Teaching Modern Physics Guide For Teachers
Teaching Modern Physics Guide For Teachers
Teaching Modern Physics Guide For Teachers
Prepared by:
July 2006
Dear Colleague:
Thank you for taking this opportunity to look through this collection of educational materials.
The goal of QuarkNet is to get more modern physics into the high school classroom. Our group
realizes that with all the topics a typical teacher needs to cover in a given year, sometimes
reaching modern physics is a difficult task. We took that in mind as we created this packet. We
have offered a variety of worksheets, activities, labs, and lesson plans that a teacher can use
throughout the year, but incorporate modern physics. We have also included some complete
plans for modern physics units that would be good for the end of the year.
While these activities have been tested in our own classrooms, we welcome input from you. We
would like to know what works, what doesn’t, and how we can improve our product. Please
complete the survey below and return it through the mail or by e-mail by June 15, 2007. Even if
you’ve only used one idea, your input will be of value to us. Thank you in advance for all your
help; your insights will help enhance this collection of educational materials and along the way
will educate more of our youth about modern physics!
Sincerely,
Please rate the following with (0) being poor and (10) being excellent.
Worksheets:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Activities/Labs:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Unit Plans:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Please turn the page over for the rest of the survey.
Which activities did you use in your classroom? Please comment on each of them. If you need
more room, please answer on a separate sheet of paper.
What did you find most helpful about this educational packet?
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Materials for
Prepared by:
July 2006
QuarkNet Curriculum
Chicago-Fermilab Section
Our Chicago QuarkNet group meets at Fermilab and has enjoyed our collaboration with the
scientists there. In the spring of 2004, our group decided that to bring high-energy physics into
the high school classroom, we needed to write some specific curriculum for teachers. We
focused on two concepts to achieve that goal. Our first was to write a specific weeklong unit that
a teacher could use, which focuses on the basics of high-energy physics. We feel that web
resources, activities, worksheets and test questions are essential to a physics teacher who may not
have the time to create such a plan from scratch. Our next goal is to give teachers the opportunity
to sprinkle high-energy physics topics into the yearlong curriculum. We have written larger items
such as labs and activities. We have also created something as simple as momentum problems
using high-energy physics as the topic. In either, the teacher can spark enthusiasm in students by
bringing in topics that will excite and inform them, as they are the current topics in the physics
world.
Our group hopes that this curriculum will be helpful to you in the classroom and will spark
interest in your students.
Sincerely,
Beginning-of-the-Year Ideas
Light
Astronomy
Sloan Digital Sky Survey SkyServer Project Unit Plan (Joshua Norten) 177
Resources
What the Fermilab Website Has to Offer for Particle Physics Activities
(Jennifer Ciaccio) 183
Applets & Other Web Resources (Joshua Norten) 189
Web, Magazine, & Book Resources for Particle Physics Unit
(Donald Lincoln & Deborah Lojkutz) 191
Units
PowerPoint Presentations
Units
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Sky Server Project (Joshua Norten) 177
Radioactivity Unit Plan (Deborah Lojkutz) 199
End-of-the-Year Unit Plan (Chicago QuarkNet Group) 201
Resources
What the Fermilab Website Has to Offer for Particle Physics Activities
(Jennifer Ciaccio) 183
Applets & Other Web Resources (Joshua Norten) 189
Web, Magazine, & Book Resources for Particle Physics Unit
(Donald Lincoln & Deborah Lojkutz) 191
Procedure:
1. Determine the rules by which quarks join with other quarks.
2. Record any other observations.
3. Record any questions your group may have as a result of your observations.
Rules:
Observations:
Questions:
1
The Quark Zoo
Teacher’s Notes & Set-up
Instructions for teacher to give to students:
Many rules or discoveries in science result from the observation of patterns. At Fermilab,
scientists energize protons and then smash them into energized antiprotons. The energy
that results from this collision reorganizes into different particles. These particles are
groups of quarks (one of the smallest building blocks of matter).
Materials:
Each group is given a Quark Zoo worksheet. You may also want to prepare a set of cards
with each allowed quark group written on a card so that students could sort and
categorize them during the activity.
Results:
5 different quarks
“Bar” only joins with an “antibar” or with two other “bars”
u & d quarks are very common.
Teacher Comments:
There are six…u&d….s&c…b&t (NOTE: T is missing; discuss with students why it
is hard to find; it’s not common.)
Baryons vs. Mesons
Protons vs. neutrons
(Electrons are leptons.)
2
Student Worksheet
Constant Velocity Problems
1. The MINOS experiment involves sending a beam of neutrinos at the speed of light to the
Soudan iron mine 420 miles away. Calculate the amount of time for a massless neutrino
to go from Fermilab to Soudan.
2. The Fermilab accelerator forces protons to travel in a circular orbit with radius 1 km. If
the protons are traveling essentially at the speed of light, how many times does the proton
complete the circle per second? How long does one orbit take? How many orbits are in
12 hours (which is the normal time the beam lasts)? How far does the proton travel in the
12 hours?
4. An evil alien assassin intends to shoot the president of Earth. His weapon of choice is a
particle beam, consisting of particles traveling at 1/3 the speed of light. The assassin’s
culture requires that he simultaneously warn his target by flashing a bright light in his
eyes, giving him an opportunity to duck. If the assassin, sitting on the moon’s surface,
simultaneously flashes his light and fires his weapon at the president, how long will the
president have to react between the time he sees the light and the particle beam that
would hit him?
5. Cosmic rays are created in the upper atmosphere when a proton from outer space hits an
air molecule. After the collision, the cosmic rays consist of photons and muons. The
photons travel at the speed of light, while the muons travel at 99.5% the speed of light. If
the cosmic rays are created at an altitude of 20 km and travel so that they hit the ground
at an angle of 30°, calculate the difference in arrival time between the muons and
photons.
3
4
Teacher’s Key
Constant Velocity Problems
1. The MINOS experiment involves sending a beam of neutrinos at the speed of light to the
Soudan iron mine 420 miles away. Calculate the amount of time for a massless neutrino
to go from Fermilab to Soudan.
2. The Fermilab accelerator forces protons to travel in a circular orbit with radius 1 km. If
the protons are traveling essentially at the speed of light, how many times does the proton
complete the circle per second? How long does one orbit take? How many orbits are in
12 hours (which is the normal time the beam lasts)? How far does the proton travel in the
12 hours?
Need to calculate the distance around the ring. From speed and time, you calculate
total distance. Divide distance by circumference and get number of orbits. For second
part, divide circumference by velocity.
Time for one orbit = t = d/v = (6280 m)/( 3 × 108 m/s) = 2.1 × 10-5 s
5
4. An evil alien assassin intends to shoot the president of Earth. His weapon of choice is a
particle beam, consisting of particles traveling at 1/3 the speed of light. The assassin’s
culture requires that he simultaneously warn his target by flashing a bright light in his
eyes, giving him an opportunity to duck. If the assassin, sitting on the moon’s surface,
simultaneously flashes his light and fires his weapon at the president, how long will the
president have to react between the time he sees the light and the particle beam that
would hit him?
Need to calculate the two times and calculate the difference between them. Use an
earth-moon orbit distance of 3.84 × 108 m. The two velocities are the speed of light (3 ×
108 m/s) and 1/3 that velocity (3 × 108 m/s).
5. Cosmic rays are created in the upper atmosphere when a proton from outer space hits an
air molecule. After the collision, the cosmic rays consist of photons and muons. The
photons travel at the speed of light, while the muons travel at 99.5% the speed of light. If
the cosmic rays are created at an altitude of 20 km and travel so that they hit the ground
at an angle of 30°, calculate the difference in arrival time between the muons and
photons.
6
Free Fall and Projectiles
Sample Problem:
Billy stands on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge kicking stones into the water below. If Billy kicks a
stone with a horizontal velocity of 3.5 m/s, and it lands in the water a horizontal distance of
5.4 m from where Billy is standing,
B. If the stone had been kicked harder, how would this affect the time it would take to fall?
Homework:
1. A car drives straight off of a cliff that is 50 m high. The police at the scene of this accident
note that the point of impact is 90 m from the base of the cliff. How fast was the car traveling
when it left the cliff?
2. In physics lab, Dimo rolls a 10-g marble down a ramp and off the table with a horizontal
velocity of 3 m/s. The marble falls in a cup placed 2 m from the table's edge. How high is the
table?
3. Cindy drops a cherry pit out the car window 1 m above the ground while traveling down the
road at 18 m/s. (Neglect air resistance.)
a. How far horizontally from the initial dropping point will the pit hit the ground?
b. If the car continues to travel at the same speed, where will the car be in relation to the pit
when it lands?
7
8
Free Fall and Projectiles
KEY
Sample Problem:
Billy stands on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge kicking stones into the water below. If Billy kicks a
stone with a horizontal velocity of 3.5 m/s, and it lands in the water a horizontal distance of
5.4 m from where Billy is standing,
Horizontal Vertical
v = 3.5 m/s vi = 0 m/s
d = 5.4 m d=?
t = 1.54 s t = 1.54s
a = -9.8 m/s2
d = vit + 1/2at2
d = 0 + 1/2(-9.8m/s2)(1.54s)2
d = 11.7 m
B. If the stone had been kicked harder, how would this affect the time it would take to fall?
It would not affect the time. It will be the same time since it’s the same drop, just a
greater horizontal distance.
Homework:
1. A car drives straight off of a cliff that is 50 m high. The police at the scene of this accident
note that the point of impact is 90 m from the base of the cliff. How fast was the car traveling
when it left the cliff?
d = vit + 1/2at2
-90 m = 0 + 1/2(-9.8 m/s2)t2
t = 4.28 s
2. In physics lab, Dimo rolls a 10-g marble down a ramp and off the table with a horizontal
velocity of 3 m/s. The marble falls in a cup placed 2 m from the table's edge. How high is the
table?
9
3. Cindy drops a cherry pit out the car window 1 m above the ground while traveling down the
road at 18 m/s. (Neglect air resistance.)
d = vit + 1/2at2
-1 m = 0 + 1/2(-9.8m/s2)t2
t = 0.45 s
a. How far horizontally from the initial dropping point will the pit hit the ground?
v = d/t
18 m/s = d / 0.45s
d = 8.13 m
b. If the car continues to travel at the same speed, where will the car be in relation to the pit
when it lands?
10
Conservation of Momentum
Sample Problems:
Adrian and Iqbal have a combined mass of 200 kg and are zooming along in a 100-kg
amusement park bumper car at 10 m/s. They bump Ethan's car, which is sitting still. Ethan has a
mass of 50 kg. After the elastic collision, Adrian and Iqbal continue ahead with a speed of 4 m/s.
How fast is Ethan's car bumped across the floor?
If an 800-kg sports car slows to 13 m/s to check out an accident scene and the 1200-kg pick-up
truck behind him continues traveling at 25 m/s, with what velocity will the two move if they lock
bumpers after a rear-end collision?
Ruth, a 65-kg skin diver, shoots a 2-kg spear with a speed of 15 m/s at a fish who darts quickly
away without getting hit. How fast does Ruth move backwards when the spear is shot?
Homework:
1. A 100-g marble strikes a 25-g marble that is at rest on a smooth horizontal surface. In the
impact, the speed of the larger marble is reduced from 100 cm/s to 60 cm/s. What is the
speed of the smaller marble immediately after impact?
11
2. Running at 2 m/s, Chris, the 50-kg running back, collides with Yoon, the 90-kg defensive
lineman, who is traveling at 7 m/s in the other direction. Upon collision, Yoon continues to
travel forward at 1 m/s.
3. A 55-kg swimmer is standing on a stationary 210-kg floating raft. The swimmer runs off the
raft at a speed of 5 m/s.
4. A 50-g sticky mass strikes a 1-kg block and sticks to it. If the sticky mass and the block
travel with a speed of 10 m/s after the collision, what is the speed of the sticky mass before it
struck the block?
12
Conservation of Momentum
KEY
Sample Problems:
Adrian and Iqbal have a combined mass of 200 kg and are zooming along in a 100-kg
amusement park bumper car at 10 m/s. They bump Ethan's car, which is sitting still. Ethan has a
mass of 50 kg. After the elastic collision, Adrian and Iqbal continue ahead with a speed of 4 m/s.
How fast is Ethan's car bumped across the floor?
(300 kg)(10 m/s) + (150 kg)(0 m/s) = (300 kg)(4 m/s) + (150 kg) v
v = 12 m/s
If an 800-kg sports car slows to 13 m/s to check out an accident scene and the 1200-kg pick-up
truck behind him continues traveling at 25 m/s, with what velocity will the two move if they lock
bumpers after a rear-end collision?
Ruth, a 65-kg skin diver, shoots a 2-kg spear with a speed of 15 m/s at a fish who darts quickly
away without getting hit. How fast does Ruth move backwards when the spear is shot?
Homework:
1. A 100-g marble strikes a 25-g marble that is at rest on a smooth horizontal surface. In the
impact, the speed of the larger marble is reduced from 100 cm/s to 60 cm/s. What is the
speed of the smaller marble immediately after impact?
2. Running at 2 m/s, Chris, the 50-kg running back, collides with Yoon, the 90-kg defensive
lineman, who is traveling at 7 m/s in the other direction. Upon collision, Yoon continues to
travel forward at 1 m/s. How fast is Chris knocked backward?
(50 kg)(2 m/s) + (90 kg)(-7 m/s) = (50 kg) v +(90 kg)(- 1 m/s)
v = -8.8 m/s
13
3. A 55-kg swimmer is standing on a stationary 210-kg floating raft. The swimmer runs off the
raft at a speed of 5 m/s. Explain what happens to the raft using numbers and formulae.
4. A 50-g sticky mass strikes a 1-kg block and sticks to it. If the sticky mass and the block
travel with a speed of 10 m/s after the collision, what is the speed of the sticky mass before it
struck the block?
14
Conservation of Momentum Lab
Goal:
To perform an elastic collision between two balls and to compare the vector momentum of
the system of two balls after the collision with the vector momentum before the collision.
You need to know that P = M*v and that momentum is a vector. You also need to know the
basic equations of projectile motion.
