Physics 171.104
General Physics for Biological Science Majors II

Spring 2008

 

Course Description

This course is a calculus-based introduction to Physics that has been tailored to biological science majors. Students will learn how to use physical ideas and principles to understand the world around them. Some emphasis will be placed on biological systems. The course will also help students to prepare for the MCAT examinations. The second semester covers electromagnetism and modern physics.

Required Material

1. Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics

by Randall D. Knight, Addison Wesley (2004) ISBN-10: 0805389784, ISBN-13: 9780805389784. The textbook, bundled together with the Mastering Physics online homework system is available at the JHU Bookstore. This bundle also includes the optional Student Workbook. This workbook is helpful, but is not required.

The bookstore has the five-volume boxed set version of the textbook. There is also a single-volume version available that is a little cheaper. I'm going with the boxed set, because the single volume version weighs as much as a small car. The multi-volume and single-volume versions are identical as far as I can tell, so you should be ok with either one.

2. Mastering Physics Online Homework System

You need a copy of the MasteringPhysics Student Access Kit for Knight's "Physics for Scientists and Engineers." If you buy the textbook at the JHU Bookstore, you will receive a copy of this bundled with the textbook.

If you choose to get the book from another source than the bookstore, you need to be sure to get the Mastering Physics. This can be purchased separately at MasteringPhysics.com.

Registering your copy of MasteringPhysics:

Follow the instructions in the Student Access Kit. After registering, when you first log in to MasteringPhysics (p. 6 of the Instruction pamphlet) you will be asked for a Course ID and a Student ID. Please enter the following:

Course ID : MPSZALAY74518
Student ID: (enter your JHED ID)

3. Classroom Performance System (CPS) Remote Unit:

This device is like a TV remote control and will be used to respond to questions in class. It is also called an "In-class Voting System."  The CPS unit must be purchased at the JHU Bookstore. When you buy it, you will receive a coupon that you will use for payment when you register your CPS unit on-line.

If you already have a CPS remote unit, you can use it for this course. However, you still need a coupon in order to register your remote for the Spring 2008 term. To get a coupon, take a copy of your Course Schedule to the JHU Bookstore to verify that you are enrolled for this class, and you will be given a coupon.

Registering your CPS Unit:

Please register at http://www.einstruction.com/ for the class named General Physics for Biological Science Majors II (171.104).

Use the class key: F38008D618

Note: When registering, please enter your JHED ID in the "Student ID" field.  You only need one CPS unit for all your JHU classes!!!

Lectures

 

Lectures will be held on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 9:00-9:50 AM
in Bloomberg 272 (Schafler Auditorium).

 

Students are responsible for reading the assigned sections of the text before the lectures.

 

You must bring your CPS remote to class each day. Your responses to the CPS in-class questions will form part of your grade for the course.

 

Cell phones must be turned off during the class.

Lecturer

 

Prof. Alexander Szalay

Department of Physics & Astronomy

Office: Bloomberg 515

Phone: (410) 516-7217

Email: szalay@jhu.edu

Office Hours: Monday 10:00-11:00 am,
1:00-3:00 pm and by appointment

Conference

Conference sections are held in several classrooms in Bloomberg and Dunning, on Tuesdays, 8:00-8:50.

Secn

Room

TA Name

Office

Ext

Email

1

361 Bloomberg

Matt McEvoy (Head TA)    

437

x6-8037

mmcevoy@pha.jhu.edu  

2

205 Dunning

Andrew Whitbeck  

409

x6-3472

whitbeck@pha.jhu.edu

3

176 Bloomberg

Rongguang Xu

106D

x6-6027

xrg117@pha.jhu.edu

4

274 Bloomberg

Yin Zhang

423

x6-7680

zhangyin@pha.jhu.edu

5

206 Dunning

Zheng Zhang

409

x6-3472

zhangzh@pha.jhu.edu

6

278 Bloomberg

Zheng Zheng

106D

x6-6027

zz@pha.jhu.edu

7

168 Bloomberg

Thomas Zorawski

106G

x6-4905

tz137@pha.jhu.edu

8

211 Dunning

Guo Xia

341

x6-7386

gqxia@pha.jhu.edu

9

212 Dunning

Mike Salerno

331

x6-5139

ksalerno@pha.jhu.edu

Homework

Homework will be due weekly on Monday evenings at 11:59 PM.

