)?
b. What is the period T of oscillation (in seconds) of an electron that is bouncing up and
down in response to the passage of a packet of red light? Is the electron moving rapidly
or slowly?
9. Radio signals are carried by electromagnetic waves (i.e. light waves). The radio waves from
San Francisco radio station KMEL (106.1 FM) have a frequency of 106.1 MHz. When these
waves reach your antenna, your radio converts the motions of the electrons in the antenna
back into sound.
a. What is the wavelength of the signal from KMEL?
b. What is the wavelength of a signal from KPOO (89.5 FM)?
c. If your antenna were broken off so that it was only 2 cm long, how would this affect your
reception?
Ch 11-5
10. Add together the two sound waves shown below and sketch the resultant wave. Be as exact as
possible using a ruler to line up the waves will help. The two waves have different
frequencies, but the same amplitude. What is the frequency of the resultant wave? How will
the resultant wave sound different?
Amplitude
(i.e. loudness)
time (s)
11. Aborigines, the native people of Australia, play an instrument called the Didgeridoo like the
one shown above. The Didgeridoo produces a low pitch sound and is possibly the worlds
oldest instrument. The one shown above is about 1.3 m long and open at both ends.
a. Knowing that when a tube is open at both ends there must be an antinode at both ends,
draw the first 3 harmonics for this instrument.
b. Derive a generic formula for the frequency of the nth standing wave mode for the
Didgeridoo, as was done for the string tied at both ends and for the tube open at one end.
Ch 11-6
12. Reread the difference between transverse and longitudinal waves. For each of the following
types of waves, tell what type it is and why. (Include a sketch for each.)
sound waves
water waves in the wake of a boat
a vibrating string on a guitar
a swinging jump rope
the vibrating surface of a drum
the wave done by spectators at a sports event
slowly moving traffic jams
13. At the Sunday drum circle in Golden Gate Park, an Indian princess is striking her drum at a
frequency of 2 Hz. You would like to hit your drum at another frequency, so that the sound of
your drum and the sound of her drum beat together at a frequency of 0.1 Hz. What
frequencies could you choose?
14. A guitar string is 0.70 m long and is tuned to play an E note (f = 330 Hz). How far from the
end of this string must your finger be placed to play an A note (f = 440 Hz)?
15. Piano strings are struck by a hammer and vibrate at frequencies that depend on the length of
the string. A certain piano string is 1.10 m long and has a wave speed of 80 m/s. Draw
sketches of each of the four lowest frequency nodes. Then, calculate their wavelengths and
frequencies of vibration.
16. Suppose you are blowing into a soda bottle that is 20 cm in length and closed at one end.
a.
b.
Draw the wave pattern in the tube for the lowest four notes you can produce.
What are the frequencies of these notes?
17. You are inspecting two long metal pipes. Each is the same length; however, the first pipe is
open at one end, while the other pipe is closed at both ends.
a.
b.
Compare the wavelengths and frequencies for the fundamental tones of the standing
sound waves in each of the two pipes.
The temperature in the room rises. What happens to the frequency and wavelength for
the open-on-one-end pipe?
18. A train, moving at some speed lower than the speed of sound, is equipped with a gun. The
gun shoots a bullet forward at precisely the speed of sound, relative to the train. An observer
watches some distance down the tracks, with the bullet headed towards him. Will the
observer hear the sound of the bullet being fired before being struck by the bullet? Explain.
19. A 120 cm long string vibrates as a standing wave with four antinodes. The wave speed on the
string is 48 m/s. Find the wavelength and frequency of the standing wave.
Ch 11-7
20. A tuning fork that produces a frequency of 375 Hz is held over pipe open on both ends. The
bottom end of the pipe is adjustable so that the length of the tube can be set to whatever you
please.
a.
b.
c.
What is the shortest length the tube can be and still produce a standing wave at that
frequency?
The second shortest length?
The one after that?
21. The speed of sound in hydrogen gas at room temperature is 1270 m/s. Your flute plays notes
of 600, 750, and 800 Hz when played in a room filled with normal air. What notes would the
flute play in a room filled with hydrogen gas?
22. A friend plays an A note (440 Hz) on her flute while hurtling toward you in her imaginary
space craft at a speed of 40 m/s. What frequency do you hear just before she rams into you?
23. How fast would a student playing an A note (440 Hz) have to move towards you in order for
you to hear a G note (784 Hz)?
24. Students are doing an experiment to determine the speed of sound in air. The hold a tuning
fork above a large empty graduated cylinder and try to create resonance. The air column in
the graduated cylinder can be adjusted by putting water in it. At a certain point for each
tuning fork a clear resonance point is heard. The students adjust the water finely to get the
peak resonance then carefully measure the air column from water to top of air column. (The
assumption is that the tuning fork itself creates an anti-node and the water creates a node.)
The following data table was developed:
Frequency of tuning
fork (Hz)
184
328
384
512
1024
Wavelength (m)
Ch 11-8
q = Ne
F = kq1q2/r2
F = qE
E = kq/r2
UE = qV
E = V/x
V = kq/r
Ch 12-1
Key Concepts
Electrons have negative charge and protons have positive charge. The magnitude of the
charge is the same for both, e.
In any process, electric charge is conserved. The total electric charge of the universe does
not change. Therefore, electric charge can only be transferred not lost from one body
to another.
Normally, electric charge is transferred when electrons leave the outer orbits of the atoms
of one body (leaving it positively charged) and move to the surface of another body
(causing the new surface to gain a negative net charge). In a plasma all electrons are
stripped from the atoms, leaving positively charged ions and free electrons.
Similarly-charged objects have a repulsive force between them. Oppositely charged
objects have an attractive force between them.
The value of the electric field tells you the force that a charged object would feel if it
entered this field. Electric field lines tell you the direction a positive charge would go if it
were placed in the field.
Electric potential is measured in units of Volts (V) thus electric potential is often
referred to as voltage. Electric potential is the source of the electric potential energy.
Positive charges move towards lower electric potential; negative charges move toward
higher electric potential
Key Applications
In problems that ask for excess negative or positive charge, remember that each electron
has one unit of the fundamental charge e.
To find the speed of a particle after it traverses a voltage difference, use the equation for
the conservation of energy: qV = mv2
Force and electric field are vectors. Use your vector math skills (i.e. keep the x and y
directions separate) when solving two-dimensional problems.
Ch 12-2
4. You rub a glass rod with a piece of fur. If the rod now has a charge of 0.6 C, how many
electrons have been added to the rod?
a. 3.75 1018
b. 3.75 1012
c. 6000
d. 6.00 1012
e. Not enough information
5. What is the direction of the electric field if an electron initially at rest begins to move in the
North direction as a result of the field?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
North
East
West
South
Not enough information
A, B, C
C, B, A
B, A, C
B, C, A
A = B = C theyre all at the same potential
Ch 12-3
B
A
a. A, B, C
b. C, B, A
c. B, A, C
d. B, C, A
e. A = B = C theyre all at the same electric potential
8. The three arrows shown here represent the magnitudes of the electric field and the directions at
the tail end of each arrow. Consider the distribution of charges which would lead to this
arrangement of electric fields. Which of the following
is most likely to be the case here?
a. A positive charge is located at point A
b. A negative charge is located at point B
c. A positive charge is located at point B and a
negative charge is located at point C
d. A positive charge is located at point A and a
negative charge is located at point C
e. Both answers a) and b) are possible
A
B
C
9.. Particles A and B are both positively charged. The arrows shown indicate the direction of the
forces acting on them due to an applied electric field (not shown in the picture). For each, draw in
the electric field lines that would best match the observed force.
c.
a.
e.
A
A
b.
d.
2V
10 V
6V
Peoples Physics Book
Ch 12-4
11.. A suspended pith ball possessing +10 C of charge is placed 0.02 m away from a metal plate
possessing
6 C of charge.
a. Are these objects attracted or repulsed?
b. What is the force on the negatively charged object?
c. What is the force on the positively charged object?
12. Calculate the electric field a distance of 4.0 mm away from a 2.0 C charge. Then, calculate
the force on a 8.0 C charge placed at this point.
13. Consider the hydrogen atom. Does the electron orbit the proton due to the force of gravity or
the electric force? Calculate both forces and compare them. (You may need to look up the
properties of the hydrogen atom to complete this problem.)
14. As a great magic trick, you will float your little sister in the air using the force of opposing
electric charges. If your sister has 40 kg of mass and you wish to float her 0.5 m in the air, how
much charge do you need to deposit both on her and on a metal plate directly below her? Assume
an equal amount of charge on both the plate and your sister.
15. Copy the arrangement of charges below. Draw the electric field from the 2 C charge in one
color and the electric field from the +2 C charge in a different color. Be sure to indicate the
directions with arrows. Now take the individual electric field vectors, add them together, and
draw the resultant vector. This is the electric field created by the two charges together.
2 C
+2 C
16. A proton traveling to the right moves inbetween the two large plates. A vertical electric
field, pointing downwards with magnitude 3.0
N/C, is produced by the plates.
a. What is the direction of the force on the
proton?
b. Draw the electric field lines on the diagram.
c. If the electric field is 3.0 N/C, what is the
acceleration of the proton in the region of the
plates?
d. Pretend the force of gravity doesnt exist; then sketch the path of the proton.
e. We take this whole setup to another planet. If the proton travels straight through the
apparatus without deflecting, what is the acceleration of gravity on this planet?
Ch 12-5
17. A molecule shown by the square object shown below contains an excess of 100 electrons.
a. What is the direction of the electric field at point A, 2.010-9 m away?
21. A metal sphere with a net charge of +5 C and a mass of 400 g is placed at the origin and
held fixed there.
a. Find the electric potential at the coordinate (6 m, 0).
b. If another metal sphere of 3 C charge and mass of 20 g is placed at the coordinate
(6 m, 0) and left free to move, what will its speed be just before it collides with the metal
sphere at the origin?
+5 C
3 C
6m
Ch 12-6
22. Collisions of electrons with the surface of your television set give rise to the images you see.
How are the electrons accelerated to high speed? Consider the following: two metal plates (The
right hand one has small holes allow electrons to pass through to the surface of the screen.),
separated by 30 cm, have a uniform electric field between them of 400 N/C.
a. Find the force on an electron located at a point midway between the plates
b. Find the voltage difference between the two plates
c. Find the change in electric potential energy of the electron when it travels from the back
plate to the front plate
d. Find the speed of the electron just before striking the front plate (the screen of your TV)
Ch 12-7
Ch 12-8
Power is the rate that energy is released. The units for power are Watts (W), which
equal Joules per second [W] = [J]/[s]. Therefore, a 60 W light bulb releases 60 Joules of
energy every second.
The equations used to calculate the power dissipated in a circuit is P = IV . As with Ohms Law,
one must be careful not to mix apples with oranges. If you want the power of the entire circuit,
then you multiply the total voltage of the power source by the total current coming out of the
power source. If you want the power dissipated (i.e. released) by a light bulb, then you multiply
the voltage drop across the light bulb by the current going through that light bulb.
Ch13-1
Name
Symbol
Voltage
Electrical
Symbol
Units
Analogy
Volts (V)
Amps (A)
A = C/s
Current
Resistance
Ohm ()
Everyday
device
Battery, the
plugs in your
house, etc.
Whatever
you plug into
your wall
sockets
draws current
Light bulb,
Toaster, etc.
Resistors in Series: All resistors are connected end to end. There is only one river, so
they all receive the same current. But since there is a voltage drop across each resistor,
they may all have different voltages across them. The more resistors in series the more
rocks in the river, so the less current that flows.
Rtotal = R1 + R2 + R3 + ...
Resistors in Parallel: All resistors are connected together at both ends. There are many
rivers (i.e. The main river branches off into many other rivers), so all resistors receive
different amounts of current. But since they are all connected to the same point at both
ends they all receive the same voltage.
1
1
1
1
= +
+ + ...
Rtotal R1 R2 R3
DC Power: Voltage and current flow in one direction. Examples are batteries and the
power supplies we use in class.
AC Power: Voltage and current flow in alternate directions. In the US they reverse
direction 60 times a second. (This is a more efficient way to transport electricity and
electrical devices do not care which way it flows as long as current is flowing. Note:
your TV and computer screen are actually flickering 60 times a second due to the
alternating current that comes out of household plugs. Our eyesight does not work this
fast, so we never notice it. However, if you film a TV or computer screen the effect is
observable due to the mismatched frame rates of the camera and TV screen.) Electrical
current coming out of your plug is an example.
Voltage
120V
-120V
1/60 sec
time
Ch13-2
Ammeter: A device that measures electric current. You must break the circuit to
measure the current. Ammeters have very low resistance; therefore you must wire them
in series.
Voltage source: A power source that produces fixed voltage regardless of what is
hooked up to it. A battery is a real-life voltage source. A battery can be thought of as a
perfect voltage source with a small resistor (called internal resistance) in series. The
electric energy density produced by the chemistry of the battery is called emf, but the
amount of voltage available from the battery is called terminal voltage. The terminal
voltage equals the emf minus the voltage drop across the internal resistance (current of
the external circuit times the internal resistance.)
Key Equations:
I = q/t
V = I R
P = IV
Ch13-3
Ch13-4
100
12
90
Power
+
Supply of 45V
10
A
10
20
9. Draw the schematic of the following circuit.
Power
+
Supply of 20V
10
12
10
20
10
12
100
10. What does the ammeter read and which
resistor is dissipating the most power?
30V
50
50
Ch13-5
120V
75
45
50
20
50V
+
-
30
40
50
13. You have a 600 V power source, two 10 toasters that both run on 100 V and a 25
resistor.
a. Show (with a schematic) how you would wire them up so the toasters run properly.
b. What is the power dissipated by the toasters?
c. Where would you put the fuses to make sure the toasters dont draw more than 15 Amps?
d. Where would you put a 25 Amp fuse to prevent a fire (if too much current flows through
the wires they will heat up and possibly cause a fire)?
14. Look at the following scheme of four
identical light bulbs connected as shown.
Answer the questions below giving a
justification for your answer:
a. Which of the four light bulbs is the
brightest?
b. Which light bulbs are the dimmest?
c. Tell in the following cases which
other light bulbs go out if:
i. bulb A goes out
ii. bulb B goes out
iii.bulb D goes out
d. Tell in the following cases which
other light bulbs get dimmer, and which get brighter if:
i.bulb B goes out
ii. bulb D goes out
Ch13-6
15. Refer to the circuit diagram below and answer the following questions.
a. What is the resistance between A and B?
b. What is the resistance between C and B?
c. What is the resistance between D and E?
d. What is the the total equivalent resistance of the circuit?
e. What is the current leaving the battery?
f. What is the voltage drop across the 12 resistor?
g. What is the voltage drop between D and E?
h. What is the voltage drop between A and B?
i. What is the current through the 25 resistor?
j. What is the total energy dissipated in the 25 if it is in use for 11 hours?