Part 1 - 1D Collision
1. Clamp the device to the table with “C” clamp. Rotate the end flange to the side so the ball
can roll down the ramp and shoot off into the air without hitting the end flange.
2. Tape a piece of paper on the floor beneath the lower end of the device. Place a piece of
carbon paper over the paper. Drop a metal ball straight down from the lower end of the
device onto a piece of carbon paper that is on the floor. The ball will leave a mark on the
paper. Call this point A.
3. Let metal ball roll down the ramp, off the device and hit the floor. Place a piece of carbon
paper on top of a piece of paper on the floor where the ball hit the paper and repeat the
ball roll. The second roll will leave a mark on the paper at point B.
4. Now rotate the flange back into place and adjust the set screw on the flange. Place the
second metal ball on the recess of the set screw. Adjust the height of the set screw so that
when ball 1 rolls down the ramp and hits ball 2 on the set screw, the second ball flies off
and hits the floor very near [within a centimeter or so] of point B. This ensures that the
collision between ball 1 and ball 2 is an elastic collision. Do not change the level of the
set screw.
5. Measure to three significant figures the distance between the floor and the bottom of the
balls just as the ball flies off the device. Calculate the time the ball is in the air.
Part 2 – 2D Collision
1. Rotate the flange to one side a bit. Place ball 2 on the set screw. Roll ball 1 down the
ramp and it will hit ball 2. Both balls will fly off the apparatus and onto the floor. Notice
about where each ball hits. Place a piece of carbon paper on the sheet of paper on the
floor at these points. Call where ball 1 hits point C and where ball 2 hits point D.
2. Do not change the set screw. Repeat the previous step, but now with the carbon paper in
place. Check to see that points C and D are recorded on the paper.
15
Analysis to prove that momentum was conserved in both dimensions:
1. Draw a line from A to B and measure its length: AB = _____________ m.
3. Use a protractor to measure the angle between line AB and line AC.
Call this theta 1 = ________ degrees.
4. Use a protractor to measure the angle between line AB and line AD.
Call this theta 2 = _____________ degrees.
Note that since the mass of ball 1 = mass of ball 2, the mass value is not important here.
For convenience, use m = 1.
16
Student Worksheet
Circular Motion Problems
2. The Fermilab accelerator is designed to use magnetic fields to make protons orbit in a
circular path with a radius of 1 km. The magnetic field strength can be changed. If
protons are injected into the accelerator with an initial energy of 120 GeV and are
accelerated to a final energy of 980 GeV, calculate the ratio of the final to initial
magnetic field.
3. A particle physics detector consists of a circular region of radius 50 cm filled with air,
surrounded by an extended region filled with metal. The air-filled region contains a
magnetic field with strength 2 T, directed out of the page in the attached diagram. A
proton is emitted from the center of the circle with momentum p in the plane of the paper
and directed radially outwards from the center. Calculate the maximum p for which the
proton will not hit the metal region.
4. The Fermilab accelerator is designed to accelerate protons in a circular orbit with radius 1
km and to a momentum p. The new LHC accelerator accelerates protons to a momentum
seven times that of the Fermilab accelerator. If the radius of circular motion followed by
a proton in the LHC is 4.3 km, calculate the ratio of the magnetic field of the Tevatron to
the LHC.
17
18
Teacher’s Key
Circular Motion Problems
p = 980 GeV/c = (980 × 109 eV) (1.602 × 10-19 J/eV)/(3 × 108 m/s) =
5.2 × 10-16 kg m/s
2. The Fermilab accelerator is designed to use magnetic fields to make protons orbit in a
circular path with a radius of 1 km. The magnetic field strength can be changed. If
protons are injected into the accelerator with an initial energy of 120 GeV and are
accelerated to a final energy of 980 GeV, calculate the ratio of the final to initial
magnetic field.
F = m v2/r = q v B → p = q r B → B = p/(q r)
Thus,
3. A particle physics detector consists of a circular region of radius 50 cm filled with air,
surrounded by an extended region filled with metal. The air-filled region contains a
magnetic field with strength 2 T, directed out of the page in the attached diagram. A
proton is emitted from the center of the circle with momentum p in the plane of the paper
and directed radially outwards from the center. Calculate the maximum p for which the
proton will not hit the metal region.
This problem is mildly tricky, as one can do it a hard way and an easy way. The first
thing to realize is that if the radius of the magnetic field region is 50 cm, then a particle
originating at the center of the cylinder will have to travel with a radius of curvature of
25 cm to fit fully within the magnetic region. The next thing one has to do is to convert
the “particle physics momentum,” with its units of GeV/c to “normal momentum.”
19
However, to do it the “normal way,” one uses:
F = m v2/r = q v B → p = q r B
To make the more useful GeV/c, multiply by the conversion for GeV/eV (10-9).
This gives a nice and final result:
pparticle physics = 0.3 r B
where r is in meters, B is in Tesla
and pparticle physics is in GeV/c.
4. The Fermilab accelerator is designed to accelerate protons in a circular orbit with radius 1
km and to a momentum p. The new LHC accelerator accelerates protons to a momentum
seven times that of the Fermilab accelerator. If the radius of circular motion followed by
a proton in the LHC is 4.3 km, calculate the ratio of the magnetic field of the Tevatron to
the LHC.
F = m v2/r = q v B → p = q r B → B = p/(q r)
Thus,
20
Student Worksheet
Constant Acceleration/Force Problems
1. The Fermilab accelerator has a circular shape, with radius of 1 km. It can take protons
with an initial energy of 120 GeV and accelerate them to 980 GeV in 20 seconds. The
acceleration actually only takes place via an electric force that is only 50 feet along the
orbit. The remainder contains magnetic fields that only bring the protons back around in a
circle for another acceleration phase.
Since the protons are relativistic (i.e., traveling at the speed of light at all energies), one
can calculate the number of orbits per second.
d. Calculate the average strength of the electric field in the acceleration region. Assume
the electric field is constant in the acceleration region.
2. The first accelerator in the Fermilab accelerator chain is the Cockcroft-Walton. A proton
enters the accelerator with essentially zero energy and exits with a velocity of 4 percent
of the speed of light (thus allowing you to ignore any relativistic effects). If the
acceleration time is 0.16 µs,
a. Calculate the average acceleration of the proton and compare it to the acceleration
due to gravity.
21
b. Calculate the force on the proton.
c. If the electric field can be approximated as being constant and uniform, what is the
length of the acceleration region?
1. The first accelerator in the Fermilab accelerator chain is the Cockcroft-Walton. A proton
is accelerated from rest across an electric potential of 750 kV and exits the acceleration
region in 0.16 µs. If the acceleration region is filled with a uniform and constant electric
field, calculate the region’s length.
22
Teacher’s Key
Constant Acceleration/Force Problems
1. The Fermilab accelerator has a circular shape, with radius of 1 km. It can take protons
with an initial energy of 120 GeV and accelerate them to 980 GeV in 20 seconds. The
acceleration actually only takes place via an electric force that is only 50 feet along the
orbit. The remainder contains magnetic fields that only bring the protons back around in a
circle for another acceleration phase.
Since the protons are relativistic (i.e., traveling at the speed of light at all energies), one
can calculate the number of orbits per second.
d. Calculate the average strength of the electric field in the acceleration region. Assume
the electric field is constant in the acceleration region.
If the energy increase in each pass is 900 keV, and the particle is a proton, then the
accelerating voltage is 900 kV.
1. The first accelerator in the Fermilab accelerator chain is the Cockcroft-Walton. A proton
enters the accelerator with essentially zero energy and exits with a velocity of 4 percent
of the speed of light (thus allowing you to ignore any relativistic effects). If the
acceleration time is 0.16 µs,
a. Calculate the average acceleration of the proton and compare it to the acceleration
due to gravity.
23
<a> = (vfinal - vinitial)/time = (0.04)( 3 × 108)/(0.16 × 10-6) = 7.5 × 1013 m/s2
(Much bigger than gravity’s 9.8 m/s2)
c. If the electric field can be approximated as being constant and uniform, what is the
length of the acceleration region?
E = F/q = (1.25 × 10-13 N)/(1.6 × 10-19 q) = 7.82 × 105 N/C = 782 kV/m
Since E = V/d and consequently d = V/E, we need to find the accelerating potential.
Since the particle starts at rest and has a final speed of 4 percent of the speed of
light, we can calculate the change in kinetic energy, use energy conservation to
calculate the initial potential energy and use the unit charge of the proton to
determine the underlying electric potential.
1. The first accelerator in the Fermilab accelerator chain is the Cockcroft-Walton. A proton
is accelerated from rest across an electric potential of 750 kV and exits the acceleration
region in 0.16 µs. If the acceleration region is filled with a uniform and constant electric
field, calculate the region’s length.
Calculate potential energy. Use energy conservation to calculate final velocity. Use
velocity and time to calculate constant acceleration. Use acceleration and mass to find
force. Use force and charge to calculate electric field. Finally, use electric potential
and electric field to find distance.
qV = 1/2m v2 → v = (2 q V/m)1/2
a = v/t
F=ma
E = F/q
d = V/E
d = t (Vq/(2m))1/2
d = (0.16 × 10-6)[(750000)(1.602 × 10-19)/2/(1.67 × 10-27)]1/2 = 0.96 m
24
The Electron
1. What is the value of e/m for a particle that moves in a circle of radius 8.0 mm in a 0.46 T
magnetic field that is crossed by a 200 V/m electric field that makes the path straight?
2. Protons move in a circle of radius 5.20 cm in a 0.465 T magnetic field. What value of
electric field could make their paths straight? In what direction must it point?
3. What is the velocity of a beam of electrons that go undeflected when passing through
crossed electric and magnetic fields of magnitude 8.85 x 103 V/m and 4.5 x 10-3 T
respectively? What is the radius of the electron orbit if the electric field is turned off?
4. In an early set of experiments (1911), Millikan observed that the following measured
charges, among others, appeared at different times on a single drop of oil. What value of
elementary charge can be deduced from these data?
a. 6.563 x 10-19 C
b. 8.204 x 10-19 C
c. 11.5 x 10-19 C
d. 13.13 x 10-19 C
e. 16.48 x 10-19 C
f. 18.08 x 10-19 C
g. 19.71 x 10-19 C
h. 22.89 x 10-19 C
i. 26.13 x 10-19 C
5. A negatively charged oil drop weighs 8.5 x 10-15 N. The drop is suspended in an electric
field intensity of 5300 N/C.
a. What is the charge on the drop?
b. How many electrons does is carry?
25
26
The Electron
KEY
1. What is the value of e/m for a particle that moves in a circle of radius 8.0 mm in a 0.46 T
magnetic field that is crossed by a 200 V/m electric field that makes the path straight?
2. Protons move in a circle of radius 5.20 cm in a 0.465 T magnetic field. What value of
electric field could make their paths straight? In what direction must it point?
3. What is the velocity of a beam of electrons that go undeflected when passing through
crossed electric and magnetic fields of magnitude 8.85 x 103 V/m and 4.5 x 10-3 T
respectively?
What is the radius of the electron orbit if the electric field is turned off?
4. In an early set of experiments (1911), Millikan observed that the following measured
charges, among others, appeared at different times on a single drop of oil. What value of
elementary charge can be deduced from these data?
Second, find the greatest common factor of the numbers preceding the “similarity” by
“2.” You will soon notice another similarity . . . that each of these values is close to
“1.6.” Thus, the answer is “1.6x10-19C” or the charge of a single electron.
27
5. A negatively charged oil drop weighs 8.5 x 10-15 N. The drop is suspended in an electric
field intensity of 5300 N/C.
a.) What is the charge on the drop?
b.) How many electrons does is carry?
FE = mg
a. Eq = mg
Solve for q = 8.5 x 10-15 = 1.6 x 10-18
5300
b. Divide by qe
Answer = 10 e-1
28
The History of the Electron Worksheet
Conceptual Physics
Directions: Please answer each question using a complete sentence.
2. A fast moving electron enters a magnetic field. Describe what happens to the electron during
this interaction. Use the words: magnetic field, perpendicular, path and force.
3. Explain Millikan’s oil drop experiment. Use at least three sentences and include the words:
charge, force, gravity, electric.
4. In an early set of experiments (1911), Millikan observed that the following measured
charges, among others, appeared at different times on a single drop of oil. Each of these
drops of oil had a different mass. What value of elementary charge can be deduced from
these data?
a. 6.563 x 10-19C
b. 11.5 x 10-19C
c. 13.13 x 10-19C
d. 22.89 x 10-19C
e. 26.13 x 10-19C
Draw a force diagram for the electron in Thompson’s experiment when the electron is
traveling in a straight path.
29
30
The History of the Electron Worksheet - Key
Conceptual Physics
Directions: Please answer each question using a complete sentence.
2. A fast moving electron enters a magnetic field. Describe what happens to the electron during
this interaction. Use the words: magnetic field, perpendicular, path and force.
As the electron moves perpendicular to the constant magnetic field direction, a constant
magnetic force causes the electron’s path to bend.
3. Explain Millikan’s oil drop experiment. Use at least three sentences and include the words:
charge, force, gravity, electric.
Charged oil drops are made to fall due to the force of gravity within a variable electric
field. The force of gravity that varies with the mass of the oil drop is made to fall within an
electric field. If the electric force acting on an oil drop is made to equal the gravitational
force on the oil drop, then the charge mass ratio can be determined.
4. In an early set of experiments (1911), Millikan observed that the following measured
charges, among others, appeared at different times on a single drop of oil. Each of these
drops of oil had a different mass. What value of elementary charge can be deduced from
these data?
a. 6.563 x 10-19C
b. 11.5 x 10-19C
c. 13.13 x 10-19C
d. 22.89 x 10-19C
e. 26.13 x 10-19C
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6. What forces were applied on the cathode ray in J. J. Thompson’s experiment?
Draw a force diagram for the electron in Thompson’s experiment when the electron is
traveling in a straight path.