The first homework will be due on February 4.

The homework will be web-based using the Mastering Physics software.

The only way to really understand a new idea is to apply it to a problem. Problems, real and imaginary, have been the physicist's tool to attack new ideas for many years. You will learn everything by doing homework problems.

Remember, if you cannot correctly solve the homework problems (without help from friends or TAs), you are not prepared for the next exam.

Examinations

There will be three "hour" exams during the semester:

Midterm Exam #1, Tuesday, Feb 19, covering Chapters 25-28
Midterm Exam #2, Tuesday, Mar 11, covering Chapters 29-31
Midterm Exam #3, Tuesday, Apr 15, covering Chapters 32-35, 23

Note that since only your best two midterm scores are counted toward your final grade, no makeup exams will be given for the midterms. If you know in advance that you will not be taking one of the midterms, as a courtesy please inform your TA.

The Final Exam is scheduled for Friday, May 9, 9:00-12:00 noon, and will cover Chapters 23, 25-35, 37-38. Please plan your travel accordingly.

  • There will be an evening review session before each exam.
  • Exams are closed book but each student will be allowed to use a single sheet (8.5 x 11 inches, double-sided) of notes. The page (with your name) must be turned in with your blue book.
  • Calculators are allowed.  Do not bring laptops, PDAs, cell phones, etc.
  • Please write all exams in ink. Exams written in pencil cannot be re-graded.
  • All students must bring their J-card IDs to the exam.
  • Copies of the examinations from the past two years are available from the Eisenhower Library Reserve Room at this link.

Lecture Plan and Reading Assignments

Please check this regularly for updates

Last update: Jan 27, 2008

 

Week

Class

Date

Chapter

Topic

Reading

 

1

28-Jan

 

Introduction

 

1

2

30-Jan

25

Electric Charges and Forces

25.1-25.3

 

3

1-Feb

 

Coulomb's Law

25.4-25.6

 

4

4-Feb

26

The Electric Field

26.1-26.5

2

5

6-Feb

27

Motion of Charged Particle

26.6-26.7

 

6

8-Feb

 

The Concept of Flux

27.1-27.3

 

7

11-Feb

 

Gauss' Law

27.4-27.6

3

8

13-Feb

28

Current, Batteries

28.1-28.3

 

9

15-Feb

 

Conductivity

28.4-28.5

 

10

18-Feb

 

Potential Energy

29.1-29.3

 

 

19-Feb

 

MIDTERM 1 in Section

 

4

11

20-Feb

29

The Electric Potential

29.4-29.5

 

12

22-Feb

 

Potential of Point Charges

29.6-29.7

 

13

25-Feb

 

Potential and Field

30.1-30.3

5

14

27-Feb

30

Sources of Potential

30.4-30.5

 

15

29-Feb

 

Capacitors

30.6-30.7

 

16

3-Mar

 

Fundamentals of Circuits

31.1-31.3

6

17

5-Mar

31

Energy and Power

31.4-31.6

 

18

7-Mar

 

Resistor and RC Circuits

31.7-31.10

 

19

10-Mar

 

Magnetism, Moving Charges

32.1-32.3

 

 

11-Mar

 

MIDTERM 2 in Section

 

7

20

12-Mar

32

Magnetic Field of a Current

32.4-32.6

 

21

14-Mar

 

Magnetic Forces, Torques

32.7-32.10

 

 

17-Mar

 

 

 

8

 

19-Mar

 

SPRING BREAK

 

 

 

21-Mar

 

 

 

 

22

24-Mar

 

Induced Currents

33.1-33.3

9

23

26-Mar

33

Lenz's Law, Faraday's Law

33.4-33.6

 

24

28-Mar

 

Inductors, LC,RC Circuits

33.7-33.10

 

