final 3:00-9:30 pm on december 10th (wednesday) about 75-100 multiple choice questions –about...
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Final• 3:00-9:30 pm on December 10th (Wednesday)
• About 75-100 multiple choice questions– About 15-20 questions on Chapter 14. The rest will be on
material covered on Exams 1-3, with about equal coverage of material for each Exam.
• Do you need to take the final?– Your final grade will be the average of your highest three
percentage scores among Exams 1-3 and the final exam. – If your final percentage score is the lowest, it will be
dropped. If you missed one exam your final grade will be the average of the three exams you took.
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Final Logistics• IMPORTANT: The Testing and Tutoring Center will be
closed during finals week except for these hours, so if you miss the exam, I will not be able to give you a make-up exam.
• During the break, I will have a sign-up sheet for the exam time slots that are during the normally scheduled exam time. There will be a 4:30-5:15 slot, a 5:15-6:00 slot, a 6:00-6:45 slot, and a 6:45-7:30 slot.
• The final exam will have 75-100 questions. The exam will have questions related to the topics covered in the problems in lecture, problems on the quizzes, and problems on the first three exams. You will have 120 minutes to complete the exam (but I expect most students to finish in about 60 minutes).
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Final – How to prepare
• Same as for previous exams
• Work through the practice exams and problems worked in class.
• Make sure that you understand the principle that the question is asking you about. (Try to memorize as little as possible.).
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Grade Adjustments
• I have given two extra credit opportunities, and for borderline grades, I usually round in the student’s favor.
• I will not make any adjustments to your grade – please don’t ask!
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Final Review
• I’ll post these slides tonight or tomorrow.
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15 questions on Chapter 14
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~ 10 % of final
• For the following picture, be able to– Draw the Earth, Moon, Sun, and Venus
in their orbit from far above north pole
– Shade them in
– Decide which is Venus and why
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• Draw the Earth, Moon, Sun, and Venus in their orbit from far above north pole.
• Shade them in
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Flux
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Flux• Flux is a measure of how much “stuff”
crosses or hits a small patch in a given amount of time.
• Can have flux = # of green photons that hit an area per second. Stuff = # of green photons
• Can have flux = Energy that hits and area per second. Stuff = Energy
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Energy Flux?
If you know number of photons that hit per second, you can compute the energy per second into the solar panel
Each photon has a certain amount of energy in Joules that is given by Plank’s law.
1 meter x 1 meter squareBlue photon
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Surface Area of Sphere
• It is an area, so it is proportional to the square of the radius
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Cube with light source inside
L
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• What is the volume of this cube?• What is the surface area of the outside of
the cube?• If the length of the sides of the cube are
increased by a factor of two, what would happen to– Its volume?– Its surface area?– The number of photons that hit each side?– The flux of photons on each side?
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Side view of cube
L2L
Photons just before they hit inner wall.
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Side view of cube
L2L
What happened to the separation distance d between hits on wall?
d
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• What is the volume of this cube? L*L*L• What is the surface area of the outside of the
cube? 6*L*L• If the length of the sides of the cube are
increased by a factor of two, what would happen to– Its volume? Increases by factor of 8 (L*L*L changes
to 2*L*2*L*2*L– Its surface area? Increases by a factor of 4. 6*L*L
changes to 6*2*L*2*L– The number of photons that hit each side? Same– The flux of photons on each side? Decreases by
factor of 4. Same number of photons hit area that is 4x larger. Flux is (photons/s) / Area
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Lens
• Suppose you have a single lens from a pair of eyeglasses that is 3 inches in diameter. How many more photons hit this lens per second than would hit a lens that is only 1.5 inches in diameter?– 4 times– 2 times– 8 times– 16 times
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Area
2 meters
1 m
eter
22
4dr
Area
Disk Disk
Increase r or d by a factor of 2 and Surface Area increases by 2x2 = 4
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Lens
• Suppose you have a single lens from a pair of eyeglasses that is 3 inches in diameter. How many more photons hit this lens per second than would hit a lens that is only 1.5 inches in diameter?– 4 times– 2 times– 8 times– 16 times
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Volume
2 meters
1 m
eter
3
6
1dVolume
Sphere Sphere
Increase d by a factor of 2 and Volume increases by 2x2x2 = 8
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Volume
2 meters1
met
er
Sphere Sphere
What happens if radius increases by a factor of two?
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Volume
2 meters
1 m
eter
33
6
1
3
4dr Volume
Sphere Sphere
Increase r by a factor of 2 and Volume increases by 2x2x2 = 8
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Area
2 meters
1 m
eter
2rArea
Disk Disk
Increase r by a factor of 2 and Surface Area increases by 2x2 = 4