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Copyright (c) 1999-2008 by B. Crowell and V. Roundy. This lab manual is subject to the Open Publication
License on page 178. If you do not agree to the license, then you do not have permission to copy the
manual. The lab manual is available for downloading from www.lightandmatter.com, and a copy of the
Open Publication License is also available at opencontent.org.

Contents
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Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . .
Kinematics . . . . . . . . . . . .
Free Fall . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Earths Gravitational Field . . . .
Newtons Second Law . . . . . . . .
Air Friction . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vector Addition of Forces . . . . . . .
Acceleration In Two Dimensions . . . .
Conservation Laws . . . . . . . . .
Conservation of Energy . . . . . . .
Conservation of Momentum . . . . . .
Torque . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Absolute Zero . . . . . . . . . . .
The Clement-Desormes Experiment . . .
The Pendulum . . . . . . . . . . .
Resonance . . . . . . . . . . . .
Resonance (short version for physics 222) .
Standing Waves . . . . . . . . . .
Resonances of Sound . . . . . . . .
Static Electricity . . . . . . . . . .
The Oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . .
The Speed of Sound . . . . . . . . .
Electrical Resistance . . . . . . . .
The Loop and Junction Rules . . . . .
Electric Fields . . . . . . . . . . .
Magnetism (Physics 206/211) . . . . .
The Dipole Field (Physics 222) . . . . .
The Earths Magnetic Field (Physics 222) .
Relativity . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Charge to Mass Ratio of the Electron.
Energy in Fields . . . . . . . . . .
RC Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . .
LRC Circuits . . . . . . . . . . .
Faradays Law . . . . . . . . . . .
Electromagnetism . . . . . . . . .
Impedance . . . . . . . . . . . .
Refraction and Images . . . . . . . .
Geometric Optics . . . . . . . . . .
Two-Source Interference . . . . . . .
Wave Optics . . . . . . . . . . .
Polarization . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Photoelectric Effect . . . . . . .
Electron Diffraction . . . . . . . . .
The Hydrogen Atom . . . . . . . .
The Michelson Interferometer . . . . .
Appendix 1: Format of Lab Writeups . .
Appendix 2: Basic Error Analysis . . . .
Appendix 3: Propagation of Errors . . .

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Contents

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166

Appendix
Appendix
Appendix
Appendix
Appendix
Appendix
Appendix

4: Graphing . . . . . . . . .
5: Finding Power Laws from Data .
6: Using the Photogate . . . . .
7: Using a Multimeter . . . . .
8: High Voltage Safety Checklist .
9: Laser Safety Checklist . . . .
10: The Open Publication License .

Contents

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168
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180

Contents

Interactions

Apparatus

ball being pushed outlines two relationships involving four objects:

single neodymium magnet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group


triple neodymium magnet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
compass
triple-arm balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
clamp and 50-cm vertical rod for holding balance up
string
tape
scissors
heavy-duty spring scales
rubber stoppers

(1) The earths role is not interchangeable with that


of the rock. The earth functions only as a place
where the rock tends to go, while the rock is an
object that moves from one place to another.

Goal
Form hypotheses about interactions and test them.

Introduction
Why does a rock fall if you drop it? The ancient
Greek philosopher Aristotle theorized that it was because the rock was trying to get to its natural place,
in contact with the earth. Why does a ball roll if you
push it? Aristotle would say that only living things
have the ability to move of their own volition, so the
ball can only move if you give motion to it. Aristotles explanations were accepted by Arabs and Europeans for two thousand years, but beginning in the
Renaissance, his ideas began to be modified drastically. Today, Aristotelian physics is discussed mainly
by physics teachers, who often find that their students intuitively believe the Aristotelian world-view
and strongly resist the completely different version
of physics that is now considered correct. It is not
uncommon for a student to begin a physics exam
and then pause to ask the instructor, Do you want
us to answer these questions the way you told us was
true, or the way we really think it works? The idea
of this lab is to make observations of objects, mostly
magnets, pushing and pulling on each other, and to
figure out some of the corrections that need to be
made to Aristotelian physics.
Some people might say that its just a matter of
definitions or semantics whether Aristotle is correct
or not. Is Aristotles theory even testable? One
testable feature of the theory is its asymmetry. The
Aristotelian description of the rock falling and the

According to Aristotle, there are asymmetries involved in both situations.

Lab 1

Interactions

(2) The hands role is not analogous to the balls.


The hand is capable of motion all by itself, but the
ball cant move without receiving the ability to move
from the hand.
If we do an experiment that shows these types of
asymmetries, then Aristotles theory is supported.
If we find a more symmetric situation, then theres
something wrong with Aristotles theory.

Observations
The following important rules serve to keep facts
separate from opinions and reduce the chances of
getting a garbled copy of the data:
(1) Take your raw data in pen, directly into your lab
notebook. This is what real scientists do. The point
is to make sure that what youre writing down is
a first-hand record, without mistakes introduced by
recopying it. (If you dont have your two lab notebooks yet, staple todays raw data into your notebook when you get it.)
(2) Everybody should record their own copy of the
raw data. Do not depend on a group secretary.
(3) If you do calculations during lab, keep them on
a separate page or draw a line down the page and
keep calculations on one side of the line and raw
data on the other. This is to distinguish facts from
inferences.
Because this is the first meeting of the lab class,
there is no prelab writeup due at the beginning of
the class. Instead, you will discuss your results with

your instructor at various points.


A Comparing magnets strengths
To make an interesting hypothesis about what will
happen in part C, the main event of the lab, youll
need to know how the top (single) and bottom (triple)
magnets strengths compare. It would seem logical
that the triple magnet would be three times stronger
than the single, but in this part of the lab youre going to find out for sure.

B Qualitative observations of the interaction of


two magnets
Play around with the two magnets and see how they
interact with each other. Can one attract the other?
Can one repel the other? Can they act on each other
simultaneously? Do they need to be touching in order to do anything to each other? Can A act on B
while at the same time B does not act on A at all?
Can A pull B toward itself at the same time that
B pushes A away? When holding one of the heavier
magnets, it may be difficult to feel when there is any
push or pull on it; you may wish to have one person
hold the magnet with her eyes closed while the other
person moves the other magnet closer and farther.
C Measurement of interactions between two magnets

Orient your magnet this way, as if its rolling toward the


compass from the north. With no magnet nearby, the
compass points to magnetic north (dashed arrow). The
magnet deflects the compass to a new direction.

One way of measuring the strength of a magnet is


to place the magnet to the north or south of the
compass and see how much it deflects (twists) the
needle of a compass. You need to test the magnets
at equal distances from the compass, which will produce two different angles.1 Its also important to get
everything oriented properly, as in the figure.2

Once you have your data from parts A and B, you


are ready to form a hypothesis about the following
situation. Suppose we set up two balances as shown
in the figure. The magnets are not touching. The
top magnet is hanging from a hook underneath the
pan, giving the same result as if it was on top of the
pan. Make sure it is hanging under the center of the
pan. You will want to make sure the magnets are
pulling on each other, not pushing each other away,
so that the top magnet will stay in one place.

Make sure to take your data with the magnets far


enough from the compass that the deflection angle
is fairly small (say 5 to 30 ). If the magnet is close
enough to the compass to deflect it by a large angle, then the ratio of the angles does not accurately
represent the ratio of the magnets strengths. After
all, just about any magnet is capable of deflecting
the compass in any direction if you bring it close
enough, but that doesnt mean that all magnets are
equally strong.

1 There are two reasons why it wouldnt make sense to find


different distances that produced the same angle. First, you
dont know how the strengths of the effect falls off with distance; its not necessarily true, for instance, that the magnetic
field is half as strong at twice the distance. Second, the point
of this is to help you interpret part C, and in part C, the triple
magnets distance from the single magnet is the same as the
single magnets distance from the first magnet.
2 Laying the magnet flat on the table causes the compass
needle to try to tilt out of the horizontal plane, which its not
designed to do. Turning it so that it faces the compass also
doesnt work, because it makes the magnets magnetic field
lie along the same north-south line as the Earths, rather than
perpendicular to it.

