Principles of Physics II Syllabus for 2020-2021
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Instructor Information

Office Hours

4-5PM Mon-Thurs.

Course Information

COVID-19 Protocols

Recording Policy

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Administrative Drop Policy

Students who do not attend class on or prior to the census date will be administratively dropped. Effective Fall, 2016

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Course

PHYS-2426-001 Principles of Physics II

Prerequisites

Prerequisites: PHYS 2425 and MATH 2414

Course Description

Principles of physics for science, computer science and engineering majors, using calculus, involving the principles of electricity and magnetism, including circuits, electromagnetism, waves, sound, light and optics. Laboratory experiments supporting theoretical principles presented in lecture involving the principles of electricity and magnetism, including circuits, electromagnetism, waves, sound, light and optics; experimental design, data collection and analysis, and preparation of laboratory reports.

Student ResourcesStudent Resources Website

Department Expectations

Occupational License Disclaimer

Notice to Students enrolled in an educational program for preparation of issuance of certain occupational licenses:

Students enrolled in an educational program in preparation for obtaining certain occupational licenses are potentially ineligible for such license if the student has been convicted of an offense. For further information, please contact:

Melodie Graves
Justice Involved Advocate
Student Service Center 117
mgraves24@actx.edu
806-371-5995
Make appointment at https://melodiegraves.youcanbook.me

You can also contact the Legal Clinic, or the faculty member in charge of the educational program that you seek to enroll in. The further information you will receive will include notification to you of your right to request a criminal history evaluation letter from the licensing authority in order to clarify your particular situation.

Hours

(4 sem hrs; 3 lec, 3 lab)

Class Type

Tech Supported

Syllabus Information

Textbooks

Lecture: Physics for Scientists and Engineers 9th edition, Serway & Jewitt (optional, the WebAssign access includes an ebook version)

Lab: Laboratory Manual for PHYS 2426, on Blackboard.

Homework: You will need to get a code for WebAssign if you do not already have one.  If you took Principles of Physics I from Professor Van Domelen, your old code should still work.

Supplies

Calculator: You will need a calculator that is not your phone that can handle scientific notation, exponents, and trigonometric functions.

Ruler and Protractor: While there are ones to borrow in the lab classroom, you should own a set for the rest of the course.  A protractor is particularly important for the exams.

Lab Kit: In the event we are no longer able to do in-person labs, you will need to pick up a lab equipment kit (and return it at the end of the term.)

Student Performance

After completing the lecture part of this course, students should be able to:

1. Articulate the fundamental concepts of electricity and electromagnetism, including electrostatic potential energy, electrostatic    potential, potential difference, magnetic field, induction, and Maxwell’s equations.
2. State the general nature of electrical forces and electrical charges, and their relationship to electrical current.
3. Solve problems involving the inter-relationship of electrical  charges, electrical forces, and electrical fields.
4. Apply Kirchhoff’s laws to analysis of circuits with potential sources, capacitance, and resistance, including parallel and series capacitance and resistance.
5. Calculate the force on a charged particle between the plates of a parallel-plate capacitor.
6. Apply Ohm’s law to the solution of problems.
7. Describe the effects of static charge on nearby materials in terms of Coulomb’s law.
8. Use Faraday’s and Lenz’s laws to find the electromotive forces.
9. Describe the components of a wave and relate those components to mechanical vibrations, sound, and decibel level.
10. Articulate the principles of reflection, refraction, diffraction, interference and superposition of waves.
11. Solve real-world problems involving optics, lenses, and mirrors.

After completing the lab part of this course, students should be able to:

1. Prepare laboratory reports that clearly communicate experimental information in logical and scientific manner.
2. Conduct basic laboratory experiments involving electricity and magnetism.
3. Relate physical observations and measurements involving electricity and magnetism to theoretical principles.
4. Evaluate the accuracy of physical measurements and the potential sources of error in the measurement.
5. Design fundamental experiments involving principles of electricity and magnetism.
6. Identify appropriate sources of information for conducting laboratory experiments involving electricity and magnetism.

Students Rights and Responsibilities

Student Rights and Responsibilities

Log in using the AC Connect Portal

In order to receive your AC Connect Email, you must log in through AC Connect at https://acconnect.actx.edu .

If you are an active staff or faculty member according to Human Resources, use "Exchange". All other students, use "AC Connect (Google) Email".

Expected Student Behavior

     The lecture meetings will be held on Discord, text and audio but no video.  You will be expected to be present during the scheduled class times, and participation in class discussions is encouraged.

     Students are expected to remain up-to-date on their own grades, and bring any disputes to the instructor in a timely manner.  Other than disputes regarding the final exam itself, all disputes must be brought up prior to taking the final exam.

     To avoid disruption and potential embarrassment, please silence your microphone when not asking a question.  Specific rules for device use will be outlined in the online exam honor statement you will be required to sign.

     You may record the audio portion of lectures for your personal use or to share with other students currently taking this course.  You do not have permission to post them online for wide distribution or to sell them or otherwise profit by the distribution of the lectures.

