Phys211x - General Physics - Fall05
Instructor: Renate Wackerbauer, 
Office Location: NSF 106 
phone: 474-6108 
e-mail: ffraw1@uaf.edu 

Office Hours:  I am (usually) unavailable the hour before the start of any of my lectures, otherwise walk-ins are very welcome; appointments help; email is effective for straight-forward questions.
Help Room: For homework related questions the physics conference room (122 NSF) is staffed at various times each day. Please see the schedule posted at the door of room 122, NSF. 
Noyes Computer Lab: Access to the Noyes Computer Lab (Rm 101 NSF) is provided to all students enrolled in a Physics course. Your polar express card lets you in.
Course info: Phys211x (75109), 4 credits. This course fulfills the core requirement for all majors. 
Prerequisites: Concurrent enrollment in MATH 201x or instructor's permission.  Recommended: 1 year of high school physics.  Algebra, trigonometry and calculus will be used extensively. 
Lectures:  MWF 10:30 to 11:30 pm, NSF 201A. 
The lectures will explore material presented in the text.  To read the text before the lecture helps to focus on the understanding of the "maybe tricky parts" during the lecture.
Recitation: One voluntary review session each week is offered (TBA).  We will discuss homework, lectures, mathematical approaches, etc. Lots of questions and contributions from students are expected. 
Material:  Required text:
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, by Serway and Jewett, Thomson (6th edition, 2004): Chapters 1-18
Calculator: 
For homework/Lab a basic scientific calculator is required. Trigonometric, exponential and logarithmic functions is all you need. No calculators are allowed during quizzes and exams. 
Supplementary readings: 
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, by Fishbane et al.; Prentice Hall.  This book is similar to the book by Serway et al. 
Feynman Lectures on Physics, by Feynman et al, Addison Wesley An excellent book for advanced reading. 
For Fun: Physics demonstrations and physics info on the Net (TBD)
Course Content:
Tentative course calendar
This course is a calculus-based introduction to basic principles in physics (mechanics).  The laws introduced by Newton (1643-1727) still govern the behavior of macroscopic particles that move with a velocity clearly smaller than the velociy of light. Think about collision processes when playing billard, about planetary motion, about oscillatory motion of a perturbed spring, or soundwaves traveling inside a pipe to generate music. 
Mechanics: Vectors, kinematics, Newton's laws, momentum, work, energy, rotational motion, oscillations, waves, gravity and fluids. 
Homework:

HWassignments
 

Homework will be assigned weekly on the Department's homepage. The homework is due by 5:00 pm on the following Thursday, unless explicitely altered at the time of assignment. Late homework will not be accepted. Finished homework should be placed in the designated box in the main office of the Physics Department. Homework assignments and solutions will be posted in the glass case in the Physics Department hallway for approximately 1 week. Graded homework will be turned back to you in your LAB section. 
Quizzes:
quiz schedule
There will be approximately 6 short (~10min) in-class quizzes throughout the semester. They will be closed book, closed notes and with no calculator allowed. The questions will be similar to recent homework problems or material covered in class. No make-up of quizzes is possible. 
Lab:
Lab schedule
There is a lab associated with this course.  ALL labs and reports must be completed by Monday, December 12, 2005 to get a passing grade for the lab. A passing grade in the lab is necessary to pass this course.  Lab make up will be during Thanksgiving week, i.e. Nov. 21, 22, and 23. One day (and only one day) of lab makeup will be scheduled during the recitation week before finals, that day will be announced. You need to get written permission to attend another lab section if you can't attend your normal one on a particular week. You get the permission from Robert Parsons, the Laboratory Supervisor in NSF 114, (474-7857). If you don't have the permission slip, the TA will not permit you to attend the different section.
Questions about the lab should be directed first to the teaching assistant in charge of your lab, and then to the Lab supervisor
Examinations:  Two one-hour in-term examinations and a two hour final examination will be held during the semester. In-term exams will be held in the classroom. The exams  will be closed books, closed notes, and without a calculator. Formulas will be given (more details in class). Recitation is scheduled in the Labs during the week before each exam.  
Exam1 Monday, Oct 10 approx chapt 1-7
Exam2 Monday, Nov 14 approx chapt 8-13
Final Exam Wednesday, Dec 14, 10:15am approx chapt 1-18
Grading: A solution (homework, exam) that presents nothing more than a restatement of the problem will receive zero credit. Partial credit will be given, with the score of an individual problem ranging between zero and full credit. Credit will be given for clarity of presentation, illegible work will not be graded. For the final grade homework, exams, etc. will be weighted as follows: 
Homework 15%
Exam1 15%
Quizzes 15%
Exam2 15%
Lab 15%
Final Exam 25%
To pass this class all labs and lab reports need to be turned in the latest on Monday, December 12, 2005. 
To pass the course, you need 50% of the total credits. Grades A - D are assigned equal weight for total credits between 50% and 100% unless otherwise noted. Small adjustments to this grade policy can be made based on the statistical point distribution of the class.
Course policies:  Attendance at lectures is expected. Active class participation, questions, comments on newspaper articles are extremely welcome in the classes.  A missed exam  will receive 0 credit unless the instructor is notified by email, phone, etc before the exam starts. Make-up exams will be individually scheduled with the student.
Student Obligations:  As students of UAF, you are bound by the policies and regulations of the University of Alaska, UAF rules and procedures, and the Student Honor Code. You are obligated to make yourselves familiar with all conditions presented in the UAF Catalog. If you have any kind of dissability, please ensure that you go to the dissabilities services program coordinator. I will work with the office of disabilities services (203 WHIT, 474-7043) to provide reasonable accomodations to students with disabilities.