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Student Worksheet
Motion of Charged Particles in a Magnetic Field
1. Three particles move through a constant magnetic field and follow the paths shown in the
drawing. Determine whether each particle is positively charged, negatively charged, or
neutral. Give a reason for each answer.
2. Three particles have identical charges and masses. They enter a constant magnetic field and
follow the paths shown in the picture. Which particle is moving the fastest, and which is
moving the slowest? Justify your answers.
∗
Pictures are from Webassign.
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Teacher’s Key
Motion of Charged Particles in a Magnetic Field
1. Three particles move through a constant magnetic field and follow the paths shown in the
drawing. Determine whether each particle is positively charged, negatively charged, or
neutral. Give a reason for each answer.
2. Three particles have identical charges and masses. They enter a constant magnetic field
and follow the paths shown in the picture. Which particle is moving the fastest, and
which is moving the slowest? Justify your answers.
Fast Slow, the order is 2 – 3 – 1
Greater velocity means greater force because q & B are the same.
∗
Pictures are from Webassign.
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Particle Quiz 2
Answer each question on a separate sheet of paper showing as much work as possible. When you
are finished, add an extra question at the end of the quiz. If you ask about this at all, you will not
receive credit for this question.
1. A uniform electric field exists in a region between two oppositely charged plates. An electron
is released from rest at the surface of the negatively charged plate and strikes the surface of
the opposite plate 2 cm away, 1.5 x 10-8 seconds later.
a. Knowing that the electron will accelerate in the field, choose an equation from the board
that will determine the acceleration of the electron and find it.
d. Determine the electric force on the electron and then calculate the electric field strength.
2. An electron moving westward with a speed of 10000 m/s enters a uniform magnetic field of
strength of 3T directed north.
c. What electric field strength is needed to balance the magnetic force felt by the electron?
35
36
Particle Quiz 2
Key
Answer each question on a separate sheet of paper showing as much work as possible. When you
are finished, add an extra question at the end of the quiz. If you ask about this at all, you will not
receive credit for this question.
1. A uniform electric field exists in a region between two oppositely charged plates. An electron
is released from rest at the surface of the negatively charged plate and strikes the surface of
the opposite plate 2 cm away, 1.5x10-8 seconds later.
a. Knowing that the electron will accelerate in the field, choose an equation from the board
that will determine the final velocity of the electron.
vi = 0
vf = ? d = vit + 1/2at2
d = 0.02m 0.02m = 0 + 1/2a (1.5 x 10-8s)2
a=? a = 1.8 x 1014m/s2
t = 1.5 x 10-8s
d. Determine the electric force on the electron and then calculate the electric field strength.
2. An electron moving westward with a speed of 10000 m/s enters a uniform magnetic field of
strength of 3T directed north.
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b. What is the direction of the magnetic force?
B
Out of the page
c. What electric field strength is needed to balance the magnetic force felt by the electron?
E = FE / q = FB / q = 30000 N/C
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The Electron
Discovery by J. J. Thompson (1897)
Used idea that cathode rays (produced by cathode
and anode at high electric potential) can be bent by
interaction of electric fields and magnetic fields.
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The Three Experiments in One…
A cathode ray sent into a variable magnetic field
and through an electric field, which is also variable.
I
A
Bx
High V
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For path A…
The cathode ray only interacts with the electric field
so:
Fc = FE
(mv2)/r = qE
For path C…
The cathode ray only interacts with the magnetic
field so:
Fc =FB
(mv2)/r = qvB
q/m = v/(Br)
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For path B…
The cathode ray interacts with both the electric field
and the magnetic field simultaneously.
FE = FB
qE = qvB
v = E/B
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Millikan’s Oil Drop Experiment
http://webphysics.davidson.edu/Alumni/ToHaynie/OilDrop/oilappa.htm
(the apparatus)
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In his experiment, Millikan tried to suspend an oil drop within
an electric field so that:
Fe = mg
qE = mg and since V = Ed
(qV)/d = mg or
q/m = (gd)/V
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http://www.aip.org/history/electron/jj1897.htm
(animated image of cathode ray bent by electric field)
http://webserver.lemoyne.edu/faculty/giunta/thomson1897.html
(copy of Thompson’s paper published in 1897)
http://webphysics.davidson.edu/Alumni/ToHaynie/OilDrop/oiltable.htm
(Millikan’s work)
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46
Notes on the Electron PowerPoint Presentation
What is a Cathode Ray?
Streams of electrons issuing from the cathode of an evacuated tube.
2. Create a second tape of equal length with a handle. Place the tape on
top of the first piece so that it covers the length of the first piece of
tape. Remove both pieces of tape from the table simultaneously. Rip
the pieces apart CAREFULLY!
3. Repeat the first two steps so that now you have four tapes.
For Path C
Equipment: Strong U-shaped magnet; direct current in a wire produced by the
application of an electric potential.
To do: 1. Connect approximately 1 m of wire to a DC outlet.
2. Place the wire through the arms of the magnet so that the current flows
in one direction perpendicular to the magnetic field produced by the
poles of the magnet.
3. Apply an electric potential to the wire and observe the behavior of the
wire. (The wire should be pushed up or down.)
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Millikan’s Experiment
What would happen if an electron were placed near a positively charged tape?
(Attract)
If the electron has mass, what would the electron do under the influence of Earth’s gravitational
field?
(Fall down . . .)
How could you design an experiment to make an electron stop falling to the Earth?
You get to use an electron, Earth’s gravity, a negatively charged plate and a positively charged
plate.
(The experiment designed should always have the force of gravity (weight) of the electron
balanced by the electric force of the field created by the charged plates. See diagram on website
listed below.)
This website has an excellent discussion with a link which simulates the experiment. The student
needs to cause the electron to stop falling in the electric field.
http://www68.pair.com/willisb/millikan/experiment.html
(This site is nice, but the Java application/demo of Millikan’s Experiment freezes the computer
eventually. . . .)
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Student Worksheet
Index of Refraction Problems
1. Assume that you have a long optical fiber with core index of refraction ncore = 1.59 and
cladding nclad = 1.49. The fiber is 2 m long with an inner-core diameter of 1 mm. Light is
generated on the axis of the fiber at one end and bounces along it to the other end. Due to
small imperfections in manufacturing, the light is not quite perfectly reflected at each
bounce. Calculate what fraction of light is reflected at each bounce so that 50 percent of
the light makes it out of the far end of the fiber. Assume that the reflection fraction is
identical for each bounce and consider only light transmitted at the critical angle.
Calculate the critical angle (i.e., the angle at the core-cladding interface) for light trapped:
c. In a fiber with a polystyrene core and two claddings, an inner one of PMMA,
followed by an outer one of fPMMA.
3. A large particle detector uses optical fiber technology. The fiber consists of a core with
index of refraction = 1.59, surrounded by a cladding with index of refraction 1.49. The
fiber is 14 m long. If light is injected so that it bounces at the critical angle in the fiber,
how long does it take to travel the length of the fiber and exit?
4. A common particle detector technique involves optical scintillating fiber, which emits
light when crossed by a charged particle. If the fiber consists of a core with index of
refraction 1.59 and a cladding of index of refraction 1.49, what fraction of the light is
trapped in the fiber and transported to an end? Assume all light is emitted at the center of
the fiber (i.e., on the fiber axis) and that the light emission is isotropic.
5. Cerenkov light is a form of light emitted when a charged particle travels in a transparent
medium faster than light travels in the same medium. Calculate the minimum velocity an
electron must have to emit Cerenkov light in water.
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6. Cerenkov light is a form of light emitted when a charged particle travels in a transparent
medium faster than light travels in the same medium. An imaginative experiment called
ICE-CUBE plans to use a cubic kilometer of ice (which becomes clear at great depths) in
Antarctica to detect charged particles from outer space called muons. Calculate the
minimum velocity a muon must have to emit Cerenkov light in the ICE-CUBE
experiment.
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Teacher’s Key
Index of Refraction Problems
1. Assume that you have a long optical fiber with core index of refraction ncore = 1.59 and
cladding nclad = 1.49. The fiber is 2 m long with an inner-core diameter of 1 mm. Light is
generated on the axis of the fiber at one end and bounces along it to the other end. Due to
small imperfections in manufacturing, the light is not quite perfectly reflected at each
bounce. Calculate what fraction of light is reflected at each bounce so that 50 percent of
the light makes it out of the far end of the fiber. Assume that the reflection fraction is
identical for each bounce and consider only light transmitted at the critical angle.
θc
t1 t2
First calculate the critical angle, then the amount of distance traveled by the light
(along the fiber-axis direction) for each bounce. From that, you can calculate the
number of bounces (n). Since each bounce reflects a factor r of the light, the light
transmitted will be rn.
Calculate the critical angle (i.e., the angle at the core-cladding interface) for light trapped:
51
b. In a fiber with a polystyrene core and an fPMMA cladding.
c. In a fiber with a polystyrene core and two claddings, an inner one of PMMA,
followed by an outer one of fPMMA.
3. A large particle detector uses optical fiber technology. The fiber consists of a core with
index of refraction = 1.59, surrounded by a cladding with index of refraction 1.49. The
fiber is 14 m long. If light is injected so that it bounces at the critical angle in the fiber,
how long does it take to travel the length of the fiber and exit?
52
4. A common particle detector technique involves optical scintillating fiber, which emits
light when crossed by a charged particle. If the fiber consists of a core with index of
refraction 1.59 and a cladding of index of refraction 1.49, what fraction of the light is
trapped in the fiber and transported to an end? Assume all light is emitted at the center of
the fiber (i.e., on the fiber axis) and that the light emission is isotropic.
2π π
Ω= ∫ ∫ sin θ dθ dφ = 4π
0 0
Only the light emitted with angle smaller than 20.43° (= 0.36 radians) will be trapped. Thus,
2π 0.36
Ω trapped = ∫ ∫ sin θ dθ dφ = 0.396
0 0
The fraction trapped is Ωtrapped/Ω = 3.15%.
A common error is to ignore the azimuthal angle and use a simple proportion. This error yields
11.3%.
5. Cerenkov light is a form of light emitted when a charged particle travels in a transparent
medium faster than light travels in the same medium. Calculate the minimum velocity an
electron must have to emit Cerenkov light in water.
This is a simple problem. Use n = c/v. The index of refraction of water is 1.33.
So v = 2.26 × 108 m/s.
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6. Cerenkov light is a form of light emitted when a charged particle travels in a transparent
medium faster than light travels in the same medium. An imaginative experiment called
ICE-CUBE plans to use a cubic kilometer of ice (which becomes clear at great depths) in
Antarctica to detect charged particles from outer space called muons. Calculate the
minimum velocity a muon must have to emit Cerenkov light in the ICE-CUBE
experiment.
This is a simple problem. Use n = c/v. The index of refraction of ice is 1.31.
So v = 2.29 × 108 m/s.
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Student Worksheet
WARP SPEED
Step 1. Open up to http://www-ed.fnal.gov/projects/labyrinth/index.shtml
Step 4. Read the story and hit Warp Speed, then select Push the Particle.
Step 8. Select Show Data button and reset until you have the best score.
Step 10. Attempt to double your score after reading the passage and answering the following
question:
Before the particle enters the linac, it has an energy of 750 keV, or 750 kilo-electron
volts. (Kilo is a prefix that means 1000.) By the time it leaves the linac, physicists must
accelerate it to an energy of 116 MeV, or mega-electron volts. (Mega is a prefix for a
million.) How many times greater is the energy the particle has when it leaves the linac
than the amount of energy it has when it enters the linac?
Step 11. Select one of the above and hit All Done to see if you doubled your score.
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Teacher’s Key
WARP SPEED
Step 1. Open up to http://www-ed.fnal.gov/projects/labyrinth/index.shtml
Step 4. Read the story and hit Warp Speed, then select Push the Particle.
Step 8. Select Show Data button and reset until you have the best score.
Step 10. Attempt to double your score after reading the passage and answering the following
question:
Before the particle enters the linac, it has an energy of 750 keV, or 750 kilo-electron
volts. (Kilo is a prefix that means 1000.) By the time it leaves the linac, physicists must
accelerate it to an energy of 116 MeV, or mega-electron volts. (Mega is a prefix for a
million.) How many times greater is the energy the particle has when it leaves the linac
than the amount of energy it has when it enters the linac?
Step 11. Select one of the above and hit All Done to see if you doubled your score.
56
Student Worksheet
RACE FOR ENERGY
Step 1. Select Race for Energy and Go to Game.
Study the graphs from a trial and answer this question correctly for 100 Einstein bucks.
Step 5. If you are all done and want to double your score, then select the buttons and answer the
following question after reading the material presented:
57
Teacher's Key
RACE FOR ENERGY
Step 1. Select Race for Energy and Go to Game.
Study the graphs from a trial and answer this question correctly for 100 Einstein bucks.
Step 5. If you are all done and want to double your score, then select the buttons and answer the
following question after reading the material presented:
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Student Worksheet
FERMILABYRINTH LAW & ORDER
Step 1. Select Law ‘n Order.
Step 4. Then select Particle Families and select a level, such as Physics. At the conclusion of
"What is a Particle Family?," answer the following question:
Fill out the following chart to indicate which forces affect the particles listed. Shade in the box if
YES and leave the box empty if NO.
FOUR FORCES
PARTICLES GRAVITY ELECTROMAGNETIC WEAK STRONG
Neutron
Neutrino
Quark
Proton
Photon
Electron
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Teacher’s Key
FERMILABYRINTH LAW & ORDER
Step 1. Select Law ‘n Order.
Step 4. Then select Particle Families and select a level, such as Physics. At the conclusion of
"What is a Particle Family?," answer the following question:
Fill out the following chart to indicate which forces affect the particles listed. Shade in the box if
YES and leave the box empty if NO.
FOUR FORCES
PARTICLES GRAVITY ELECTROMAGNETIC WEAK STRONG
Neutron
Neutrino
Quark
Proton
Photon
Electron
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Teacher’s Notes
The Half-Life of Donkey Kong Dice
This lab uses a bag of Donkey Kong dice from an old game. Two sides of the dice say Donkey
Kong rests. Any dice may be used by making some mark on two sides of the dice to represent the
Donkey Kong sides.