The balances will not show the magnets true masses,


because the magnets are exerting forces on each other.
The top balance will read a higher number than it
would without any magnetic forces, and the bottom balance will have a lower than normal reading.
The difference between each magnets true mass and
the reading on the balance gives a measure of how

strongly the magnet is being pushed or pulled by the


other magnet.
How do you think the amount of pushing or pulling
experienced by the two magnets will compare? In
other words, which reading will change more, or will
they change by the same amount? Write down a hypothesis; youll test this hypothesis in part C of the
lab. If you think the forces will be unequal predict
their ratio.
Discuss with your instructor your results from parts
A and B, and your hypothesis about what will happen with the two balances.
Now set up the experiment described above with two
balances. Since we are interested in the changes in
the scale readings caused by the magnetic forces, you
will need to take a total of four scale readings: one
pair with the balances separated and one pair with
the magnets close together as shown in the figure
above.
When the balances are together and the magnetic
forces are acting, it is not possible to get both balances to reach equilibrium at the same time, because
sliding the weights on one balance can cause its magnet to move up or down, tipping the other balance.
Therefore, while you take a reading from one balance, you need to immobilize the other in the horizontal position by taping its tip so it points exactly
at the zero mark.
You will also probably find that as you slide the
weights, the pointer swings suddenly to the opposite side, but you can never get it to be stable in
the middle (zero) position. Try bringing the pointer
manually to the zero position and then releasing it.
If it swings up, youre too low, and if it swings down,
youre too high. Search for the dividing line between
the too-low region and the too-high region.
If the changes in the scale readings are very small
(say a few grams or less), you need to get the magnets closer together. It should be possible to get the
scale readings to change by large amounts (up to 10
or 20 g).
Part C is the only part of the experiment where you
will be required to analyze random errors using the
techniques outlined in Appendices 2 and 3 at the
back of the lab manual. Think about how you can
get an estimate of the random errors in your measurements. Do you need to do multiple measurements? Discuss this with your instructor if youre
uncertain.
Dont take apart your setup until lab is over, and

Lab 1

Interactions

youre completely done with your analysis its no


fun to have to rebuild it from scratch because you
made a mistake!
D

Measurement of interactions involving objects in contact

Youll recall that Aristotle gave completely different


interpretations for situations where one object was
in contact with another, like the hand pushing the
ball, and situations involving objects not in contact
with each other, such as the rock falling down to
the earth. Your magnets were not in contact with
each other. Now suppose we try the situation shown
below, with one persons hand exerting a force on the
others. All the forces involved are forces between
objects in contact, although the two peoples hands
cannot be in direct contact because the spring scales
have to be inserted to measure how strongly each
person is pulling. Suppose the two people do not
make any special arrangement in advance about how
hard to pull. How do you think the readings on the
two scales will compare? Write down a hypothesis,
and discuss it with your instructor before continuing.

Now carry out the measurement shown in the figure.

Self-Check
Do all your analysis in lab, including error analysis
for part C. Error analysis is discussed in appendices
2 and 3; get help from your instructor if necessary.

Analysis
In your writeup, present your results from all four
parts of the experiment, including error analysis for
part C.

Analysis
The most common mistake is to fail to address the
point of the lab. If you feel like you dont understand
why you were doing any of this, then you were missing out on your educational experience! See the back
of the lab manual for the format of lab writeups.

Notes For Next Week

see it unless I think theres a problem after reading


your abstract.

(1) Next week, when you turn in your writeup for


this lab, you also need to turn in a prelab writeup
for the next lab. The prelab questions are listed
at the end of the description of that lab in the lab
manual. Never start a lab without understanding
the answers to all the prelab questions; if you turn
in partial answers or answers youre unsure of, discuss the questions with your instructor or with other
students to make sure you understand whats going
on.
(2) You should exchange phone numbers with your
lab partners for general convenience throughout the
semester. You can also get each others e-mail addresses by logging in to Spotter and clicking on email.

Rules and Organization


Professor Crowells Labs

for

Collection of raw data is work you share with your


lab partners. Once youre done collecting data, you
need to do your own analysis. E.g., it is not okay for
two people to turn in the same calculations, or on a
lab requiring a graph for the whole group to make
one graph and turn in copies.
Youll do some labs as formal writeups, others as
informal check-off labs. As described in the syllabus, theyre worth different numbers of points, and
you have to do a certain number of each type by the
end of the semester.
The format of formal lab writeups is given in appendix 1 on page 158. The raw data section must
be contained in your bound lab notebook. Typically
people word-process the abstract section, and any
other sections that dont include much math, and
stick the printout in the notebook to turn it in. The
justification and reasoning section will usually just
consist of hand-written calculations you do in your
lab notebook. You need two lab notebooks, because
on days when you turn one in, you need your other
one to take raw data in for the next lab. You may
find it convenient to leave one or both of your notebooks in the cupboard at your lab bench whenever
you dont need to have them at home to work on;
this eliminates the problem of forgetting to bring
your notebook to school.
For a check-off lab, the main thing Ill pay attention
to is your abstract. The rest of your work for a
check-off lab can be informal, and I may not ask to

Kinematics

Apparatus

Setup

computer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
track . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
dynamics cart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
fan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
AA batteries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4/group
aluminum slugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
motion detector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
protractor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
WD-40

Check that all four wheels on the cart will spin for
about 20-30 seconds if you flick them hard. If they
only spin for a few seconds, see if you can fix the
problem by spraying WD-40 on the bearings.
Set the cart on the track without the fan. Prop
the motion detector (sonar gun) at one end of the
track so that it is aimed slightly upward. This angle
is critical measure 86 above horizontal with the
protractor, and tape it to the backrest.
With the computer turned off, plug the motion detector into the PORT2 plug on the interface box.

Goal
Learn how to relate the motion of an object to its
position-versus-time graph.

Introduction
Analyzing motion is the most fundamental thing we
do in physics. The most versatile way of representing
motion is with a graph that has the objects position
on the upright axis and time on the horizontal axis.
It takes some practice to be able to sketch and interpret these graphs, but once you get used to them,
they become very intuitive.

Apparatus
The object whose motion youll study is a cart that
rolls on a track. You can either push the cart by
hand, start it moving with a shove, or clamp a fan on
top of it to make it speed up or slow down steadily.
To measure the carts motion, youll use a little sonar
gun that sends out clicks. When it hears the echo
from the cart, it figures out how far away the cart
was based on the time delay and the known speed of
sound. The sonar gun is connected to a computer,
which produces a position-versus-time graph.

Start up the computer. For compactness, Ill use notation like this to describe the computer commands:
Start>Programs>Vernier Software>Logger Pro 2
This is the command to start the computer software running. Start means to click on the start
menu at the bottom left corner of the screen, Programs means to select that from the menu, and so
on. There are two different versions of the software
installed; use version 2. (Logger Pro 3 doesnt work
with the interface boxes we have.)
Make sure that the interface box is plugged into
COM1 (the first COM port) at the back of the computer, not COM2. If the computer presents you
with a dialog box saying Set Up Interface, choose
COM1.
Once the program is running, do File>Open, then
go into Probes and Sensors and then into Motion
Detector, and open the file of the same name. At
this point, you may get the following error message,
which you can ignore: This file cannot run properly
with this hardware interface.
Youll get three graphs on the screen, but you only
want one, the x t graph. Click on the x t graph,
and then do View>Graph Layout>One Pane, and
the other two graphs will go away.
If you now click the button to tell it to collect data,
the motion detector should start clicking rapidly,
and it you move the cart back and forth you should
see a graph of its motion. Make sure it is able to
sense the carts motion correctly for distances from
50 cm to the full length of the track. If it doesnt
work when the cart is at the far end of the track,
play with the angle of motion detector a little. If

10

Lab 2

Kinematics

youre having other problems, you may find some


relevant debugging information in appendix 6, which
describes how to use the computer interface with a
different sensor.

Observations
In parts Athrough E,you dont need to take detailed
numerical data just sketch the graphs in your lab
notebook. All of your graphs will have garbage data
at the beginning and the end, and you need to make
sure you understand whats what.
A Fast and slow motion
Moving the cart by hand, make a graph for slow
motion and another for fast motion. Make sure the
motion is steady, and dont get confused by the parts
of the graph that come before and after your period
of steady pushing. Sketch the graphs and make sure
you understand them.
B Motion in two different directions
Now try comparing the graphs you get for the two
different directions of motion. Again, record what
they look like and figure out what youre seeing.
C Reproducing a graph
Now see if you can produce a graph that looks like
this:

D Accelerating away from the sensor


Suppose the fan is mounted on the cart as shown
in the figure, so that if the cart is released from a
position close to the motion detector, it will begin
moving away from it. Predict what you think the
carts position-time graph will look like, and show
your prediction to your instructor before getting a
fan.
Before putting the batteries in the fan, make sure the
fans switch is off (to the right). Put the batteries in
and clamp the fan on the cart.

