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Wednesday, Mar 07, 2007 - 23:14 SGT
Posted By: Gilbert

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Modern Physics in Fifteen Easy Lectures

Alas, I am not the sort of dweeb hardworking student who lies in his bed at night dreaming of mathematical or physics formulae - or at least not often at all. So woe is me during closed-book exams if the examiner doesn't have the decency to supply the value of Boltzmann's constant. Speaking of dreams, I had one just last night that was quite clearly a sequel to one I had before... not sure when I picked up a subscription to Sandman TV. Now, to see if they're part of a trilogy, or if a prequel is in the making...

Speaking of constants, one of my (smarter) friends was complaining that he predicts a couple of B grades for his modules this semester. Not trying to be unempathic, but I kinda have a hard time believing his self-predictions from past experience. This leads me to postulate a Grade Optimism Constant A+* for each student, such that G = A+*G', where G' is the average predicted grade (numerical value) and G is the average actual grade. Clearly if A+* > 1, the student is a pessimist, and if A+* < 1, he's an optimist. I think that particular friend has an A+* of like 1.5.

Oh well, here's what we're supposed to know after half a semester of modern physics. Enjoy.

Time Dilation

Δt = γΔtp

where Δtp is the proper time (at rest with respect to the clock)
Δt is the time measured by an observer moving with respect to the clock
γ = 1/√(1 - v2/c2)
N.B. γ ≥ 1
i.e. a moving clock is always observed to run slower than one at rest (by a factor γ)


Length Contraction

L = Lp

where Lp is the proper length (at rest with respect to the observer)
L is the length measured by an observer when it moves at speed v in a parallel to its length
N.B. 1/γ ≤ 1
i.e. a moving object is always observed to be shorter than one at rest (by a factor 1/γ)


Galilean Transformation equations (S to S' frame)

x' = x - vt
y' = y
z' = z
t' = t


Lorentz Transformation equations (also S to S' frame, discovered in 1890 - relativistic)

x' = γ(x - vt)
y' = y
z' = z
t' = γ[t - (v/c2)x]



Lorentz Velocity Transformation (be very careful of the sign of v used!)

u'x = (ux - v)/[1 - (uxv)/c2]

where v is the relative velocity of another inertial frame S' relative to the observer's S frame
ux is the velocity of the object relative to the S frame
u'x is the velocity of the object relative to the S' frame
N.B. As with above, to find ux instead of u'x, let all v be -v and interchange the primed variables.


Conservation of (relativistic) momentum, p

p = γmv

where m is the particle mass and v is the particle velocity
N.B. relativistic momentum ≥ classical momentum, most prominently at velocities approaching c.


Conservation of (total) (relativistic) energy, E

E = γmc2 = KE + mc2

where KE is the kinetic energy of the particle
mc2 is the rest energy (independent of velocity)


Energy/Momentum of zero mass particle

E = pc
i.e. p = E/c

where p is the momentum of the particle
N.B. A massless particle can still have momentum!


Equivalence of mass and energy

E = mc2


Wien's displacement law

λmaxT = 0.2898 x 10-2 m.K

where λmax is the peak wavelength
T is the temperature of the blackbody in Kelvins (K)
0.2898 x 10-2 m.K (sometimes denoted by b) is Wien's displacement constant


Rayleigh-Jeans Law (classical description of blackbody radiation)

I(λ,T) = 2πckBT/λ4

where kB is Boltzmann's constant


Planck's blackbody radiation formula

I(λ,T) = 2πhc25(ehc/λkBT-1)

where h is Planck's constant


Einstein's photoelectric effect equation

Kmax = hf - φ

where φ is the work function (on the order of a few eV), varies from metal to metal

Cutoff frequency, Fc = φ/h
(if f < Fc, no emission is possible)

Cutoff wavelength, λc = c/f = hc/φ
(if λ > λc, no emission is possible)


Compton scattering equation

Δλ = λ' - λ0 = (h/mec)(1-cosθ)

where me is the mass of an electron
θ is the scattering angle
h/mec is also known as the Compton wavelength of the electron


General formula for spectral lines in Hydrogen

1/λ = RH[(1/n2f) - (1/n2i)]

where RH is the Rydberg constant
θ is the scattering angle
nf and ni are integers, and nf > ni

N.B. The Balmer series is when nf = 2, and ni = 3,4,5... It is the first visible series.
Lyman series - nf = 1 (ultraviolet light, cannot be seen)
Paschen series - nf = 3
Brackett series - nf = 4


Energy of the hydrogen atom

E = -kee2/2r

where ke is the Coulomb constant
e is the elementary charge of a single proton
r is the radius of the electron orbit


Radii of Bohr orbits in hydrogen

rn = n2h2/(2π)2mkee2

where n = 1,2,3...
N.B. The orbit with the smallest radius (Bohr radius, a0) corresponds to n = 1


General expression for the radius of any orbit

rn = n2a0/Z

where n = 1,2,3...
and Z is the atomic number (number of protons in the nucleus) of the element (1 for hydrogen)


General expression for the energy quantisation of electron orbits

En = -[Z2/n2]kee2/2a0

where n = 1,2,3...
and Z is the atomic number (number of protons in the nucleus) of the element (1 for hydrogen)
N.B. En = -13.6/n2 eV for hydrogen (by inserting the numerical value of kee2/2a0)


de Broglie wavelength of a particle

λ = h/p = h/mv

N.B. not to be confused with the Compton wavelength


Maximum intensity (white fringe) of Young's double slit experiment

D sin θ = nλ

where D is the distance betwen the slits
n = 1,2,3...


Minimum intensity (dark fringe) of Young's double slit experiment

D sin θ = nλ

where D is the distance betwen the slits
n = 1/2,3/2,5/2...


Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

ΔxΔp ≥ h

where h (the reduced Planck constant) = h/2π
N.B. some sources appear to quote this equation as ΔxΔp ≥ h/2, when Δx and Δp are defined as the standard deviations.

also,

ΔEΔt ≥ h

this sets a limit with which the energy E of a system can be measured if a time interval Δt is allowed for the measurement.



Allowed wave functions for particle in a box

ψ(x) = A sin(nπx/L)

where L is the length of the box
x is the position of the particle
N.B. the particle can exist in an infinite number of states n.


Allowed momentums for particle in a box

p = h/λ = nh/2L


Allowed energies for particle in a box

En = (h2/8mL2)n2 = n2E1

where n = 1,2,3...
N.B. the least energy the particle can have in the box is when n = 1, also called the zero point energy. The particle cannot have zero energy.



Constants Used


Bohr radius = 5.29 x 10-11 m

Boltzmann's constant = 1.38 x 10-23 m2 kg s-2 K-1

Coulomb's constant = 8.988 x 109 N m2 C-2

Electron-volt (eV) = 1.60 x 10-19 J

Electron mass = 9.11 x 10-31 kg

Elementary charge = 1.602 x 10-19 C

Planck's constant = 6.626 x 10-34 m2 kg s-1

Rydberg constant = 1.097 x 107 m-1



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