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62
The Half-Life of Donkey Kong Dice
Half-life is the amount of time it takes for half of a radioactive sample to decay. Our Donkey
Kong dice are “radioactive.” They have decayed when the Donkey Kong “rests” side comes up.
The purpose of this lab is to investigate the nature of half-life and to determine the half-life of the
Donkey Kong Dice.
Materials:
Baggie of dice
Shaker
Data table
Graph paper
Procedure:
1. Count your dice and record as Number of Dice Remaining at time = 0.
2. Shake and roll your dice, being careful that they do not fall on the floor.
3. Count and remove the decayed dice, return to baggie. Record the number as Number
of Dice Decayed for time = 1 (Trial #1).
4. Count and record the Number of Dice Remaining for time = 1 (Trial #1). Return
these dice to the shaker.
5. Shake and roll, etc. (steps 2 – 4), increasing time by 1 each time, until all the dice
have decayed.
6. Place you data on the board to get class totals.
Analysis:
1. Plot Number of Dice Remaining vs. Time (Trial #)
Plot Number of Dice Decayed vs. Time (Trial #)
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a. What do the graphs of the class data look like?
b. How are the class data graphs like or different from your graphs?
3. Use the graph of Class Total Number of Dice Remaining vs. Time to determine the Half-
life of the Donkey Kong dice. Explain how you used the graph to determine the half-life.
Conclusion:
What can you conclude?
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Real Radioactive Measurements & The Half-Life of Cesium-137
I. Background
Use the Geiger counter to measure the counts in the room for three one-minute intervals.
Find the average. Use this count for normal background radiation.
Average =
II. Rocks
Use the Geiger counter to measure the counts of the radiation for several different rock
samples. For each sample time three one-minute intervals, find the average, and calculate
the net count for that sample by subtracting the background radiation.
Is the Fiesta Ware more or less radioactive than the rocks? How can you tell?
IV. Cesium-137
We will time a sample of Cesium-137 for twelve minutes. We will record the count for
each one-minute time interval for the twelve minutes, then calculate net count.
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Time (min) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Count
Net Count
While we’re collecting data, prepare a piece of graph paper to graph Net Count Decayed
vs. Time and start plotting points.
Analysis:
What does the graph of Net Count Decayed vs. Time look like?
How much time elapsed between the original and half of the original? _________
How much time elapsed between the original and 1/4 the original? _________
Fiesta Ware contains uranium. If we timed the Fiesta Ware for twelve minutes and graphed
the Net Count vs. Time, how would you expect the graph look? Explain your reasoning.
Conclusion:
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Half-Life Activity
Procedure
1. Put your M&M’s in a shoebox with a lid on it and shake the box. Remove the
M&M’s that have the M-side up and record these in a data chart.
3. Total the number of candies that you recorded in each iteration of step 1. Use this
number to calculate the number of candies that remained in the box each time.
4. Create a plot of your data of the number of candies remaining vs. the number of
shakes you had.
Questions
2. Approximately what percent of the remaining candies were removed on each shake?
Why?
3. Each shake represents a half-life for the candies. What is meant by a half-life?
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68
Half-Life Practice
1. What is half-life?
a. How much of the isotope will you have left after 10 years?
b. How much of the isotope will you have left after 20 years?
4. The half-life of radon-222 is 3.8 days. How much of a 100-g sample is left after 15.2 days?
5. Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5,730 years. If a sample contained 70 mg originally, how much
is left after 17,190 years?
6. How much of a 500-g sample of potassium-42 is left after 62 hours if its half-life of 12.4
hours?
7. The half-life of cobalt-60 is 5.26 years. If 50 g are left after 15.8 years, how many grams
were in the original sample?
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8. The half-life of I-131 is 8.07 days. If 25 g are left after 40.35 days, how many grams were in
the original sample?
9. If 100 g of Au-198 decays to 6.25 g in 10.8 days, what is the half-life of Au-198?
10. Graph the following data on the graph paper, then use the graph to determine the half-life of
this isotope.
Time (years) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Mass Remaining (grams) 100 75 56 42 32 24 18 13 10 8 6
half-life = ________________
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Radioactivity
The emission of alpha or beta
particles, or gamma rays from the
nucleus of an unstable atom.
Unstable atoms are considered
radioactive.
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Alpha Particle
• The nucleus of a helium atom
• Made up of two protons and two
neutrons
2
2 He
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α
Beta Particle
• An electron emitted from the
nucleus at very high speed
β
73
Gamma Radiation
• Electromagnetic waves with very
high frequency and energy
• Has no mass and no charge
• Travels at the speed of light
γ
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Penetrating Power
α
β
Radioactive
γ
Source
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76
Modern Physics
Relativity Set #1
1. You are on a speedboat on a lake. You see ahead of you a wavefront, caused by the previous
passage of another boat, moving away from you. You accelerate, catch up with, and pass the
wavefront. Is this scenario possible if you are in a rocket and you detect a wavefront of light
ahead of you? Explain.
2. You are packing for a trip to another star, to which you will be traveling at 0.99 c. Should
you buy smaller sizes of clothing, because you will be skinnier on the trip? Can you sleep in
a smaller cabin than usual, because you will be shorter when you lie down? Explain.
3. Two identically constructed clocks are synchronized. One is put in orbit around the Earth and
the other remains on Earth. Which clock runs more slowly? When the moving clock returns
to Earth, will the two clocks still be synchronized? Explain.
4. A muon formed high in the earth’s atmosphere travels at speed v = 0.99 c for a distance of
4.6 km before it decays into an electron, a neutrino, and an antineutrino: µ− → e− + υ µ + υ e
a. How long does the muon live, as measured in its reference frame?
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b. How far does the muon travel, as measured in its frame?
5. Manisha is in a spaceship and travels past you at a high speed. She tells you that her ship is
20 m long and that the identical ship you are sitting in is 19 m long. According to your
observations:
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Modern Physics
Relativity Homework Set #2
1. Imagine an astronaut on a trip to Sirius, which is eight light-years from Earth. On arrival at
Sirius, the astronaut finds that the trip lasted six years. If the trip was made at a constant
speed of 0.8 c, how can the eight light-year distance be reconciled with the six-year duration?
2. Some distant star-like objects, called quasars, are receding from us at half the speed of light
or greater. What is the speed of light we receive from these quasars? Explain.
3a. An unstable high-energy particle enters a detector and leaves a track 1.05 mm long before it
decays. Its speed relative to the detector was 0.992 c. What is its proper lifetime? That is,
how long would the particle have lasted before its decay in its own reference frame (at rest
relative to the detector)?
b. A pi-meson has an average lifetime in its own frame of reference of 2.6 x 10-8 seconds.
(This is the proper lifetime.) If the meson moves with a speed of 0.95 c, what is its mean
lifetime as measured by an outside observer,
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4a. Can a person, in principle, travel from Earth to the Galactic Center (about 23,000 light-year
distance) in a normal lifetime? Explain using either time-dilation or length-contraction
arguments. (1 light-year is the distance light travels in one year.)
b. What constant speed would be necessary to make the trip in 30 years of proper time?
5. A space traveler takes off from Earth and moves at speed 0.99 c toward the star Vega, which
is 26 light-year distant. How much time will have elapsed by Earth clocks:
a. When the traveler reaches Vega?
b. When Earth observers receive word from the traveler that she has arrived?
d. How much older will Earth observers calculate the traveler to be (measured from her
frame) when she reaches Vega than she was when she started the trip?
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Modern Physics
Relativity Set #2
1. Sneha and Anjali are at it again. Sneha’s battle cruiser moves directly toward Anjali’s super
secret scout ship when Sneha fires a decoy toward the scout ship. Relative to the scout ship,
the speed of the decoy is 0.980c and the speed of Sneha’s cruiser is 0.900 c. What is the
speed of the decoy relative to the cruiser?
2a. In terms of c, what is the speed of an electron whose kinetic energy is 100 MeV?
b. Find the speed and the Lorentz factor γ for a proton whose kinetic energy is 1.00 keV.
c. For the protons at Fermilab, whose energies are > 500 GeV?
3. Quasars are thought to be the nuclei of active galaxies in the early stages of their formation.
A typical quasar radiates energy at the rate of 10^41 Joules/second. At what rate is the mass
of this quasar being reduced to supply this energy? Express your answer in solar mass units
per year, where the solar mass is 2.0 x 10^30 kg.
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4. In a high-energy collision between a cosmic ray particle and a particle near the top of the
earth’s atmosphere, 120 km above sea level, a pion is created. The pion has a total energy of
1.35 X 10^5 MeV and is traveling vertically downward. In the pion’s rest frame, the pion
decays 35.0 ns after its creation. At what altitude above sea level, as measured from the
earth’s reference frame, does the decay occur? The rest energy of a pion is 139.6 MeV.
5. Gabe, who as we all know, is in his own galaxy, Galaxy A, recedes from us in our Milky
Way at 0.35 c. Oleg is in Galaxy B and is located in precisely the opposite direction and is
also found to be receding from us at 0.35 c. What recessional speed would Gabe compute for
us? And what speed would he compute for Oleg?
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TNT vs. Fission Worksheet
1. How much energy is released in the explosion of a fission bomb (like the ones dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki) containing 3.0 kg of fissionable material? Assume that 0.10 percent
of the mass is converted into released energy.
2. What mass of TNT would have to explode to provide the same energy release? Assume that
each mole of TNT liberates 3.4 MJ of energy on exploding. The molecular mass of TNT is
0.227 kg/mol.
3. For the same mass of explosive, how much more effective is the nuclear explosion than the
TNT explosion? That is, compare the amounts of energy released in explosions involving,
say, 1 kg of fissionable material and 1 kg of TNT.
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84
Modern Physics
The Ultraviolet Catastrophe!
1. As Ms. Nicks turns up and down the lamp, how does the spectrum change? Describe what
happens.
Click on the red box, and a small picture of the galaxy and some numbers will come up on
the right-hand side of the screen. If you click on Explore over on the right, the data about this
galaxy will come up in a new window, called the Object Explorer window. You can look at
the spectrum if you scroll down a bit. If you click on the spectrum, it will open up to a picture
you can actually see. Sketch this spectrum, and indicate what overall wavelength you think
the peak of this spectrum is (the peak of the overall trend, not the tiny little peaks and
valleys).
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If you like this galaxy, you can “Save in Notes” over on the left side. You can do this with
any galaxy.
3. Now, go back to the Navigate window and zoom way out (click the bar next to the minus) so
that you can go to another part of the sky. The red boxes, again, mean that SDSS has a
spectrum for that object. Click on a part of the sky with lots of red boxes, and then click
Recenter over on the right. Then zoom back in not quite halfway. (If you zoom in too much,
you may lose the objects with the red boxes.) You can click N/S/E/W to find more objects.
Sketch five spectra and indicate the overall peak wavelength. Save them in your Notes. You
can see your notes at any time by clicking Show Notes in the Explorer window.
86
By the way, the y-axis of these graphs is called the energy density. It’s a measure of how
many incoming waves have that particular wavelength. If the peak of the spectrum is in the
red, there are more red waves coming in than any other type of wave. A spectrum, then, is a
graphical way to represent the demo in #1.
87
4. Now we’d like to figure out what all this means, but we don’t want to go through an
astronomy tutorial. (You’re welcome to on your own if you’d like.) Close the Navigate and
Explorer windows. Go to Projects, and click Advanced; these are the high school and
introductory college projects. Then click Color. The tutorial here goes into great depth about
star color, which is certainly interesting, but we’d like a bigger picture. Scroll down the page,
and on the left, click Light from Stars.
a. Now, think carefully about what you saw in the demo. What color do you think these two
stars would be? (This is Question 2 of the tutorial.)
b. Question 3. Some stars have peak wavelengths in the infrared part of the spectrum,
longer than red light. Can you still see these stars? Why or why not? What color do they
appear? What about stars whose peak wavelengths are in the ultraviolet?
c. Click Next, and click on the Animation to play it. Then answer Question 5. If you
continued heating the plate, you would no longer be able to see its glow . . . but it would
give you a sunburn! Why?
d. Click Next. These are actual radiation (light) curves from stars of different temperatures.
Click on the words Interactive Java Applet and try different temperatures. You’ll see
the color of the star on the left.
Sum up what you just saw:
88
5. OK, so that’s real data from real stars and galaxies. In the early 1900’s, the best theory that
our physicists could come up with was that the overall curve of the spectra (what you were
sketching before) should look like the following equation, called Rayleigh-Jean’s law:
8πkT
energy density = 4
λ
where k = 1.38 x 10-23 J/K, and T is the temperature of the object. For a star, 2500 K is a cool
star, 15000 K is a hot star.
a. Sketch a graph of this equation for an average star. Remember λ should be on the x-axis.
It’s your independent€ variable.
b. Hmm. . . . Why, do you think, was this disagreement between theory (Rayleigh-Jean’s
law) and experiment (your galaxy notes) called the Ultraviolet Catastrophe?
89
6. Wien was an experimental physicist and tried to come up with a best-fit equation for his data.
(Sound familiar?) He thought this equation best fit the data:
C
energy density = 31 e−C 2 / λT
λ
k and T have the same values as above, C1 = 7.01 x 10-14, and C2 = 0.00819.
Sketch the graph of this equation for the same temperature star as before (again, λ should be
on the x-axis).
€
Here’s the catch! Wien had no idea why it worked. (Ever have that trouble in a science lab?!)
There was no theory to support his pretty equation that fit the data so well. To be honest,
Wien’s law didn’t fit the data all that well; it did fit the ultraviolet end of the spectra, but not
the infrared; go figure. Now, a theory isn’t such a good theory if you have to switch it for
different stellar temperatures (or any hot object).
7. Max Planck was a theoretical physicist working in Wien’s lab and was good friends with
Wien. To try to help out his friend, Planck added a bit to the theory of physics. (He
FUDGED the PHYSICS to FIT the data; ever do that?) What he added was this:
E = nhf
where h = 6.626 x 10-34 J s, called Planck’s constant (or Planck’s fudge factor); n was an
integer: 1, 2, 3, …; and f was the frequency of the light.