E Slow or Rapid Acceleration


The aluminum slugs can be used to replace two of
the batteries so that the fan will exert about half as
much force. Discuss with your partners what you
think will happen if you repeat your previous run
with a weakened fan. Now try it.
F Changing the direction of motion
Change the fan back to full strength.
Now suppose instead of releasing the cart from rest
close to the motion detector, you started it moving
with a push toward the motion sensor, from the far
end of the track. It will of course slow down and
eventually come back. Discuss with your partners
what the position-time graph would look like. Now
try it.
G Rate of changing speed
The goal of this part of the lab is to determine
whether the speed of the cart in part F was changing
at a constant rate, i.e., by the same amount every
second.
Zoom in on the relevant part of your graph from part
F. To zoom in, either (a) draw a box with the mouse
and click on the magnifying glass icon, or (b) do
View>Graph Options>Axis Options to select ranges
of time and position values that you want. Print out
a big copy; choose landscape mode in the print dialog
box. (Note that if you take different data later, you
may need to fiddle with this again because youll be
zoomed in on the wrong part of the new graph.)
If that printer isnt working, heres what you need to
do instead. Do File>Export Data, and select .txt
for the type of the file. Use a text editor such as
WordPad to delete the header from the file. Save it
in your FC student directory, and also on a floppy
disk if you intend to work on it at home. Get into
OpenOffice or Excel, and open the file. Appendix 4
describes how to use OpenOffice. Whatever method
you use, make sure the whole group will end up with
copies.
Rather than trying to read distances from your graphs
vertical axis in units of meters, and times from its
horizontal axis in units of seconds, the simplest thing
to do is simply to use a ruler to measure vertical
and horizontal distances on the graph, and determine the slopes from these; although the resulting
slopes wont be in any standard units, that wont
affect your conclusion.

Set up the situation described above, and compare


the results with what you predicted.

11

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Make a prediction of the four graphs youll obtain in parts A and B.

Self-Check
Do the analysis in lab.

Analysis
At one-second intervals, draw nice long tangent lines
on the curve from part G and determine their slope.
Some slopes will be negative, and some positive.
Summarize this series of changing speeds in a table.
Did the velocity increase by about the same amount
with every second?

12

Lab 2

Kinematics

13

Free Fall

Apparatus
two stations:
Behr free-fall column and weight
plumb bob
spark generator (CENCO)
paper tape
switch for electromagnet

ideal case of =90 , which would be the same as free


fall. Galileos task would have been a lot simpler
if hed had accurate enough devices for measuring
time, because then he could have simply carried out
measurements for objects falling vertically. Thats
what youll do today.

Goal
Find out whether it is v/x or v/t that is constant for an object accelerating under the influence
of gravity.

Introduction
A fundamental and difficult problem in pre-Newtonian physics was the motion of falling bodies. Aristotle had various incorrect but influential ideas on the
subject, including the assertions that heavier objects
fell faster than lighter ones and that the object only
sped up for a short while after it was dropped and
then continued on at a constant speed. Even among
Renaissance scientists who disagreed with Aristotles
claim that the object no longer sped up after a while,
there was a great deal of confusion about whether it
was v/x or v/t that was constant. It seems
obvious to modern physicists that they could not
both be constant, but it was not at all obvious to
authorities such as Domingo de Soto and Albert of
Saxony. Galileo started out thinking they were both
constant, then realized this was mathematically impossible, and finally determined from experiments
that it was v/t, now called acceleration, that was
constant.
The main reason why the confusion persisted for two
thousand years was that the methods for measuring
time were inaccurate, and the time required for an
object to fall was very short. Galileo was able to
make settle the issue because he figured out how to
use a pendulum to measure time accurately, and also
came up with the idea of effectively slowing down the
motion by studying objects rolling down an inclined
plane, rather than objects falling vertically. He then
found how to extrapolate from the case of an object
rolling down an inclined plane at an angle to the

14

Lab 3

Free Fall

A Setup
The apparatus consists of a 2-meter tall column with
a paper tape running down it. A weight is held at the
top with an electromagnet and then released, falling
right next to the paper tape. (An electromagnet
is an artificial magnet that works when you put an
electric current through it, unlike a permanent magnet, which does not require power.) A spark generator is hooked up to the two vertical wires, and as
the weight falls, sparks cross the gap from the first
wire to the metal flange on the weight, then from
the flange to the other wire. Sparks are produced
only briefly, at regular intervals of 1/60 of a sec-

ond. On their way, the sparks go through the paper


tape, making dots on it that show the location of the
weight at 1/60-s intervals.
First, unplug the spark generator so you dont get
shocked while youre getting things ready. Use the
switch made from a regular light switch to turn on
the magnet at the top of the column, which operates
on 7 volts from the labs DC power circuits. Insert
the plumb bob, hanging from the magnet. Use the
three screws on the feet of the column to level the
apparatus so the plumb bobs string is parallel to
the wire.
Replace the plumb bob with the weight. Pull fresh
tape up from the roll at the bottom, and get the
tape straight and centered on the wire.
Plug in the spark generator, and put the function
knob on line, which means it will base its cycle
of sparks on the AC power from the wall, which
switches directions once every sixtieth of a second.
The red LED should light up. From now on, do not
press the thumb switch to activate the sparks unless
you are sure nobody is near the vertical wires. Try
it out, and see if you get a spot at the top of the
tape, where the weight currently is.
B Observations
Hold down the thumb switch to make the sparks
start, flip the switch to release the weight, and wait
until the weight has fallen in the cup at the bottom
before releasing the thumb switch. You want a nice
straight line of dots on the tape, going all the way
from the top to the bottom you may have to make
adjustments and try a few times before getting a
good tape. Take your tape off, and measure the
locations of the dots accurately with a two-meter
stick.

would be tedious to plot them all by hand.


Determine whether your data are consistent with
constant v/x or v/t or neither.

Self-Check
Appendix 4 discusses graphing. The graphing for
this lab is time-consuming without a computer; since
we have a limited number of computers in lab, you
may want to go to one of the other campus computer
labs for this. Determine which quantity is constant.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Consider the quantities x, x, t, and t, which
are measured more or less directly in this lab. Which
of these would have a single value throughout the
whole motion of the falling weight?
P2 Explain, based on the meaning of the symbols
and /, why v/x and v/t have to be notations for numbers, not descriptions of graphs. How
would these two numbers relate to the two graphs?
P3 Suppose that, once you have data, v/x turns
out to be constant, and v/t isnt. Explain how
you would be able to tell this from your graphs.

Analysis
Since the sparks start before you release the electromagnet, the first dot at the very top of the tape will
give the starting position of the weight.
If you consider any adjacent pair of dots (avoiding
the top and bottom ones), then measuring the distance x between them allows you to calculate an
approximation to the speed of the weight, which you
can think of as being its speed at the point half-way
between the two dots.
Make one plot of speed versus time and another of
speed versus distance, preferably using a computer,
since you will have about thirty data points, and it

15

The Earths Gravitational Field

Note to the lab technician: The computers to use


are the ones with labels on their sides saying Lassie,
Fang, and Ribsy.

Apparatus
(two stations):
vertical plank with electromagnets
steel balls (2/station)
Linux computers with Audacity installed (in 416T)
spirit levels

Goal
Make a high-precision measurement of the strength
of the Earths gravitational field, g, in Fullerton.

Introduction
When objects fall, and all forces other than gravity are negligible, we observe that the acceleration
is the same, regardless of the objects mass, shape,
density, or other properties. However, the acceleration does depend a little bit where on the earth
we do the experiment, and even bigger variations in
acceleration can be observed by, e.g., going to the
moon. Thus, this acceleration can be considered as
a property of space itself, and we can refer to it as
the gravitational field in that region of space. Just
as you would use a magnetic compass to find out
about the magnetic field in the classroom, you can
use dropping masses to find out about the gravitational field. In this experiment, youll measure the
gravitational field, g, in the classroom to sufficiently
high precision that, if everybody does a good job and
we pool and average everyones data to reduce random errors, we should be able to get a value that is
measurably different from the generic world-average
value you would find in a textbook.
A Measuring g precisely
You will measure g, the acceleration of an object in
free fall, using electronic timing techniques. The idea
of the method is that youll have two steel balls hanging underneath electromagnets at different heights.
Youll simultaneously turn off the two magnets using the same switch, causing the balls to drop at

16

Lab 4

the same moment. The ball dropped from the lower


height (h1 ) takes a smaller time (t1 ) to reach the
floor, and the ball released from the greater height
(h2 ) takes a longer time (t2 ). The time intervals
involved are short enough that due to the limitations of your reflexes it is impossible to make good
enough measurements with stopwatch. Instead, you
will record the sounds of the two balls impacts on
the floor using the computer. The computer shows
a graph in which the x axis is time and the y axis
shows the vibration of the sound wave hitting the
microphone. You can measure the time between the
two visible blips on the screen. You will measure
three things: h1 , h2 , and the time interval t2 t1
between the impact of the second ball and the first.
From these data, with a little algebra, you can find
g.
The experiment would have been easier to analyze if
we could simply drop a single ball and measure the
time from when it was released to when it hit the
floor. But since our timing technique is based on
sound, and no sound is produced when the balls are
released, we need to have two balls. If h1 , the height
of the lower ball, could be made very small, then it
would hit the floor at essentially the same moment
the two balls were released (t1 would equal 0), and
t2 t1 would be essentially the same as t2 . But
we cant make h1 too small or the sound would not
be loud enough to detect on the computer.
B Using the computer software
There are three Linux computers in 416T that have
the right software and hardware. Theyre labeled
Lassie, Fang, and Buck. (On Fang, only sound inpuyt works, not output.) First lets see how to record
yourself on the computer saying hello. Use the
xmix or xmixer program to set the record and mic
levels all the way up. Start up the sound recording
program, called Audacity. Set the record level on
high, using the control marked . . . + next to the
microphone icon. Record your sound.
Before you get down to serious science, you may enjoy listening to your own voice reversed in time. A
fun diversion is to write a sentence down backwards,
read it out loud, and then electronically reverse it
so its forward again. It sounds sort of like someone
with a thick Hungarian accent.
To find out how long a sound is, you can use the

The Earths Gravitational Field

Youre not positioning the balls on the same


spot on the magnets every time.