D
C
20
50
+
48 V
40
30
25
20
12
4
16. In the circuit shown here, the battery produces an emf of 1.5 V and has an internal resistance
of 0.5 .
2
a. Find the total resistance of the external circuit.
b. Find the current drawn from the battery.
c. Determine the terminal voltage of the battery
1
+
d. Show the proper connection of an ammeter
and a voltmeter that could measure voltage
across and current through the 2 resistor. What
measurements would these instruments read?
3
Ch13-7
Current (a)
.11
.08
.068
.052
.04
.025
.01
a. Show a circuit diagram with the connections to the power supply, ammeter and voltmeter.
b. Graph voltage vs. current; find the best-fit straight line.
c. Use this line to determine the resistance.
d. How confident can you be of the results?
e. Use the graph to determine the current if the voltage were 13 V.
18. Students are now measuring the terminal voltage of a battery hooked up to an external
circuit. They change the external circuit four times and develop the following table of data:
Terminal Voltage (v)
14.63
14.13
13.62
12.88
a.
b.
c.
d.
Current (a)
.15
.35
.55
.85
Ch13-8
19. Students are using a variable power supply to quickly increase the voltage across a resistor.
They measure the current and the time the power supply is on. The following table of data is
developed:
Time (sec)
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
Voltage (v)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Current (a)
0
1.0
2.0
3.0
3.6
3.8
3.5
3.1
2.7
2.0
Ch13-9
24. Students use a variable power supply an ammeter and three voltmeters to measure the
voltage drops across three unknown resistors. The power supply is slowly cranked up
and the following table of data is developed:
Current (ma)
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
600
700
Voltage R1 (v)
2.1
3.0
3.9
5.0
6.2
7.1
7.9
9.0
10.2
12.5
14.0
Voltage R2 (v)
3.6
5.0
7.1
8.9
10.8
12.7
14.3
16.0
18.0
21.0
25.0
Voltage R3 (v)
5.1
7.7
10.0
12.7
15.0
18.0
20.0
22.0
25.0
31.0
36.0
Ch13-10
Key Concepts
Ch 14-1
FB = qvB = qvBsin()
.
F
Use this figure to
remember the geometry
of the angle .
v
F
o = 410
Bwire = o I / 2r
Tm/A
Ch 14-2
.
.
.
.
.
.
In the example to the left, a current is running along a wire towards the top of
your page. The magnetic field is circling the wire in loops that are pierced
through the center by the current. Where these loops intersect this piece of paper,
we use the symbol . to represent where the magnetic field is coming out of the
pageand the symbol
to represent where the magnetic field is going into the
page. The distance r (for radius) is the distance from the wire.
Currents in same
direction: wires
attracted to each
other
= NB A
Currents in
opposite direction:
wires repelled by
each other
Greater distance d
means less force F
If you have a closed, looped wire of area A (measured in m2) and N loops,
and you pass a magnetic field B through, the magnetic flux is . The units
of magnetic flux are Tm2, also known as a Weber (Wb).
In the example to the left, there are four loops of wire (N = 4) and each
has area r2. The magnetic field is pointing toward the top of the page,
at a right angle to the loops. Think of the magnetic flux as the bundle
of magnetic field lines held by the loop. Why does it matter? See the
next equation.
= / t
The direction of the induced current is determined as
follows: the current will flow so as to generate a
magnetic field that opposes the change in flux used in
Faradays Law. This is called Lenzs Law.
If you change the amount of magnetic flux that is passing through a loop
of wire, electrons in the wire will feel a force, and this will generate a
current. The equivalent voltage that they feel is equal to the change in
flux divided by the amount of time t it takes to change the flux by
that amount. This is Faradays Law of Induction.
Ch 14-3
a.
b.
B
c.
-x-direction
+y-direction (towards the top of the page)
-z-direction (i.e. into the page)
+z-direction (i.e. out of the page)
none of the above
7. A positively charged hydrogen ion turns upward as it enters a magnetic field that points into
the page. What direction was the ion going before it entered the field?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
-x-direction
+x-direction
-y-direction (towards the bottom of the page)
+z-direction (i.e. out of the page)
none of the above
Ch 14-4
8. An electron is moving to the east at a speed of 1.8106 m/s. It feels a force in the upward
direction with a magnitude of 2.210-12 N. What is the magnitude and direction of the
magnetic field this electron just passed through?
9. A vertical wire, with a current of 6.0 A going towards the ground, is immersed in a magnetic
field of 5.0 T pointing to the right. What is the value and direction of the force on the wire?
The length of the wire is 2.0 m.
10. A futuristic magneto-car uses the interaction between current flowing across the magneto car
and magnetic fields to propel itself forward. The device consists of two fixed metal tracks
and a freely moving metal car (see illustration above). A magnetic field is pointing downward
with respect to the car, and has the strength of 5.00 T. The car is 4.70 m wide and has 800 A
of current flowing through it. The arrows indicate the direction of the current flow.
a. Find the direction and magnitude of the force on the car.
b. If the car has a mass of 2050 kg, what is its velocity after 10 s, assuming it starts at rest?
c. If you want double the force for the same magnetic field, how should the current change?
11. A horizontal wire carries a current of 48 A towards the east. A second wire with mass 0.05 kg
runs parallel to the first, but lies 15 cm below it. This second wire is held in suspension by the
magnetic field of the first wire above it. If each wire has a length of half a meter, what is the
magnitude and direction of the current in the lower wire?
12. Protons with momentum 5.110-20 kgm/s are magnetically steered clockwise in a circular
path. The path is 2.0 km in diameter. (This takes place at the Dann International Accelerator
Laboratory, to be built in 2057 in San Francisco.) Find the magnitude and direction of the
magnetic field acting on the protons.
Ch 14-5
13. A bolt of lightening strikes the ground 200 m away from a 100-turn coil (see above). If the
current in the lightening bolt falls from 6.0106 A to 0.0 A in 10 s, what is the average
voltage, , induced in the coil? What is the direction of the induced current in the coil? (Is it
clockwise or counterclockwise?) Assume that the distance to the center of the coil determines
the average magnetic induction at the coils position. Treat the lightning bolt as a vertical
wire with the current flowing toward the ground.
14. A coil of wire with 10 loops and a radius of 0.2 m is sitting on the lab bench with an electromagnet facing into the loop. For the purposes of your sketch, assume the magnetic field from the
electromagnet is pointing out of the page. In 0.035 s, the magnetic field drops from 0.42 T to 0 T.
a. What is the voltage induced in the coil of wire?
b. Sketch the direction of the current flowing in the loop as the magnetic field is turned off.
(Answer as if you are looking down at the loop).
Io = 2 A
Ch 14-6
16. An electron is accelerated from rest through a potential difference of 1.67 X 105 volts. It
then enters a region traveling perpendicular to a magnetic field of 0.25 T.
a. Calculate the velocity of the electron.
b. Calculate the magnitude of the magnetic force on the electron.
c. Calculate the radius of the circle of the electrons path in the region of the magnetic field
17. A beam of charged particles travel in a straight line through mutually perpendicular electric
and magnetic fields. One of the particles has a charge, q; the magnetic field is B and the
electric field is E. Find the velocity of the particle.
18. Two long thin wires are on the same plane but perpendicular to each other. The wire on the
y-axis carries a current of 6.0 A in the y direction. The wire on the x-axis carries a current
of 2.0 A in the + x direction. Point, P has the co-ordinates of (2.0, 2,0) in meters. A charged
particle moves in a direction of 45o away from the origin at point, P, with a velocity of 1.0
X107 m/s.
a. Find the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field at point, P.
b. If there is a magnetic force of 1.0 X 10-6 N on the particle determine its charge.
c. Determine the magnitude of an electric field that will cancel the magnetic force on the
particle.
19. A rectangular loop of wire 8.0 m long and 1.0 m wide has a resistor of 5.0 on the 1.0 side
and moves out of a 0.40 T magnetic field at a speed of 2.0 m/s in the direction of the 8.0 m
side.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
20. A positron (same mass, opposite charge as an electron) is accelerated through 35,000 volts
and enters the center of a 1.00 cm long and 1.00 mm wide capacitor, which is charged to 400
volts. A magnetic filed is applied to keep the positron in a straight line in the capacitor. The
same field is applied to the region (region II) the positron enters after the capacitor.
a. What is the speed of the positron as it enters the capacitor?
b. Show all forces on the positron.
c. Prove that the force of gravity can be safely ignored in this problem.
d. Calculate the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field necessary.
e. Show the path and calculate the radius of the positron in region II.
f. Now the magnetic field is removed; calculate the acceleration of the positron away from
the center.
g. Calculate the angle away from the center with which it would enter region II if the
magnetic field were to be removed.
Ch 14-7
21. A small rectangular loop of wire 2.00 m by 3.00 m moves with a velocity of 80.0 m/s in a
non-uniform field that diminishes in the direction of motion uniformly by .0400 T/m.
Calculate the induced emf in the loop. What would be the direction of current?
22. An electron is accelerated through 20,000 V and moves along the positive x-axis through a
plate 1.00 cm wide and 2.00 cm long. A magnetic field of 0.020 T is applied in the -z
direction.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Calculate the velocity with which the electron enters the plate.
Calculate the magnitude and direction of the magnetic force on the electron.
Calculate the acceleration of the electron.
Calculate the deviation in the y direction of the electron form the center.
Calculate the electric field necessary to keep the electron on a straight path.
Calculate the necessary voltage that must be applied to the plate.
23. A long straight wire is on the x-axis and has a current of 12 A in the x direction. A point P,
is located 2.0 m above the wire on the y-axis.
a. What is the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field at P.
b. If an electron moves through P in the-x direction at a speed of 8.0 x 107 m/s what is the
magnitude and direction of the force on the electron?
c. What would be the magnitude and direction of an electric field to be applied at P that
would counteract the magnetic force on the electron?
Ch 14-8
Q = CV
U = CV2
the potential energy stored in a capacitor is equal to one half the stored
charge multiplied by the electric potential. U is measured in Joules.
C = 0A/d
Q = Q0 e-t/
I(t)=Io e-t/
The current follows the same exponential curve for discharging the
capacitor since current is simply charge over time.
Ch 15-1
Key Concepts
Current can flow into a capacitor from either side, but current doesnt flow across the
capacitor from one plate to another. The plates do not touch, and the substance in
between is insulating, not conducting.
One side of the capacitor fills up with negative charge, the other with positive charge.
The reason for the thin, close plates is you can use the negative charge on one plate to
attract and hold the positive charge on the other plate. The reason for plates of big area is
that you can spread out the charge on one plate so that its self-repulsion doesnt stop you
from filling it with more charge.
Typical dielectric constants are roughly 5.6 for glass and 80 for water. What these
dielectric substances do is align their electric polarity with the electric field in a
capacitor (much like atoms in a magnetic material) and, in doing so, amplify the electric
field, allowing more charge to be stored without repelling.
When a capacitor is initially uncharged, it is very easy to stuff charge in. As you put more
charge in, it starts to build up and repel the additional charge you are attempting to stuff
in there. The charging of a capacitor follows a logarithmic curve. The total amount of
energy you need to expend to fully charge a capacitor with charge Q and electric
potential V is U = QV = CV2 . When you pass current through a resistor into a
capacitor, the capacitor eventually fills up and no more current flows. A typical RC
circuit is shown below; when the switch is closed, the capacitor discharges with an
exponentially decreasing current.
Q refers to the amount of positive charge stored on the high voltage side of the capacitor;
an equal and opposite amount, Q, of negative charge is stored on the low voltage side of
the capacitor.
The total capacitance of two or more capacitors placed in series add as resistors in
parallel: 1 / CS = 1/C1 + 1/C ; two or more capacitors wired in parallel add as resistors
in series: CP = C1 + C2 .
Many home-electronic circuits include capacitors; for this reason, it can be dangerous to
mess around with old electronic components, as the capacitors may be charged even if
the unit is unplugged. For example, old computer monitors (not flat screens) and TVs
have capacitors that hold dangerous amounts of charge hours after the power is turned
off.
Ch 15-2
Ch 15-3
II
III
Ch 15-4
Inductors are made from coiled wires, normally wrapped around ferromagnetic material
and operate according to the principles of magnetic induction presented in Chapter 14.
Inductors generate a back-emf. Back-emf is essentially an induced negative voltage which
opposes changes in current. The amount of back-emf generated is proportional to how
quickly the current changes. They can be thought of as automatic flow regulators that
oppose any change in current. Thus electrical engineers call them chokes.
In a circuit diagram, an inductor looks like a coil. The resistance R
and capacitance C of an inductor are very close to zero. When
analyzing a circuit diagram, assume R and C are precisely zero.
Diodes are passive circuit elements that act like one-way gates. Diodes allow current to
flow one way, but not the other. For example, a diode that turns on at 0.6 V acts as
follows: if the voltage drop across the diode is less than 0.6 V, no current will flow.
Above 0.6 V, of current flows with essentially no resistance. If the voltage drop is
negative (and not extremely large), no current will flow.
Diodes have an arrow showing the direction of the flow.
Transistors are active circuit elements that act like control gates for the flow of current.
Although there are many types of transistors, lets consider just one kind for now. This
type of transistor has three electrical leads: the base, the emitter, and the collector.
emitter
base
Ch 16-1
For example, if the base voltage is more than 0.8 V above the collector voltage, then
current can freely flow from the emitter to the collector, as if it were just a wire. If the
base voltage is less than 0.8 V above the collector voltage, then current does not flow
from the emitter to the collector. Thus the transistor acts as a switch. (This 0.8 V is
known as a diode drop and varies from transistor to transistor.)
Transistors have an infinite output resistance. If you measure the resistance between the
collector and the base (or between the emitter and the base), it will be extremely high.
Essentially no current flows into the base from either the collector or the emitter; any
current, if it flows, flows from the emitter to the collector..
Transistors are used in amplifier circuits, which take an input voltage and magnify it by a
large factor. Amplifiers typically run on the principle of positive and negative feedback.
Feedback occurs when a small portion of an output voltage is used to influence the input
voltage.
Circuit
element
Symbol
Voltage
Source
Electrical
symbol
Unit
Everyday device
Volts (V)
Resistor
Ohm ()
Capacitor
Farad (F)
Inductor
Henry (H)
Diode
varies
by type
none
Transistor
varies
by type
none
Ch 16-2
Digital circuits only care about two voltages: for example, +5 V (known as on) and 0 V
(known as off). Logic devices, which are active circuit elements, interpret voltages
according to a simple set of mathematical rules known as Boolean logic. The most basic
logic devices are the AND , OR, and NOT gates:
input A
input B
input A
input B
input
output
output
output
For a NOT gate, the output will always be the opposite of the
input. Thus, if the input is 5 V (on), the output will be 0 V
(off) and vice-versa.