He called E the energy of an “oscillator,” or the source of the light. With this little fudge, he
came up with an equation sort of like Wien’s:
8πch 1
energy density = 5 hc / kλT
λ e −1
k and T are the same as before, h is Planck’s new fudge factor, and c is the speed of light, our
old friend.
€
90
b. Sketch a graph of this equation:
The thing is, this equation fit ALL of the experimental data perfectly—the ultraviolet, the
infrared, the visible, . . .
There was only one small problem:
91
92
Modern Physics
Bohr Theory Problems
1. How do Bohr’s assumptions contradict classical physics?
2a. What is the energy of the photon that could cause an electron’s transition from the n = 4 state
to the n = 5 state of hydrogen?
b. What energy would be released by an electron making the transition from the n = 5 state
to the n = 4 state?
3a. Calculate the radii of the first, second and third Bohr orbits of hydrogen.
b. Calculate the radius of the first Bohr orbit in b: He+, Li2+, and Be3+
93
4. Calculate the wavelength of the photon that is released when the electron in a hydrogen atom
initially in the n = 3 state drops back down to the ground state.
5. A muon is a particle with a charge of –e and a mass equal to 207 times the mass of an
electron. Muonic lead is formed when ionized 208Pb captures a muon. According to the Bohr
theory, what are the radius and energy of the ground state of muonic lead?
94
Modern Physics
de Broglie Problems
1. What was de Broglie’s assumption and why is it so weird?
3. An electron and a photon each have energy equal to 50 keV. What are their de Broglie
wavelengths?
4. A hydrogen atom initially in the n = 3 state emits a photon and drops back down to the
ground state.
a. What is the energy and wavelength of the photon?
95
5. An air rifle is used to shoot 1-g particles at speeds of 100 m/s through a hole of diameter 2
mm. How far from the rifle must an observer be in order to see the beam spread by 1 cm?
Compare this to the diameter of the universe (~1026m).
96
Modern Physics
Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
Please attempt every problem.
2. Calculate the energy in Joules and electron volts of a photon whose frequency is:
a. 5 x 1014 Hz
b. 10 GHz
b. What is the electron’s potential energy in this electric field? Give your answer both in
electron volts and in Joules.
d. If the mass of an electron is 9.11 x 10-31 kg (which it is, and also an important number to
remember; it is stored in your calculator under the constants menu—see Me), what was
the electron’s initial velocity when it entered the electric field region?
97
4. The work function for potassium is 2.24 eV. If potassium metal is illuminated with light of
wavelength 350 nm, find:
a. The maximum kinetic energy of the photoelectrons at this wavelength.
If the outgoing electrons are stopped with a 550 mV stopping potential, what wavelength of
photon was absorbed by those electrons?
5a. Why is the photon model of light more appropriate for describing the photoelectric effect
experiment?
b. When is the wave model of light more appropriate for describing the behavior of light?
98
Modern Physics
Photoelectric Effect Write-up
Your lab write-up should be somewhat formal, be typed, and stand on its own and not rely on
someone else’s work; include printouts of all graphs and data tables. If you would like to
organize it into sections (i.e., Purpose, Procedure, Data . . .), you may, but you are not required
to. Either way, you need to provide detailed answers to the following questions in addition to
providing your data in tables and your graphs. Another reasonably intelligent person (i.e., your
roommate) should be able to pick up the report and be able to replicate your particular
experiment and get the same kinds of data you did.
2. Provide a sketch and short description of the experimental setup. Why is it necessary to do
this experiment in the dark?
3. Give a short description of what is happening inside the “Photoelectric Effect” box. Include
what happens when you twiddle the two knobs.
4. Describe what you do to get a graph of current vs. voltage and why these graphs are
important.
5. What is the final goal of the experiment? What calculations do you need to do to get there?
Provide at least a sample of each calculation that you did.
6. What is your final graphical model of kinetic energy vs. frequency? Explain the graph and
the mathematical model you use to fit the data. Explain what the slope and y-intercept mean
and the units of such numbers.
99
100
Planck vs. The Macroscopic Oscillator
Planck derived a correct explanation for the spectrum of a blackbody radiator. In his case, the
oscillator was a light wave, but we can extend his thought here. He insisted that the energy of
any oscillator had to be an integer multiple of h (Planck’s constant) times the frequency (f) of
oscillation of the oscillator. In other words,
E = nhf
In this problem we will explore the implications for a macroscopic oscillator.
We have already analyzed the behavior of an oscillating mass on a spring. Another macroscopic
oscillator is the simple pendulum. Suppose a pendulum is constructed as shown below with a
string of length L and a mass of m near the surface of the earth where g = 9.8 m/s2. We start the
mass swinging by holding it at some angle θ and releasing it from rest. The period of oscillation
is then:
l
T = 2π
g
a. What is the total energy of the pendulum in terms of θ and the other parameters in this
problem (L, m, g)? Remember that potential energy = mgh and that kinetic energy = 1/2 mv2.
b. Now suppose that the energy of the system could only come in integer multiples of H times
frequency, i.e., E = nHf, where H just happens to be 0.66 J-s. (Perhaps we could call H
Nickerson’s constant!) What values of θ are allowed? Use m = 1.0 kg and L = 1.0 m.
c. Now apply the real value of Planck’s constant to this system, so that the real allowed
energies are E = nhf. (This is really what Planck is saying!!) What values are allowed for θ?
Could we detect these quantum behaviors?
101
102
Modern Physics
Quantum Mechanics Questions
1. Is light a wave or a particle? Explain. What about an electron?
2. How would de Broglie account for the fact that in the Bohr model (which remember was
highly successful in predicting the spectral lines of hydrogen), the electrons are always found
at certain distinct distances from the nucleus?
3. Why is the wave nature of matter not more apparent to us in our everyday lives?
4. In classical physics, the accuracy of measurements has always been limited by the measuring
instruments used, and no instrument is perfect. How is this limitation different from that
formulated by Heisenberg in the uncertainty principle?
5. What is the physical significance of the square of the Schroedinger wave function, |Ψ|2?
103
6. Describe the quantum-mechanical model of the atom. How is this similar to Bohr’s model?
How are the two different?
7. Sum up quantum mechanics and our current interpretations of quantum mechanics. Use
Feynmann’s notes if you find them helpful.
104
Modern Physics
Quantum I Turn-in Problems
1. Molybdenum has a work function of 4.2 eV.
a. Find the cutoff wavelength and the threshold (cutoff) frequency for the photoelectric
effect.
b. Calculate the stopping potential if the incident light has a wavelength of 200 nm.
2. A light source of wavelength λ illuminates a metal and ejects electrons with a maximum
kinetic energy of 1 eV. A second light source with half the wavelength of the first ejects
electrons in the same metal with a maximum kinetic energy of 4 eV. What is the work
function of the metal?
105
106
Modern Physics
Quantum Mechanics Catches on—and Gives a New Atomic Model
Electrons were discovered in 1898 by J. J. Thomson. It had been known before that that the atom
was composed of positive and negative charges, but that most atoms were indeed neutral overall.
J. J. Thomson found the source of the negative charge—the electron. He constructed a model of
the atom called the “Plum Pudding” model of the atom in which the majority of the “stuff” that
composed the atom was positive, and the electrons were stuck inside like chocolate chips in a
chocolate chip cookie (or like plums in a plum pudding). Draw a picture of this model of the
atom.
Check out the regular (incandescent) light bulb with the specs on. Describe what you see.
Now check out the three lamps with the specs on. Describe what you see.
What was Balmer’s formula, what did it describe, and how did he come up with it? (We’ll put it
in Rydbergh’s notation to make it less complicated.)
107
Draw Geiger, Marsden, and Rutherford’s experiment here:
Now explain why Rutherford is quoted as saying, “It was quite the most incredible event that has
ever happened to me in my life. It was almost as incredible as if you fired a 15-inch shell at a
piece of tissue paper and it came back and hit you.” Use J. J.Thomson’s model of the atom
(which is what Rutherford was operating under) and the current model of the atom to explain
why Geiger and Marsden saw what they saw.
108
What were Bohr’s four assumptions?
Plug in numbers for the n = 1 state: (This is called the Bohr radius.)
What was Bohr’s formula for the energy in each state? Plug in numbers for the n = 1 (called the
ground state). This is the ground state energy for the hydrogen atom (otherwise known as the
ionization energy).
How would you calculate the transition energy for an electron from one state to another?
Could you find the wavelength of photon that is required for such a transition? Describe how:
109
Explain why Balmer/Rydbergh’s formula worked:
110
Fermilab Questions
Directions: Find the answers to these questions at http://www.fnal.gov/ and submit them in
complete sentences by the end of class today.
(What are quarks? What are leptons? What are mediating particles?)
7. What is DØ?
8. What is CDF?
111
112
Fermilab Questions - Solutions
1. How far is it from ?
Variable answer; can design for your town.
7. What is DØ?
A detector of collisions on the Main Ring of the Tevatron at Fermilab. It specializes in
the energy measurements of the particle collisions.
8. What is CDF?
A detector of collisions on the Main Ring of the Tevatron at Fermilab. It specializes in
the momentum measurements of the particle collisions.
113
10. Describe how particle physics assists cosmology.
Each collision creates a mini Big Bang simulation. The higher the energy of a
Fermilab collision, the farther back in time an astrophysicist sees. The Big Bang
theory says that at one time very early in the universe, the universe was very hot. It is
only with a particle collider that this “hotness” can be replicated. Fermilab helps us see
what particles existed in the early universe.
114
Particle Accelerators
(Basic Principles)
115
Particle Acceleration
(Principles)
weight
(force)
gravity electric
field
Force
116
Electric Field (Reminder)
+
+
separation
Battery
−
width
117
Electric Field and Acceleration
+ −
+ + + + +
+
+
Electric Field
+
+
}
}
+
+
+
Acceleration Constant Speed
+
+
118
TV: A Familiar Accelerator
15,000 Volts
+ −
Rapidly
Changing
Electric Fields
119
Multistage Accelerators (LINAC)
1 2 3
}I
} II
II
} IIIII
II
+ − + − + − Ball
Falling
Batteries
120
The Role of Magnetism
Magnetic
Force
Electric
Magnetic Force
Force
LINAC
121
Particle Accelerators
Why were they created?
A. The greater the energy in the collision, the greater the
mass of the particle being created. (E = mc2)
B. A good way to “see” the small. de Broglie theorized that
particles can behave like waves. Just as light can behave
like a particle (Einstein’s photoelectric effect – Nobel
Prize) or a wave (Young’s diffraction experiment), so can
an electron beam be diffracted in a crystal lattice
(Davisson and Germer).
The greater their speed, the smaller the wavelength; thus,
the smaller the object that can be “seen.”
E = hf with c = λf. Thus, λ = hc/E.
E is the sum of the particle’s rest energy (mc2) and its KE.
122
How is the speed increased?
A. By varying the electric field from positive to negative
1. Van de Graff or Cockcroft-Walton
2. Linear
B. The use of magnetic fields in cyclotrons and synchrotron
Fc = Fb (using Fc = (mv2)/r and Fb = qvB…)
v = (qrB)/m (so as v increases, B needs to increase.)
123
Cyclotrons are constructed as two “D” magnets with
a gap in between through which a particle is
accelerated further by a reversing electric potential
(field).
B⊗ E B⊗
125
126
Fermilab Accelerators
Name Year Initial Final Maximum Acceleration
Turned Energy Energy Velocity Time
On (% speed (seconds)
of light)
127
QUIZ ON PARTICLE
ACCELERATORS
128
Particle Accelerators Quiz
(Solutions for PowerPoint Presentation Quiz)
λ = hc / Ε
hc
(moc2 – KE)
1.98 x 10-25
1.5 x 10-10 + 6.4 x 10-9
3 x 10-19 m
2. Determine how long it takes for an electron to travel around a cyclotron with a magnetic
field strength of 2T.
F = qB
2πm
F = 5.6 x 1010 Hz
T = 18 x 10-11 sec
129
130
Particle Zoo
Bosons and Fermions
Fermions
mesons (q-anti q)
131
There are 12 elementary particles that make up
most of the Standard Model:
Quarks: u, d, c, s, t, b
Mesons
Baryons
132
They combine via four conservation rules:
133
134
Particle Accelerator Problems
1. What is the total energy of a proton whose kinetic energy is 15 GeV? What is its
wavelength?
2. The voltage across the dees of a cyclotron is 50 kV. How many revolutions do protons make
to reach a kinetic energy of 15 MeV?
3. What is the time for one complete revolution for a very high-energy proton (v = c) in the 1-
km radius Fermilab accelerator?
5. Protons are injected into the 1-km radius Fermilab synchrotron with an energy of 8 GeV. If
they are accelerated by 2.5 q each revolution, how far do they travel and approximately how
long does it take for them to reach 400 GeV?
6. What magnetic field intensity is needed at the 1-km radius Fermilab synchrotron for 400
GeV protons? Use the relativistic mass.
135
136
Particle Accelerator Problems
KEY
1. What is the total energy of a proton whose kinetic energy is 15 GeV? What is its
wavelength?
λ = (hc) / ε = (hc) / (εο + KE) = 1.98 x 10-25 / (1.5 x 10-10 J + 2.4 x 10-9 J) = 7.76 x 10-17 m
ε = εο + KE = 2.55 x 10-9 J
2. The voltage across the dees of a cyclotron is 50 kV. How many revolutions do protons make
to reach a kinetic energy of 15 MeV?
n = 150
3. What is the time for one complete revolution for a very high-energy proton (v = c) in the 1-
km radius Fermilab accelerator?
v = 2πr / T
λ = (hc) / (εο + KE) = 1.98 x 10-25 / (1.5 x 10-10 J + 6.4 x 10-8 J) = 3.1 x 10-18 m
5. Protons are injected into the 1-km radius Fermilab synchrotron with an energy of 8 GeV. If
they are accelerated by 2.5 MeV each revolution, how far do they travel and approximately
how long does it take for them to reach 400 GeV? (Assume the protons are moving at the
speed of light.)