Two thumps, as recorded on the computer through the


microphone.

curson and click to find the time corresponding to


a particular point in the graph. Sometimes you are
not sure which wiggles in the visual representation of
the sound correspond to which parts of the recorded
sound. To find out, you can select part of the sound
and listen to only that part.
C Finding the interval between two sounds
When you record the sound of the two consecutive
impacts of the balls, they will look like vertical spikes
on the screen. You can practice using hand claps.

To drop the balls, you should break the circuit


by pulling one of the wires out of the plug on
the power supply. Dont use the switch; if you
use the switch, it takes some time for the magnetic field to decay, and the balls stick for a
while before dropping.
Audacity will let you keep on making new recordings, stacking the graphs vertically. However,
if you do this you will introduce significant timing errors. The reason is probably that Audacity is designed for use in multitrack recording
of music, so it tries to play back the previously
recorded tracks while recording the new one,
and on cheap sound hardware this causes little
timing glitches.

Analysis

To accurately find the time when one of the sounds


started, first zoom in on it until its like youre seeing
it under a powerful microscope. Click on the onset
of the sound, and read the time from the scale at the
top of the window.

Extract a value of g from your data.

You may get this error message: Error while opening sound device. Please check the input device settings and the project sample rate. Quit the program
and restart it.

Self-Check

Some of the computers have very low gain on their


microphones, so it may be difficult to see the thumps.
To work around this, do the following after youve
recorded a sound: type control-A to select the whole
recording, and then do Effect>Amplify; the default
is to amplify the sound by the maximum possible
amount,which is what you want.
You should make a series of measurements, and make
sure they agree at the level of about 104 s; if they
dont, theres something wrong with your technique.
Also, you should check that your result for g makes
sense.
Here are some common problems that cause inconsistent or wrong results:
The balls are brushing against the electrical
wires as they fall.
Youre misidentifying the thumps.

Derive error bars on your result, using the techniques


in appendices 2 and 3.

Extract the value of g, with error bars. Read Appendix 3 for information on how to do error analysis
with propagation of errors; get help from your instructor if necessary.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 If your instructor has assigned homework problem 27 from ch. 3 of Newtonian Physics,dont bother
turning in another copy of your work for this prelab
question. Derive an equation for g in terms of the
quantities youll measure, which are h1 , h2 , and the
time interval t2 t1 . The point of the lab is to
measure g, so dont just say well of course g is 9.8
m/s2 . (You should check your equation by using
the answer checker for the homework problem.)

The surface the balls are dropping onto has


dents in it.

17

Newtons Second Law

Apparatus
pulley
spirit level
string
weight holders, not tied to string
two-meter stick
slotted weights
stopwatch
foam rubber cushions

of masses, but keep the total amount of mass constant and just divide it differently between the two
holders. Remember to take the masses of the holders
themselves into account. Make sure to perform your
measurements with the longest possible distance of
travel, because you cannot use a stopwatch to get an
accurate measurement of very short time intervals.
The best results are obtained with combinations of
weights that give times of about 4 to 20 seconds.
Also, make sure that the masses are at least a few
hundred grams or so on each side.

Goal

Self-Check

Find the acceleration of unequal weights hanging


from a pulley.

Compare theoretical and experimental values of acceleration for one of your mass combinations. Check
whether they come out fairly consistent.

Observations
Analysis
Use your measured times and distances to find the
actual acceleration, and make a graph of this versus
M m. Show these experimentally determined accelerations as small circles. Overlaid on the same
graph, show the theoretical equation as a line or
curve.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Criticize the following reasoning: The weight
fell 1.0 m in 1 s, so v = 1 m/s, and a = v/t = 1 m/s2 .
Set up unequal masses on the two sides of the pulley,
and determine the resulting acceleration by measuring how long it takes for the masses to move a certain distance. Use the spirit level to make the pulley
vertical; otherwise you get extra friction. Use relatively large masses (typically half a kg or a kg each
side) so that friction is not such a big force in comparison to the other forces, and the inertia of the
pulley is negligible compared to the inertia of the
hanging masses. Do several different combinations

18

Lab 5

Newtons Second Law

P2 Since that wont work, plan how you really will


determine your experimental accelerations based on
your measured distance and times.

19

Air Friction

Apparatus

push harder against the road.

coffee filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10/group


stopwatch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
computer with sonar sensor
wire cages to protect sensors

Your goal in this lab is to find a proportionality relating the force of air friction to the velocity at which
the air rushes over the object. For instance, you may
find the rule
F v
,
which is a shorthand for

Goal

F = (some number)(v)

Determine how the force of air friction depends on


the velocity of a moving object.
As an alternative, you may create your own technique for doing the same sort of experiment for friction between two surfaces wetted with a liquid such
as water, vegetable oil, or machine oil the result
might be more interesting, since it is not to be found
in textbooks. If you are interested in doing this, discuss it in advance with your instructor.

Introduction
Friction between solid objects occurs all the time in
our daily lives. The frictional force exerted by the air
on a solid object is not as often evident, but it is responsible for the wind blowing our hair, for the slow
dropping of a feather, and for our cars poorer gas
mileage at freeway speeds compared to more moderate speeds.
The latter effect suggests that air friction might increase with speed, unlike solid-solid friction, which is
nearly independent of speed. By Newtons first law,
a car or a jet plane cruising at constant speed must
have zero total force on it, so if the air friction force
gets stronger with speed, that would explain why
a greater forward-pushing force would be needed to
travel at high speeds. For instance, a car traveling
at low speed might have a -10 kN air friction force
pushing backward on it, so in order to have zero total force on it the road must be making a forward
force of +10 kN. At a higher speed, air friction might
increase to -30 kN, so the road would need to make a
forward force of +30 kN. The car convinces the road
to make the stronger force by pushing backward on
the road more strongly: by Newtons third law, the
cars force on the road and the roads force on the
car must be equal in magnitude and opposite in direction. The car burns more gas because it must

20

Lab 6

Air Friction

The numerical value of some number is not very


interesting, because we would expect it to be different for different objects, which is why you would
write your result as F v. This proportionality
would tell you for instance that anytime the speed
was doubled, the result would be twice as much air
friction.
Suppose instead you find that doubling the speed
makes the force eight times greater, multiplying the
speed by 10 makes the force 1000 times greater, and
so on. In each case, the force is being multiplied
by the third power of the increase in the speed, i.e.,
F v3 .

Observations
There are two possible methods for measuring the
terminal velocity of the filter.
The first method is shown in the figure below. We
use coffee filters because they dont tumble or sway
very much as they fall, and because they allow us to
easily change the mass of our falling object by nesting more coffee filters inside the bottom one, without changing its aerodynamic properties. The filters
will start speeding up when you release them near
the ceiling, but as they speed up, the upward force
of air friction on them increases, until they reach a
speed at which the total force on them is zero. Once
at this speed, they obey Newtons first law and continue at constant speed. If the number of coffee filters is small, they will have reached their maximum
speed within the first half a meter or so. By the
time they are even with the edge of the lab bench,
they are moving at essentially their full speed. You
can then use the stopwatch to determine how long it
takes them to cover the distance to the floor, which
will allow you to find their speed. During this final
part of the fall, you know the upward force of air

friction must be as great as the downward force of


gravity, so you can determine what it was.

time to get up to their final speed. This is also the


only way you can tell for sure whether youre taking data at terminal velocity: the results at the two
different heights (inside and outside) should be consistent.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Suppose you tried to do this lab with stacks of
coins instead of coffee filters. Assuming you had a
sufficiently accurate timing device, would it work?
P2

A different technique is to drop the filters onto a


sonar sensor of the type used in lab 2. You can put
the sensor on the floor facing up, and put the wire
cage over it to keep it from getting damaged by being
stepped on inadvertently.
For a long time, I had my students do the lab using
only the first method, but now Im experimenting
with the second method. A couple of advantages of
the second method are that (1) it doesnt depend on
human reflexes, and (2) it gives you a real-time picture of the motion, so its easier to tell whether the
filters are actually reaching terminal velocity. The
latter is an important issue, because it gives you a
better chance of being able to take data over a wide
range of values for F and v, but without running
into problems with cases where the filters dont really reach terminal veloicity. On the other hand, the
computer method has some practical problems, such
as the tendency of the filters to drift sideways instead
of heading straight down onto the sensor. This is an
opportunity for you to do something like what real
scientists do: use your ingenuity and try different
things to see what works best!