Alternating current changes direction of current flow. The frequency is the number of
times the current reverses direction in a second. Household AC is 60 Hz. In AC circuits
the current is impeded but not stopped by elements like capacitors and inductors.
Capacitive Reactance is a measure of how a capacitor impedes the current flow from a
given voltage in an AC circuit and is inversely proportional to capacitance. Inductive
Reactance is a measure of how an inductor in an AC circuit impedes the current flow
from a given voltage and is directly proportional to inductance.
The total impedance of an AC circuit depends on resitance, capacitive reactance and
inductive reactance.
If the capacitive reactance and inductive reactance are both zero or unequal the voltage
and current are out of phase. That is they peak at different times in the cycle. The phase
angle measures the lag or lead of current over voltage.
Key Equations
Ch 16-3
Emf = L(I/t)
L = 0N2A/
XL = f
XC = 1/C
Z = R + (XL XC )
Vm = ImZ
tan = XL XC/ R
Ch 16-4
1. You purchase a circular solenoid with 100 turns, a radius of 0.5 cm, and a length of 2.0 cm.
a. Calculate the inductance of your solenoid in Henrys.
b. A current of 0.5 A is passing through your solenoid. The current is turned down to zero
over the course of 0.25 seconds. What voltage is induced in the solenoid?
2. What is the voltage drop across an inductor if the current passing through it is not changing
with time? Does your answer depend on the physical makeup of the inductor? Explain.
3. Consider the transistor circuit diagram shown here. The resistor is a
light bulb that shines when current passes through it.
+15 V
100
input A
0V
output
100
B
10
A
B
Ch 16-5
State of A
State of B
State of C
on
on
on
on
on
off
on
off
on
on
off
off
off
on
on
off
off
on
off
on
off
off
off
off
State of D
6. A series circuit contains the following elements: a 125 resistor, a 175 mH inductor, two 30.0
F capacitors and a 40.0 F capacitor. Voltage is provided by a 235 Vm generator operating at
75.0 Hz.
a. Draw a schematic diagram of the circuit.
b. Calculate the total capacitance of the circuit.
c. Calculate the capacitive reactance.
d. Calculate the impedance.
e. Calculate the peak current.
f. Calculate the phase angle.
g. Resonance occurs at the frequency when peak current is maximized. What is that frequency?
Ch 16-6
Light is produced when charged particles accelerate. As a result changing electric and
magnetic fields radiate outward. The traveling electric and magnetic fields of an accelerating
(often oscillating) charged particle are known as electromagnetic radiation or light.
The color of light that we observe is nothing more than the wavelength of the light: the longer
the wavelength, the redder the light.
Light can have any wavelength at all. Our vision is restricted to a very narrow range of colors
between red and violet.
Ch 17-1
The spectrum of electromagnetic radiation can be roughly broken into the following ranges:
Color
Wavelength range
Comparison size
gamma-ray (-ray)
atomic nucleus
x-ray
10
-11
-8
-8
hydrogen atom
-7
m 10 m
ultraviolet (UV)
10 m 10 m
small molecule
violet (visible)
typical molecule
blue (visible)
~ 450 nm
typical molecule
green (visible)
~ 500 nm
typical molecule
red (visible)
~ 650 nm
typical molecule
infrared (IR)
-6
10 m 1 mm
human hair
microvwave
1 mm 10 cm
human finger
radio
Larger than 10 cm
car antenna
Fermats Principle makes the angle of incident light equal to the angle of reflected light.
This is the law of reflection.
When light travels from one type of material (like
air) into another (like glass), the speed slows down
due to interactions between photons and electrons. If
the ray enters the material at an angle Fermats
Principle dictates that the light also changes the
direction of its motion. This is called refraction. See
figure at right, which demonstrates the refraction a
light ray experiences as it passes from air into a
rectangular piece of glass and out again. Because
light travels at slower than usual speed in transparent materials (due to constantly being
absorbed and re-emitted), this means that light doesnt always travel in a straight line.
White light consists of a mixture of all the visible colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue,
indigo, and violet (ROYGBIV). Our perception of the color black is tied to the absence
of light.
Our eyes include color-sensitive and brightness-sensitive cells. The three different colorsensitive cells (cones) can have sensitivity in three colors: red, blue, and green. Our
perception of other colors is made from the relative amounts of each color that the cones
register from light reflected from the object we are looking at. Our brightness-sensitive
cells work well in low light. This is why things look black and white at night.
The chemical bonds in pigments and dyes like those in a colorful shirt absorb light at
frequencies that correspond to certain colors. When you shine white light on these
pigments and dyes, some colors are absorbed and some colors are reflected. We only see
the colors objects reflect.
Ch 17-2
Color Addition
Red
Green
Blue
Perceived color
white
black
magenta
yellow
cyan
Key Applications
Total internal reflection occurs when light goes from a slow (high index of refraction)
medium to a fast (low index of refraction) medium. With total internal reflection, light
refracts so much it actually refracts back into the first medium. This
is how fiber optic cables work: no light leaves the wire.
Rayleigh scattering occurs when light interacts with our atmosphere.
The shorter the wavelength of light, the more strongly it is disturbed
by collisions with atmospheric molecules. So blue light from the Sun
is preferentially scattered by these collisions into our line of sight.
This is why the sky appears blue.
Beautiful sunsets occur when light travels long distances through the
atmosphere. The blue light and some green is scattered away,
leaving only red and a little green, making the sun appear red.
Lenses, made from curved pieces of glass, focus or de-focus light as
it passes through. Lenses that focus light are called converging
lenses, and these are the ones used to make telescopes and cameras.
Lenses that de-focus light are called diverging lenses.
Converging lens
Lenses can be used to make visual representations, called images.
Mirrors are made from highly reflective metal that is applied to a curved or flat piece of
glass. Converging mirrors can be used to focus light headlights, telescopes, satellite TV
receivers, and solar cookers all rely on this principle. Like lenses, mirrors can create
images.
The focal length, f, of a lens or mirror is the distance from the surface of the lens or
mirror to the place where the light is focused. This is called the focal point or focus. For
diverging lenses or mirrors, the focal length is negative.
When light rays converge in front of a mirror or behind a lens, a real image is formed.
Real images are useful in that you can place photographic film at the physical location of
the real image, expose the film to the light, and make a two-dimensional representation of
the world, a photograph.
Ch 17-3
Diverging lens
Waves are characterized by their ability to constructively and destructively interfere. Light
waves which interfere with themselves after interaction with a small aperture or target are
said to diffract.
Light creates interference patterns when passing through holes (slits) in an obstruction such
as paper or the surface of a CD, or when passing through a thin film such as soap.
The product of the wavelength of the light (in meters) and the frequency f of the
light (in Hz, or 1/sec) is always equal to a constant, namely the speed of light c =
300,000,000 m/s.
Key Equations
c = f
n=c/u
The index of refraction, n, is the ratio of the speed c it travels in a vacuum to the
slower speed it travels in a material. n can depend slightly on wavelength .
ni sin(i) = nr sin(r)
ni
i
nr
r
m = dsin()
m = dsin
Ch 17-4
m = dsin
m = 2nd
diffraction grating
1 1 1
= +
f d o di
For lenses, the distance from the center of the lens to the focus is f. Focal
lengths for foci behind the lens are positive in sign. The distance from the
center of the lens to the object in question is d0, where distances to the left of
the lens are positive in sign. The distance from the center of the lens to the
image is di. This number is positive for real images (formed to the right of the
lens), and negative for virtual images (formed to the left of the lens).
For mirrors, the same equation holds! However, the object and image distances are both positive
for real images formed to the left of the mirror. For virtual images formed to the right of the
mirror, the image distance is negative.
di
do
M=
R = 2f
The size of an objects image is larger (or smaller) than the object itself by its
magnification, M. The level of magnification is proportional to the ratio of di and
do. An image that is double the size of the object would have magnification M = 2.
The radius of curvature of a mirror is twice its focal length.
Ch 17-5
Material
vacuum
1.00000
air
1.00029
water
1.33
typical glass
1.52
cooking oil
1.53
1.65
sapphire
1.77
diamond
2.42
Ch 17-6
14
10. A light ray bounces off a fish in your aquarium. It travels through the water, into the glass
side of the aquarium, and then into air. Draw a sketch of the situation, being careful to
indicate how the light will change directions when it refracts at each interface. Include a brief
discussion of why this occurs.
11. Why is the sky blue? Find a family member who doesnt know why the sky is blue and
explain it to them. Ask them to write a short paragraph explaining the situation and include a
sketch.
12. Describe the function of the dye in blue jeans. What does the dye do to each of the various
colors of visible light?
13. A light ray goes from the air into the water. If the angle of incidence is 34, what is the angle
of refraction?
14. In the disappearing test tube demo, a test tube filled with vegetable oil vanishes when
placed in a beaker full of the same oil. How is this possible? Would a diamond tube filled
with water and placed in water have the same effect?
15. Imagine a thread of diamond wire immersed in water. Can such an object demonstrate total
internal reflection? If so, what is the critical angle? Draw a picture along with your
calculations.
Ch 17-7
17. Nisha stands at the edge of an aquarium 3.0 m deep. She shines a laser at a height of 1.7 m
that hits the water of the pool 8.1 m from the edge.
a. Draw a diagram of this situation. Label all known lengths.
b. How far from the edge of the pool will the light hit bottom?
c. If her friend, James, were at the bottom and shined a light back, hitting the same spot as
Nishas, how far from the edge would he have to be so that the light never leaves the
water?
18. Heres an example of the flat mirror problem. Marjan is looking at herself in the mirror.
Assume that her eyes are 10 cm below the top of her head, and that she stands 180 cm tall.
Calculate the minimum length flat mirror that Marjan would need to see her body from eye
level all the way down to her feet. Sketch at least 3 ray traces from her eyes showing the
topmost, bottommost, and middle rays.
Ch 17-8
In the following five problems, you will do a careful ray tracing with a ruler (including the
extrapolation of rays for virtual images). It is best if you can use different colors for the three
different ray tracings. When sketching diverging rays, you should use dotted lines for the
extrapolated lines behind a mirror or in front of a lens in order to produce the virtual image.
When comparing measured distances and heights to calculated distances and heights, values
within 10% are considered good. Use the following cheat sheet as your guide.
CONVERGING
(CONCAVE)
MIRRORS
Ray #1: Leaves tip of candle, travels parallel to optic axis, reflects back through focus.
Ray #2: Leaves tip, travels through focus, reflects back parallel to optic axis.
Ray #3: Leaves tip, reflects off center of mirror with an angle of reflection equal to the angle
of incidence.
DIVERGING
(CONVEX)
MIRRORS
Ray #1: Leaves tip, travels parallel to optic axis, reflects OUTWARD by lining up with focus
on the OPPOSITE side as the candle.
Ray #2: Leaves tip, heads toward the focus on the OPPOSITE side, and emerges parallel to
the optic axis.
Ray #3: Leaves tip, heads straight for the mirror center, and reflects at an equal angle.
CONVERGING
(CONVEX)
LENSES
DIVERGING
(CONCAVE)
LENSES
Ray #1: Leaves tip, travels parallel to optic axis, refracts and travels to through to focus.
Ray #2: Leaves tip, travels through focus on same side, travels through lens, and exits lens
parallel to optic axis on opposite side.
Ray #3: Leaves tip, passes straight through center of lens and exits without bending.
Ray #1: Leaves tip, travels parallel to optic axis, refracts OUTWARD by lining up with focus
on the SAME side as the candle.
Ray #2: Leaves tip, heads toward the focus on the OPPOSITE side, and emerges parallel from
the lens.
Ray #3: Leaves tip, passes straight through the center of lens and exits without bending.
19. Consider a concave mirror with a focal length equal to two units, as shown below.
a. Carefully trace three rays coming off the top of the object in order to form the image.
f
b.
c.
d.
e.
Ch 17-9
20. Consider a concave mirror with unknown focal length that produces a virtual image six units
behind the mirror.
a. Calculate the focal length of the mirror and draw an at the position of the focus.
b. Carefully trace three rays coming off the top of the object and show how they converge to
form the image.
c. Does your image appear bigger or smaller than the object? Calculate the expected
magnification and compare it to your sketch.
21. Consider a convex mirror with a focal length equal to two units.
a. Carefully trace three rays coming off the top of the object and form the image.
f
b.
c.
d.
e.
Ch 17-10
22. Consider a converging lens with a focal length equal to three units.
a. Carefully trace three rays coming off the top of the object and form the image.
b.
c.
d.
e.
23. Consider a diverging lens with a focal length equal to four units.
a. Carefully trace three rays coming off the top of the object and show where they converge
to form the image.
b.
c.
d.
e.
24. A piece of transparent goo falls on your paper. You notice that the letters on your page appear
smaller than they really are. Is the goo acting as a converging lens or a diverging lens?
Explain. Is the image you see real or virtual? Explain.
Ch 17-11
25. An object is placed 30 mm in front of a lens. An image of the object is located 90 mm behind
the lens.
a. Is the lens converging or diverging? Explain your reasoning.
b. What is the focal length of the lens?
26. Little Red Riding Hood (aka R-Hood) gets to her grandmothers house only to find the Big
Bad Wolf (aka BBW) in her place. R-Hood notices that BBW is wearing her grandmothers
glasses and it makes the wolfs eyes look magnified (bigger).
a. Are these glasses for near-sighted or far-sighted people? For full credit, explain your
answer thoroughly. You may need to consult some resources online.
b. Create a diagram of how these glasses correct a persons vision.
Mirror
Image of
light bulb
Real
light
bulb
20.0 cm
Black painted
wood box (side
view)
64 cm
28. In your laboratory, light from a 650 nm laser shines on two thin slits. The slits are separated
by 0.011 mm. A flat screen is located 1.5 m behind the slits.
a. Find the angle made by rays traveling to the third maximum off the optic axis.
b. How far from the center of the screen is the third maximum located?
c. How would your answers change if the experiment was conducted underwater?
29. Again, in your laboratory, 540 nm light falls on a pinhole 0.0038 mm in diameter. Diffraction
maxima are observed on a screen 5.0 m away.
a. Calculate the distance from the central maximum to the first interference maximum.
b. Qualitatively explain how your answer to (a) would change if you
i.
move the screen closer to the pinhole.
ii.
increase the wavelength of light.
iii.
reduce the diameter of the pinhole.
