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HOW PHYSICS LOOKS TO A BEGINNING STUDENT

HOW PHYSICS LOOKS TO A BEGINNING STUDENT. A 21 st Century Approach to Introductory Physics. Let’s start with a description of our current paradigm of the nature of the Universe. Larry Curtis. Distinguished University Professor of Physics and Astronomy University of Toledo.

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HOW PHYSICS LOOKS TO A BEGINNING STUDENT

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  1. HOW PHYSICS LOOKS TO A BEGINNING STUDENT

  2. A 21st Century Approach to Introductory Physics Let’s start with a description of our current paradigm of the nature of the Universe Larry Curtis Distinguished University Professor of Physics and Astronomy University of Toledo

  3. THE NATURE OF MATTER _________________________________________________________ All matter consists of little bits of positive and negative electricity: in perpetual motion; attract each other at short distances; repel each other when pressed too close together. ________________________________________________________ The most important discovery ever made. If all other scientific information we know were lost in some cataclysmic event, and only this information survived, all could be rediscovered in a very short time. - Richard P. Feynman ` ////

  4. Iron atoms positioned on a carbon surface

  5. Second Quantization - The Discrete Photon

  6. 700 keV Li+ beam (v=4.4 mm/ns) incident on a thin (3 g/cm2) carbon foil. The blue light is H-like 4f-5g in Li2+ (4500Å, =3 ns, x=1.3 cm). The green light is He-like 2s 3S-2p 3P in Li+ (5485Å, =44 ns, x=19 cm).

  7. Can we pictureattractive and repulsive interactions without the force concept? Quantum Field Theory is conceptually easy!

  8. ACTION-AT-A-DISTANCE Exchange of a ‘gauge boson’ Particle exchange can produce both attraction and repulsion. It is intermittent, like rain on the roof. The Force concept requires an average over a time interval.

  9. Interactions between any two particles involves all the particles in the universe.

  10. Intrinsic Action  Quantized: ħ/2 = building blocks  Odd#: 1st quant. (inter. Part.) / Even#: 2nd quant. (gauge bosons) Odd #: FD stat. / Even #: BE stat. / Together: MB stat.  Least Action – gives conservation laws, dynamics Energy = Action/Time; Momentum = Action/Length Least Action + Quantization = Uncertainty Principle  A Lorentz Invariant  Mechanical action  parity

  11. Conservation of Action http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQLtcEAG9v0

  12. Strike a billiard ball so it rolls w/o slipping? If we use the line of action of the impulse as the fulcrum, there are NO torques ! The angular momentum is the same before and after the impulse.

  13. Speed at which a sliding ball rolls w/o slipping ? at release alley exerts friction rolls w/o slipping Use conservation of angular momentum about the point-of contact with the floor, so there are no torques.

  14. Action & Quantum Statistics

  15. Least Action Action Quantization Minimum Uncertainty

  16. LEAST ACTION – What is the path between (x1,y1,t1) and (x2,y2,t2) ? Total Energy = Kinetic Energy + Potential Energy “Action” = [Kinetic Energy – Potential Energy] t The particle does whatever it wants, but we see the path where the Total “Action” summed over all points adds up to the smallest value. On this path the Total Energy is the SAME for each point

  17. Nature chooses the space-time path of minimum action and that path must contain an integer number action “quanta” Action canonically welds: Momentum-to-Length Energy-to-Time This leads to an “Uncertainty Principle” between them

  18. Principle of Least Action Interactive

  19. THE SPACE-TIME CONTINUUM The Magnetic Field Zitterbewegung – Spin & magnetic moment of a point particle One unique electron The PET scan as a time traveler

  20. TIME “Time is what keeps everything from happening at once.” - Attributed to John Archibald Wheeler Quoted by Woody Allen “Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.” - Groucho Marx ‘Backward turn, turn backward, O time in your flight. Make me a child again, just for tonight.’ - Elizabeth Akers Allen

  21. Nature has revealed a beautiful secret! The behavior of the Universe becomes very simple if it is described in a way in which space and time are symmetric. What makes it seem hard, is the fact the we must live our lives by standing at a point in space and watching time pass, but not the reverse. It’s like our perspective in riding the Earth around the Sun, which seems as if the Sun were going around us. However, the heliocentric equations are much simpler.

  22. Model for a current in a wire Woldemar Voigt 1887 Variously delayed photon arrivals make lengths appear shorter and charge appear denser. If q moves with the electron drift, the positive charge appears denser, giving a repulsion. If q moves opposite to the electron drift, the negative charge appears denser, giving an attraction. This is magnetism, and results from relativity at speed ~ 0.1 mm/sec !

  23. How can a point particle exhibit angular momentum and magnetic moment? Zitterbewegung, averaged over time, has a finite extent commensurate with Compton wavelength. Virtual photons possess spin, cause Zitterbewegung region to precess, circulating mass and charge.

  24. Electron-Positron Pair Creation and Annihilation Once created, e+ and e- are stable until annihilated

  25. time Are they all really the same electron? Future Here-Now space Past

  26. PET scan: Ingest sugar with tagged positron-emitting Fluorine-18 (110 min. halflife). Sugar concentrates at high metabolism. On decay, positrons encounter electrons.

  27. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Scan Ragnar Hellborg Lund University

  28. Laplacian Determinism – A Costly Mistake Pierre Simon Laplace - 1776: “An intelligence that knows all of the relations of the entities of the universe at one instant could state their positions, motions, and general effects any instant in the past of future. Henri Poincare – 1903: “Small differences in the initial conditions can produce very great ones in the final phenomena – prediction Then becomes impossible (1st recognition of chaos). Werner Heisenberg – 1924: There is a fundamental limit on the accuracy to which position and velocity can be co-determined. Stephen Hawking –1988: In the cosmology of the Big Bang and Black Holes, space and time themselves break down.

  29. Position Probability Density Dwell Time

  30. Why didn’t Isaac Newton think about the possibility of getting hit on the head when he sat under the apple tree? x 

  31. Where does the pendulum spend the most time? The least time?

  32. Dwell time: Time exposure High: many / slow Low: Few / fast

  33. Equal time inside No time outside Most time at end points Least time at center Most time at aphelion and perihelion

  34. The secret of life, computers, & transitors

  35. 1-D Periodic Motion Non-relativistic conservative potential Periodic motion with turning points Distribution (xm x  xm) Box: SHO:

  36. So in general Where V(x) can beany algebraic or numerical function.

  37. Solve Numerically : First normalize Then evaluate

  38. Einstein-Brillouin-Keller Action Quantization (1917) (1926) (1958) Bohr-Sommerfeld-Wilson quantization used fuzzy math, neglecting caustics at turning points in librations. The correct semiclassical action quantization condition is: where i = 0(rotations) Topological Maslov Index = 2 (librations) It yields astonishingly accurate results !!!

  39. Average Values of Powers of the Coordinate

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