Criticize the following statement:

We found that bigger velocities gave bigger air drag


forces, which demonstrates the proportionality F
v.
P3

Criticize the following statement:

We found F v 7 , which shows that you need more


force to make things go faster.

Analysis
Use your raw data to compile a list of F and v values.
Use the methods explained in Appendix 5 to see if
you can find a power-law relationship between F and
v. This will require fitting a line to a set of data, as
explained in appendix 4. Both fitting a line to data
and finding power laws are techniques you will use
several more times in this course, so it is worth your
while to get help now if necessary in order to get
confident with them.

Note that if the coffee filters get too flattened out,


theyll flutter, giving lousy results.
Take data with stacks of various numbers of coffee
filters. You will get the most clearcut determination
of the power law relationship if your data cover the
largest possible range of values. Its a good idea to
take some data with a large number of filters, dropping them from the balcony outside so they have

21

Vector Addition of Forces

Apparatus
force table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
spirit level . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
weights
string

Goal
Test whether the vector sum of the forces acting on
an object at rest is equal to zero.

Introduction
Modern physics claims that when a bridge, an earthquake fault, or an oak tree doesnt move, it is because the forces acting on it, which combine according to vector addition, add up to zero. Although
this may seem like a reasonable statement, it was
far from obvious to premodern scientists. Aristotle,
for instance, said that it was the nature of each of
the four elements, earth, fire, water and air, to return to its natural location. Rain would fall from
the sky because it was trying to return to its natural location in the lakes and oceans, and once it got
to its natural location it would stop moving because
that was its nature.
When a modern scientist considers a book resting on
a table, she says that it holds still because the force
of gravity pulling the book down is exactly canceled
by the normal force of the table pushing up on the
book. Aristotle would have denied that this was possible, because he believed that at any one moment an
object could have only one of two mutually exclusive
types of motion: natural motion (the tendency of the
book to fall to the ground, and resume its natural
place), and forced motion (the ability of another object, such as the table, to move the book). According
to his theory, there could be nothing like the addition of forces, because the object being acted on was
only capable of following orders from one source at
a time. The incorrect Aristotelian point of view has
great intuitive appeal, and beginning physics students tend to make Aristotelian statements such as,
The tables force overcomes the force of gravity,
as if the forces were having a contest, in which the
victor annihilated the loser.

22

Lab 7

Vector Addition of Forces

Observations
The apparatus consists of a small circular table, with
a small metal ring held in the middle by the tension
in four strings. Each string goes over a pulley at the
edge of the table, so that a weight can be hung on it
to control the tension. The angles can be recorded
either graphically, by sliding a piece of paper underneath, or by reading angles numerically off of an
angular scale around the circumference of the table.
Use the spirit level to level the table completely using the screws on the feet. Set up four strings with
weights, using the small pin to hold the ring in place.
Adjust the angles or the amounts of weight or both,
until the ring is in equilibrium without the pin, and
is positioned right over the center of the table. Avoid
a symmetric arrangement of the strings (e.g., dont
space them all 90 degrees apart), and dont make any
forces collinear with each other. The ring is an extended object, so in order to treat it mathematically
as a pointlike object you should make sure that all
the strings are lined up with the center of the ring,
as shown in the figure.

Because of friction, it is possible to change any one


of the weights slightly without causing the ring to
move. This is a potential source of systematic errors, but you can eliminate the error completely by
the following method. Find out how much you can
increase or decrease each weight without causing the
ring to move. Within the range of values that dont

cause slipping, use the center of the range as your


best value; with this amount of weight, there is no
friction at all in the pulley. The point here is not to
redo the entire experiment with a completely different combination of weights that would not tell
you anything about friction as a source of error,
since even if there was no friction at all, it would be
possible for example to double all the weights and
get an equilibrium. Once youve set each weight to
its friction-free value, leave it that way; by the time
youre done, you will have eliminated friction from
all four pulleys.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.

the magnitude of the sum of the forces is small compared to the magnitudes of the individual forces.

Analysis
Calculate the magnitude of vector sum of the forces
on the ring, first graphically and then analytically.
Make sure the two methods give the same result. If
they do not, try measuring the x and y components
off of your drawing and comparing them with the x
and y components you calculated analytically.
Estimate the possible random error in your final
sum.
Are your results consistent with theory, taking into
account the random errors involved?

P1 The weights go on weight holders that hang


from the string, and the weight holders are each 50
g. Criticize the following reasoning: We dont need
to count the mass of the weight holders, because its
the same on all four strings, so it cancels out.
P2 Describe a typical scale that you might use for
drawing force vectors on a piece of paper, e.g., how
long might you choose to make a 1-N force? Assume
your masses are from 500 to 1500 grams.
P3 Graphically calculate the vector sums of the
two pairs of vectors shown below. As a check on
your results, you should find that the magnitudes of
the two sums are equal.

Lab 8 has been deleted.

Self-Check
Do both a graphical calculation and an analytic calculation in lab, without error analysis. Make sure
they give the same result. Do a rough check that

23

Acceleration In Two Dimensions

Apparatus
air track (small)
cart
photogate (PASCO) (under lab benches in rm. 418)
computer
air blowers
power strips for switching CENCO blowers on and
off
vernier calipers
wood blocks

Goal
Test whether the acceleration of gravity acts like a
vector.

Introduction
As noted in lab 2, one of the tricky techniques Galileo
had to come up with to study acceleration was to
use objects rolling down an inclined plane rather
than falling straight down. That slowed things down
enough so that he could measure the time intervals
using a pendulum clock. Even though you were able,
in lab 4, to use modern electronic timing techniques
to measure the short times involved in a vertical fall,
there is still some intrinsic interest in the idea of
motion on an inclined plane. The reason its worth
studying is that it reveals the vector nature of acceleration.
Vectors rule the universe. Entomologists say that
God must have had an inordinate fondness for beetles, because there are so many species of them.
Well, God must also have had a special place in her
heart for vectors, because practically every natural
phenomenon she invented is a vector: gravitational
acceleration, electric fields, nuclear forces, magnetic
fields, all the things that tie our universe together
are vectors.

Setup
The idea of the lab is that if acceleration really acts
like a vector, then the carts acceleration should equal
the component of the earths gravitational acceleration vector that is parallel to the track, because the

24

Lab 9

cart is only free to accelerate in the direction along


the track. There is almost no friction, since the cart
rides on a cushion of air coming through holes in the
track.
The speed of the cart at any given point can be measured as follows. The photogate consists of a light
and a sensor on opposite sides of the track. When
the cart passes by, the cardboard vane on top blocks
the light momentarily, keeping light from getting to
the sensor. The computer detects the electrical signal from the sensor, and records the amount of time,
tb , for which the photogate was blocked. Given tb ,
you can determine the approximate speed that cart
had when it passed through the photogate. The use
of the computer software is explained in Appendix 6;
of the three modes described there, you want to use
the software in the mode in which it measures the
time interval over which the photogate was blocked.
Plug the photogate into the DG1 plug on the interface box.

Observations
The basic idea is to release the cart at a distance x
away from the photogate. The cart accelerates, and
you can determine its approximate speed, v, when it
passes through the photogate. (See prelab question
P1. Make sure to use vernier calipers to measure the
width of the vane, w.) From v and x, you can find
the acceleration. You will take data with the track
tilted at several different angles, to see whether the
carts acceleration always equals the component of g
parallel to the track.

Acceleration In Two Dimensions

You can level the track to start with by adjusting


the screws until the cart will sit on the track without
accelerating in either direction.
The distance x can be measured from the starting
position of the cart to half-way between the point
where it first blocks the photogate and the point
where it unblocks the photogate. You can determine
where these positions are by sliding the cart into the
photogate and watching the red LED on the top of
the photogate, which lights up when it is blocked.
Hints:
Keep in mind that if the cart rebounds at the
bottom of the track and comes back up through
the gate, you will get a second, bogus time
reading.
Note that you have no way to measure accurately to the total amount of time over which
the cart picked up speed (which would be several seconds) what you measure is the very
short time required for the cart to pass through
the photogate.
If youre using one of the gray air pumps, which
has a knob to adjust the flow, make sure its on
the highest speed, or the cart will drag on the
track, giving bogus data. Its easy to mess up
this adjustment, so get the knob set correctly
for once and for all, and then never touch it
again. To turn the pump on and off, plug the
blower in to its own power strip, and use the
switch on the power strip.
Release the cart by hand after starting up the
air pump. If you leave the cart on the track
and then turn on the pump, there will be a
period of time when the pump is first starting
up, and the cart will drag.
The variable x actually changes a little when
you change , so dont just assume its always
the same.
Once you have data at your first angle, check
whether theory and experiment agree reasonably well.