Ch 17-12
30. You are to design an experiment to determine the index of refraction of an unknown liquid.
You have a small square container of the liquid, the sides of which are made of transparent
thin plastic. In addition you have a screen, laser, ruler and protractors. Design the
experiment. Give a detailed procedure; include a diagram of the experiment. Tell which
equations you would use and give some sample calculations. Finally, tell in detail what level
of accuracy you can expect and explain the causes of lab error in order of importance.
31. Students are doing an experiment with a Helium-neon laser, which emits 632.5 nm light.
They use a diffraction grating with 8000 lines/cm. They place the laser 1 m from a screen and
the diffraction grating, initially, 95 cm from the screen. They observe the first and then the
second order diffraction peaks. Afterwards, they move the diffraction grating closer to the
screen.
a.
Fill in the table below with the expected data based on your understanding of physics.
Hint: find the general solution through algebra before plugging in any numbers.
Distance of
diffraction grating
to screen (cm)
95
75
55
35
15
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Plot a graph of the first order distance as a function of the distance between the grating
and the screen.
How would you need to manipulate this data in order to create a linear plot?
In a real experiment what could cause the data to deviate from the expected values?
Explain.
What safety considerations are important for this experiment?
Explain how you could use a diffraction grating to calculate the unknown wavelength
of another laser.
32.
An abalone shell, when exposed to white light, produces an array of cyan, magenta and
yellow. There is a thin film on the shell that both refracts and reflects the light. Explain
clearly why these and only these colors are observed.
33.
34.
Laser light shines on an oil film (n = 1.43) sitting on water. At a point where the film is
96 nm thick, a 1st order dark fringe is observed. What is the wavelength of the laser?
Ch 17-13
35.
You want to design an experiment in which you use the properties of thin film
interference to investigate the variations in thickness of a film of water on glass.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Ch 17-14
The pressure of a fluid is a measure of the forces exerted by a large number of molecules
when they collide and bounce off a boundary. The unit of pressure is the Pascal (Pa).
Mass density represents the amount of mass in a given volume. We also speak of fluids
as having gravitational potential energy density, kinetic energy density, and momentum
density. These represent the amount of energy or momentum possessed by a given
volume of fluid.
Pressure and energy density have the same units: 1 Pa = 1 N/m2 = 1 J/m3. The pressure of
a fluid can be thought of as an arbitrary level of energy density.
For static fluids and fluids flowing in a steady state all locations in the connected fluid
system must have the same total energy density. This means that the algebraic sum of
pressure, kinetic energy density and gravitational energy density equals zero. Changes in
fluid pressure must be equal to changes in energy density (kinetic and/or gravitational).
Liquids obey a continuity equation which is based on the fact that liquids are very
difficult to compress. This means that the total volume of a sample of fluid will always be
the same. Imagine trying to compress a filled water balloon
The specific gravity of an object is the ratio of the density of that object to the density of
water. Objects with specific gravities greater than 1.0 (i.e., greater than water) will sink in
water; otherwise, they will float. The density of fresh water is 1000 kg/m3 .
Key Equations
P=F/A
=M/V
ug = gh
Ch 18-1
k = v2
P = gh
P + k + ug = 0
= Av
Key Applications
In a fluid at rest, pressure increases in proportion to its depth this is due to the weight of
the water above you.
Archimedes Principle states that the upward buoyant force on an object in the water is
equal to the weight of the displaced volume of water. The reason for this upward force is
that the bottom of the object is at lower depth, and therefore higher pressure, than the top.
If an object has a higher density than the density of water, the weight of the displaced
volume will be less than the objects weight, and the object will sink. Otherwise, the
object will float.
Pascals Principle reminds us that, for a fluid of uniform pressure, the force exerted on a
small area in contact with the fluid will be smaller than the force exerted on a large area.
Thus, a small force applied to a small area in a fluid can create a large force on a larger
area. This is the principle behind hydraulic machinery.
Bernoullis Principle is a restatement of the conservation of energy, but for fluids. The
sum of pressure, kinetic energy density, and gravitational potential energy density is
conserved. In other words, P + k + ug equals zero. One consequence of this is that a
fluid moving at higher speed will exhibit a lower pressure, and vice versa. There are a
number of common applications for this: when you turn on your shower, the moving
water and air reduce the pressure in the shower stall, and the shower curtain is pulled
inward; when a strong wind blows outside your house, the pressure decreases, and your
shutters are blown open; due to the flaps on airplane wings, the speed of the air below the
wing is lower than above the wing, which means the pressure below the wing is higher,
and provides extra lift for the plane during landing. There are many more examples.
Due to the conservation of flux, , which means that a smaller fluid-carrying pipe
requires a faster moving fluid, and also due to Bernoullis Principle, which says that fastmoving fluids have low pressure, a useful rule emerges. Pressure in a smaller pipe must
be lower than pressure in a larger pipe.
If the fluid is not in a steady state energy can be lost in fluid flow. The loss of energy is
related to viscosity, or deviation from smooth flow. Viscosity is related to turbulence, the
tendency of fluids to become chaotic in their motion. In a high viscosity fluid, energy is
lost from a fluid in a way that is quite analogous to energy loss due to current flow
through a resistor. A pump can add energy to a fluid system also. The full Bernoulli
Equation takes these two factors, viscosity and pumps, into account.
Ch 18-2
2. A rectangular barge 17 m long, 5 m wide, and 2.5 m in height is floating in a river. When the
barge is empty, only 0.6 m is submerged. With its current load, however, the barge sinks so
that 2.2 m is submerged. Calculate the mass of the load.
3. The density of ice is 90% that of water.
a. Why does this fact make icebergs so dangerous?
b. A form of the liquid naphthalene has a specific gravity of 1.58. What fraction of an ice
cube would be submerged in a bath of naphthalene?
4. A cube of aluminum with a specific gravity of 2.70 and side length 4.00 cm is put into a
beaker of methanol, which has a specific gravity of 0.791.
a. Draw a free body diagram for the cube.
b. Calculate the buoyant force acting on the cube.
c. Calculate the acceleration of the cube toward the bottom when it is released.
5. A cube of aluminum (specific gravity of 2.70) and side length 4.00 cm is put in a beaker of
liquid naphthalene (specific gravity of 1.58). When the cube is released, what is its
acceleration?
6. Your class is building boats out of aluminum foil. One group fashions a boat with a square 10
cm by 10 cm bottom and sides 1 cm high. They begin to put 2.5 g coins in the boat, adding
them until it sinks. Assume they put the coins in evenly so the boat doesnt tip. How many
coins can they put in? (You may ignore the mass of the aluminum boat assume it is zero.)
Ch 18-3
8. You are doing an experiment in which you are slowly lowering a tall, empty cup into a
beaker of water. The cup is held by a string attached to a spring scale that measures tension.
You collect data on tension as a function of depth. The mass of the cup is 520 g, and it is long
enough that it never fills with water during the experiment. The following table of data is
collected:
String tension (N)
Depth (cm)
5.2
4.9
4.2
3.7
2.9
2.3
10
1.7
12
0.7
15
0.3
16
17
a. Complete the chart by calculating the buoyant force acting on the cup at each depth.
b. Make a graph of buoyant force vs. depth, find a best-fit line for the data points, and
calculate its slope.
c. What does this slope physically represent? (That is, what would a greater slope mean?)
d. With this slope, and the value for the density of water, calculate the area of the circular
cups bottom and its radius.
e. Design an experiment using this apparatus to measure the density of an unknown fluid.
Ch 18-4
9. A 1500 kg car is being lifted by a hydraulic jack attached to a flat plate. Underneath the plate
is a pipe with radius 24 cm.
a. If there is no net force on the car, calculate the pressure in the pipe.
b. The other end of the pipe has a radius of 2.00 cm. How much force must be exerted at
this end?
c. To generate an upward acceleration for the car of 1.0 m/s2, how much force must be
applied to the small end of the pipe?
10. A SCUBA diver descends deep into the ocean. Calculate the water pressure at each of the
following depths.
a. 15 m
b. 50 m
c. 100 m
11. What happens to the gravitational potential energy density of water when it is siphoned out of
a lower main ditch on your farm and put into a higher row ditch? How is this consistent with
Bernoullis principle?
Ch 18-5
12. Water flows through a horizontal water pipe 10.0 cm in diameter into a smaller 3.00 cm pipe.
What is the ratio in water pressure between the larger and the smaller water pipes?
13. A pump is required to pipe water from a well 7.0 m in depth to an open-topped water tank at
ground level. The pipe at the top of the pump, where the water pours into the water tank, is
2.00 cm in diameter. The water flow in the pipe is 5.00 m/s.
a. What is the kinetic energy
density of the water
flow?
b. What pressure is required at
the bottom of the well?
(Assume no energy is lost
i.e., that the fluid is
traveling smoothly.)
c. What power is being
delivered to the water by the
pump?
(Hint: For the next part, refer to
Chapter 12)
d. If the pump has an
efficiency of 45%, what is
the pumps electrical power
consumption?
e. If the pump is operating on
a 220 V power supply
(typical for large pieces of
equipment like this), how
much electrical current does
the pump draw?
f. At 13.5 cents per kilowatthour, how much does it cost
to operate this pump for a
month if it is running 5% of the time?
14. Ouch! You stepped on my foot! That is, you put a force of 550 N in an area of 9 cm2 on the
tops of my feet!
a. What was the pressure on my feet?
b. What is the ratio of this pressure to atmospheric pressure?
15. A submarine is moving directly upwards in the water at constant speed. The weight of the
submarine is 500,000 N. The submarines motors are off.
a. Draw a sketch of the situation and a free body diagram for the submarine.
b. What is the magnitude of the buoyant force acting on the submarine?
Ch 18-6
16. You dive into a deep pool in the river from a high cliff. When you hit the water, your speed
was 20 m/s. About 0.75 seconds after hitting the water surface, you come to a stop before
beginning to rise up towards the surface. Take your mass to be 60 kg.
a. What was your average acceleration during this time period?
b. What was the average net force acting on you during this time period?
c. What was the buoyant force acting on you during this time period?
17. A glass of water with weight 10 N is sitting on a
scale, which reads 10 N. An antique coin with
weight 1 N is placed in the water. At first, the coin
accelerates as it falls with an acceleration of g/2.
About half-way down the glass, the coin reaches
terminal velocity and continues at constant speed.
Eventually, the coin rests on the bottom of the glass.
What was the scale reading when
a. the coin had not yet been released into the
water?
b. the coin was first accelerating?
c. the coin reached terminal velocity?
d. the coin came to rest on the bottom?
18. You are planning a trip to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, located in the western Pacific
Ocean. The trench has a maximum depth of 11,000 m, deeper than Mt. Everest is tall! You
plan to use your bathysphere to descend to the bottom, and you want to make sure you design
it to withstand the pressure. A bathysphere is a spherical capsule used for ocean descent a
cable is attached to the top, and this cable is attached to a winch on your boat on the surface.
a. Name and sketch your bathysphere.
b. What is the radius of your bathysphere in meters? (You choose estimate from your
picture.)
c. What is the volume of your bathysphere in m3?
d. What is the pressure acting on your bathysphere at a depth of 11,000 m? The density of
sea water is 1027 kg/m3.
e. If you had a circular porthole of radius 0.10 m (10 cm) on your bathysphere, what would
the inward force on the porthole be?
f. If the density of your bathysphere is 1400 kg/m3, what is the magnitude of the buoyant
force acting on it when it is at the deepest point in the trench?
g. In order to stop at this depth, what must the tension in the cable be? (Draw an FBD!)
Ch 18-7
Ch 18-8
Key Concepts
The temperature of a gas is a measure of the amount of average kinetic energy that the atoms
in the gas possess.
The pressure of a gas is the force the gas exerts on a certain area. For a gas in a container, the
amount of pressure is directly related to the number and intensity of atomic collisions on a
container wall.
An ideal gas is a gas for which interactions between molecules are negligible, and for which
the gas atoms or molecules themselves store no potential energy. For an ideal gas, the
pressure, temperature, and volume are simply related by the ideal gas law.
Atmospheric pressure (1 atm = 101,000 Pascals) is the pressure we feel at sea level due to the
weight of the atmosphere above us. As we rise in elevation, there is less of an atmosphere to
push down on us and thus less pressure.
When gas pressure-forces are used to move an object then work is done on the object by the
expanding gas. Work can be done on the gas in order to compress it.
Ch 19-1
Adiabatic process: a process where no heat enters or leaves the heat engine.
Isothermal: a process where the temperature does not change.
Isobaric: a process where the pressure does not change.
Isochoric: a process where the volume of the container does not change.
If you plot pressure on the vertical axis and volume on the horizontal axis the work done in
any complete cycle is the area enclosed by the graph. For a partial process work is the area
underneath the curve, or PV.
In a practical heat engine the change in internal energy must be zero over a complete cycle.
Therefore over a complete cycle W = Q
The work done by a gas during a portion of a cycle = PV, note V can be positive or
negative.
The efficiency of any heat engine : = W/Qin
An ideal engine, i.e.: the most efficient even theoretically possible, is called a Carnot Engine.
Its efficiency, = 1 Tcold/ Thot The temperatures are in Kelvins and are respectively the
temperature of the exhaust environment and the temperature of the heat input. In a Carnot
engine heat is inputted and exhausted in isothermal cycles.
Key Equations
< /2 mv >AVG = /2 kT
P=F/A
PV = NkT
The pressure on an object is equal to the force pushing on the object divided by the
area over which the force is exerted. Unit for pressure are N/m2 (called Pascals)
An ideal gas is a gas where the atoms are treated as point-particles and assumed to
never collide or interact with each other. If you have N molecules of such a gas at
temperature T and volume V, the pressure can be calculated from this formula. Note that
k = 1.3810-23 J/K; this is the ideal gas law.
PV = nRT
Qin = Qout + W + U
Ch 19-2
Ch 19-3
To the right is a graph of the pressure and volume of a gas in a container that has an adjustable
volume. The lid of the container can be raised or lowered, and various manipulations of the
container change the properties of the gas within. The points a, b, and c represent different stages
of the gas as the container undergoes changes (for instance, the lid is raised or lowered, heat is
added or taken away, etc.) The arrows represent the
P
flow of time. Use the graph to answer the following
questions.
c
a
13. Consider the change the gas undergoes as it
transitions from point b to point c. What type of
process is this?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
adiabatic
isothermal
isobaric
isochoric
entropic
14. Consider the change the gas undergoes as it transitions from point c to point a. What type of
process is this?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
adiabatic
isothermal
isobaric
isochoric
none of the above
15. Consider the change the gas undergoes as it transitions from point a to point b. Which of the
following best describes the type of process shown?
a.
b.
c.
isothermal
isobaric
isochoric
18. Calculate the average speed of N2 molecules at room temperature (300 K). (You remember
from your chemistry class how to calculate the mass (in kg) of an N2 molecule, right?)