Knowing Ei = 8 GeV and Ef = 400 GeV, then Ef - Ei = 392 GeV difference. Since on each
pass around the ring the proton gains 2.5 MeV, then the proton will move around the ring
1.57 x 105 times. Since the radius of the ring is 1000 m, the circumference is 2π(1000 m).
If the proton moves around the ring 1.57 x 105 times, then the total distance the proton
moves is 9.85 x 108 m. Further, since the particle is moving at the speed of light (3 x
108 m/s), the time to move a distance of 9.85 x 108 m at this speed would be 3.3 sec.
137
6. What magnetic field intensity is needed at the 1-km radius Fermilab synchrotron for 400
GeV protons? Use the relativistic mass.
ε = mc2
εο + KE = mc2
B = 1.33 T
138
Calculate the Mass of the Zo Boson Questions
The Zo boson is a particle that is involved in radioactive decay. It was discovered in Europe in
1983. Because it decays in 10-23 seconds, it is impossible to observe it directly. It can only be
observed by its decay products which, among others, can be a muon and an antimatter muon. We
say Zo → µ+µ−. In this exercise, we use the energy and momentum of the muons to infer the Zo
boson’s mass.
This packet contains first the mathematics for determining the mass of the Zo boson from the
given material and two worked examples. It then contains student worksheets (six variants) and
separate answers sheets. The six variants of the worksheet are separated into 2D and 3D cases.
Within each case, version 1 is a simple calculation, version 2 requires the students to measure the
φ angle with a protractor and version 3 is the most difficult, requiring the students to calculate
the not-given momentum using the given mass.
To determine the mass of a particle, we need to use the extended version of Einstein’s famous
equation E = mc2. This extended equation is:
E 2 = m2c4 + p 2c2
where E, m and p are the energy, mass and momentum of the Zo respectively. c is the speed of
light. Since we cannot directly observe the Zo boson, we need to use our familiar concepts of
conservation of energy and momentum. If the Zo boson decays into a muon (µ−) and an
antimatter muon (µ+), then conservation of energy and momentum can be expressed as:
EZ o = Eµ+ + Eµ−
p Zo = p µ+ + p µ−
For the sake of simplicity, we can treat the muons as massless and this means (for muons) E =
|pc|. Substituting these equations into the first one, we find the final interesting equation:
1
mZ o = 2
( Eµ + + Eµ + ) 2 − ( p µ + + p µ + ) 2 c 2
c
Thus we see that the mass of the Zo boson can be expressed simply as a combination of the
energy and momenta of the two muons. We must remember what the last part of this equation
means.
139
And finally, we need to remember spherical coordinates. Given a specific momentum, polar and
azimuthal angle (p, θ, φ ) (and assuming the particle is massless), we can write:
p x = p sin θ cos φ
p y = p sin θ sin φ
p z = p cos θ
E = pc
So let’s do an example.
And doing:
1
m= 2
E 2 − c 2 p x2 − c 2 p 2y − c 2 p z2
c
1
= 2 9662.89 − 1470.58 − 115.88 − 72.09
c
= 89.5 GeV/c 2
One can do a 2D example, which basically is equivalent to setting θ = 90°.
140
We need to remember 2D polar coordinates. Given a specific momentum and azimuthal angle (p,
φ ) (and assuming the particle is massless), we can write:
p x = p cos φ
p y = p sin φ
E = pc
So let’s do an example.
1
m= 2
E 2 − c 2 p x2 − c 2 p y2
c
1
= 2 10733.01 − 215.74 − 2177.32
c
= 91.3 GeV/c 2
141
Z Boson Mass Reconstruction for DØ Events
Student 3D-Version 1
Mass: Mass:
1 1
Event #1 µ1 µ2 Event #2 µ1 µ2
ϕ 108° 336° ϕ 70° 315°
θ 54° 107° θ 40° 80°
P 42.3 GeV 56.0 GeV P 70.1 GeV 53.6 GeV
Mass: Mass:
1 1
2 2
Event #3 µ1 µ2 Event #4 µ1 µ2
ϕ 78° 249° ϕ 103° 296°
θ 42° 137° θ 78° 112°
P 33.3 GeV 56.5 GeV P 31.6 GeV 65.3 GeV
142
Z Boson Mass Reconstruction for DØ Events
Student 3D-Version 2
Mass: Mass:
y y
1 1
x x
2 2
Event #1 µ1 µ2 Event #2 µ1 µ2
ϕ ϕ
θ 77° 64° θ 55° 88°
P 54.8 GeV 52.01 GeV P 62.8 GeV 50.08 GeV
Mass: y
y 1 Mass:
1
x x
2 2
Event #3 µ1 µ2 Event #4 µ1 µ2
ϕ ϕ
θ 60° 99° θ 74° 76°
P 37.9 GeV 51.53 GeV P 41.55 GeV 56.4 GeV
143
Z Boson Mass Reconstruction for DØ Events
Student 3D-Version 3
Mass: 87.3
Mass: 90.9 GeV
GeV
1 1
Event #1 µ1 µ2 Event #2 µ1 µ2
ϕ 108° 336° ϕ 70° 315°
θ 74° 34° θ 69° 98°
P 48.49 GeV P 38.6 GeV
2 2
Event #3 µ1 µ2 Event #4 µ1 µ2
ϕ 78° 249° ϕ 103° 296°
θ 84° 64° θ 47° 104°
P 31 GeV P 37.06 GeV
144
Z Boson Mass Reconstruction for DØ Events
Student 2D-Version 1
Mass: Mass:
1 1
Event #1 µ1 µ2 Event #2 µ1 µ2
ϕ 108° 336° ϕ 70° 315°
P 65.4 GeV 38.2 GeV P 52.3GeV 56.7 GeV
Mass:
Mass:
1 1
2 2
Event #3 µ1 µ2 Event #4 µ1 µ2
ϕ 78° 249° ϕ 103° 296°
P 47.6 GeV 44.3 GeV P 48.3 GeV 42.3 GeV
145
Z Boson Mass Reconstruction for DØ Events
Student 2D-Version 2
Mass: Mass:
y y
1 1
x x
2 2
Event #1 µ1 µ2 Event #2 µ1 µ2
ϕ ϕ
P 51.9 GeV 48.7 GeV P 56.7 GeV 53.6 GeV
y
y Mass: Mass:
1 1
x x
2 2
Event #3 µ1 µ2 Event #4 µ1 µ2
ϕ ϕ
P 45.6 GeV 45.3 GeV P 47.2 GeV 42.3 GeV
146
Z Boson Mass Reconstruction for DØ Events
Student 2D-Version 3
1 1
Event #1 µ1 µ2 Event #2 µ1 µ2
ϕ 108° 336° ϕ 70° 315°
P 48.49 GeV P 38.6 GeV
2 2
Event #3 µ1 µ2 Event #4 µ1 µ2
ϕ 78° 249° ϕ 103° 296°
P 31 GeV P 37.06 GeV
147
3D
Version 1
Problem Mass φ1 θ1 p1 φ2 θ2 p2
1 89.5 108 54 42.30 336 107 56.00
2 92.3 70 40 70.10 315 80 53.60
3 86.6 78 42 33.30 249 137 56.50
4 90.0 103 78 31.60 296 112 65.30
Version 2
Problem Mass φ1 θ1 p1 φ2 θ2 p2
1 92.1 108 77 54.80 336 64 52.01
2 91.3 70 55 62.80 315 88 50.08
3 86.7 78 60 37.90 249 99 51.53
4 92.9 103 74 41.55 296 76 56.40
Version 3
Problem Mass φ1 θ1 p1 φ2 θ2 p2
1 90.9 108 74 75.30 336 34 48.49
2 87.3 70 69 38.60 315 98 68.61
3 92.2 78 84 31.00 249 64 74.60
4 86.2 103 47 54.00 296 104 37.06
148
2D
Version 1
Problem Mass φ1 p1 φ2 p2
1 91.3 108 65.40 336 38.20
2 91.9 70 52.30 315 56.70
3 91.6 78 47.60 249 44.30
4 89.8 103 48.30 296 42.30
Version 2
Problem Mass φ1 p1 φ2 p2
1 91.9 108 51.90 336 48.70
2 93.0 70 56.70 315 53.60
3 90.6 78 45.60 249 45.30
4 88.8 103 47.20 296 42.30
Version 3
Problem Mass φ1 p1 φ2 p2
1 90.7 108 50.80 336 48.49
2 88.6 70 38.60 315 71.50
3 91.1 78 31.00 249 67.30
4 90.8 103 56.30 296 37.06
149
150
Particle Test
1. Which combination of quarks is invalid?
a.) d d c.) u u d
_ ___
b.) d u d.) u d d
a.) mesons
d.) answers a and b
b.) baryons
e.) answers b and c
c.) leptons
4. What are the charge number, baryon number and strangeness of a usd (Λο) particle?
a.) Q = 0, B = 0, S = 1 c.) Q = 1, B = 0, S = 0
b.) Q = 0, B = 1, S = -1 d.) Q = 1, B = 1, S = -1
151
7. J. J. Thompson applied a net force of zero on the cathode rays by applying both an
electric and a magnetic field. As a result, Thompson measured the _______ of the
cathode rays.
8. Fermilab accelerates_________.
9. Determine the direction of the magnetic field required to cause the proton beam to move
counterclockwise in a circular path as shown.
10. Three particles have identical charges and speeds. They enter a constant magnetic field
and follow the paths shown in the picture. Which particle is the most massive?
152
___ _
11. A proton (u u d) and an antiproton (u u d) collide and a u and a u annihilate to create a
_ _ _ _
total of eight quarks (u u d d d d s s). What three particles form?
__
a.) Σ− Λο π−
c.) Λο π+ p
b.) Κ π p
+ +
13. At what fraction of the speed of light are the protons moving along Fermilab’s 1-km
radius collider if its magnetic field directing the beam is 0.003 T?
14. Name two particles or particle characteristics for which Fermilab is currently searching.
15. Fermilab’s accelerator is currently operational and its particles move through the
following sequence so as to collide with various targets:
17. CDF measures the __________ of particles using __________. DØ measures the
__________ of particles using __________.
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d.) energy / a silicon detector and a magnet / momentum / a calorimeter
a.) the initial velocity of the objects must equal the final velocity of the objects.
b.) the initial momenta of the objects is greater than the final momenta of the objects.
c.) the initial momenta of the objects is less than the final momenta of the objects.
d.) the initial momenta of the objects must equal the final momenta of the objects.
19. A 0.5-kg puck moving with a speed of 3 m/s collides with a stationary 2-kg puck. After
the collision, the 2-kg puck moves off in the same direction as the 0.5-kg puck was
moving before the collision with a speed of 1 m/s. What is the final velocity of the 0.5-kg
puck?
A p+ and a πo were created from the decay of an unknown particle. Using this
information and the questions below, identify the unknown particle.
20. What was the energy of that unknown particle if the p+ has an energy of 0.973 GeV and
the πo has an energy of 0.325 GeV?
21. What was the momentum of the unknown particle that decayed if the p+ has a momentum
of 0.257 GeV/c and initially travels at an angle of 21.5 degrees and the πo has a
momentum of 0.295 GeV/c and initially travels at an angle of –18.7 degrees?
22. Using your results from questions 20 and 21, compute the rest mass and identify the
particle that decayed.
154
Particle Test Name:
1) ______ 8) ______
2) ______ 9) ______
7) ______
14) ____________________________________________________
155
Particle Test Answer Key
1) A 8) B
2) E 9) A
3) E
10) B
4) B
11) A
5) B
12) C
6) B
13) A
7) C
15) C 19) C
16) A 20) C
17) C 21) A
156
Conceptual Particle Physics Test
Directions: For problems #1-11, choose the best match for each definition. For #12-15, fill in the
correct terms for the chart using the choices below. (1 pt. each.)
10. This type of particle has two quarks. (1 quark & 1 antiquark)
Matter
(12) (13)
(14) (15)
157
16. What are the three particles that make up an atom? (3 pts.)
18. What did Rutherford discover? Explain how he made this discovery. (Explain his lab.) (4
pts.)
19. What element is produced when a gold nucleus gains a proton? (1 pt.) ____________
20. How many protons are there in the nucleus of 82Sr? How many neutrons? How many
electrons are there in the neutral atom? (3 pt.) 38
BONUS
158
Conceptual Particle Physics Test – Answer Key
Directions: For problems #1-11, choose the best match for each definition. For #12-15, fill in the
correct terms for the chart using the choices below. (1 pt. each.)
A 14. This describes the number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus.
J 21. This type of particle has two quarks. (1 quark & 1 antiquark)
Matter
(12) (13)
(14) (15)
159
16. What are the three particles that make up an atom? (3pts.)
18. What did Rutherford discover? Explain how he made this discovery. (Explain his lab.)
(4pts)
He discovered the positive nucleus. He shot alpha particles at the gold nucleus and
they came back!