Self-Check
Find the theoretical and experimental accelerations
for one of your angles, and see if they are roughly
consistent.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Skip this question if the corresponding homework problem from Newtonian Physics has already
been assigned. (a) If w is the width of the vane, and
tb is defined as suggested above, what is the speed of
the cart when it passes through the photogate? (b)
Based on v and x, how can you find a?
P2 Should x be measured horizontally, or along
the slope of the track?
P3 It is not possible to measure accurately with
a protractor. How can be determined based on
the distance between the feet of the air track and
the height of the wood block?
P4 Explain why the following method for finding
the carts acceleration is incorrect. The time I got
off the computer was 0.0237 s. My vane was 2.2 cm
wide, so v = 2.2 cm/.0237 s = 93 cm/s. That means
the acceleration was a = v/t = (vf vi )/t =
(vf 0)/t = vf /t, or 93 cm/s divided by .0237
s, which gives 3900 cm/s2 .

Analysis
Extract the acceleration for each angle at which you
took data. Make a graph with on the x axis and
acceleration on the y axis. Show your measured accelerations as points, and the theoretically expected
dependence of a on as a smooth curve.
Error analysis is not required for this lab, because
the random errors are small compared to systematic
errors such as the imperfect leveling of the track,
friction, warping of the track, and the measurement
of w.

Youll use the photogates again in lab 10, so make


sure you understand the technique thoroughly, and
take notes on it so youll remember how its done.

25

10

Conservation Laws

Apparatus
Part A: vacuum pump (Lapine) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
electronic balance (large capacity) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
plastic-coated flask . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
Part B: beaker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
propyl alcohol 200 mL/group
canola oil 200 mL/group
funnels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
100-mL volumetric flask . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
rubber stopper, fitting in
volumetric flask . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
1-ml pipette and bulb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
magnetic stirrer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
triple-beam balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1/group

Goal
People believe that objects cannot be made to disappear or appear. If you start with a certain amount
of matter, there is no way to increase or decrease
that amount. This type of rule is called a conservation law in physics, and this specific law states
that the amount of matter is conserved, i.e., must
stay the same. In order to make this law scientifically useful, we must define more carefully how the
amount of a substance is to be defined and measured numerically. Specifically, there are two issues
that scientifically untrained people would probably
not agree on:
Should air count as matter? If it has weight,
then it probably should count. In this lab, you
will find out if air has weight, and, if so, measure its density.
Should the amount of a substance be defined in
terms of volume, or is mass more appropriate?
In this lab, you will determine whether mass
and/or volume is conserved when water and
alcohol are mixed.

Introduction
Styles in physics come and go, and once-hallowed
principles get modified as more accurate data come
along, but some of the most durable features of the
science are its conservation laws. A conservation law

26

Lab 10

Conservation Laws

is a statement that something always remains constant when you add it all up. Most people have a
general intuitive idea that the amount of a substance
is conserved. That objects do not simply appear
or disappear is a conceptual achievement of babies
around the age of 9-12 months. Beginning at this
age, they will for instance try to retrieve a toy that
they have seen being placed under a blanket, rather
than just assuming that it no longer exists. Conservation laws in physics have the following general
features:
Physicists trying to find new conservation laws
will try to find a measurable, numerical quantity, so that they can check quantitatively whether
it is conserved. One needs an operational definition of the quantity, meaning a definition
that spells out the operations required to measure it.
Conservation laws are only true for closed systems. For instance, the amount of water in a
bottle will remain constant as long as no water is poured in or out. But if water can get in
or out, we say that the bottle is not a closed
system, and conservation of matter cannot be
applied to it.
The quantity should be additive. For instance,
the amount of energy contained in two gallons
of gasoline is twice as much as the amount of
energy contained in one gallon; energy is additive. An example of a non-additive quantity is
temperature. Two cups of coffee do not have
twice as high a temperature as one cup.
Conservation laws always refer to the total amount
of the quantity when you add it all up. If you
add it all up at one point in time, and then
come back at a later point in time and add it
all up, it will be the same.
How can we pin down more accurately the concept
of the amount of a substance? Should a gallon
of shaving cream be considered more substantial
than a brick? At least two possible quantities come
to mind: mass and volume. Is either conserved?
Both? Neither? To find out, we will have to make
measurements.
We can measure mass by the see-saw method
when two children are sitting on the opposite sides

of a see-saw, the less massive one has to move farther out from the fulcrum to make it balance. If we
enslave some particular child as our permanent mass
standard, then any other childs mass can be measured by balancing her on the other side and measuring her distance from the fulcrum. A more practical version of the same basic principle that does
not involve human rights violations is the familiar
pan balance with sliding weights.
Volume is not necessarily so easy to measure. For
instance, shaving cream is mostly air, so should we
find a way to measure just the volume of the bubbly film itself? Precise measurements of volume can
most easily be done with liquids and gases, which
conform to a vessel in which they are placed.
Should a gas, such as air, be counted as having any
substance at all? Empedocles of Acragas (born ca.
492 BC) was the originator of the doctrine that all
material substances are composed of mixtures of four
elements: earth, fire, water and air. The idea seems
amusingly naive now that we know about the chemical elements and the periodic table, but it was accepted in Europe for two thousand years, and the
inclusion of air as a material substance was actually a nontrivial concept. Air, after all, was invisible, seemed weightless, and had no definite shape.
Empedocles decided air was a form of matter based
on experimental evidence: air could be trapped under water in an inverted cup, and bubbles would be
released if the cup was tilted. It is interesting to
note that in China around 300 BC, Zou Yan came
up with a similar theory, and his five elements did
not include air.
Does air have weight? Most people would probably
say no, since they do not feel any physical sensation
of the atmosphere pushing down on them. A delicate
house of cards remains standing, and is not crushed
to the floor by the weight of the atmosphere.
Compare that to the experience of a dolphin, though.
A dolphin might contemplate a tasty herring suspended in front of it and conjecture that water had
no weight, because the herring did not involuntarily
shoot down to the sea floor because of the weight of
the water overhead. Water does have weight, however, which a sufficiently skeptical dolphin physicist
might be able to prove with a simple experiment.
One could weigh a 1-liter metal box full of water and
then replace the water with air and weigh it again.
The difference in weight would be the difference in
weight between 1 liter of water of and 1 liter of air.
Since air is much less dense than water, this would
approximately equal the weight of 1 liter of water.

Our situation is similar to the dolphins, as was first


appreciated by Torricelli, whose experiments led him
to conclude that we live immersed at the bottom
of a sea of...air. A human physicist, living her life
immersed in air, could do a similar experiment to
find out whether air has weight. She could weigh a
container full of air, then pump all the air out and
weigh it again. When all the matter in a container
has been removed, including the air, we say that
there is a vacuum in the container. In reality, a
perfect vacuum is very difficult to create. A small
fraction of the air is likely to remain in the container
even after it has been pumped on with a vacuum
pump. The amount of remaining air will depend
on how good the pump is and on the rate at which
air leaks back in to the container through holes or
cracks.
Cautions
Please do not break the glassware! The vacuum
flasks and volumetric flasks are expensive.
The alcohol you will be using in this lab is chemically
different from the alcohol in alcoholic beverages. It
is poisonous, and can cause blindness or death if you
drink it. It is not hazardous as long as you do not
drink it.