     Academic dishonesty will at a minimum be punished by a score of zero on the relevant task.  This includes cheating on exams, and turning in lab reports for a lab that was not actually attended.  (The online homework is harder to cheat than to just do honestly, but please do not take this as a challenge.)  Additional sanctions at the College level may be applied if the situation merits.

Grading Criteria

Exams

         Exams will all be administered online via Blackboard, using the Assignments system.  They are expected to take only about an hour to 90 minutes to complete, but you will have a wide window to submit them in recognition that many of you will have work and family obligations.  If you do not think you will be able to take the exam at all on the scheduled day, let Dr. Van Domelen know well in advance so he can make arrangements.  All regular exams will take place on Fridays, the final exam will take place during Finals Week on the day you would be taking it in person, but available for the entire day (24 hours).  Exams 1-3 are worth 10% of the total grade each, and the Final Exam is worth 20% of the total grade.  Additionally, if it would help you, the percentage you get on your Final Exam replaces your one lowest regular exam score.

         Exam 1: February 12

         Exam 2: March 12 (day before Spring Break)

         Exam 3: April 16

         Final Exam: May 10

Homework

         Homework is delivered via the WebAssign system.  We will be making sure everyone is properly set up in WebAssign on the first day of class, during the lab timeslot.  The homework is due just before midnight the day of the first lecture of the week, with exceptions noted in the schedule below.  While extensions may be granted if your reason is good enough, this is not a course where you can go back and redo the homework later for a higher score.

         Lecture attendance provides extra credit points on your final homework assignment.  Perfect attendance gets 15 points (a typical assignment averages 10 points), less one for every day of lecture missed, to a minimum of zero.  Homework is 20% of the total course grade.

Labs

         Maximum occupancy in the lab classroom is 16, and we will be holding it to 12 or fewer, with no more than three lab groups at a time.  To accomplish this, lab groups will be split into even and odd groups, with half the class doing the lab each week.  The lab groups will be assigned by the instructor, and changed after every exam.  Three experiments are planned for the first half of the semester and two for the second half, as seen below in the schedule.  The lab manual is available on Blackboard.  Lab reports are a group effort, and a single one will be turned in by each group.

         Take-Home labs have been developed for Physics 2 and are being developed for Physics 1 along the same lines.  In the event in-person instruction ceases, every student will be issued a Lab Kit and experiments will be performed during the regular lab time, but with groups collaborating online.  Lab Kits will have to be returned in good condition.  These lab manuals will also be available in Blackboard.  Since everyone will already be socially isolated, Take-Home labs will all be performed the same week, rather than split up into even/odd groups.  As with in-person labs, there will be one report per group.

         Either way, all of the Pre-Lab exercises in the regular lab manual will be turned in online at some point, as per the schedule below.  They are due at the beginning of lecture.

         Labs are worth 10% of the total grade.  There are no dropped lab scores, but turning in partner evaluations is worth a bonus point on the lab.  Pre-Labs are also worth 10% of the total grade.

Problem Sessions

         These will be run on Discord during the scheduled class times ("Lab" time on the second class day of the week, and some other days when no one is doing a lab on the first day).  You will work with your lab group on these problems.   Voice channels for each group will be available on Discord for those who wish to communicate that way, but participation grades will depend on seeing at least some typed activity in the group channels.  Having the Discord app on your phone will make it easier to upload pictures of your work to the group chat.

         In the event we shift to the Take-Home labs, there will be extra problem sessions in place of labs in some weeks, since we will no longer need to switch between even and odd lab groups.

         Problem sessions will be a mix of working on homework problems and working on problems that the homework system either cannot handle (such as diagram-drawing) or that would be too hard for anyone to be expected to do alone.  Grading will be based on participation rather than successful completion, and up to two zeroes for missed sessions will be dropped.  Problem sessions will be worth 10% of the final grade.

The Curve

         Individual assignments and exams will not be curved.  The instructor will decide on the final curve based on the distribution of scores after all grades are in, but it will not be more severe than the following:

A: 89.50% and up

B: 79.50% to 89.49%

C: 69.50% to 79.49%

D: 59.50% to 69.49%

F: 59.49% or below

         The final curve is likely to be "uneven" in that the ranges are not all the same 10% wide.  Anyone who falls just below the boundary will have their situation scrutinized more closely to determine if they deserve to be raised by a letter grade or should remain the highest score in the lower letter.  Things not specifically graded for, such as class participation (good) or frequent lateness (bad) will also be considered in these borderline cases.

Attendance

        https://discord.gg/RBTdptT is the course Discord server, and we will be using this for some parts of class even during in-person meetings.  All students are required to join the server, and will be assigned a role based on their section.  If you are already part of this server from 2020, your role will merely be updated.  Otherwise, you will need to join the server.  I strongly recommend you also install the Discord app on your phone.

 

         Important note: students who are absent for all meetings of the class in the first two weeks will be automatically dropped.

         The instructor lecture notes (with answers to some in-class problems removed) are available on Blackboard.  Attendance will be taken, and will factor into your grade as part of the homework score.

         See below for a schedule of material covered each week in lecture.