19. What element is produced when a gold nucleus gains a proton? (1 pt.) Hg - Mercury
20. How many protons are there in the nucleus of 82Sr? How many neutrons? How many
electrons are there in the neutral atom? (3 pt.) 38
21. What holds the nucleons in a nucleus together? (1 pt.) Strong force (or gluons)
Top Up Charm
BONUS
160
Up (u) Down (d)
Matter Matter
Quark Quark
Charge = +2/3 Charge = -1/3
Mass = 5 MeV/c 2 Mass = 8 MeV/c 2
Charm (c) Strange (s)
Matter Matter
Quark Quark
Charge = +2/3 Charge = -1/3
Mass = 1500 MeV/c 2 Mass =160 MeV/c 2
Top (t) Bottom (b)
Matter Matter
Quark Quark
Charge = +2/3 Charge = -1/3
Mass = 180,000 MeV/c 2 Mass = 4250 MeV/c 2
Antiup ( u ) Antidown ( d )
Antimatter Antimatter
Quark Quark
Charge = -2/3 Charge = +1/3
Mass = 5 MeV/c 2 Mass = 8 MeV/c 2
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Anticharm ( c ) Antistrange ( s )
Antimatter Antimatter
Quark Quark
Charge = -2/3 Charge = +1/3
Mass = 1500 MeV/c 2 Mass = 160 MeV/c 2
Antitop ( t ) Antibottom ( b )
Antimatter Antimatter
Quark Quark
Charge = -2/3 Charge = +1/3
Mass = 180,000 MeV/c 2 Mass = 4250 MeV/c 2
Electron (e) Electron neutrino ( e)
Matter Matter
Lepton Lepton
Charge = -1 Charge = 0
Mass = 0.511 MeV/c 2 Mass = ~0 MeV/c 2
Muon ( µ) Muon neutrino ( µ)
Matter Matter
Lepton Lepton
Charge = -1 Charge = 0
Mass = 105.7 MeV/c 2 Mass = ~0 MeV/c 2
162
Tau ( ) Tau neutrino ( )
Matter Matter
Lepton Lepton
Charge = -1 Charge = 0
Mass = 1777 MeV/c 2 Mass = <70 MeV/c 2
Positron (e +) Electron antineutrino
Antimatter ( e+)
Lepton Antimatter
Charge = +1 Lepton
Mass = 0.511 MeV/c 2 Charge = 0
Mass = ~0 MeV/c 2
Antimuon ( µ ) Muon antineutrino
Antimatter ( µ)
Lepton Antimatter
Charge = +1 Lepton
Mass = 105.7 MeV/c 2 Charge = 0
Mass = ~0 MeV/c 2
Antitau ( ) Tau antineutrino
Antimatter ( )
Lepton Antimatter
Charge = +1 Lepton
Mass = 1777 MeV/c 2 Charge = 0
Mass = ~0 MeV/c 2
163
Gluon W+
Gauge boson Gauge boson
Force carrier: Force carrier:
Strong force Weak force
Charge = 0 Charge = +1
Mass = 0 MeV/c2 Mass = 81,000 MeV/c2
W- Z0
Gauge boson Gauge boson
Force carrier: Force carrier:
Weak force Weak force
Charge = -1 Charge = 0
Mass = 81,000 MeV/c2 Mass = 93,000 MeV/c2
Photon Graviton
Gauge boson Gauge boson
Force carrier: Force carrier:
Electromagnetic force Gravitational force
Charge = 0 Charge = 0
Mass = 0 MeV/c2 Mass = 0 MeV/c2
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Standard Model Mixer
Some instructions regarding this “mixer”
1. It can be done whenever in the year. Perhaps this is a good introduction to a particle physics
unit.
2. No prerequisite standard model knowledge is required.
3. This is a good critical thinking activity. That is, students need to classify, organize, sort,
compare/contrast, etc.
4. Here is the general flow of thinking:
--“Am I matter, antimatter or a gauge boson?”
--“OK, now am I a quark, lepton, or a force carrier?”
--“What is my net charge?”
--“Finally, what is my rest mass?”
5. Students should be able to organize into the following hierarchy (with some guidance):
1. Matter
2. Quarks
3. +2/3 charge
4. Up
4. Charm
4. Top
3. -1/3 charge
4. Down
4. Strange
4. Bottom
2. Leptons
3. –1 charge
4. Electron
4. Muon
4. Tau
3. Zero charge
4. Electron neutrino
4. Muon neutrino
4. Tau neutrino
1. Antimatter
2. Antiquarks
3. +2/3 charge
4. Antiup
4. Anticharm
4. Antitop
3. -1/3 charge
4. Antidown
4. Antistrange
4. Antibottom
2. Leptons
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3. –1 charge
4. Positron
4. Antimuon
4. Antitau
3. Zero charge
4. Electron antineutrino
4. Muon antineutrino
4. Tau antineutrino
1. Gauge bosons
2. Force carriers
3. Strong
4. Gluon
3. Weak
4. W+
4. W-
4. Zo
3. Electromagnetism
4. Photon
3. Gravity
4. Graviton
6. NOTE: The numbering on this hierarchy is from Project CRISS (Creating Independence
through Student-Owned Strategies), third edition, Santa, Havens, and Valdes. This
numbering strategy is called “power thinking.” At first it looks weird, but it makes sense
after a short time.
7. The Standard Model used is from the Education Office publication, Topics in Modern
Physics, Teacher Resource Materials, First Revision, August 1996. It is found on page 2 of
this document.
8. The hierarchy suggested above is JUST A SUGGESTION. Students could organize
themselves in other logical ways as well. In fact, various standard model tables organize the
elements in physically different manners on the paper. This is unlike the Periodic
Table—where no matter who publishes it, the format is always uniform.
9. There are 30 “items” to categorize. This is sufficient for a larger class. Smaller classes could
eliminate some or all of the antiparticles.
166
Standard Model Review
1. Fill in the boxes with the correct terms.
Matter
2. List the four fundamental forces with the strongest on top down to the weakest. Then list the
force carrier particles for each.
Force Force Carrier Particles
a)
b)
c)
d)
3. List the six quarks (not antiquarks) and the six leptons (not antileptons).
Quarks Leptons
167
Standard Model Review – Answer Key
1. Fill in the boxes with the correct terms.
Matter
Hadrons Leptons
Baryons Mesons
2. List the four fundamental forces with the strongest on top down to the weakest. Then list the
force carrier particles for each.
Force Force Carrier Particles
a) Strong Gluon
b) Electromagnetic Photon
c) Weak W & Z bosons
d) Gravitational Graviton
3. List the six quarks (not antiquarks) and the six leptons (not antileptons).
Quarks Leptons
Up Electron
Down e- neutrino
Charm Muon
Strange µ neutrino
Top Tau
Bottom τ neutrino
7. What is the difference between hadrons and leptons? Hadrons participate in all four
force interactions and leptons
do not participate in the strong
force.
168
Analyzing Bubble Chamber Decays Lab
Goal: Find the mass of Λο using the equation E2 = m2+p2.
Note: Do not forget to draw the appropriate work on the graph clearly and neatly.
Procedure:
1. Draw two chords on the curve, bisect, and find the radius of the curve for each resulting
particle. Using this radius (R), and the knowledge that a charged particle (q) with a
known mass (m) is moving in a uniform magnetic field (B) at a given velocity (v), write a
relationship that will relate q, v , B, m, and R in the space below.
2. Given the above relationship and considering that we will ultimately need to find the
momentum (p), solve the above relationship for the momentum. (HINT: Think back to
the original formula for momentum and manipulate the above to solve for momentum.)
Write your answer below.
3. You should be able to see that R is proportional to p; this means that if you know R you
“know” p.
pπ-: ____________________
169
5. Now draw the p vectors of p+ and π - before they curved. With these vectors you can now
get the angle at which they are traveling in.
p+
Λo
π-
6. Draw these to scale recalling that R~p so the radius value is the magnitude of the
momentum vectors of p+ and π+ . Add these two vectors to get the resultant, which will be
the initial p of Λο. (Recall the idea of conservation!) Show your work below.
p+
π-
Λo
170
7. Now we can move on to the masses of these particles. I have listed them here for you.
8. Now that you know the masses and the momenta, find the energy with the formula given
in the goal. Show your work below.
9. Using the idea of the conservation of energy, find the energy of the Λo. Remember to
relate the energy before the decay to the energy after the decay. Show your work below.
EΛο : _______________________
10. Now we can finally move on to solving for the mass of Λο because we now know the
energy and the momentum of Λο. Show your work below:
MassΛ: _________________________
171
172
Analyzing Bubble Chamber Decays Lab – Teacher’s Key
Goal: Find the mass of Λο using the equation E2 = m2+p2.
Note: Do not forget to draw the appropriate work on the graph clearly and neatly.
Procedure:
1. Draw two chords on the curve, bisect, and find the radius of the curve for each resulting
particle. Using this radius (R), and the knowledge that a charged particle (q) with a
known mass (m) is moving in a uniform magnetic field (B) at a given velocity (v), write a
relationship that will relate q, v , B, m, and R in the space below.
FB=Fcentr.
q v B = m v2
R
qB=mv
R
2. Given the above relationship and considering that we will ultimately need to find the
momentum (p), solve the above relationship for the momentum. (HINT: Think back to
the original formula for momentum and manipulate the above to solve for momentum.)
Write your answer below.
qB=mv
R
qBR=mv
qBR=p
3. You should be able to see that R is proportional to p; this means that if you know R you
“know” p.
pπ-: 0.214
173
5. Now draw the p vectors of p+ and π - before they curved. With these vectors you can now
get the angle at which they are traveling in.
p+
Λo
π-
6. Draw these to scale recalling that R~p so the radius value is the magnitude of the
momentum vectors of p+ and π+ . Add these two vectors to get the resultant, which will be
the initial p of Λο. (Recall the idea of conservation!) Show your work below.
p+
π-
Λo
174
7. Now we can move on to the masses of these particles. I have listed them here for you.
8. Now that you know the masses and the momenta, find the energy with the formula given
in the goal. Show your work below.
9. Using the idea of the conservation of energy, find the energy of the Λo. Remember to
relate the energy before the decay to the energy after the decay. Show your work below.
10. Now we can finally move on to solving for the mass of Λο because we now know the
energy and the momentum of Λο. Show your work below:
175
176
Sloan Digital Sky Survey SkyServer Project
http://skyserver.sdss.org/dr1/en/
I. Brief Description
A. Designed for Honors to Advanced Placement level student
B. For AP course, project completed following the AP exam
C. For honors course, project completed following “Astronomy” unit:
1. Kepler’s Laws
2. Universal Gravitation
3. Einstein’s General Relativity
4. SDSS SkyServer Project (new component of the Astronomy unit)
A complete unit outline of the AP Physics/Astronomy unit, in its current form, can be found on
the following two pages. The Honors Physics outline would be similar, but would also include
general relativity. Note that no additional astronomy and/or astrophysics content would
necessarily follow the SkyServer activities. SkyServer activities would act as a culminating event
for the unit, and can easily be appended to the existing unit.
This instructor has found that some students are left “wanting more” following a study of
Kepler’s Law’s, universal gravitation, and the physical systems governed by these laws.
SkyServer activities satisfy this niche, offering students an opportunity to explore asteroids, star
makeup, galaxies, as well as other astrophysics topics. Additionally, the process is structured
such that students must apply the scientific method as they face sometimes difficult
categorization, data organization, and data analysis tasks.
177
Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation
and Kepler’s Laws of Planetary Motion
(Chapter 7b)
I. Teacher’s Notes:
These two topics fall under the larger topic we’ve been working through recently, which is
Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM). Just like an oscillating pendulum, a mass oscillating on the end
of a spring, or an object moving in a circle, planets orbiting the sun or satellites orbiting the
Earth have a measurable period of oscillation. This group of topics together make up a sizable 6
percent of the AP exam, so work to become comfortable with these ideas.
178
2. Geosynchronous orbit example (w/globe, also address home dishes)
3. Other examples using EASY units such as AUs and YEARS
F. Problem Set #2, Chapter 7, pages 202-207
1. CQ: 13 (Sketch & explain how sketch shows this.)
2. P: 43, 50, 71
3. wkst circled problems
G. Black hole space race
179
II. Intended Activities and Approximate Timeline
A. Introduce project to students (< 1 period).
1. Teacher introduces SkyServer website.
2. Teacher shows students (via projection) the types of projects available.
3. While quickly advancing through possible projects, teacher identifies physics already
studied including: spectral lines, stars, galaxies, rotations, Doppler shift, etc.
4. Explain final product to students:
a. Work in groups of two.
b. Select project topic:
1. Looking for project on the order of 4-5 hours of “estimated time” to complete.
2. Show students how they can find estimated time by looking to the teacher
information.
B. Show students suggestions for shortening longer projects to the 4-5 hour time
frame, also found within teacher information.
5. Students form groups of two.
B. Explain expectations for student product (< 1 period).
1. Students will document all work in a scientific lab book. Lab book entries will
include:
a. Notes from introductory materials.
b. Work from all exercises completed in lab book including:
1. Data tables
2. Sketches
3. Calculations
4. All questions from project written in lab book
5. Student responses to each question
6. Printouts of all Excel spreadsheets and graphs glued into lab book
c. List of items still confusing to student following completion of activity.
2. Grading rubric: See Section III.
C. Student groups work in computer lab to complete project (~3-4 periods).
D. Groups prepare to share ONE interesting item from their project (< 1 period).
E. Groups share their item with the class (~1 period).
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III. Grading Rubric
Sketches _____ / 5
5 Clear, add to understanding of project
2 Hastily done appearance
0 None
Calculations _____ / 5
5 Equations written, appropriate amount of algebra shown
3 Shown work leaves reader somewhat unclear
0 Calculations absent
181
All questions from project written in lab book _____ / 8
8 Yes
0 No
Printouts of all Excel spreadsheets and graphs from project glued into lab book _____ / 5
5 All present, follow appropriate scientific style, few errors (axes & columns labeled,
BEST FITS present)
3 All present; errors in scientific style detract from overall quality.
0 Required tables and/or plots missing
Presentation to class:
Scope _____ / 5
5 Appropriate for ~5-minute time frame
3 Too short or too long
0 Little, if any, preparation evident
Quality _____ / 5
5 Component of project presented became clear to audience. Projection/other AV items
used offered clear/organized/relevant information.
3 Some problems/lack of smoothness in utilization of AV
0 Little, if anything, shown to class
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What the Fermilab Website Has to Offer for
Particle Physics Activities
If you go to the Education Office link from Fermilab’s home page (ed.fnal.gov), you’ll find the
bold titles listed below on that page, giving you an easy way to find these activities. This
commentary focuses on resources that will help teach particle physics. There are some other
resources listed on this website that Fermilab offers yet are not addressed below.
QuarkNet
QuarkNet is a program that joins high school teachers with scientist mentors from across
the country at locations that offer research in high-energy physics. The goal is to make
high-energy physics more accessible to high school students. This is the home page for
QuarkNet. From this link you can find out more information about:
• Joining a QuarkNet program near you.
• Educators will find classroom activities you can use and a list of other online
resources.
• Students will find links to activities they can use and webcasts to watch.