Observations
A Density of air
You can remove the air from the flask by attaching the vacuum pump to the vacuum flask with the
rubber and glass tubing, then turning on the pump.
You can use the scale to determine how much mass
was lost when the air was evacuated.
Make any other observations you need in order to
find out the density of air and to estimate error bars
for your result.
B Is volume and/or mass conserved when two
fluids are mixed?
The idea here is to find out whether volume and/or
mass is conserved when water and alcohol are mixed.
The obvious way to attempt this would be to measure the volume and mass of a sample of water, the
volume and mass of a sample of alcohol, and their
volume and mass when mixed. There are two problems with the obvious method: (1) when you pour
one of the liquids into the other, droplets of liquid
will be left inside the original vessel; and (2) the

27

most accurate way to measure the volume of a liquid is with a volumetric flask, which only allows one
specific, calibrated volume to be measured.

mL, weigh the flask, pipette in enough water to bring


it up to 100 mL, weigh it again, and then figure out
what mass and volume of water you added based on
the change in mass. If it is more than 100 mL, weigh
the flask, pipette out enough of the mixture to bring
the volume down to 100 mL, weigh it again, and
make a similar calculation using the change in mass
and the density of the oil. If you need to pipette out
some oil, make sure to wash and rinse the pipette
thoroughly afterwards.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Give an example of two things having the same
mass and different densities.
P2 Give an example of two things having the same
density and different masses.
Heres a way to get around those problems. Put the
magnetic stirrer inside the flask. Pour water through
a funnel into a volumetric flask, filling it less than
half-way. (Do not use the pipette to transfer the
water.) A common mistake is to fill the flask more
than half-way. Now pour a thin layer of cooking
oil on top. Cooking oil does not mix with water,
so it forms a layer on top of the water. (Set aside
one funnel that you will use only for the oil, since
the oil tends to form a film on the sides.) Finally,
gently pour the alcohol on top. Alcohol does not mix
with cooking oil either, so it forms a third layer. By
making the alcohol come exactly up to the mark on
the calibrated flask, you can make the total volume
very accurately equal to 100 mL. In practice, it is
hard to avoid putting in too much alcohol through
the funnel, so if necessary you can take some back
out with the pipette.
If you put the whole thing on the balance now, you
know both the volume (100 mL) and the mass of
the whole thing when the alcohol and water have
been kept separate. Now, mix everything up with
the magnetic stirrer. The water and alcohol form a
mixture. You can now test whether the volume or
mass has changed.
If the mixture does not turn out to have a volume
that looks like exactly 100 mL, you can use the following tricks to measure accurately the excess or
deficit with respect to 100 mL. If it is less than 100

28

Lab 10

Conservation Laws

P3 Why can the density of water be given in a


book as a standard value under conditions of standard temperature and pressure, while the mass of
water cannot?
P4 What would your raw data in part A be like if
air had no weight? What would they be like if air
did have weight?
P5 Referring to appendix 2, plan how you will estimate your random errors.
P6 In part B, pick either mass or volume, and describe what your observations would be like if that
quantity was not conserved.

Self-Check
Do a quick analysis of both parts without error analysis. Plan how you will do your error analysis.

Analysis
A. If your results show that air has weight, determine
the (nonzero) density of air, with an estimate of your
random errors.
B. Decide whether volume and/or mass is conserved
when alcohol and water are mixed, taking into account your estimates of random errors.

29

11

Conservation of Energy

Apparatus
air track
cart
springs (steel, 1.5 cm diameter)
photogate (PASCO)
computer
stopwatches
air blowers
alligator clips
spring scales
vernier calipers
power strips for CENCO blowers
string

Goal
Test conservation of energy for an object oscillating
around an equilibrium position.

This could be a vibration of the sun, a water balloon, or


a nucleus.

Introduction
One of the most impressive aspects of the physical
world is the apparent permanence of so many of its
parts. Objects such as the sun or rocks on earth
have remained unchanged for billions of years, so it
might seem that they are in perfect equilibrium, with
zero net force on each part of the whole. In reality,
the atoms in a rock do not sit perfectly still at an
equilibrium point they are constantly in vibration
about their equilibrium positions. The unchanging
oblate shape of the sun is also an illusion. The sun
is continually vibrating like a bell or a jiggling water
balloon, as shown in the (exaggerated) figure. The
nuclei of atoms also jiggle spontaneously like little
water balloons. The fact that these types of motion
continue indefinitely without dying out or building

30

Lab 11

Conservation of Energy

up relates to conservation of energy, which forbids


them to get bigger or smaller without transferring
energy in or out.

Our model of this type of oscillation about equilibrium will be the motion of a cart on an air track between two springs. The sum of the forces exerted by
the two springs should at least approximately obey
Hookes law,
F = kx
,
where the equilibrium point is at x = 0. The negative sign means that if the object is displaced in the
positive direction, the force tends to bring it back
in the negative direction, towards equilibrium, and
vice versa. Of course, there are no actual springs
involved in the sun or between a rocks atoms, but
we can still learn about this type of situation in a
lab experiment with a mass attached to a spring. In
this lab, you will study how the changing velocity of
the object, in this case a cart on an air track, can
be understood using conservation of energy. Recall
that for a constant force, the potential energy is simply F x, but for a force that is different at different
locations, the potential energy is minus the area under the curve on a graph of F vs. x. In the present
case, the area formed is a triangle with base = x,
height = kx, and
1
base height
2
1
= kx2
2

area =

(counted as negative area because it lies below the


x axis), so the potential energy is
PE =

1 2
kx
2

Conservation of energy, P E + KE = constant, gives


1 2 1
kx + mv 2 = constant
2
2

of the Vernier Timer software are given in Appendix


6; you want the mode for measuring how long the
photogate was blocked. The two springs are attached to the cart by sticking them directly through
the holes in the cart (not through the bumper, which
would cause the springs to drag on the track). At
the ends of the track, the springs can be attached using alligator clips, again taking care to attach them
high enough so they dont drag.

Preliminary Observations
You should do both of the following methods of determining the spring constant.
Determining the spring constant: method 1
Pull the cart to the side with a spring scale, and
make a graph of F versus x, like the one above.
To avoid pulling at the wrong angle, it helps if you
connect the spring scale to the cart with a piece of
string. Find the combined spring constant of the two
springs, k, from the slope of the graph. (Dont disconnect either spring.) Since youll only use method
1 as a rough check against the more precise method
2, dont spend time taking a lot of data points.
Determining the spring constant: method 2
The second technique for determining k is to pull the
cart to one side, release it, and measure the period
of its side-to-side motion, i.e., the time required for
each complete repetition of its vibration. As well
discuss later in the course, the period is nearly independent of the amount of travel, and the spring
constant is related to the period and the mass of the
cart by the equation k = m(2/T )2 . A small period indicates a large spring constant, since a powerful spring would be required to whip the cart back
and forth rapidly. The period, T , can be found very
accurately by using a stopwatch to time many oscillations in a row without stopping. This method
therefore gives a very accurate value for k, which
you should use in your analysis of the conservation
of energy. Your k value from method 1 is still useful
as a check, however.

Observations
The technique is essentially the same as in lab 9,
which you may want to review. Instructions for use

Throughout the lab, you should only leave the air


blower turned on when you are actually using the
air track. In the past, we have burned out motors
or even melted hoses by leaving the air blowers on
continuously.
Before you start taking actual data, check whether
you have excessive friction by letting the computer
record data while the cart vibrates back and forth
a few times through the photogate. If the air track
is working right, all the time measurements should
be nearly the same, but if the data show the cart
slowing down a lot from one vibration to the next,
then you have a problem with friction. A drop in
velocity of about 1% over a half-cycle is reasonable.
The most common causes of excessive friction are
springs that are dragging on the track or springs
that are not horizontal, and thus tipping the cart
and causing one of its edges to drag.
Measure the velocity of the cart for many different
values of x by moving the photogate to various positions. Make sure you always release the cart from
rest at the same point, and when you are initially
choosing this release point, make sure that it is not
so far from the center that the springs are completely
bunched up or dragging on the track. Dont forget
that the x you use in the potential energy should
be the distance from the equilibrium position to the
position where the vane is centered on the photogate
if you dont think about it carefully, its easy to
make a mistake in x equal to half the width of the
vane.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 What measurements besides those mentioned
above will you need to do in lab in order to check
conservation of energy?

31

P2 Find the value of x from the figure below. (Ive


made the centimeter scale unrealistic for readability
the real track is more than a meter long, not 14
centimeters.)

P3 Check that the units of the two methods for


finding k agree.

Self-Check
Calculate the energies at the extremes, where P E =
0 and KE = 0, and see whether the energy is staying
roughly constant. You should do this self-check as
early as possible in the lab, so that you can make
sure youre not spending lots of time collecting data
that turn out to be bogus.

Analysis
Graph P E, KE, and the total energy as functions
of x, with error bars (see appendices 1, 2, and 3),
all overlaid on the same plot. Make sure to include
the points with KE = 0 and P E = 0. As a shortcut
in your error analysis, its okay if you do the error
analysis for your most typical data-point, in which
the energy is split roughly 50-50 between PE and
KE, and then assume that the same error bars on
P E, KE, and total energy apply to all the other
points on the graph as well.
Discuss whether you think conservation of energy
has been verified.

