Instructor: Professor
Ringwald E-mail: ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @ |
Phone: (559) 278-8426 |
Office hours (via Zoom, send email, or phone me, between January
21 and May 6):
MoTuWeTh 5:30-7 p.m.
Please feel free to contact me if you have any problems in this course, or if you're doing well, and just want to talk. It's in my interest, and I care, that you do well.
Lecture meeting times and location: Schedule 35266 (Section 03),
but in-person meetings have been suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
All class functions will be conducted in virtual asynchronous mode, with
videos of classes posted to YouTube and linked to the Course Schedule
(see
below).
Iclickers or clickers are NOT required
for Phys 4C. I never use them! I also never use
Mastering Physics.
Required Course Texts, which should be available in Kennel Bookstore:
Recommended Course Texts, all of which are excellent sources of worked examples:
Course webpage: http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/phys4c.html . This is not on Canvas: I do all my own web programming.
The Homework Assignments are available on the
course webpage, at:
http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/hw4c.html.
Solutions to the homework assignments will be posted
to the course webpage the day after they are due.
Course grades will be awarded for the
following final percentages:
85.000-100% = A;
70.000-84.999% = B; 60.000-69.999% = C;
50.000-59.999% = D; 0-49.999% = F.
These percentages will be computed from the following:
Do the homework, even though it won't be graded this semester. If you don't, you won't know the material on the exams, which count a lot.
A favorite pastime is to try and determine a ``running'' grade (in other words, trying to figure out a grade based on a single exam or some subset of it). Since there are many contributors to the final grade, this isn't very useful. The above grading scale will not be moved: how any student's grade is determined doesn't depend on any other student's grade.
Professor Ringwald will be happy to fix any errors that occur in the grading. If after any errors are fixed, students still want to contest their grades, the students are required to do it in writing. This written request must be typed and must be a minimum of half a single-spaced page of 12-point type for exam or Final Exam questions, and a minimum of one single-spaced page of 12-point type for the overall grade. It is to be submitted one time, either to Professor Ringwald during his office hours, or to his mailbox in McLane 173.
TENTATIVE Course Schedule (updated 2021 April 20). Always do
the readings before class:
Week | Tu | Th | Read by Tuesday of next week |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1/19: No class | 1/21:
Introduction;
Maxwell's equations
(Chapter 33) | Chapter 33 |
2 | 1/26: Electromagnetic waves (Chapter 33) | 1/28: Electromagnetic waves (Chapter 33) | Chapters 33 and 34 |
3 | 2/02: Electromagnetic radiation (Chapter 33) | 2/04:
Geometrical optics:
reflection and refraction (Chapter 34) | Chapter 35 |
4 | 2/09:
Image formation: mirrors
(Chapter 35) | 2/11:
Image formation:
lenses (Chapter 35); Homework #1 due (on Chapter 33) | Chapters 35 and 36 |
5 | 2/16:
Practical optics (microscopes and telescopes) (Chapter 35) | 2/18:
Interference of light waves (Chapter 36);
Homework #2 due (on Chapter 34) | Chapters 36 and 37 |
6 | 2/23:
Interference of
light waves (Chapter 36) and also click here | 2/25:
Diffraction (Chapter 37); Homework #3 due (on Chapter 35) | Chapter 37; also re-read Chapters 33-35. |
7 | 3/02: Diffraction (Chapter 37) | 3/04: Mid-Term Exam 1 (on Chapters 33-35) | Chapters 37 and 38 |
8 | 3/09: Polarization (Chapter 37) | 3/11:
Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity (Chapter 38); Homework #4 due (on Chapter 36) | Chapter 38 |
9 | 3/16: Relativity (Chapter 38) | 3/18:
Relativity
(Chapter 38); Homework #5 due (on Chapter 37) | Chapters 38 and 39 |
10 | 3/23: Relativity (Chapter 38) | 3/25:
Quantum physics
(Chapters 39.1-39.2) (Thermal radiation and the Photoelectric Effect); Homework #6 due (on Chapter 38) | - |
- | 3/30: Spring Break | 4/01: Spring Break | Chapters 39 and 40 |
11 | 4/06:
Quantum physics (Chapters 39.3-39.8) (The Compton Effect, de Broglie waves, Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle) | 4/08:
Quantum mechanics (Chapters 40.1-40.6) (The Schroedinger equation); Homework #7 due (on Chapter 39) | Chapters 40 and 43 |
12 | 4/13:
Quantum mechanics
(Chapter 40.2) (The QM Particle in a Box); | 4/15:
Nuclear physics
(Chapter 43); Homework #8 due (on Chapter 40) | Chapter 43; also re-read Chapters 36-40. |
13 | 4/20: Nuclear physics (Chapter 43) | 4/22:
Mid-Term Exam 2 due by 11:59 p.m. on 4/23 (on Chapters 36-40) | Chapter 41 |
14 | 4/27: Nuclear physics (Chapter 43) | 4/29:
The Bohr model of
the H atom (Chapters 41.1-41.3); Homework #9 due (on Chapter 43) | Chapter 41 |
15 | 5/04: QM atoms (Chapters 41.4-41.8); Homework #10 due (on Chapter 41) | 5/06: No class | Re-read Chapters 33-41 and 43. |
Do the homework yourself: you will gain the maximum benefit from it this way. Remember: you NEED to practice doing these problems yourself for the exams, which count for most of the course grade.
Last updated 2021 April 20. Webpage by Professor Ringwald
(ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @)
Department of Physics,
California State University,
Fresno. Please read this disclaimer.