PHYS 222
Physics II (GE)
Credit hours (4)
Prerequisites: PHYS 221
Topics are studied utilizing calculus.
Note(s): General Education and Scientific and Quantitative Reasoning designated course.  Students
                                       may not receive credit for both PHYS 111:PHYS 112 AND PHYS 221:222. 
Detailed Description of Course
The students' study of mechanics, the subject matter of PHYS 221, is extended to continuous
                                       media and wave motion. A brief treatment of heat and kinetic theory is then included.
                                       This occupies approximately the first quarter of the course. The middle half of the
                                       semester is devoted to electricity and magnetism. This section contains the most extensive
                                       use of calculus, in the discussion of the laws of Gauss, Ampere, and Faraday. The
                                       Maxwellian synthesis then makes the connection between electromagnetism and light,
                                       and the remainder of the course is devoted to studying geometrical and physical optics. 
                                       The major areas which are covered are:
    1) Fluids, including Archimedes' principle
    2) Waves, including the principle of superposition and standing waves
    3) Heat, including specific heat, thermodynamic work, and the first law of thermodynamics
    4) Kinetic theory of ideal gases
    5) Coulomb's law, the electric field, Gauss's law
    6) Electric potential energy and potential
    7) Ohm's law and simple circuits
    8) Magnetic fields, Ampere's law
    9) Faraday's law
    10)The Maxwellian synthesis, the electromagnetic  spectrum
    11)Geometrical optics: reflection, refraction, mirrors, lenses
    12)Physical optics: interference and diffraction
Detailed Description of Conduct of Course
During the lecture periods, the basic principles of mechanics are presented and explained.
                                       Every effort is made to relate these principles to the students' actual experiences.
                                       Students are encouraged to participate in classroom discussion by asking questions
                                       or by suggesting illustrations, applications, confirmations, or apparent violations
                                       of the stated principles. As much time as possible will be devoted to problem solving. 
                                       The instructional strategy used here is example and practice. Detailed solutions to
                                       typical problems are presented in class, with extensive explanation of the motivation
                                       behind the steps followed in these solutions. The student is then encouraged to understand
                                       the solution process, rather than to simply memorize the specific solutions themselves.
                                       Homework problems allow the students to practice what they have learned. They are
                                       strongly encouraged to do many problems and to wrestle with problems whose solutions
                                       do not come easily. The lab exercises are designed to reinforce the student's understanding
                                       of the basic physical principles which are discussed in the classroom and which are
                                       applied in the problems. They also serve to introduce the student to experimental
                                       procedures, data analysis, and the drawing of conclusions. Students work in groups
                                       of 2 - 4. The instructor or an assistant circulates about the room in order to observe
                                       the students' procedures, provide assistance, or pose questions for further investigation.
                                       A lab report must be submitted for each lab exercise.
Goals and Objectives of the Course
    1) Students will be introduced to physics - what it is, what it does, how it does
                                       it.
    2) Students will learn the principles of classical mechanics and how to relate
                                       them to real-world physical situations.
    3) Students will improve their problem 颅 solving ability, in particular, their
                                       ability to solve quantitative problems which are posed verbally.
    4) Students will improve their experimental skills, in particular, their ability
                                       to take data, analyze it, and draw conclusions.
Core Curriculum Objectives (Goal 6: Physical and Natural Sciences)
福利导在线观看 students will understand the methodologies of scientific inquiry,
                                       think critically about scientific problems, and apply principles of a scientific discipline
                                       to solve problems in the natural/physical world.
福利导在线观看 students will be able to:
    1) Distinguish between findings that are based upon empirical data and those that
                                       are not.
    2) Apply scientific principles within the context of a specific scientific discipline
                                       to solve real world problems.
Assessment Measures
Progress toward Goals (1) and (2) above is assessed through informal discussion with
                                       students during labs and office visits, and through classroom participation. Goal
                                       (3) is assessed through homework problems, tests, and the final exam. All tests and
                                       the final exam contain problems only. The students are expected to show all significant
                                       work and will receive substantial partial credit for the correct plan of attack and
                                       for the correct application of relevant equations. Clearly, students' performances
                                       on these problems also measure their understanding of the physical principles referred
                                       to in Goal (2). Students' lab skills are assessed through observation during the lab
                                       period and through the submitted lab reports.
Other Course Information
None
Review and Approval
September 2001
June 20, 2015
March 01, 2021