19. How high would the temperature of a sample of O2 gas molecules have to be so that the
average speed of the molecules would be 10% the speed of light?
20. How much pressure are you exerting on the floor when you stand on one foot? (You will
need to estimate the area of your foot in square meters.)
Ch 19-4
21. Calculate the amount of force exerted on a 2 cm 2 cm patch of your skin due to atmospheric
pressure (P0 = 101,000 Pa). Why doesnt your skin burst under this force?
22. Use the ideal gas law to estimate the number of gas molecules that fit in a typical classroom.
23. Assuming that the pressure of the atmosphere decreases exponentially as you rise in elevation
h
Use this formula to determine the change in pressure as you go from San Francisco to
Lake Tahoe, which is at an elevation approximately 2 km above sea level.
If you rise to half the scale height of Earths atmosphere, by how much does the pressure
decrease?
If the pressure is half as much as on sea level, what is your elevation?
24. At Noahs Ark University the following experiment was conducted by a professor of
Intelligent Design (formerly Creation Science). A rock was dropped from the roof of the
Creation Science lab and, with expensive equipment, was observed to gain 100 J of internal
energy. Dr. Dumm explained to his students that the law of conservation of energy required
that if he put 100 J of heat into the rock, the rock would then rise to the top of the building.
When this did not occur, the professor declared the law of conservation of energy invalid.
a.
b.
Was the law of conservation of energy violated in this experiment, as was suggested?
Explain.
If the law wasnt violated, then why didnt the rock rise?
25. An instructor has an ideal monatomic helium gas sample in a closed container with a volume
of 0.01 m3, a temperature of 412 K, and a pressure of 474 kPa.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
26. A famous and picturesque dam, 80 m high, releases 24,000 kg of water a second. The water
turns a turbine that generates electricity.
a.
b.
c.
What is the dams maximum power output? Assume that all the gravitational potential
energy of the water is converted into electrical energy.
If the turbine only operates at 30% efficiency, what is the power output?
How many Joules of heat are exhausted into the atmosphere due to the plants
inefficiency?
Ch 19-5
28. Calculate the ideal efficiencies of the following sci-fi heat engines:
a.
b.
c.
A nuclear power plant on the moon. The ambient temperature on the moon is 15 K.
Heat input from radioactive decay heats the working steam to a temperature of 975 K.
A heat exchanger in a secret underground lake. The exchanger operates between the
bottom of a lake, where the temperature is 4 C, and the top, where the temperature is 13
C.
A refrigerator in your dorm room at Mars University. The interior temperature is 282 K;
the back of the fridge heats up to 320 K.
29. How much external work can be done by a gas when it expands from 0.003 m3 to 0.04 m3 in
volume under a constant pressure of 400 kPa? Can you give a practical example of such
work?
30. In the above problem, recalculate the work done if the pressure linearly decreases from 400
kPa to 250 kPa under the same expansion. Hint: use a PV diagram and find the area under the
line.
31. One mole (N = 6.021023) of an ideal gas is moved through the following states as part of a
heat engine. The engine moves from state A to state B to state C, and then back again.
State
Volume (m3)
Pressure (atm)
0.01
0.60
0.01
0.25
0.02
0.25
Temperature (K)
Ch 19-6
32. A sample of gas is used to drive a piston and do work. Heres how it works:
The gas starts out at standard atmospheric pressure and temperature. The lid of the gas
container is locked by a pin.
The gas pressure is increased isochorically through a spigot to twice that of atmospheric
pressure.
The locking pin is removed and the gas is allowed to expand isobarically to twice its
volume, lifting up a weight. The spigot continues to add gas to the cylinder during
this process to keep the pressure constant.
Once the expansion has finished, the spigot is released, the high-pressure gas is allowed
to escape, and the sample settles back to 1 atm.
Finally, the lid of the container is pushed back down. As the volume decreases, gas is
allowed to escape through the spigot, maintaining a pressure of 1 atm. At the end,
the pin is locked again and the process restarts.
a. Draw the above steps on a P-V diagram.
b. Calculate the highest and lowest temperatures of the gas.
33. A heat engine operates through 4 cycles according to the PV diagram sketched below.
Starting at the top left vertex they are labeled clockwise as follows: a, b, c, and d.
a. From a-b the work is 75 J and the change in internal energy is 100 J; find the net heat.
b. From the a-c the change in internal energy is -20 J. Find the net heat from b-c.
c. From c-d the work is -40 J. Find the net heat from c-d-a.
d. Find the net work over the complete 4 cycles.
e. The change in internal energy from b-c-d is -180 J Find:
i. the net heat from c-d
ii. the change in internal energy from d-a
iii. the net heat from d-a
P
A
W = 75J
U = 100J
W = -40J
U = -20J
Ch 19-7
34. A 0.1 mole of an ideal gas is taken from state A by an isochoric process to state B then
to state C by an isobaric process. It goes from state C to D by a process that is linear on
a PV diagram then back to A by an isobaric process. The volumes and pressures of the
states are given below:
Volume in m x 10-3
1.04
1.04
1.25
1.50
state
A
B
C
D
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Ch 19-8
Key Concepts
The speed of light will always be measured to be the same (about 3108 m/s) regardless of
your motion towards or away from the source of light.
In order for this bizarre fact to be true, we must reconsider what we mean by space, time,
and related concepts, such as the concept of simultaneous events. (Events which are seen as
simultaneous by one observer might appear to occur at different times to an observer moving
with a different velocity. Note that both observers see the same laws of physics, just a
different sequence of events.)
Ch 20-1
Clocks moving towards or away from you run more slowly, and objects moving towards or
away from you shrink in length. These are known as Lorentz time dilation and length
contraction; both are real, measured properties of the universe we live in.
If matter is compressed highly enough, the curvature of spacetime becomes so intense that a
black hole forms. Within a certain distance of a black hole, called an event horizon, nothing
can escape the intense curvature, not even light. No events which occur within the horizon
can have any effect, ever, on events which occur outside the horizon.
Key Equations
=v/c
= 1 / 1 2
The dimensionless Lorentz gamma factor can be calculated from the speed, and
tells you how much time dilation or length contraction there is. 1 .
Object
Speed (km/sec)
=v/c
Lorentz Factor
Commercial Airplane
0.25
810-7
1.00000000000
Space Shuttle
7.8
310-5
1.00000000034
UFO
150,000
0.5
1.15
~300,000
0.9999999995
~100,000
L = L /
T = T
If you see an object of length L moving towards you at a Lorentz gamma factor , it
will appear shortened (contracted) in the direction of motion to new length L .
If a moving object experiences some event which takes a period of time T (say, the
amount of time between two heart beats), and the object is moving towards or away
from you with Lorentz gamma factor , the period of time T measured by you will
appear longer.
Rs = 2GM/c2
m = m0
The radius of the spherical event horizon of a black hole is determined by the mass of
the black hole and fundamental constants. A typical black hole radius is about 3 km.
The massThe
of an
object
moving
relativistic
speeds increases
by a factor
.
mass
of an
objectatmoving
at relativistic
speeds increases
byofa factor
E = (mf-m0)c2
The potential energy of mass is equal to mass times the speed of light squared.
Ch 20-2
Ch 20-3
a. What was the ratio of the speed of the neutrinos to that of light?
b. Calculate how much space was Lorentz-contracted form the point of view of the neutrino.
c. Suppose you could travel in a spaceship at that speed to that galaxy and back. It that were
to occur the Earth would be 320,000 years older. How much would you have aged?
12. An electron moves in an accelerator at 95% the speed of light. Calculate the relativistic
mass of the electron?
13.
Enterprise crew members notice that a passing Klingon ship moving .8c with respect to
them is engaged in weapons testing on board. At point of closest contact the Klingons are
testing two weapons: one is a laser, which in their frame moves at c; the other is a particle
gun, which shoots particles at .6c in the Klingon frame. Both weapons are pointed in the
same line as the Klingon ship is moving. Answer the following two questions choosing
one of the following options:
A. V < .6c
B. .6c < V < .8c
C. .8c < V < c
D. c < V < 1.4c
E. V > 1.4c
F. V = c
a. Question 1: What speed, V, does the Enterprise measure the laser gun to be with
respect to the Enterprise?
b. Question 2: What speed, V, does the Enterprise measure the particle gun to achieve
with respect to the Enterprise?
14.
15.
The isotope of silicon Si31 has an atomic mass of 30.975362 amu. It can go through beta
radioactivity, producing P31 with a mass of 30.973762 amu .
a. Calculate the total energy of the beta particle emitted, assuming the P31 nucleus remains
at rest relative to the Si31 nucleus after emission.
b. Another possibility for this isotope is the emission of a gamma ray of energy 1.2662
Mev. How much kinetic energy would the P31 nucleus gain?
c. What is the frequency and wavelength of the gamma ray?
d. What is the rebound velocity of the P31 nucleus in the case of gamma ray emission?
Ch 20-4
N = N0 ()
t = tH ln(N/N0) / ln()
A
Z
E = mc2
N = Noe-tH
tH = ln2/
Ch 21-1
Key Concepts
Key Applications
Alpha Decay
Alpha decay is the process in which an isotope releases a helium nucleus (2 protons and 2
4
neutrons,2 He) and thus decays into an atom with two less protons.
Example:
Th
232
90
228
88
Ra + 24 He
Ch 21-2
Beta Decay
Beta decay is the process in which one of the neutrons in an isotope decays, leaving a
proton, electron and anti-neutrino. As a result, the nucleus decays into an atom that has
the same number of nucleons, with one neutron replaced by a proton. (Beta positive
decay is the reverse process, in which a proton decays into a neutron, anti-electron and
neutrino.)
Example:
C 147 N + 10 e +
14
6
Gamma Decay
Gamma decay is the process in which an excited atomic nucleus kicks out a photon and
releases some of its energy. The makeup of the nucleus doesnt change, it just loses
energy. (It can be useful to think of this as energy of motion think of a shuddering
nucleus that only relaxes after emitting some light.)
Example:
137
56
Ba* 137
56 Ba +
Ch 21-3
Fission is the process in which an atomic nucleus breaks apart into two less massive
nuclei. Energy is released in the process in many forms, heat, gamma rays and the kinetic
energy of neutrons. If these neutrons collide with nuclei and induce more fission, then a
runaway chain reaction can take place. Fission is responsible for nuclear energy and
atom-bomb explosions: the fission of uranium acts as a heat source for the Earths molten
interior.
Example: 1n + 235U 141Ba + 92 Kr + 3 1n
Fusion is the process in which two atomic nuclei fuse together to make a single nucleus.
Energy is released in the form of nuclear particles, neutrinos, and gamma-rays.
Example: 13 H + 12 H 24 He + 01n +
Radioactive carbon dating is a technique that allows scientists to determine the era in
which a sample of biological material died. A small portion of the carbon we ingest every
day is actually the radioactive isotope 14C rather than the usual 12C. Since we ingest
carbon every day until we die (we do this by eating plants; the plants do it through
photosynthesis), the amount of 14C in us should begin to decrease from the moment we
die. By analyzing the ratio of the number of 14C to 12C atoms in dead carbon-based life
forms (including cloth made from plants!), we can determine how long ago the life form
died.
Ch 21-4
1s
2s
3s
4s
6s
after 5 seconds.
after 10 seconds
after 20 seconds.
after a very long time.
5. You detect a high number of alpha particles every second when standing a certain distance
from a radioactive material. If you triple your distance from the source, the number of alpha
particles you detect will decrease. By what factor will it decrease?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
3
3
9
27
It will stay the same.
Ch 21-5
6. You have 5 grams of radioactive substance A and 5 grams of radioactive substance B. Both
decay by emitting alpha-radiation, and you know that the higher the number of alphaparticles emitted in a given amount of time, the more dangerous the sample is. Substance A
has a short half-life (around 4 days or so) and substance B has a longer half-life (around 10
months or so).
a. Which substance is more dangerous right now? Explain.
b. Which substance will be more dangerous in two years? Explain.
7. Write the nuclear equations A B + C for the following reactions.
a.
b.
c.
d.
8. A certain radioactive material has a half-life of 8 minutes. Suppose you have a large sample
of this material, containing 1025 atoms.
a.
b.
c.
d.
9. There are two equal amounts of radioactive material. One has a short half-life and the other
has a very long half-life. If you measured the decay rates coming from each sample, which
would you expect to have a higher decay rate? Why?
10. Hidden in your devious secret laboratory are 5.0 grams of radioactive substance A and 5.0
grams of radioactive substance B. Both emit alpha-radiation. Quick tests determine that
substance A has a half-life of 4.2 days and substance B has a half-life of 310 days.
a. How many grams of substance A and how many grams of substance B will you have
after waiting 30 days?
b. Which sample (A or B) is more dangerous at this point (i.e., after the 30 days have
passed)?
11. The half-life of a certain radioactive material is 4 years. After 24 years, how much of a 75 g
sample of this material will remain?
12. The half life of 53Ti is 33.0 seconds. You begin with 1000 g of 53Ti. How much is left after
99.0 seconds?
Ch 21-6
13. You want to determine the half-life of a radioactive substance. At the moment you start your
stopwatch, the radioactive substance has a mass of 10 g. After 2.0 minutes, the radioactive
substance has 0.5 grams left. What is its half-life?
14. The half-life of 239Pu is 24,119 years. You have 31.25 micrograms left, and the sample you
are studying started with 2000 micrograms. How long has this rock been decaying?
15. A certain fossilized plant is 23,000 years old. Anthropologist Hwi Kim determines that when
the plant died, it contained 0.250 g of radioactive 14C (t H = 5730 years). How much should be
left now?
16. A young girl unearths a guinea pig skeleton from the backyard. She runs a few tests and
determines that 99.7946% of the original 14C is still present in the guinea pigs bones. The
half-life of 14C is 5730 years. When did the guinea pig die?
17. You use the carbon dating technique to determine the age of an old skeleton you found in the
woods. From the total mass of the skeleton and the knowledge of its molecular makeup you
determine that the amount of 14C it began with was 0.021 grams. After some hard work, you
measure the current amount of 14C in the skeleton to be 0.000054 grams. How old is this
skeleton? Are you famous?
18. Micol had in her lab two samples of radioactive isotopes: 151Pm with a half-life of 1.183 days
and 134Ce with a half-life of 3.15 days. She initially had 100 mg of the former and 50 mg of
the latter.
a. Do a graph of quantity remaining (vertical axis) vs. time for both isotopes on the same
graph.
b. Using the graph determine at what time the quantities remaining of both isotopes are
exactly equal and what that quantity is.
c. Micol can detect no quantities less than 3.00 mg again using the graph determine how
long she will wait until each of the original isotopes will become undetectable.
d. The Pm goes through - decay and the Ce decays by means of electron capture. What
are the two immediate products of the radioactivity.
e. It turns out both of these products are themselves radioactive; the Pm product goes
through - decay before it becomes stable; the Ce product goes through + decay
before it reaches a stable isotope. When all is said and done what will Micol have left
in her lab?
