1 / 16

What is a Physicist?

What is a Physicist?. Visualize a physicist “Paint” a picture. Names in Physics?. Newton Einstein Pascal Faraday Fermi Shockley Aristotle. Archimedes Hawking Tesla Hubble Feynman Henry Hertz. … only a selection!. What is the Goal of Physics?.

nita
Download Presentation

What is a Physicist?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is a Physicist? • Visualize a physicist • “Paint” a picture

  2. Names in Physics? • Newton • Einstein • Pascal • Faraday • Fermi • Shockley • Aristotle • Archimedes • Hawking • Tesla • Hubble • Feynman • Henry • Hertz … only a selection!

  3. What is the Goal of Physics? • To use a small number of basic concepts, equations and assumptions to describe the physical world. • Physics is the study of the laws of nature, because physics is everywhere!

  4. Areas within Physics • Mechanics • motion, forces • Thermodynamics • heat & temperature • Vibrations and wave phenomena • Optics • light, mirrors • Electromagnetism • electricity & magnetism • Relativity • particle motion • Quantum mechanics • behavior of submicroscopic particles

  5. Make observations and collect data that lead to a question Formulate and objectively test hypotheses by experiments Interpret results and revise hypothesis if necessary State conclusions in a form that can be evaluated by others – develop a theory! Scientific Method – basis of scientific investigation

  6. Measurement in Physics • Systems of units • (SI) Metric MKS • Meter (M) • Kilogram (K) • Second (S) • English FPS • Foot (F) • Pound (P) • Second (S)

  7. Common Conversion Values • 1 meter = 39.37” • 1 inch = 2.54 cm = 0.254 meters • 1 mile = 1609 meters • 1 kilogram = 2.2 lbs • 1 oz = 28 grams • 60 mph = 28 meters/sec • km/h > m/s = 1609/3600 = x 0.45

  8. Common Prefixes • Pico (p) 10-12 • Nano (n) 10-9 < • Micro () 10-6 < • Milli (m) 10-3 < • Centi (c) 10-2 < • Kilo (k) 103 < • Mega (M) 106 < • Giga (G) 109 • Tera (T) 1012

  9. Scientific Notation • A number in (pure) scientific notation is of the form • a * 10n, where • 1 < a < 10, • n = an integer • Ex. 3.4 * 107, 9.1 * 10-4 • Scientific Notation on Your Calculator • Most calculators now have a key on them for doing scientific notation. Look for one of the following... • EXP (most Casio calculators) • EE (most TI calculators, and you might have to use the 2nd function key to use it) • Sometimes expressed in convenient terms!

  10. Minimum Measurement • Whatever the scale (units) on a measuring device, the error you should record is one half of the smallest division. • Often this is stated as the "possible error" in the measurement. • Example 4: If you measure the length of a pencil using a regular ruler (they usually have 1 mm divisions) and find that it is 102 mm long, you should write down… • Length = 102 ± 0.5 mm Stop here

  11. Steps in Problem Solving • List the given data (Given) • List what has to be found (Find) • Draw and label a diagram, if possible • Which principles & equations are relevant to the problem – how are they used? • Simplify the equations and solve the unknowns in algebraic form • Check for unit consistency and convert if needed • Insert numerical values and calculate the result, observing significant figures and calculator requirements – use parentheses if in doubt! • Check your answer – does it make sense?

  12. Guesstimation! • Basic skill for finding “ballpark” answer • Example • Roughly, how many cans of soda are consumed by Stauntonians – population 25,000 – in a year? • Assumptions: • ½ of population drink soda 4 times a week • Calculations • 25,000 x ½ x 4 x 52 = 2.6 million cans!

  13. Summarize Critical Thinking • Given: • what do I know? • Find: • what are the unknowns? • Tools: • What concepts (therefore equations) can be used to solve the problem? • Solve: • Use the tools to solve the problem • Check: • Does the answer make sense?

  14. Graph Relationships • Linear: y = mx + b

  15. Graph Relationships • Quadratic: y = ax2

  16. Graph Relationships • Inverse: y=1/x

More Related