Title: Introduction to Physics
1Chapter 1 Introduction to Physics
Image of Sun from STEREO, from NASA.
21-1 Physics and the Laws of Nature
- Physics the study of the fundamental laws of
nature - these laws can be expressed as mathematical
equations - much complexity can arise from relatively simple
laws
31-2 Units of Length, Mass, and Time
SI units of length (L), mass (M), time
(T) Length the meter (or metre) Was one
ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole
to the equator Now the distance traveled by
light in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second
(set by The International System of
Units) http//www.bipm.org/en/si/ Mass the
kilogram One kilogram is the mass of a particular
platinum-iridium cylinder kept at the
International Bureau of Weights and Standards,
Sèvres, France. Time the second One second is
the time for radiation from a cesium-133 atom to
complete 9,192,631,770 oscillation cycles.
41-2 Units of Length
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_of_magnitude_
28length29
51-2 Units of Length
There is Plenty of Room at the Bottom Feynmann
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_of_magnitude_
28length29
61-2 Units of Mass
71-2 Units of Time
81-2 Units of Length, Mass, and Time
91-3 Dimensional Analysis
- Any valid physical formula must be dimensionally
consistent each side must have the same
dimensions
From the table Distance velocity
time Velocity acceleration time Energy mass
(velocity)2
101-4 Significant Figures
- accuracy of measurements is limited
- significant figures the number of digits in a
quantity that are known with certainty - number of significant figures after
multiplication or division is the number of
significant figures in the least-known quantity
111-4 Significant Figures
- Scientific Notation
- Leading or trailing zeroes can make it hard to
determine number of significant figures 2500,
0.000036 - Each of these has two significant figures
- Scientific notation writes these as a number
from 1-10 multiplied by a power of 10, making the
number of significant figures much clearer - 2500 2.5 103
- If we write 2.50x103, it has three significant
figures - 0.000036 3.6 x 10-5
121-4 Significant Figures
Round-off error The last digit in a calculated
number may change depending on how it is
calculated, due to rounding off of insignificant
digits, might lead to big errors. Example 12.46
6 tax 13.2076, rounds to 13.21 1.76 6
tax 1.8656, rounds to 1.87 Sum 13.21 1.87
15.08 12.46 1.76 14.22 14.22 6 tax
15.07
131-5 Converting Units
WE WILL NOT DEAL WITH IMPERIAL SYSTEM. YOU DO NOT
NEED TO KNOW CONVERSION FOR THAT.
1 hour 60 minutes 3600 seconds 1 km 1000
m 1 cm 0.01 m 1 mm 0.001 m
141-6 Order-of-Magnitude Calculations
- Why are estimates useful?
- as a check for a detailed calculation if your
answer is very different from your estimate,
youve probably made an error - to estimate numbers where a precise calculation
cannot be done
151-7 Scalars and Vectors
Scalar a numerical value. May be positive or
negative. Examples temperature, speed, height,
your age or weight. Vector a scalar with
direction. Examples displacement (e.g., 10 feet
north), force, magnetic field
161-8 Problem Solving in Physics
- No recipe or plug-and-chug works all the time,
but here are some guidelines - A - Understand The Question
- Read the problem carefully
- Sketch the system
- Visualize the physical process
- Strategize
- B - Solve The Question
- Identify appropriate equations
- Solve the equations
- Check your answer
- Explore limits and special cases
17Bottom Line of Chapter 1
- Physics is based on a small number of laws and
principles - Units of length are meters of mass, kilograms
and of time, seconds in this course. - Equations must have same dimensions on each
side. - The result of a calculation should have only as
many significant figures as the least accurate
measurement used in it
18Bottom Line of Chapter 1
- Convert your units to a set of useful ones before
doing anything else - Order-of-magnitude calculations are designed to
be accurate within a power of 10 - Scalars are just numbers vectors are scalars
with direction. - Problem solving understanding the problem is
the main step, read, sketch etc., then see which
formulas would be useful.