LInC Online
This link describes the Fermilab Leadership Institute Integrating Internet, Instruction, and
Curriculum. “The new Fermilab LInC ACT course facilitates teachers through the
process of evaluating, selecting and customizing an inquiry-based online project to teach
content in their existing curriculum. Then participants exchange ideas and feedback with
colleagues and experienced engaged learning mentors each step of the way as they field-
test their project with students.”
Teacher Workshops
This links you to a calendar of workshops for teachers of varying grades.
183
periodicals and newsletters. The collection also includes reports on science and
mathematics education, standards, assessment, equity and other topics. Visitors also have
access to Internet resources. TRC services include professional development workshops,
consultation assistance available upon request, a periodical holding list, bibliographies
and telephone reference. A U.S. Department of Education Eisenhower National
Clearinghouse Demonstration Site is located in the TRC. . . . Staff is available to assist
science, mathematics and technology educators with curriculum and instruction issues.”
Physics Data
Investigate Special Relativity
“This Website provides resources for secondary and post-secondary teachers of physical
science. These resources include data reduction projects and particle physics data files.
The data reduction projects guide student investigation of a dataset to a particular end
result. The data files are written in a format that allows for rapid Web file transfer and
ease of import into commonly available applications such as Microsoft Excel. Students
download and reduce these data in an open-ended environment in which they investigate
their own questions. The first of these resources is a data reduction project that guides
students to an understanding of special relativity.” (Description taken from Fermilab
website)
184
Fermilabyrinth
This is a computer game that offers the student the opportunity to learn about
accelerators, tracking particles and identifying particles. They play the game to earn
Einstein bucks. You could have them turn in the bucks for credit for the day’s work. The
computer game is self-sufficient.
Educators
This section of the website holds a wealth of information for educators. You can find
information about workshop schedules, school physics presentations, the Teacher
Resource Center and the Lederman Science Center. This section also includes the
following topics that have many subcategories with more information: (1) Field Trips,
Study Units & Workshops, (2) Web-based Classroom Projects, (3) Fermilab Physics
Resources, (4) Fermilab Prairie Resources, (5) Special Programs, (6) URL Lists, and (7)
Interesting Publications.
Outlined below are some of the specifics under the category of “Fermilab Physics
Resources.” While the other categories hold much information that may be useful, some
of it is outlined already in this paper, and others are not directly related to the study of
particle physics.
Accelerator Kiosk
“The video for this project was developed for the Accelerator Kiosk exhibit at the
Lederman Science Center.” You may request a DVD or play it at this link in real video.
Anatomy of a Detector
“Joe Boudreau, a physicist in the CDF collaboration, uses a virtual reality tool to show
the different parts of the detector and how they are used to display the debris from a
collision.”
185
Fermilab’s Accelerators
This is a short video that goes through the path the particle takes through the detector. It
also has links to other pages to learn more about each aspect of the run.
Fermilab Stories
This is a link to a series of streaming videos describing a variety of aspects of Fermilab.
Topics include “Work Ethic,” “The Early Years,” “Hardware and Solutions,” and
“Outreach.”
Inquiring Minds
There are links to more information on the science behind Fermilab. It includes the
following with descriptions taken directly from the website:
• The Science of Matter, Space and Time - An introduction to elementary
particles and forces in our universe.
• Physics at Fermilab - Particle physics at the energy frontier.
• Questions about Physics - Physics questions from real people and physics
answers from Fermilab scientists.
• Other High-Energy Physics Sites - Links to physics labs around the world.
• More About Particle Physics - A glossary and other online resources for those
who would like to know more.
• Library - Information is given about Fermilab’s onsite library.
• Visual Media Services - A link to Fermilab’s visual media services and its
resources.
• Particles Matter—Physics at High Energy - An interactive timeline illustrating
the history of high-energy physics.
• Accelerator Science in Action - A website of Fermilab's "Pulse" exhibit.
Research at Fermilab
This link offers an overview of the research going on at Fermilab and links to each home
page of particular groups. It is a wealth of information of details about every aspect of
research at the facility.
Pulse
This is an online exhibit explaining accelerator science in medicine.
186
Interactive Timeline
This interactive timeline describes high-energy particle physics over the past century.
1996 Revised Topics in Modern Physics Resource Book including Three-Day and Five-Day High
School Physics Lesson Plans
This link takes you to a sample of the TMP Resource Book and the two units that can be
downloaded for your use. It is important to note that this book can be ordered at no cost
to you at Fermilab.
Students
This would be the place to send your students to do more research on what is happening
here at Fermilab. Included are student-friendly resources such as videos, articles, and
online activities. It is divided into two sections, one for students K-12 and the other for
post-secondary students.
Programs
This is a search engine to help you locate particular programs on this website. You
simply check the appropriate descriptions for subject, audience and level and you will be
directed to the findings.
Calendar
Here you will find the calendar of events for educational opportunities offered at
Fermilab.
Visitors
This link will give visitors information about visiting Fermilab.
187
188
Applets & Other Web Resources
Electron:
Millikan’s oil-drop experiment:
http://www68.pair.com/willisb/millikan/experiment.html
Nucleus/protons:
Rutherford scattering:
History (good initial reading):
http://www.physlink.com/Education/AskExperts/ae46.cfm
http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/252/Rutherford_Scattering/Rutherford_Scattering.html
Applet:
http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/109N/more_stuff/Applets/rutherford/rutherford.html
Miscellaneous:
Simple and elegant Kepler’s law/elliptical orbit applet:
http://home.att.ne.jp/gold/kamikawa/physics/motion/motion_e.htm
Excellent clip showing powers of 10. Start way outside of the Milky Way and end up near a
proton in Florida!
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopticsu/powersof10/
Nice applet of a light clock; you alter the velocity (up to 0.8c). Simple, but shows length
contraction rather well.
http://webphysics.davidson.edu/Applets/TaiwanUniv/relativity/relativity.html
189
190
Web, Magazine, Book Resources for Particle Physics Unit
Bubble Chambers
http://teachers.web.cern.ch/teachers/archiv/HST2000/teaching/resource/bubble/bubble.htm
http://quarknet.fnal.gov/run2/boudreau.shtml
http://www.fnal.gov/pub/about/tour/index.html
http://www-visualmedia.fnal.gov/VMS_Site_2/gallery/photography.shtml
CERN Centric
http://info.web.cern.ch/Press/PhotoDatabase/welcome.html
http://www.interactions.org/imagebank/
http://www.particleadventure.org
good source of background information and quiz information
http://www-bd.fnal.gov/public/index.html
“How big is an electron volt?” is particularly good.
There are also some good descriptions of the basics of Fermilab’s accelerators and
accelerators in general.
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/quarknet/links.html
http://www-ed.fnal.gov/projects/exhibits/searching/
http://microcosm.web.cern.ch/Microcosm/RF_cavity/ex.html
Encyclopedia
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/P/Pa/Particle_detector.htm
191
A Game for Building a Detector
http://ed.fnal.gov/projects/labyrinth/games/ghostbustin/index.html?name=
more specific
http://ed.fnal.gov/projects/labyrinth/games/ghostbustin/calorimeter/activity.html?name=
Accelerator Games
http://ed.fnal.gov/projects/labyrinth/teachers/game_descript/game_descript.html
http://quarknet.fnal.gov/toolkits/ati/accelerators.html
• “The Gauss Rifle & Magnetic Energy” by James A. Rabchuck, The Physics Teacher,
Volume 41, March 2003, pp. 158-160.
• “Energy and Momentum in the Gauss Accelerator” by David Kagan, The Physics Teacher,
Volume 42, January 2004, pp. 24-26.
• Articles:
o http://scitation.aip.org/journals/doc/PHTEAH-ft/vol_41/iss_3/158_1.html
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Scientific American Articles
Books:
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The Cloud Chamber: In the Nobel Prize and in the Classroom
The cloud chamber is a device that allows one to see tracks left by electrically charged particles
(ions) as they pass through suitably prepared air. The instrument has been important in the
history of particle physics. At least four Noble prizes have been awarded for work based on use
of cloud chambers in particle physics.
The 1927 Nobel Prize was split between C. T. R. Wilson for his invention of the Wilson cloud
chamber and A. H. Compton for his discovery of the Compton Effect. The website
http://nobelprize.org/physics/ (laureate/1927) is a good place to start an investigation of the cloud
chamber. In particular, the selection of Wilson’s Nobel Lecture entitled “On the Cloud Method
of Making Visible Ions and the Track of Ionizing Particles” is quite good. This is a 264kb file in
*.pdf format. (The overall format of the Nobel Prize website is a biography of the laureate, her or
his Nobel Lecture and also the Banquet Speech.)
The 1936 Nobel Prize was split between Victor Hess, for his discovery of naturally occurring
radiation called cosmic rays, and Carl Anderson, for his discovery of the positron, the anti-
electron. Hess did not use the cloud chamber for his discovery, but in his lecture he does refer to
the use to which cloud chambers were put to further study cosmic rays. Anderson used the cloud
chamber to observe the positron in cosmic rays. Again, the information from the site,
http://nobelprize.org/physics/ (laureates/1936), should be consulted.
P. M. S. Blackett was awarded the 1948 Physics Prize “for his development of the Wilson cloud
chamber method, and his discoveries therewith in the fields of nuclear physics and cosmic
radiation." His Nobel lecture is entitled “Cloud Chamber Researches in Nuclear Physics and
Cosmic Rays.” Use http://nobelprize.org/physics/ (laureates/1948) for further information.
The cloud chamber was augmented and superseded by numerous particle-detecting devices. In
particular, the bubble chamber has produced many compelling visual presentations of interesting
collisions in the history of particle physics. But the cloud chamber was first by a long shot, and a
version the cloud chamber can be purchased and used in the classroom!
Cloud chambers suitable for classroom use may also be purchased. One source is Sargent-Welch.
Their catalog item WL6892-A is called a Cloud Chamber Kit, listed for $61.35. A five-set kit is
$293.00. Dry ice and alcohol must be purchased separately. The dry ice needed for this may be
purchased at some ice cream shops. Alcohol from Walgreens, or whomever, has worked well for
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us. An alternate “radiation” source that many teachers have found to work well is the lantern
material for a Coleman-type lantern.
The well-prepared teacher should set up several demonstration chambers, as all may not produce
tracks. The teacher should also have a backup of pictures (Digital are cheap.) of tracks of
chambers from a time when the chamber was working very well. A backup video of a well-
functioning chamber is also a good item to have available for review purposes.
Another good source for information on cloud chambers is a sister QuarkNet site,
http://www.physics.smu.edu/~olness/quarknet/info.html.
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Websites Explored at the Columbia-Nevis QuarkNet Workshop
October 16, 2004
http://ed.fnal.gov/samplers/hsphys/activities/top_quark_intro.html – The Top Quark Activity
from Fermilab
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Radioactivity Unit
Lesson Plans
Day 1:
Homework:
Complete lab report.
Day 2:
Homework:
Complete Half-life Practice worksheet and read pages 609-619 (Hewitt’s Conceptual
Physics).
Day 3:
Homework:
Complete the lab report and read pages 620-626 (Hewitt’s Conceptual Physics).
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Day 4:
Homework:
Practice Book page 141 and read pages 629-642 (Hewitt’s Conceptual Physics).
Day 5:
1. Question of the Day: What is the difference between fission and fusion?
2. Discuss fission and fusion.
3. As a class, do Practice Book page 145.
4. Review radioactivity.
5. As a class, do Review Questions and Think and Explain Questions on pages 626-628
(Hewitt’s Conceptual Physics).
Homework:
Study for tomorrow’s quiz.
Day 6:
Quiz
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End of the Year – Particle Physics Unit
This seven-day unit (*with optional extra lab for day eight) is designed to introduce students to
particle physics. Students will learn about today’s Standard Model and how scientists investigate
these particles through detectors. The material in this unit is designed for either a conceptual
physics class with little math or a higher-level physics class. There are some activities that are
appropriate for all students, but other activities have been written specifically for one class or the
other. These specific activities are clearly labeled.
Pre-electron
Discuss the electron before 1885.
*Review Thompson’s e/m experiment.
Homework:
Advanced Physics: The Electron worksheet
Conceptual Physics: The History of the Electron worksheet
Teacher Resources:
1. Notes on the Electron PowerPoint Presentation (Word file)
2. The Electron worksheet (Student copy and answers)
3. The History of the Electron worksheet (Student copy)
4. Electron PowerPoint presentation and a Word file containing notes about the presentation
Today’s activity will focus on introducing the Standard Model to the students. Instead of simply
presenting the Standard Model, we have created activities for your class to learn about it through
an investigation. We have two options for you. One focuses on classification and organization.
This mixer gives details about particles, and students are to classify and organize the information
into a suitable form. The second activity concentrates on how quarks combine. For this activity
you may want to briefly introduce some aspects of the Standard Model (i.e., there are particles
found in nature known as quarks, etc.).
OPTION #1
Standard Model Mixer - focus on organizing & classification
OPTION #2
The Quark Zoo – focus on how quarks combine
Homework:
Textbook reading or web article on the Standard Model
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Teacher Resources:
1. Standard Model Mixer
2. The Quark Zoo
3. List of Web resources to find an appropriate article
Teacher’s Resources:
1. Particle Zoo PowerPoint presentation
2. Standard Model worksheet (student copy and answers)
Homework:
Advanced Physics: Particle accelerator problems worksheet
Conceptual Physics: Web article to read
Teacher’s Resources:
1. Accelerator PowerPoint presentation
2. Instructions to make the “ruler” accelerometer…see the list of web resources to find
articles and other info that show you how to make and use it.
3. Accelerometer worksheet
Homework:
Review the Conservation of Momentum worksheet.
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Teacher’s Resources:
1. Anatomy of a Detector (CDF detector overview):
http://quarknet.fnal.gov/run2/boudreau.shtml
2. Conservation of Momentum worksheet
3. Results of web search about cloud chambers
Teacher’s Resources:
1. Conservation of Momentum Lab
Homework:
Study for test.
Teacher’s Resources:
1. Z Boson Mass Reconstruction Activity
Teacher’s Resources:
1. Particle Physics Test
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