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jpg) note that the Physics 24 final exam is not listed above as something you cant prepare for
Contact me or go to http://lead.mst.edu/ to fill out the application form. It looks good on your resume, pays well, and is fun!
Announcements
Pick up the Final Exam Preparation Homework from the back of the lecture hall (or get it from the Physics 24 web site).
If anything about your grade needs fixed, fix it now (next week is too late)! See your recitation instructor! (Not me!)
Announcements
Final Exam All exams will be given from 8:00-10:00 in the announced rooms. Only those students needing Test Center facilities will take their exam elsewhere. If you dont get an e-mail Thursday or Friday of this week from me about taking your exam at the Test Center, you are not on the list to take it there. If you are taking your exam at the Test Center, check in by 8:00 am on exam day. Final Exam procedures: see this.
The Final Exam and End-Material Tests are designed to give students a fair chance to improve their grades. A high score on either test does not demonstrate that a student deserves an A in the course regardless of his/her other exam scores.
Physics 24 Final Exam Room Assignments, Spring 2012: Instructor Dr. Hale Dr. Parris Dr. Schmitt Dr. Vojta Dr. Waddill Special Needs Sections B, D F, H A, C, E G, L K Room 104 Physics 120 Butler-Carlton (Civil) G-3 Schrenk G-31 EECH 125 Butler-Carlton (Civil) Testing Center
Final Exam is 8:00 am, Thursday, May 3. No one admitted after 8:15 pm!
Know the exam time! Find your room ahead of time! If at 8:00 on test day you are lost, go to 104 Physics and check the exam room schedule, then go to the appropriate room and take the exam there.
Announcements
PLC
Faculty will check PLC occasionally Wednesday afternoon and provide help to any students who show up.
There will not be PLC Wednesday evening unless students request it. E-mail me by 3:00 pm today if you want a Wednesday evening PLC.
Announcements
BLOW $#!T UP DAY!
Where: The Experimental Mine on Bridge School Road past the Tater Patch Cost: $5 ???
Physics 24 Topics
Part 1:
Coulombs Law electric fields electric fields from charge distributions motion of a charged particle in an electric field Gauss Law electric potentials and electric potential energy
Topic of a test preparation homework problem. Topic of a final lecture problem. Final exam problems may come from topics not covered on test preparation homework or during the final lecture.
Physics 24 Topics
Part 2:
capacitance, dielectrics, energy storage in capacitors, capacitors in series and parallel current density and drift speed Ohms law, resistors in series and parallel electric power emf, Kirchoffs Rules rc circuits, electrical instruments
Topic of a test preparation homework problem. Topic of a final lecture problem. Final exam problems may come from topics not covered on test preparation homework or during the final lecture.
Physics 24 Topics
Part 3:
magnetic forces on moving charged particles wires carrying currents solenoids, magnetic fields from current-carrying wires calculation of magnetic field using Biot-Savart Law Faradays Law, induction, motional emf electric field produced by changing flux motors, generators, transformers electromagnetic waves
Topic of a test preparation homework problem. Topic of a final lecture problem. Final exam problems may come from topics not covered on test preparation homework or during the final lecture.
Physics 24 Topics
Part 4:
Snells Law, total internal reflection, fiber optics mirrors lenses interference (double slits, thin films) diffraction
Topic of a test preparation homework problem. Topic of a final lecture problem. Final exam problems may come from topics not covered on test preparation homework or during the final lecture.
Test Preparation homework focuses on material after exam 3. This lecture focuses on material before exam 3.
The problems in this lecture are the standard exam review lecture problems and are not a guarantee of the exam content, nor are they intended to tell you what to study for. Expect final exam questions from material not covered in todays lecture!
A point charge +Q is located at the point (x,y) = (-a,0), and a second point charge -Q is located at (x,y) = (a,0). Find the electric field at point P, which is on the y-axis, a distance b above the origin. Express your answer in unit vector notation using the coordinate system given.
y P b a Q a -Q x
A point charge +Q is located at the point (x,y) = (-a,0), and a second point charge -Q is located at (x,y) = (a,0). A third point charge -3Q is placed at point P. Find the Coulomb force on this third charge due to the other two charges.
y P b a Q a -Q x
A point charge +Q is located at the point (x,y) = (-a,0), and a second point charge -Q is located at (x,y) = (a,0). The third point charge -3Q is now placed at the origin. Find the Coulomb force on this third charge due to the other two charges.
y P b a Q a -Q x
For the resistor system shown, R1 = 3 , R2 = 20 , and R3 = 30 . (a) Find the equivalent resistance.
V0
A proton is accelerated from rest through a potential difference of V. The proton then enters a uniform magnetic field that is perpendicular to its velocity. In the magnetic field, the proton follows a circular path with a radius R.
(a) Determine the speed, v, of the proton when it enters the magnetic field.
(b) Determine the magnitude of the magnetic field and the period, T, of the protons motion in the magnetic field. (c) Suppose the proton exits the magnetic field region after it has completed a half-circular path. What is the protons speed when it exits the magnetic field region?
In a 250-turn alternator, the magnetic flux through each turn is B = (2.50 x 10-4 Tm2) cos(t) where is the angular speed of the alternator, and the resistance of the alternator windings is 5 .
When the alternator is rotating at 3000 rev/min determine the induced emf in the alternator as a function of time, and the maximum emf in the alternator.
A light beam is incident at an angle on the top surface of a block of plastic. The sides and bottom of the block are immersed in water. If =50, find the angle the light makes with the normal to the plastic/water interface when it exits the block. (nplastic=1.49, nwater=1.33).
Air Plastic
Water
I regret to announce this is The End. I am going now. I bid you all a very fond farewell. Goodbye.Bilbo Baggins