25

31-Mar

 

Electromagnetic Fields

34.1-34.4

10

26

2-Apr

34

Maxwell's Equations

34.5-34.6

 

27

4-Apr

 

Electromagnetic Waves

34.7-34.9

 

28

7-Apr

35

AC Circuits

35.1-35.6

11

29

9-Apr

23

Ray Optics

23.1-23.5

 

30

11-Apr

 

Thin Lenses

23.6-23.8

 

31

14-Apr

24

Matter Waves

24.1-24.5

 

 

15-Apr

 

MIDTERM 3 in Section

 

12

32

16-Apr

37

The End of Classical Physics

37.1-37.8

 

33

18-Apr

38

Quantization

38.1-38.4

 

34

21-Apr

 

The Bohr Hydrogen Atom

38.5-38.7

 

35

23-Apr

39

Wave Functions and Uncertainty

39.1-39.6

13

36

25-Apr

40

Schrodinger's Equation

40.1-40.4

 

37

28-Apr

 

Quantum Harmonic Oscillator

40.8-40.10

14

38

30-Apr

41

Atomic Physics

41.1-41.8

 

39

2-May

42

Nuclear Physics, Radioactivity

42.1-42.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

15

 

 

 

READING PERIOD

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

16

 

9-May

 

FINAL EXAM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grades

Grades will be calculated from the weighted average of the homework grade, the class participation grade, the best two midterm exams, and the final exam. The weighting is

10% homework,
5% class participation (including CPS and participation in Sections)
45% midterm exams
40% final exam.

Note on CPS class participation: Excluding the first week, during which you are expected to obtain a CPS unit and figure out how to use it reliably, your CPS responses will count toward your grade via the following algorithm: You receive credit for any answer - right or wrong. If you respond to 80% or more of the CPS questions, you will receive full credit for the CPS portion of the grade. A lower response total will receive a proportional deduction.

Please note that all final grades are non-negotiable.

Re-grades: Errors in exam or midterm grades will be repaired by the original grader (contact the Head TA or the instructor to find out who to see) for a one week interval after the exams are returned. Note that exams must be written in ink to be eligible for re-grading.

Student Progress

Many students find that Physics 103/104 is the most difficult course that they've taken in college. A great deal of material is covered in a relatively short time. Memorizing the book and or formulae does not help with either homework or exams. Effort must be made to understand the ideas and to apply them to the problems. Critical thinking skills must be developed and used during the course. A conscientious student who does not have a strong background in physics should plan to spend at least 12 hours a week reading and working problems. As the course progresses, new ideas will be built upon the older ones. DO NOT LET YOURSELF FALL BEHIND, you will have great difficulty in catching up.

If you need additional help, a number of options are available:

  • Your TA during office hours or by appointment
  • TA help room, MTF 1-5 pm, W 3-5 pm, and Th 1-3 pm
  • Your lecturer during office hours or when you can find him
  • Society of Physics Students help room, Sun and Mon, 6-9 pm, Bloomberg 278
  • Your academic adviser
  • JHU Academic Advising 410-516-8216
  • Counseling and Student Development Center 410-516-8278
  • Individual tutoring 410-516-4839

Ethics

The strength of the university depends on academic and personal integrity. In this course, you must be honest and truthful. Ethical violations include cheating on exams, plagiarism, reuse of assignments, improper use of the Internet and electronic devices, unauthorized collaboration, alteration of graded assignments, forgery and falsification, lying, facilitating academic dishonesty, and unfair competition. In addition, the specific ethics guidelines for this course are:

  1. Collaboration on homework at the level of discussing strategy and approach is OK. You are expected to write your own solutions.  The copying of solutions from another student or any other source is an ethics violation.
  2. Giving your CPS remote to another student so that student can "answer" for you in class when you are not present is an ethics violation on the part of both students involved.

Report any violations you witness to the instructor. You may consult the associate dean of students and/or the chairman of the Ethics Board beforehand. See the guide on "Academic Ethics for Undergraduates" and the Ethics Board web site (http://ethics.jhu.edu/) for more information.