Calendar

There will always be lectures during the lecture times, held on the course Discord, except for the first day of class where we’ll start with policies and do the first lecture during lab time.  Unless otherwise specified in a week’s entry, the weekly schedule for other matters will be as follows:

          Mondays: WebAssign homework over the week’s new material is available at 10:00 AM.  Lab during lab time (in person), with the previous week’s lab report (if any) due at the beginning of the time.  At 11:59 tonight, homework over the previous week’s material is due (exceptions for the first week, last week, and holiday breaks).

          Wednesdays: Recitation (online) during lab time, group work problems and discussion of the homework that was due this week.

          In the detailed schedule below, “First Lab” and “Second Lab” refer to the lab time slots (Monday and Wednesdays 1PM-2:40PM).

Week 1 (1/19-1/21)
Lecture: Policies and general Discord setup.
First Lab: No class, holiday.
Second Lab: Start Chapter 23 (Electric Forces and Fields)

Week 2 (1/25-1/28)
Lecture: Finish Chapter 23, all of Chapter 24 (Gauss’s Law). 
First Lab: Experiment 2 (Electrical Measurements) Even Groups.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 1 (Friction and Torque) due.
Second Lab: Group problems.

Week 3 (2/1-2/4)
Lecture: All of Chapter 25 (Electric Potential), start Chapter 26 (Capacitance). 
First Lab: Experiment 2 Odd Groups.  Homework 1 due.
Second Lab: Group problem.

Week 4 (2/8-2/11)
Lecture: Finish Chapter 26, start Chapter 27 (Current and Resistance). 
First Lab: Group problems.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 3 (Potential Mapping) due.  Homework 2 due. 
Second Lab: Group problems.
EXAM 1 on 2/12 (covers Chapters 23-26).

Week 5 (2/15-2/18)
Lecture: Finish Chapter 27, start Chapter 28 (DC Circuits). 
First Lab: Experiment 4 (DC Circuits) Even Groups.  Homework 3 due.
Second Lab: Pre-Lab for Experiment 4 due (we cover the necessary material in the Monday lecture).  Group problems.

Week 6 (2/22-2/25)
Lecture: Finish Chapter 28, all of Chapter 29 (Magnetic Fields).
First Lab: Experiment 4 Odd Groups.  Homework 4 due.
Second Lab: Group problems.

Week 7 (3/1-3/4)
Lecture: All of Chapter 30 (Sources of Magnetic Field).
First Lab: Experiment 5 (RC Circuits) Even Groups.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 5 due.  Homework 5 due.
Second Lab: Group problems.

Week 8 (3/8-3/11)
Lecture: All of Chapter 31 (Faraday’s Law).  
First Lab: Experiment 5 Odd Groups.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 6 (Magnetic Force on a Wire) due.  Homework 6 due.  Homework 7 assigned, due after Spring Break. 
Second Lab: Group problems, exam review.
EXAM 2 on 3/12 (Chapters 27-30).

SPRING BREAK

Week 9 (3/22-3/25)
Lecture: All of Chapter 32 (Inductance). 
First Lab: Group problems.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 7 (Charge-Mass Ratio of Electrons) due.  Homework 7 due.
Second Lab: Group problems.

Week 10 (3/29-4/1)
Lecture: All of Chapter 33 (AC Circuits). 
First Lab: Experiment 8 (RLC Circuits) Even Groups.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 8 due.  Homework 8 due.

Week 11 (4/5-4/8)
Lecture: All of Chapter 34 (Electromagnetic Waves), start Chapter 35 (Ray Optics). 
First Lab: Experiment 8 Odd Groups.  Homework 9 due.
Second Lab: Group problems.

Week 12 (4/12-4/15)
Lecture: All of Chapter 35 (Ray Optics). 
First Lab: Group problems.  Homework 10 due. 
Second Lab: Group problems, exam review.
EXAM 3 on 4/16 (Chapters 31-34)

Week 13 (4/19-4/22)
Lecture: All of Chapter 36 (Image Formation). 
First Lab: Experiment 9 (Reflection and Refraction) Even Groups.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 9 due.  Homework 11 due.

Week 14 (4/26-4/29)
Lecture: Chapter 37 (Wave Optics), Chapter 38 (Dispersion and Polarization). 
First Lab: Experiment 9 Odd Groups.  Pre-Lab for Experiment 10 (Lenses) due.  Homework 12 due.

Week 15 (5/3-5/6)
Lecture: Chapter 40 (Intro to Quantum Mechanics). 
First Lab: Make-up Lab for those who need it.  Homework 13 due.  Homework 14 assigned, due at 11:59 PM 5/9.
Second Lab: Group problems, exam review.

Final exam (comprehensive, but heavy on chapters 35-38, 40) will be open for 24 hours online on May 10.  Make-up labs will be due by noon May 9, so that they can be graded before the final opens.

Additional Information

         Please notify Dr. Van Domelen in advance if you know you will miss a meeting of class, or if you will not be able to devote at least 90 minutes during the scheduled exam times to work and upload the exam.  He will try to reach an accommodation with you.

Syllabus Created on:

12/31/20 2:15 PM

Last Edited on:

12/31/20 2:20 PM