PHYS 20484 - Physics II with Lab Spring 2012
Lectures: MWF 9:00AM - 9:50AM @ SWR 357
Instructor: Dr. Yuri M. Strzhemechny
Office: SWR 373
Phone: 817-257-5793
Email: Y.Strzhemechny@tcu.edu
Web: http://personal.tcu.edu/ystrzhemechn/
Office Hours: W 8:00-8:50 AM, F 4:00-6:00 PM & by appointment
Prerequisites: PHYS
20473/20474 (REQUIRED)
Required textbook: “Physics for Scientists & Engineers, Vol II, TCU Edition”, by Serway and Jewett, Cengage, ISBN: 0495662232
Lab instructions: Will be distributed via the Internet. Further information will be provided in your Laboratory Syllabi.
Course Description: This is part two of a two-semester calculus-based physics course. We will cover material dealing with electricity, magnetism, light and optics.
Grading: The course grades
will be determined as follows:
A:
100 – 90.1 pts., B: 90 – 80.1 pts., C: 80 – 70.1 pts., D: 70 – 55.1 pts., F: 55
and below.
Weekly quizzes: 20 %
Test 1: 15 %
Test 2: 15 %
Test 3: 15 %
Final Exam: 15 %
Labs: 20 %
Weekly quizzes consisting
of a few problems (very similar to the homework problems) will be given
every Friday from 9:00 to 9:10 am, and will include material covered during the
previous week(s). The quizzes grade will be determined as the average of all
the quiz grades but one, with the lowest grade dropped. Three midterm
tests will be administered. Final exam will be
cumulative. The tests will contain conceptual questions and problems. No PDA’s,
graphing calculators, or cell phones on the tests, please. Make-up tests will
be provided to students having an Official University Absence. Students with
valid reasons for missed tests (e.g. doctor's note) will have to contact me
regarding make-up tests as early as possible. Lab is an integral
part of the course and the lab grade will be determined as an average of all
the lab grades but one, with the lowest grade dropped. All students must
complete at least 11 experiments. If a student completes less than 11
experiments, the lab points will still count toward the average course grade,
but the letter grade will be reduced by one letter for each missing lab (more
details – in your Laboratory Syllabi.). Homework: It is crucial for
you to learn how to apply conceptual knowledge for problem solving. The
textbook provides excellent guidelines for you to acquire this skill. You are
strongly encouraged to go through the solutions of the sample problems. In
addition, for each chapter, I supply a number of recommended problems for your
homework. It is in your best interest to solve those problems in a timely
manner for several reasons. First, it will provide additional training in
self-education. Second, homework problems will be very similar to those
given in the weekly quizzes. Third, homework problems will be related to those
offered in the tests and the final. Please refer to the table below for the
problems assigned for each chapter. I will not be grading your homework
assignments but I will sure grade the quizzes and the tests. If you are having
difficulty solving the homework problems you may want to contact me during my
office hours, or perhaps get a tutor (for tutors available within the
department, check our web page at http://www.phys.tcu.edu).
Lectures (Chapters) |
Homework problems |
23 (Electric Fields) |
4,9,12,13,21,36,44 |
24 (Gauss’s Law) |
3,9,15,19,23,35,64 |
25 (Electric Potential) |
2,3,11,29,34,40,59 |
26 (Capacitance and Dielectrics) |
1,7,12,23,36,50 |
27 (Current and Resistance) |
1,10,12,15,18,21,31,44 |
28 (Direct Current Circuits) |
2,7,9,21,24,28,43 |
29 (Magnetic Fields) |
1,4,9,17,27,35,46 |
30 (Sources of Magnetic Field) |
2,5,15,18,23,35,39,54 |
31 (Faraday’s Law) |
3,13,23,28,31,62 |
32 (Inductance) |
2,19,23,31,41,45,51 |
33 (Alternating Current Circuits) |
4,10,13,19,29,35,41,50 |
34 (Electromagnetic Waves) |
3,5,10,15,41,47 |
35 (Geometric Optics) |
9,11,13,32,33,43,63 |
36 (Image Formation) |
3,11,21,29,35,53,61 |
37 (Interference of Light) |
1,9,18,25,27,39,51 |
38 (Diffraction and Polarization) |
1,11,23,34,47 |
You will have an option of
getting up to 5% of extra credit for an extracurricular research. Such
assignments will be given on request from a pool of topics on a lottery basis.
Academic Misconduct: I would like to remind you about policies and
procedures regarding your rights as well as responsibilities that are published
in the TCU Student Handbook. You may have a paper copy but it is also available
on line at http://www.studenthandbook.tcu.edu/student_handbook.pdf.
Specifically I would like you to review Section 3.4 regarding Academic
misconduct, i.e. cheating, plagiarism, etc.
Disabilities statement:
Texas Christian University complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act
and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 regarding students with
disabilities. Eligible students seeking accommodations should contact the
Coordinator of Student Disabilities Services in the Center for Academic
Services located in Sadler Hall, 1010. Accommodations are not retroactive,
therefore, students should contact the Coordinator as soon as possible in the term
for which they are seeking accommodations. Further information can be obtained
from the Center for Academic Services, TCU Box 297710, Fort Worth, TX 76129, or
at (817) 257-6567.
Adequate time must be allowed to
arrange accommodations and accommodations are not retroactive; therefore,
students should contact the Coordinator as soon as possible in the academic
term for which they are seeking accommodations. Each eligible student is
responsible for presenting relevant, verifiable, professional documentation
and/or assessment reports to the Coordinator. Guidelines for documentation may
be found at http://www.acs.tcu.edu/disability_documentation.asp.
Students with emergency medical
information or needing special arrangements in case a building must be
evacuated should discuss this information with their instructor/professor as
soon as possible.