Ch 21-7
Ch 21-8
Particles can be grouped into two camps: fermions and bosons. Typically matter is made up
of fermions, while interactions (which lead to forces of nature such as gravity and
electromagnetic) occur through the exchange of particles called bosons. (There are exceptions
to this.) Electrons and protons are fermions, while photons (light particles) are bosons.
Fermions (matter particles) can be broken into two groups: leptons and quarks. Each of these
groups comes in three families.
The first family of leptons consists of the electron and the electron neutrino. The second
family consists of the muon and the muon neutrino. The third consists of the tau and the tau
neutrino. Particles in each successive family are more massive than the family before it.
The first family of quarks consists of the up and down quark. The second family consists of
the charm and strange quarks. The third family consists of the top and bottom quarks.
Up and down quarks combine (via the strong force) to form nucleons. Two ups and a down
quark make a proton, while an up quark and two down quarks make a neutron. Different
combinations of quarks are called mesons.
Particles differ in their mass, their electric charge, their family (in the case of leptons), and
their spin. Spin is a quantum mechanical concept were going to ignore for now.
Ch 22-1
Interactions
There are four fundamental forces in nature. From weakest to strongest, these are the
gravitational force, the weak nuclear force, the electromagnetic force, and the strong nuclear
force.
Each fundamental force is transmitted by its own boson(s): for gravity, they are called
gravitons; for the weak nuclear force, they are called W, W+, and Z0 bosons; for the
electromagnetic force, they are called photons; and for the strong nuclear force, they are
called gluons.
In summary, the building blocks of matter and the interactions between matter consist of the
following fundamental particles :
Fermions
Bosons
Leptons
Quarks
Force Transmitted
Associated Boson
electron
up
gravity
graviton
electron neutrino
down
electromagnetic
photon
muon
strange
weak
W, W+, and Z0
muon neutrino
charm
strong
gluons
tau
top
tau neutrino
bottom
Rules
For any interaction between particles, the five conservation laws (energy, momentum,
angular momentum, charge, and CPT) must be followed. For instance, the total electric
charge must always be the same before and after an interaction.
Electron lepton number is conserved. This means that the total number of electrons plus
electron neutrinos must be the same before and after an interaction. Similarly, muon lepton
number and tau lepton number are also (separately) conserved.
Total quark number is conserved. Unlike leptons, however, this total includes all families.
Photons can only interact with objects that have electric charge. This means that particles
without charge (such as the electron neutrino) can never interact with photons.
The strong nuclear force can only act on quarks. This means that gluons (the particle that
carries the strong nuclear force) can only interact with quarks, or other gluons.
The gravitational force can only act on objects with energy, and hence objects with mass.
The weak nuclear force interacts with both quarks and leptons. However, the weak force is
carried by any of three particles, called intermediate vector bosons: W, W+, and Z0. Note that
the W particles carry electric charge. This means you have to be more careful in making sure
that any weak force interaction conserves electric charge.
Any interaction which obeys all of these rules, and also obeys the usual rules of energy and
momentum conservation, is allowed. Due to the randomness of particle interactions (See
Chapter 24.), any allowed interaction must eventually happen.
Ch 22-2
Antimatter
In addition to all of this, there is a further complication. Each type of particle that exists (such
as an electron or an up quark) has an antiparticle. Antiparticles are strange beasts: they have
the same properties as their corresponding particles (mass, size, interactions) but their
quantum numbers are exactly reversed (electric charge, electron, muon, or tau lepton number,
and quark number).
There are two ways to denote something as an antiparticle. The most common is to draw a
horizontal line above the thing. So, for instance, the antiparticle of the up quark is the anti-up
quark:
up quark
anti-up quark
For charged leptons, you can merely switch the charge. So, for instance, an electron has
negative charge and is written e , while its antiparticle, the anti-electron (also called a
positron) is written e+.
e
electron
e+
anti-electron (aka positron)
Particles and antiparticles annihilate each other, and convert their mass directly to energy in
the form of gamma rays. Likewise, gamma rays can spontaneously revert to particleantiparticle pairs. Matter and energy exchange places frequently in this process, with a
conversion formula given by the famous equation E = mc2.
Resources
Ask your teacher to provide you with a copy of the Standard Model of Particles and
Interactions. If there arent any available, please download and print out a copy of the
Standard Model of Particles and Interactions, available at http://particleadventure.org/
Ch 22-3
Explain.
12. What is string theory? Why isnt string theory mentioned anywhere on the Standard Model?
(If you are not already familiar with string theory, you may have to do some research online.)
13. Name three winners of the Nobel Prize who were directly investigating atomic and subatomic
particles and interactions. Investigate online.
Ch 22-4
The fifth conservation law: CPT symmetry. States that if you charge
conjugate (i.e. change matter to anti-matter), Parity reversal (i.e.
mirror reflection) and then reverse the flow of time, a matter particle
is exactly the same as the anti-matter particle (see below)
matter
*C =
Anti matter
*P =
Anti matter
*T =
Space
Time
Anti matter
This is why anti-matter has its time arrow pointing backwards. And on collision diagrams, the
matter is identical to the anti-matter after a CPT operation.
Ch 23-1
If a particle is not moving, then we say that its space coordinate is fixed. Of course, if its just
sitting there, then its moving through time. On the diagram below (left), the horizontal line
shows the path of motion of a stationary particle. The diagram to the right shows the path of
motion of a particle moving away from the origin at some speed.
Space
Space
Time
Time
Space
Time
Quark or
Lepton
(matter)
Photon
Gluon
Intermediate
Vector Boson
(W, W+, or Z0)
Annihilation Diagram: When matter and antimatter particles collide, they annihilate, leaving
behind pure energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation (photons!). The Feynman
diagram for that process looks like this:
Note that space and time axes have been left out; they are understood to be there.
Also note that the arrow on the bottom is supposed to be backwards. We do that any time we
have an antiparticle. Some people like to think of antiparticles as traveling backwards in time.
Lets forget about that for a while.
Ch 23-2
It is very important that you remember that time is the horizontal axis! A lot of people see the
drawing above and think of it as two particles coming together at an angle. These two
particles are in a head-on collision, not hitting at an angle.
e
e+
e+
e
2.
e
e
e
e
Ch 23-3
3.
e
4. a.
5.
a.
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
b.
e
e
e
e
b.
e
e
6.
u
d
Ch 23-4
e
7.
W+
e+
8.
Z0
9.
e
W
10.
e
e+
W+
e
11.
e+
e
Ch 23-5
12.
13.
e
In this case, the electron and
positron are exchanging virtual
electron/positron pairs.
e+
e
14.
W
neutron
d
u
d
e
u
u proton
e
15.
Muon decay
e
16. Draw all of the possible Feynman diagrams for the annihilation of an electron and positron,
followed by motion of an exchange particle, followed by the creation of a new electron and
positron.
17. Draw the Feynman diagram for the collision of an up and anti-down quark followed by the
production of a positron and electron neutrino.
Ch 23-6
The energy of a photon is the product of the frequency and Plancks Constant. This is the
exact amount of energy an electron will have if it absorbs a photon.
A photon, which has neither mass nor volume, carries energy and momentum; the
quantity of either energy or momentum in a photon depends on its frequency. The
photon travels at the speed of light.
If an electron loses energy the photon emitted, to obey the law of energy conservation,
will have its frequency (and wavelength) determined by the electrons energy..
An electron, which has mass (but probably no volume) has energy and momentum
determined by its speed, which is always less than that of light. The electron has a
wavelength determined by its momentum.
If a photon strikes some photoelectric material its energy must first go into releasing the
electron from the material (This is called the work function of the material.) The
remaining energy, if any, goes into kinetic energy of the electron and the voltage of an
electric circuit can be calculated from this. The current comes from the number of
electrons/second and that corresponds exactly to the number of photons/second.
Ch 24-1
Increasing the number of photons will not change the amount of energy an electron will
have, but will increase the number of electrons emitted
The momentum of photons is equal to Plancks constant divided by the wavelength
The wavelength of electrons is equal to Plancks constant divided by the electrons
momentum. If an electron is traveling at about .1c this wavelength is then not much
smaller than the size of an atom.
The size of the electrons wavelength determines the possible energy levels in an atom.
These are negative energies since the electron is said to have zero potential energy when
it is ionized. The lowest energy level (ground state) for hydrogen is -13.6 ev. The
second level is -3.4 ev. Atoms with multiple electrons have multiple sets of energy
levels. (And energy levels are different for partially ionized atoms.)
When an electron absorbs a photon it moves to higher energy level, depending on the
energy of the photon. If a 13.6 ev photon hits a hydrogen atom it ionizes that atom. If a
10.2 ev photon strikes hydrogen the electron is moved to the next level.
Atomic spectra are unique to each element. They are seen when electrons drop from a
higher energy level to a lower one. For example when an electron drops from -3.4 ev to
-13.6 ev in Hydrogen then a 10.2 ev photon is emitted. The spectra can be in infra-red,
visible light, ultra-violet and even X-rays. (The 10.2 ev photon is ultra-violet.)
The wave nature of electrons makes it impossible to determine exactly both its
momentum and position. The product of the two uncertainties is of the order of Planks
Constant. (Uncertainty in the electrons energy and time are likewise so related.)
E = hf
p = h/
= h/p
; Plancks constant.
1 ev = 1.602 X10-19 J
1240nm ~ 1ev
Ch 24-2
Calculate the energy and momentum of photons with the following frequency;
a. From an FM station at 101.9 MHz
b. Infrared radiation at 0.90 x 1014 Hz
c. From an AM station at 740 kHz
2.
3.
Given the energy of the following particles find the wavelength of:
a. X-ray photons at 15.0 kev
b. Gamma ray photons from sodium 24 at 2.70 Mev
c. A 1.70 ev electron
4.
5.
The four lowest energy levels in electron-volts in a hypothetical atom are respectively:
-34 ev, -17 ev, -3.5 ev, -.27 ev.
a. Find the wavelength of the photon that can ionize this atom.
b. Is this visible light? Why?
c. If an electron is excited to the fourth level what are the wavelengths of all possible
transitions? Which are visible?
6.
Light with a wavelength of 620 nm strikes a photoelectric surface with a work function of
1.20 ev. What is the stopping potential for the electron?
7.
For the same surface in problem 7 but different frequency light a stopping potential of
1.40 V is observed. What is the wavelength of the light?
8.
An electron is accelerated through 5000 V. It collides with a positron of the same energy.
All energy goes to produce a gamma ray.
a. What is the wavelength of the gamma ray ignoring the rest mass of the electron and
positron?
b. Now calculate the contribution to the wavelength of the gamma ray of the masses of
the particles? Recalculate the wavelength.
c. Was it safe to ignore their masses? Why or why not?
9.
An photon of 42.0 ev strikes an electron. What is the increase in speed of the electron
assuming all the photons momentum goes to the electron?
Ch 24-3
10.
A 22.0 kev X-ray in the x-direction strikes an electron initially at rest. This time a 0.1 nm
X-ray is observed moving in the x-direction after collision. What is the magnitude
and direction of the velocity of the electron after collision?
11.
The highly radioactive isotope Polonium 214 has a half-life of 163.7 s and emits a
799 kev gamma ray upon decay. The isotopic mass is 213.99 amu.
a. How much time would it take for 7/8 of this substance to decay?
b. Suppose you had 1.00 g of Po214 how much energy would the emitted gamma rays give
off while 7/8 decayed?
c. What is the power generated in kilowatts?
d. What is the wavelength of the gamma ray?
12.
13.
Students doing an experiment to determine the value of Plancks constant shined light
from a variety of lasers on a photoelectric surface with an unknown work function
and measured the stopping voltage. Their data is summarized below:
laser
Helium-Neon
Krypton-Flouride
Argon
Europium
Gallium arsenide
Wavelength (nm)
632.5
248
488
612
820
Voltage (V)
.50
3.5
1.1
.60
.05
An element has the following six lowest energy (in ev) levels for its outermost electron:
-24 ev, -7.5 ev, -2.1 ev, -1.5 ev. -.92 ev, -.69 ev.
a.
b.
c.
d.
15.
A different element has black absorption lines at 128 nm, 325 nm, 541 nm and 677 nm
when white light is shined upon it. Use this information to construct an energy level
diagram.
Ch 24-4
16.
An electron is accelerated
through 7500 V and is
beamed through a
diffraction grating,
which has 2.00 x 107
lines per cm.
a. Calculate the speed of
the electron
b. Calculate the
wavelength of the electron
c. Calculate the angle in
which the first order
maximum makes with
the diffraction grating
d. If the screen is 2.00 m away from the diffraction grating what is the separation
distance of the central maximum to the first order?
17.
A light source of 429 nm is used to power a photovoltaic cell with a work function of
0.900 ev. The cell is struck by 1.00 x 1019 photons per second.
a. What voltage is produced by the cell?
b. What current is produced by the cell?
c. What is the cells internal resistance?
18.
A .150 nm X-ray moving in the positive x-direction strikes an electron, which is at rest.
After the collision an X-ray of 0 .400 nm is observed to move 45 degrees from the
positive x-axis.
a.
b.
c.
d.
19.
Curium 242 has an isotopic mass of 242.058831 amu and decays by alpha emission; the
alpha particle has a mass of 4.002602 amu and has a kinetic energy of 6.1127 Mev.
a. What is the momentum of the alpha particle?
b. What is its wavelength?
Ch 24-5
A student lab group has a laser of unknown wavelength, a laser of known wavelength, a
photoelectric cell of unknown work function, a voltmeter and test leads, and access to a
supply of resistors.
a. Design an experiment to measure the work function of the cell, and the wavelength of
the unknown laser. Give a complete procedure and draw an appropriate circuit
diagram. Give sample equations and graphs if necessary.
b. Under what circumstances would it be impossible to measure the wavelength of the
unknown laser?
c. How could one using this apparatus also measure the intensity of the laser (number of
photons emitted/second)?
21. The momentum of an electron is measured to an accuracy of 5.1 10-24 kgm/s. What is the
corresponding uncertainty in the position of the same electron at the same moment? Express
your answer in Angstroms (1 = 10-10 m, about the size of a typical atom).
22. Thor, a baseball player, passes on a pitch clocked at a speed of 45 2 m/s. The umpire calls a
strike, but Thor claims that the uncertainty in the position of the baseball was so high that
Heisenbergs uncertainty principle dictates the ball could have been out of the strike zone.
