Course Syllabus PHYS 208 – University Physics II Fall 1999 Instructor: Dr. Alison Baski, OLVPH 2017, Phone: 828-8295, E-mail: aabaski@vcu.edu Course HomePage at http://saturn.vcu.edu/~aabaski/index.html Lecture: Tue and Thur 9:30 – 10:45am [TEMPL 1165] Recitation: The original schedule for this course included a single recitation section on Fri 1:00 – 1:50pm. Due to increased resources, this course will now have five separate recitations as follows: 1) Fri 12:00–12:50, Mr. Ameen (OLVPH 2121) 4) Fri 1:00–1:50, Dr. Clayton (TEMPL 3320) 2) Fri 1:00–1:50, Mr. Ameen (TEMPL 3317) 5) Fri 2:00–2:50, Mr. Ameen (OLVPH 2121) 3) Fri 1:00–1:50, Dr. Baski (OLVPH 2121) During the first day of class, students will sign up for one of these recitations. Laboratory: Wed or Thurs 11:00 – 1:30, 2:00 – 4:30, or 5:00 – 7:30pm [TEMPL 3317] Office Hours: Tue 11:00 – 1:00 [Rm 2017] and Thur 11:00 – 1:00 [Egr Bldg, Rm 436], or by appointment. Textbook: Fundamentals of Physics, Halliday, Resnick, and Walker, Fifth Edition. Laboratory Manual for University Physics II, sold during first laboratory for $3. Material: Chapters 22 to 35: Electrostatics, Magnetostatics, Electrodynamics & Light Prerequisite: PHYS 207, University Physics I Lecture: I EXPECT you to read the chapter material BEFORE I discuss it in class. While you may not fully grasp the material from reading it on your own, you should become familiar with definitions and begin thinking about the concepts. In order to motivate pre-reading of the material, I will give short Reading Quizzes before all of the material is discussed. Because you should be familiar with the material in the book, I will not redo lengthy derivations or example problems in the book. Instead, lecture time will be used to reinforce the main concepts, explain particularly difficult sections, and/or give additional examples. Lectures will typically consist of a number of short presentations on key points, each followed by Conceptual Questions presented on overheads. These in-class questions will not be graded, but will help me gauge whether everyone is understanding the material. Usually, you will think about each question on your own and then check if your neighbor agrees with you before "voting" for an answer. If the question is answered correctly by most of the class, then we will continue on with the next main concept. Grading: Your percentage grade will be calculated as follows: Reading Quizzes Homework Laboratory Exams (2 x 18% each) Final Exam 8% 16% 16% 36% or 24% 100% 24% (2 x 12% each)† 36% † Your percentage grade will be the higher value calculated using two different methods. In Method #1, the exams will be weighted by 36% and the final exam by 24%. In Method #2, the exams will be weighted by 24% and the final exam by 36%. Letter Grades: A: 90-100%, B: 80-89%, C: 70-79%, D: 60-69%, and F: <60% The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 requires Virginia Commonwealth University to provide a “reasonable accommodation” to any individual who advises us of a physical or mental disability. If you have a physical or mental limitation that requires an accommodation or an academic adjustment, please arrange a meeting with me at your earliest convenience. 1 Course Syllabus Honor Code: PHYS 208 – University Physics II Fall 1999 Please read the VCU Honor System statement in the VCU Resource Guide. Clear and convincing evidence of honor system violations in this class will result in the submission of formal written charges to the Honor System Coordinator. Reading Quiz: Each week a closed-book, multiple-choice quiz (5 minutes) will be given over the chapter to be discussed that week (see schedule). These quizzes are meant to motivate you to read the chapter before all of it is discussed. The quiz should be straight-forward if you have looked over the chapter. No make-up reading quizzes will be given; however, your lowest quiz grade will be dropped. Homework: Each week you will read the upcoming chapter over the weekend and we will discuss it during class on Tuesday and Thursday. The homework for each chapter is due at the beginning of class on the Tuesday of the following week. No late homework will be accepted under any circumstances; however, your lowest homework grade will be dropped. Homework solutions will be posted on the course Homepage. Each homework assignment is worth 25 points and will consist of eight problems from the assigned