What is the uncertainty in position for this baseball? A typical baseball has a mass of 0.15 kg.
Should the umpire rethink his decision?
23. Consider a box of empty space (vacuum) that contains nothing, and has total energy E = 0.
Suddenly, in seeming violation of the law of conservation of energy, an electron and a
positron (the anti-particle of the electron) burst into existence. Both the electron and positron
have the same mass, 9.11 10-31 kg.
a. Use Einsteins formula (E = mc2) to determine how much energy must be used to
create these two particles out of nothing.
b. You dont get to violate the law of conservation of energy forever you can only
do so as long as the violation is hidden within the HUP. Use the HUP to
calculate how long (in seconds) the two particles can exist before they wink out
of existence.
c. Now lets assume they are both traveling at a speed of 0.1 c. (Do a nonrelativistic calculation.) How far can they travel in that time? How does this
distance compare to the size of an atom?
d. What if, instead of an electron and a positron pair, you got a proton/anti-proton
pair? The mass of a proton is about 2000 higher than the mass of an electron.
Will your proton/anti-proton pair last a longer or shorter amount of time than the
electron/positron pair? Why?
Ch 24-6
Ch 25-1
v = dx/dt = a dt
x = v dt
W = F(x) dx
P = dW/dt
J = F(t) dt = p
rc = 1/M r(m) dm
= d/dt
= d/dt
W = () d
= dL/dt
m dx/dt = -k x(t)
Ch 25-2
A particle moves in a straight line with its position, x, given by the following equation:
x(t) = t4 4t + 2t + 3t + 6.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
2.
A sky-diver of mass, m, opens her parachute and finds that the air resistance, Fa, is given
by the formula Fa = bv, where b is a constant and v is the velocity.
a.
b.
c.
d.
3.
Set up, but do not solve a differential equation for velocity as a function of time.
Set up but do not solve a differential equation for distance as a function of time.
Find the terminal velocity in terms of m, b, and g.
If in a different situation the formula for air resistance were Fa = bv +cv, where c is
another constant find the terminal velocity in terms of the above plus c.
Students are pulling a 2 kg friction block along a rough, but level, surface. In one case it
is determined that the position of the block as a function of time is given by :
x(t) = .3t - .1t +.2t.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
An 800 kg sports car traveling at 20 m/s crashes into a SUV in a completely inelastic
collision. The position of the wreck for the first 3 seconds is given by: x(t) = 8t + t-1 +2t-2 ,
where t = 0 is the time of collision.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
5.
Ch 25-3
bead
7. The above rod of length L is rotating about one end. It has a linear density given by
O
a.
b.
c.
O0 1 where O0
L
M
.
L
Find Iy.
Find the moment of inertia about an axis perpendicular to the rod and through its
CM, letting x0 be the coordinate of its CM.
Where is the CM?
Ch 25-4
8. The position of a certain system with mass of 10 kg exhibits simple harmonic motion, where
x(t) = 20 cos15.2t
a.
b.
What is the total Energy of the system (let the Potential Energy be zero at the
equilibrium position)?
At t = 0, what is the Potential Energy?
9. A device when compressed has a restoring force given by: F(x) = k1x + k2x. When x = 0,
F = 0.
a.
b.
Ch 25-5
Ch 25-6
Ch 26-1
The Key Concepts (Possible Effects That Can Accelerate Global Warming):
1. Time Lag: The excess energy warms the ocean very slowly, due to waters high heat capacity.
Even in the unlikely event that no more greenhouse gases are added to the atmosphere the
temperature increase already measured will be almost doubled.
2. The Effect of Water Vapor: Increasing temperatures will lead to more evaporation and more
water vapor in the atmosphere. Water vapor is a greenhouse gas and its increased presence may
cause further warming in a positive feedback loop. On the other hand if the water vapor results in
more clouds more solar radiation will be reflected, a possible negative feedback.
3. Albedo is the amount of light reflected by a surface. Sea ice has an albedo of .85, meaning
85% of light is reflected back from its surface (and leaves the Earth) and 15% is absorbed and
stays in the Earth; ice-free water has an albedo of .07. (93% of the solar energy is absorbed.)
Thus the observed melting of sea ice could amplify the effect of global warming
4. The melting of the Artic Permafrost also has an amplifying effect by releasing carbon
dioxide and methane that is normally trapped in the tundra.
5. Warmer oceans are hostile to algae and cytoplankton , which are the most important
absorbers of carbon dioxide. The loss of the these two photosynthesizers would remove the most
important natural CO2 sink.
6. Loss of Rain Forests would have a similar effect. Global warming is likely to lead to
desertification of the habitats of rain forests. The rain forest is the second most important CO2
sink.
Ch 26-2
Ch 26-3
agriculture, and by incomplete combustion or leakage of natural gas. As more greenhouse gases
are put into the atmosphere the temperature will increase further. The co-variation of CO2
concentrations and temperature has been demonstrated not only by recent observation, but by
records of the last 700,000 years from Antarctic ice cores. There are many possible effects and
feedback mechanisms that are currently being studied and modeled to better predict possible
outcomes of this global trend. Many of these are identified above and in the following sections.
Ch 26-4
6. The picture above shows the normal energy balance of the Earth. Note that normally the 342
W/m incoming is balance by 235 W/m outgoing + 107 W/m reflected radiation. At present the
atmospheric window allows only 39 W/m out resulting in total of 234 W/m outgoing and an
energy surplus of 1 W/m that results in temperature increases. (These figures are .5 W/m).
7. 1kwh = .68 kg CO2 (EPA estimates)
8. 10,000kWh = 1.4 cars off the road = 2.9 acres of trees planted (EPA estimates)
Ch 26-5
Ch 26-6
4. Given the following table, involving the growth in concentration of greenhouse gases:
year
[CO2] ppm
1940
310
1960
315
1980
335
2000
370
2020 (IPCC* projection)
420
*Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
[CH4] ppb
1100
1250
1550
1750
2150
Ch 26-7
CH4 in kg/Mwh
.00304
.00662
.00367
.00149
N2 O in kg/Mwh
.00168
.0133
.00404
.00154
Multiplier
1
23
296
4300
1300
22,000
11,900
8. If you shut down your computer, but the LED light is still on, it consumes about 4 w of
power. Suppose you do that for every weekend (60 hours) every week of the year. Repeat the
calculations in problem 7 to find out the global warming potential in kg of CO2.
Ch 26-8
9. In 2006 Natomas High School in California used 1692 Mwh of electricity, repeating the
calculations above find the kg of carbon dioxide emitted.
10. A large car or SUV typically carries 1.0 kg of refrigerant for the a/c.
a. If this were released into the atmosphere calculate the equivalent of carbon dioxide released.
b. Repeat this calculation for a residential air conditioner (capacity is 2.8 kg.), using HFC-143a.
c. Your school has a commercial chiller maybe (1000 ton) with a refrigerant capacity of 1225 kg.
If it uses HFC-134a calculate the equivalent of CO2 emitted, if the chiller is decommissioned.
12. Research some typical mileages, type of fuel used, and miles covered in a year and determine
the carbon footprint for:
a. a tractor-trailer truck
b. a commercial airliner
c. a corporate jet
d. a bus
e. Amtrack
Ch 26-9
13. Looking at the above problems another way, suppose you want to travel from California to
New York find your carbon footprint for the trip using:
a. Amtrack
b. a jet plane
c. a bus
d. an SUV
e. a hybrid
Assume 90% full loads on the commercial transports and 2 passengers on the cars. You will have
to go on-line to find the loads of the commercial transports.
14. China is putting two coal-fired electrical plants in operation each week. These plants do not
typically use any scrubbing or pollution controls. Research the typical Mwh output, and, using
either the table for problem 7 (Michigan depends more on coal than the other states listed.) or a
more direct source for CO2 emissions for a coal plant, find the gain in greenhouse gas emissions
each year from this source alone. Compare to the results in problem 4 and determine if the IPCC
is underestimating the problem.
Ch 26-10
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
196 cm2
250 cm3
8:1, each side goes up by 2 cm, so it will
change by 23
3.5 1051:1
72,000 km/h
0.75 kg/s
8 x 2N cm3/sec; N is for each second
starting with 0 seconds for 8 cm3
About 12 million
About 1 trillion (1.51012)
[a] = N/kg = m/s2
Ch 2: Energy Conservation
1. d
2. (discuss in class)
3a.
5.0 x 105 J
3b. 3.7 x 105 J
3c.
Chemical bonds in the food.
3d. 99 m/s
4a.
5.0 x 105 J
4b. 108 m/s
5a.
450,000 J
5b. 22,500 J
5c.
5,625 J
5d. 21.2 m/s
5e.
9.18 m
7b. KE = 504,600 J; Ug = 1,058,400 J;
Etotal = 1,563,000 J
8a.
9e.
9f.
9g.
9h.
40 meters
2.67 m/s
6 m/s
Between t = 15 s and t = 20 sec because
your position goes from x = 30 m to x =
20 m.
9i.
You made some sort of turn
10a. 7.7 m/s2
10b. 47 m, 150 feet
10c. 34 m/s
11a. 1.22 m
11b. 4.9 m/s
11c. 2.46 m/s
A-1
.
11d.
12b.
12c.
12d.
13a.
13b.
13c.
14.
15.
16a.
16b.
16c.
-4.9 m/s
1 second
at 2 seconds
4m
250 m
13 m/s, -13m/s
14s for round trip
6 times higher
-31m/s2
23 m/s
3.6 seconds
28 m
16d.
17a.
17b.
17c.
18.
19a.
19b.
19c.
19d.
20a.
20b.
45m
25 m/s
30 m
2.5 m/s2
2 m/s2
v0 = 0
10 m/s2
-10 m/s2
60 m
0.3 m/s2
0.5 m/s
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24a.
24b.
25.
40 m; 8.5 m
1.3 seconds, 7.1 meters
50 m; v0y = 30 m/s; 500; on the way up
4.4 s
19o
0.5 s
2.3 m/s
6m
1.4 seconds
yes
14 m/s @ 23 degrees from horizontal
22 m/s @ 62 degrees
13 m
41 degrees
vy = 26 m/s; vx = 45 m/s
56 degrees, 14 m/s
32 m
0.5 s
0.8 m/s
104 m
t = 0.60 s, 1.8 m below target
28 m.
3.5 s.
35 m; 15 m
Ch 5: Newtons Laws
24.
4.
A-3
.
33e.
33f.
33g.
33h
33i
33j
33k
35a.
35b.
36b.
36c.
36d
28 m/s
no
69 N
57 N
40 N
0.33
0.09
zero
kx0
f1= km1gcos; f2 = km2gcos
Ma
TA= (m1 + m2) (a + cos)
Ch 6: Centripetal Forces
5a.
5b
6a.
6b.
7a.
7b.
7c.
8.
9a.
9b.
10.
11.
12.
100 N
10 m/s2
25 N towards her
25 N towards you
14.2 m/s2
7.1x103 N
friction between the tires and the road
.0034g
6.2x105m/s2
The same as a.
3.56 1022 N
4.2 x 10-7 N; very small force
g = 9.8 m/s2; youll get close to this
number but not exactly due to some other
small effects
13a. 4 x 1026 N
13b. gravity
13c. 2 x 1041 kg
14. .006 m/s2
15a. .765
15b. 4880 N
16a. ~ 10-8 N very small force
16b. Your pencil does not accelerate toward
you because the frictional force on your
pencil is much greater than this force.
17a. 4.23 107 m
17b. 6.6 Re
17d. The same, the radius is independent of
mass
18. 1.9 x107m
19. You get two answers for r, one is outside
of the two stars one is between them,
thats the one you want, 1.32 1010 m
from the larger star.
22a. v = 28m/s
22b. v-down, a-right
22c. f-right
22d. Yes, 640N
Ch 7: Momentum Conservation
8.
9.
37.5 m/s
v1 = 2v2
10a.
24
kg m
s
10c.
22
10d.
10e.
11.
12.
13.
14a.
14b.
15a.
15b.
109 N
109 N due to Newtons third law
2.0 kg, 125 m/s
21 m/s to the left
3250 N
90 sec
1.7 x 105 sec
60 m/s
.700 sec
A-3
.
22b. 4.6 m/s 68o
7.18x109 J
204 m/s
34 m/s @ B; 28 m/s @ D; 40 m/s @ E; 49
m/s @ C and F; 0 m/s @ H
30 m
Yes, it makes the loop!!
2.3 m/s
No, the baby will not clear the hill.
29,500 J
7.9 m
86 m
220 m
48.5 m/s
128 N
0.32 m/s each
10 m/s
52 m
1.1 x104 N/m
2 m above the spring
96%
.008 m
5.12
19.
20.
21.
22a.
22b.
22c.
23a.
23b.
23c.
24a.
24b.
24c.
25.
29a.
29b.
29c.
29d.
30a.
30b.
30c.
30d.
Ch 9: Rotational Motion
2a.
2b.
2c.
2d.
2e.
3
3b.
3f.
3g.
3h.
3i.
4a.
4b.
4c.
4d.
4e.
4f.
6.
9.74 1037 kg m2
1.331047 kg m2
0.5 kg m2
0.28 kg m2
0.07 kg m2
a. True, all rotate 2 for 86,400 sec which
is 24 hours,
True, = 2/t and t=86,400 s
True, L is the same
L = I and I = 2/5 mr2
True, K = I2 & I = 2/5 mr2 sub-in K =
1/5 mr22
True, K = I2 & I = mr2 sub-in K = 1/2
mr22,
250 rad
40 rad
25 rad/s
Force applied perpendicular to radius
allows
0.27 kg m2,
K5 = 84 J and K10 = 340 J
Moment of inertia at the end 1/3 ML2 at
the center 1/12 ML2, angular momentum,
.8.
9.
10a.
10b.
10c.
10d.
11a.
11b.
12a.
12b.
12c.
12d.
12e
13a.
13b.
14.a.
14 b.
A-3
.
14c.
14d.
15.
16.
17b.
17c.
17d.
18a.
18b.
2500 J-s
12,500 m-N
28 rev/sec
2300 N
771 N, 1030 N
554 kgm
4.81rad/sec
300 N
240N, -22 N
18c.
19a.
19b.
19c.
20a.
20b.
21a.
21c.
.092
1210 N
856 n toward beam, 106 N down
3.39 rad/sec
-1.28 mN
CCW
346 kg
4690 N
7a.
7b.
10.
11.
12a.
0.0038 s
0.0038 s
4 times
0.04 m
16 Hz
390 Hz
4 Hz
It was being driven near its resonant
frequency.
2c.