chapter. One problem will be fully graded (10 pts) and the remaining seven problems will each be graded on a 2-point scale (2 pt. = complete and correct, 1 pt. = honest attempt; total = 14 points). The last available point of the assignment will be given if the homework is properly formatted (one problem per sheet of paper, problems in order, underlined answers). Each problem should be solved so that it is easy to follow your work, i.e. include relevant figures, explain steps if necessary and only substitute numbers at the end. The more time it takes the grader to understand your work, the fewer points of partial credit you will receive. You may work in groups; however, the homework which you turn in must be your own work. Recitation: This course now has separate recitation sections which will meet on Fridays. During the first part of the recitation, you will work on an example problem that is very similar to one that might appear on a future exam. In the second part of the recitation, you will have the opportunity to ask homework questions. In order to motivate attendance at recitation, you will earn 2 extra credit homework points for each day of recitation attendance. This extra credit translates to a boost of 1.2% to your overall grade if you attend all recitations. Laboratory: Attendance of the laboratory is mandatory! Approximately half of the lab experiments are now computer-interfaced, and the new laboratory manual has been rewritten to reflect this development. The manual will be sold during the first laboratory meeting for $3 (exact change requested). The experiments are scheduled so that they directly relate to concepts covered during that week of class. The laboratory reports will be due at the end of each lab period. No make-up laboratories will be offered; however, your lowest laboratory grade will be dropped. One Caveat: In order to receive a “C” or higher in this course, you must hand in at least eight laboratory reports. Exams: Two 75-minute exams will be given during this course on Thursday class periods (see schedule for dates). Each exam will consist of short-response Conceptual Questions followed by three Problems (similar to homework). All exams are closed-book; however, a sheet of relevant formulas will be provided with each exam. None of the exams will be dropped and NO MAKE-UP EXAMS will be given. If you miss an exam for a justifiable reason and can furnish written documentation, then the final exam will be weighted to adjust for the missing exam. (i.e. If one exam is missed, then the percentage weight of the other midterm exam and final exam will be 24% and 36%, respectively.) The final exam will cover the entire range of topics in the course. There will be no make-up final exam. 2 Course Syllabus Week PHYS 208 – University Physics II Chapter: Topic Aug 31, Sept 2 22: Electric Charge Sept 7, 9 23: Electric Fields Sept 14, 16 Quiz Date Fall 1999 HW Due Date Homework Laboratory Sept 7 5, 7, 10, 14, 17, 28, 31, 37 No Lab Sept 9 Sept 14 4, 11, 14, 22, 31, 34, 48, 62 No Lab 24: Gauss' Law Sept 16 Sept 21 12, 20, 24, 25, 31, 36, 51, 54 Electric Charge (buy manual $3) Sept 21, 23 25: Electric Potential Sept 23 Sept 28 9, 20, 37, 41, 50, 60, 68, 75 Equipotentials and Electric Fields Sept 28, 30 26: Capacitance Sept 30 Oct 5 9, 18, 26, 30, 46, 47, 61, 65 Capacitance using a Galvanometer Oct 5 27: Current and Resistance Oct 12 4, 10, 12, 15, 25, 35, 51, 55 Electrical Resistance Oct 7 EXAM #1: Chapters 22-26 Oct 12, 14 28: Circuits Oct. 14 Oct 19 9, 24, 38, 39, 48, 57, 65, 77 RC Circuit: Determination of τ Oct 19, 21 29: Magnetic Fields Oct. 21 Oct 26 6, 9, 16, 19, 30, 52, 55, 68 B Field of a Magnet Oct 26, 28 30: B Fields due to Currents Oct. 28 Nov. 2 3, 12, 37, 43, 47, 48, 60, 69 B Field of a Solenoid Nov 2, 4 31: Induction and Inductance Nov. 4 Nov. 9 5, 14, 17, 25, 33, 43, 63, 69 Induction using a Moving Magnet Nov 9 32: Magnetism of Matter Nov. 16 3, 7, 16, 18, 22, 31, 39, 50 LR and LRC Circuits Nov 11 EXAM #2: Chapters 27-31 Nov 16, 18 33: EM Oscillations and AC Nov. 18 Nov. 23 12, 18, 33, 41, 46, 51, 58, 87 AC Behavior of an LRC Circuit Nov 23 34: Electromagnetic Waves Nov. 23 Nov. 30 13, 27, 46, 52, 60, 63, 69, 75 Transformers Nov 30, Dec 2 35: Images Dec. 2 Dec. 7 4,8,15, 16ace, 25, 34aeg, 37, 50 Fun with Lasers and Lenses Dec 7, 9 36: Interference and Review Dec. 9 No homework on Chap. 36 No Lab Dec 14 FINAL: 8:00 – 10:50 am 3