8 Hz, 12 Hz
2d. (Note that earthquakes rarely shake at
more than 6 Hz).
5a.
7 nodes including the 2 at the ends
5b. 3.6 Hz
6.
1.7 km
7a.
1.7 cm
7b. 17 m
8a.
4.3 x 1014 Hz
8b. 2.3 x 10-15 s - man that electron is moving
fast
9a.
2.828 m
9b. 3.352 m
9c.
L =
so it would be difficult to receive
the longer wavelengths.
10. Very low frequency
11b. Same as closed at both ends
13.
14.
15.
A-3
Ch 12: Electricity
18.
11b
11c.
12a.
12b.
13.
1350 N
1350 N
1.1 x 109 N/C
9000 N
Fg = 1.0 1047 N and Fe = 2.3 108 N. The
19.
20.
21a.
21b.
22a.
22b.
22c.
22d.
23b.
23c.
23d.
4.5C
2.8 x 1019 electrons
0.11 A
1.0 W
2.5 x 1021 electrons
3636 W
192
0.42 W
5.4 V
1.4 x 10-8 A
7.3 x 10-11 W, not a lot
2.6 x 10-7 J
left = brighter, right = longer
224 V
400 W by 100 and 48 W by 12
448 W
8.3
0.5A
0.8A and the 50 on the left
0.94 A
112 W
0.35 A
0.94 A
50, 45, 75
11f.
11g.
12a.
12b.
13b.
14a.
14b.
14c.
14d.
15a.
15b
15c.
15d.
15e.
15f.
15g.
15h.
15i.
15j.
16a.
16b.
16c.
23a.
8.
9.
10a.
10b.
10c.
7.6 T, north
Down the page; 60 N
To the right, 1.88104 N
91.7 m/s
It should be doubled
Ch 14: Magnetism
1.
4a.
4b.
4c.
5.
A-4
.
11.
12.
13.
14a.
14b.
15a.
15b.
15c.
15d.
16a.
16b.
16c.
17.
18a.
18b.
19a.
19b.
19c.
19d.
East 1.5104 A
0.00016 T; if CCW motion, B is pointed
into the ground.
1.2105 V, counterclockwise
15 V
Counter-clockwise
210-5 T
Into the page
2.8 N/m
CW
2.42 x 108 m/s
9.69 x 10-12 N
.0055 m
E/B
8 x 10-7 T
1.3 x 10-6 C
0 .8 V
CCW
.064 N
.16 N/C
19e.
20a.
20b.
20d.
20e.
20f.
20g.
21.
22a.
22b.
22c.
22d.
22e.
22f.
23a.
23b.
23c.
.13 w
1.11 x 108 m/s
9.1 x 10-30 N<< 6.4 x 10-14 N
.00364 T
.173 m
7.03 x 1016 m/s
3.27o
19.2 V
8.39 x 107 m/s
2.68 x 10-13 N, -y
2.95 x 1017 m/s
.00838 m
1.68 x 106 N/C
16,800 V
1.2 x 10-6 T, +z
1.5 x 10-17 N, -y
96 N/C, -y
5.
6a.
6b.
7a.
7b.
7c.
8a.
4107 V
4109 J
100 V
A greater voltage created a stronger
electronic field, or because as charges
build up they repel each other from the
plate.
21 V, V is squared so it doesnt act like
problem 4
3.3 F
54
200 V
5 x10-9 F
2.5 x 10-9 F
6V
8b.
8c.
8d.
8e.
8f.
9a.
9b.
10a.
10b.
10c.
10d.
10e.
10f.
0.3A
18V
3.6x10-4C
3.2x10-3J
i) 80F ii) 40F iii)120F
26.7F
166.7F
9.0x103 N/C
1.4x10-15 N
1.6x1015 m/s2
3.3x10-11 s
8.9x10-7 m
5.1x10-30
4f.
5a.
5b.
5c.
6b.
6c.
6d.
6e.
6f.
6g.
11
On
On
On, on, off, on, off, off, on, on
10.9 F
195
169
1.39 A
-42o
115Hz
4.
65000 x-rays
4.910-5 H
-9.8 x 10-5 V
Zero
Yes
No
Because they turn current flow on and off.
0.5 V
0.05 A
0.05 A
5.5 V
8.25V
Ch 17: Light
3.
A-5
.
5.
6.
8b.
8c.
9.
12.
13.
15.
16a.
16b.
16c.
17b.
17c.
18.
19c.
19e.
61014 Hz
3.3 m
vacuum & air
1.96108 m/s
6.9910-7 m; 5.2610-7 m
Absorbs red and green.
25
33.3
49.7
No such angle
48.8
11.4 m
11.5 m
85 cm
4 units
1
20a.
20b.
21c.
21d.
22c.
22e.
23c.
25b.
27.
28a.
28b.
28c.
29a.
31.
33.
34.
6 units
bigger; M = 3
1.5 units
2
/3
21/4 units
2/3
5.3 units
22.5 mm
32 cm
10.2
27 cm
20 cm
0.72 m
54 cm, 44cm, 21 cm, 8.8 cm
13.5
549 nm
12.
13a.
13b.
13c.
13d.
13e.
13f.
14a.
14b.
15b.
16a.
16b.
16c.
17a.
17b.
17c.
17d.
18a.
18b.
18c.
18e.
18f.
.0081
12500 J/m3
849 kPa
5.33 kW
12.0 kW
54 A
$210,000
611 kPa
6 atm
500,000 N
27 m/s2, (2.7 g) upward
1600 N
2200 N
10 N
10.5 N
11 N
11 N
The Thunder Road
2.0 m (note: here and below, you may
choose differently)
33.5 m3
3.5 million N
111 MPa
25b.
25c.
25d.
25e.
25g.
26a.
26b.
26c.
27a.
27b.
27c.
6.64 10-27 kg
1600 m/s
744 kPa
4.21020 or 0.0007 moles
0.00785 m3
1.9 MW
0.56 MW
1.3 Mw
54%
240 kW
890 kW
Ch 18: Fluids
1.
2.
3a.
3b.
4b.
4c.
5.
6.
7b.
7c.
7d.
0.84
1.4105 kg
90% of the berg is underwater
57%
5.06 x 10-4 N
7.05 m/s2
4.14 m/s
40 coins
upward
4.5 m/s2
Cooler air outside, so more initial buoyant
force
7e.
Thin air at high altitudes weighs almost
nothing, so little weight displaced.
8a.
At a depth of 10 cm, the buoyant force is
2.9 N
8d. The bottom of the cup is 3 cm in radius
9a.
83,000 Pa
9b. 104 N
9c.
110 N
10a. 248 kPa
10b. 591 kPa
10c. 1081 kPa
Ch 19: Thermodynamics and Heat Engines
18.
19.
21.
22.
23a.
23b.
23c.
24a.
24b.
25a.
517 m/s
1.15 x 1012K
40 N
1028 molecules
21,000 Pa
Decreases to 61,000 Pa
5.8 km
No
allowed by highly improbable state. More
likely states are more disordered.
8.34 x 1023
A-6
.
27d.
27e.
28a.
28b.
28c.
29.
30.
31b.
31c.
590 kW
630 kg
98%
4.0%
12%
14800 J
12,000 J
720 K, 300 K, 600 K
isochoric; isobaric
31d.
31e.
32b.
33a.
33b.
33c.
33d.
33e.
C to A; B-C
0.018 J
300 K, 1200 K
1753 J
-120 J
80 J
35 J
-100 J, 80 J, 80 J
9.
10.
11.
12.
13a.
13b.
14.
15a.
15b.
2900 m
1.34 x 10-57 m
0.303 s
2.9 x 10-30kg, yes harder to accelerate
f
c
4.51016 J; 1.81013 softballs
1.568 x 10-13 J
3.04 x 106 J
longer
= , the universe would be a dot
76.4 m,76.4 m
= 1.002
9.15107 m/s
2.6108 m/s
0.659 km
22.4
4.92x10-5 m/s
14.7 km
9.
strange
Some type of meson
Electron, photon, tau
Neutron, electron neutrino, Z0
Neutron, because it doesnt have electrical
charge
No, because it doesnt have electrical
charge
Two anti-up quarks and an anti-down
quark
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
A-7
.
1. Allowed: an electron and antielectron(positron) annihilate to a photon
then become an electron and antielectron(positron) again.
2.
3.
4a.
4b.
5a.
5b.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
Allowed: up quark annihilates with antiup quark becomes Z0, then becomes a
strange quark and anti-strange quark
Not allowed: charge not conserved
Allowed: this is a very rare interaction
Not allowed: electrons dont interact with
gluons
Not allowed: neutrinos dont interact with
photons
14b.
14c.
15.
16.a.
16b.
16c.
16d.
17a.
17b.
17c.
18a.
18b.
18c.
18d.
19a.
19b.
19c.
19d.
19e.
19f.
19g.
15
182 nm,188 nm, 206 nm,230 nm
-10.3 ev,-3.82 ev, -2.29 ev, -1.83 ev
4.19 x 107 m/s
1.70 x 10-11 m
1.95o
.068 m
1.89 V
1.60 A
1.25
4.40 x 10-24 kgm/s
1.17 x 10-24 kgm/s
3.23 x 10-24 kgm/s
3.76 x 107 m/s
1.1365 x 10-22 kgm/s
5.860 pm
242
Cu 4He + 238Pu
238.0497 amu
17.7 cm
y
+y, 34.2 N/C
1d. 0
3a. 3.4 m/s
3b. a(t) = 1.8 t- .2
3c. F(t) = 3.6t - .4
A-8
.
3d.
3e.
3f.
3g.
3h.
4c.
4e.
9a.
9b.
.04 J
11.56 J
11.52 J
10.3 J
P(x) = (x + 2x +2) dx/dt
2000 kg
1037 N-s
k1/2x + k2/3 x
k1x + k2 - k3dx/dt = mdx/dt
A-9
A-10
v = f
m
k
Tp = 2S
fn
L
g
fn
fbeat
nv
2L
nv
(n is odd) node at one end
4L
| f1 f 2 |
/2 kT = < mv 2>avg
P=F/A
P = P0 + gh
P + ( gh) + ( v) = 0
= Av
o
C = oK + 273.15
Properties of fundamental particles
27
mproton = 1.6726 u10 kg
qelectron = qproton = 1.602 u1019 C
-10
rhydrogen atom 0.529u10 m
k = 1.381u1023 J/K
air = 1.29 kg/m3
R = 8.315 J/mol-K
W = PV
water = 1000 kg/m3
k = v 2; u = gh
PATMOSPH = 101,000 N/M
= W/Qin;
Carnot = 1 (Tlow / Thigh) Navo = 6.022 X 1023 mol-1
PV = NkT = nRT
Fbuoy = ( waterVdisplaced)g
Qin = W + U + Qout
(E)(t) h/4
Ephoton = hf = pc
Kmax = qV = hf +
blue 450 nm
green 500 nm
red 600 nm
nisin(i) = nrsin(r)
c = 2.998 108 m/s
m = dsin()
h = 6.626 1034 Js
A
Z = element Z with A nucleons
14
C: tH = 5,730 years
(half life = th)
239
Pu: tH = 24,119 years
Eo = - 13.605 ev (Hydrogen ground state)
nair nvacuum = 1.00
nwater = 1.33
n = c/vmaterial
FE = k q1q2 / r
E = FE / q
E = V / x
Uel = qV
k = 8.992109 Nm 2/C 2
Po = 4107 Tm/A
= BAcos()
V = / t =Blv
FB = qvB = qvBsin()
(direction: RHR)
Bwire = Po I / 2Sr
(direction: RHR)
Fwire = (IB) = IBsin()
(direction: RHR)
for point charges only, E(r) = k q / r 2 and V(r) = k q / r
(k = 1/4
o where
o = 8.8541012 C2/Nm2)
Electric circuits
V = IR
P = E / t = IV = I2R = V2/R
I = q/t = V/R
R = l/A
V = L(I/t)
= RC
Name
Rseries = R1 + R2 +
1 / Rparallel = (1/R1) + (1/R2) +
1 / Cseries = (1/C1) + (1/C2) +
Unit
Typical examples
V
Volt (V)
Resistor
Ohm (:)
Capacitor
Farad (F)
Inductor
Henry (H)
7 H (guitar pickup)
Diode
by type
none
Transistor
by type
none
Computer processors
Voltage
Source
Symbols
Q = C V
Cparallel plate = A/d
Cparallel = C1 + C2 +
Vector quantities are shown in bold; some equations provide only scalar magnitudes.
The symbol means approximately equal to.
Peoples Physics Book 3e
Mathematics
sin() = b/c b = c sin()
cos() = a/c a = c cos()
tan() = b/a b = a tan()
c =a + b
180 = radians
Ccircle = 2R
Acircle = R2
a
Vsphere = (4/3)R3
Vcylinder = R2h
1 mX = 0.001 X = 10 X
1 kX = 1 000 X = 10 X
6
1 X = 0.000 001 X = 106 X
1 MX = 1 000 000 X = 10 X
9
1 GX = 1 000 000 000 X = 109 X
1 nX = 0.000 000 001 X = 10 X
2
If ax + bx + c = 0, then
% difference = |(measured accepted) / accepted| 100%
b r b 2 4ac
vector dot product: a b =ab cos ( product is a scalar)--- is angle between vectors
x
2a
vector cross product: a x b = ab sin (direction is given by RHR)
Kinematics under constant acceleration
x(t) = x0 + v0t + axt2
v(t) = v0 + at
2
2
v = v0 + 2a(x)
x = xfinal xinitial
(anything) = final value initial value
vavg = x / t
aavg = v / t
(x = x0 and v = v0 at t = 0)
1 meter = 3.28 ft
1 mile = 1.61 km
Fg = mg
f k = kFN
f s
sFN
FC = mv 2 / r
Fsp = k(x)
FG = Gm1m2 / r 2
G = 6.6721011 Nm 2/kg 2
1 kg = 1000 g = 2.2 lbs
1 N = 1 kgm/s2
p = mv
Favg = p / t
Einitial = Efinal
E=K+U+W
K = mv2
Ug = mgh
Usp = k(x)2
Ug = -Gm1m2/ r
W = Fx
P = W / t
P=F.v
1 J = 1 Nm
1 W = 1 J/s
1 food Calorie = 4180 J
1 ev = 1.602 X 10-19 J
1 kwh = 3.600 X 106 J
Rotational motion
d = r
v = r
a = r
= 2 / T
= I
K = I 2
L = rp = I
= rF = L / t
Astronomy
P = 41026 W
30
M = 1.99 10 kg
8
R = 6.9610 m
Vector quantities are shown in bold; some equations provide only scalar magnitudes.
The symbol means approximately equal to.
Peoples Physics Book 3e