32

Lab 11

Conservation of Energy

33

12

Conservation of Momentum

Apparatus
computer with Logger Pro software
track
2 dynamics carts and 2 carts with magnets
1-kg weight
1 kg slotted weight
masking tape
2 force sensors with rubber corks

Qualitative Observations
First youre going to observe some collisions between
two carts and see how conservation of momentum
plays out. If you really wanted to take numerical
data, it would be a hassle, because momentum depends on mass and velocity, and there would be four
different velocity numbers youd have to measure:
cart 1 before the collision, cart 1 after the collision,
cart 2 before, and cart 2 after. To avoid all this complication, the first part of the lab will use only visual
observations.
Try gently pressing the two carts together on the
track. As they come close to each other, youll feel
them repelling each other! Thats because they have
magnets built into the ends. The magnets act like
perfect springs. For instance, if you hold one cart
firmly in place and let the other one roll at it, the
incoming cart will bounce back at almost exactly the
same speed. Its like a perfect superball.
A Equal masses, target at rest, elastic collision
Roll one cart toward the other. The target cart is
initially at rest. Conservation of momentum reads
like this,
M
=? M

+M
+M

where the two blanks on the left stand for the two
carts velocities before the collision, and the two
blanks on the right are for their velocities after the
collision. All conservation laws work like this: the
total amount of something remains the same. You
dont have any real numbers, but just from eyeballing the collision, what seems to have happened?
Lets just arbitrarily say that the mass of a cart is
one unit, so that wherever it says M x in the equation, youre just multiplying by one. You also dont

34

Lab 12

Conservation of Momentum

have any numerical values for the velocities, but suppose we say that the initial velocity of the incoming
cart is one unit. Does it look like conservation of
momentum was satisfied?
B Mirror symmetry
Now reenact the collision from part A, but do everything as a mirror image. The roles of the target cart
and incoming cart are reversed, and the direction of
motion is also reversed.
M
=? M

+M
+M

What happens now? Note that mathematically, we


use positive and negative signs to indicate the direction of a velocity in one dimension.
C An explosion
Now start with the carts held together, with their
magnets repelling. As soon as you release them,
theyll break contact and fly apart due to the repulsion of the magnets.
M
=? M

+M
+M

Does momentum appear to have been conserved?


D Head-on collision
Now try a collision in which the two carts head towards each other at equal speeds (meaning that one
carts initial velocity is positive, while the others is
negative).
M
=? M

+M
+M

E Sticking
Arrange a collision in which the carts will stick together rather than rebounding. You can do this by
letting the velcro ends hit each other instead of the
magnet ends. Make a collision in which the target is
initially stationary.
M
=? M

+M
+M

The collision is no longer perfectly springy. Did it


seem to matter, or was conservation of momentum
still valid?

F Hitting the end of the track


One end of the track has magnets in it. Take one
cart off the track entirely, and let the other cart roll
all the way to the end of the track, where it will
experience a repulsion from the fixed magnets built
into the track. Was momentum conserved? Discuss
this with your instructor.
G Unequal masses
Now put a one kilogram mass on one of the carts,
but leave the other cart the way it was. Attach the
mass to it securely using masking tape. A bare cart
has a mass of half a kilogram, so youve now tripled
the mass of one cart. In terms of our silly (but convenient) mass units, we now have masses of one unit
and three units for the two carts. Make the triplemass cart hit the initially stationary one-mass-unit
cart.
3M
=? 3M

+M
+M

These velocities are harder to estimate by eye, but if


you estimate numbers roughly, does it seem possible
that momentum was conserved?

Quantitative Observations
Now were going to explore the reasons why momentum always seems to be conserved. Parts H and I
will be demonstrated by the instructor for the whole
class at once.
Attach the force sensors to the carts, and put on the
rubber stoppers. Make sure that the rubber stoppers
are positioned sufficiently far out from the body of
the cart so that they will not rub against the edge
of the cart. Put the switch on the sensor in the
+10 N position. Plug the sensors into the DIN1
and DIN2 ports on the interface box. Start up the
Logger Pro software, and do File>Open>Probes and
Sensors>Force Sensors>Dual Range Forrce>2-10 N
Dual Range. Tell the computer to zero the sensors.
Try collecting data and pushing and pulling on the
rubber stopper. You should get a graph showing how
the force went up and down over time. The sensor
uses negative numbers (bottom half of the graph) for
forces that squish the sensor, and positive numbers
(top half) for forces that stretch it. Try both sensors,
and make sure you understand what the red and blue
traces on the graph are showing you.
H. Put the extra 1-kilogram weight on one of the
carts. Put it on the track by itself, without the other
cart. Try accelerating it from rest with a gentle,

steady force from your finger. Youll want to set the


collection time to a longer period than the default.
Position the track so that you can walk all the way
along its length (not diagonally across the bench).
Even after you hit the Collect button in Logger Pro,
the software wont actually start collecting data until
its triggered by a sufficiently strong force; squeeze
on one of the sensors to trigger the computer, and
then go ahead and do the real experiment with the
steady, gently force.
What does the graph on the computer look like?
I. Now repeat H, but use a more rapid acceleration
to bring the cart up to the same momentum. Sketch
a comparison of the graphs from parts H and I.
Discuss with your instructor how this relates to momentum.
J. You are now going to reenact collision A, but dont
do it yet! Youll let the carts rubber corks bump into
each other, and record the forces on the sensors. The
carts will have equal mass, and both forces will be
recorded simultaneously. Before you do it, predict
what you think the graphs will look like, and show
your sketch to your instructor.
Switch both sensors to the +50 N position, and open
the corresponding file on the computer.
Zero the sensors, then check the calibration by balancing a 1 kg weight on top, taking data, zooming
in, and putting the mouse cursor on the graph. You
will probably find that the absolute calibration of
the sensor is very poor when its used on the 50 N
scale; keep this in mind when interpreting your results from the collision.
Now try it. To zoom in on the relevant part of the
graph, use the mouse to draw a box, and then click
on the magnifying glass icon. You will notice by
eye that the motion after the collision is a tiny bit
different than it was with the magnets, but its still
pretty similar. Looking at the graphs, how do you
explain the fact that one cart lost exactly as much
momentum as the other one gained? Discuss this
with your instructor before going on.
K. Now imagine but dont do it yet that you
are going to reenact part G, where you used unequal
masses. Sketch your prediction for the two graphs,
and show your sketch to your instructor before you
go on.
Now try it, and discuss the results with your instructor.

35

13

Torque

Apparatus
meter stick with holes drilled in it . . . . . . . . 1/group
spring scales, calibrated in newtons
weights
string
protractors
hooks

Construct a setup like the one shown above. Avoid


any symmetry in your arrangement. There are four
forces acting on the meter stick:
FH = the weight hanging underneath
FM = Earths gravity on the meter stick itself
FL = tension in the string on the left
FR = tension in the string on the right
Each of these forces also produces a torque.

Goal
Test whether the total force and torque on an object
at rest both equal zero.

Introduction
It is not enough for a boat not to sink. It also must
not capsize. This is an example of a general fact
about physics, which is also well known to people
who overindulge in alcohol: if an object is to be in
a stable equilibrium at rest, it must not only have
zero net force on it, to keep from picking up momentum, but also zero net torque, to keep from acquiring
angular momentum.

In order to determine whether the total force is zero,


you will need enough raw data so that for each torque
you can extract (1) the magnitude of the force vector, and (2) the direction of the force vector. In order
to add up all the torques, you will have to choose an
axis of rotation, and collect enough raw data to be
able to determine for each force (3) the distance from
the axis to the point at which the force is applied to
the ruler, and (4) the angle between the force vector
and the line connecting the axis with the point where
the force is applied. Note that the meter sticks own
weight can be though of as being applied at its center
of mass.
You have a selection of spring scales, so use the right
one for the job dont use a 20 N scale to measure
0.8 newtons, because it will not be possible to read
it accurately. If you need to swap in a new spring
scale, dont forget to calibrate it.
Since the analysis requires you to compute the total torque a second time using a different choice of
axis, you cannot neglect to measure any of the angles
involved.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.

Observations
Weigh your meter stick before you do anything else;
they dont all weigh the same amount.
For each spring scale, hang a known weight from it,
and adjust the calibration tab so that the scale gives
the correct result.

36

Lab 13

Torque

P1 You have complete freedom in defining what


point is to be considered the axis of rotation if
one choice of axis causes the total torque to be zero,
then any other choice of axis will also cause the total torque to be zero. It is possible to simplify the
analysis by choosing the axis so that one of the four
torques is zero. Plan how you will do this.

P2 All the torques will be tending to cause rotation in the same plane. You can therefore use plus
and minus signs to represent clockwise and counterclockwise torques. Choose which one youll call positive. Using your choice of axis, which of the four
torques, H , M , L , and R , will be negative, which
will be positive, and which will be zero?
P3 Suppose that in the figure above, the angle between the meter stick and the hanging weight is 80 ,
the mass of the hanging weight is 1 kg, and the mass
of the meter stick is 0.1 kg. If a student is then trying to calculate the x components of the forces FM
and FH , why is it incorrect to say
FM ,x = (0.1 kg)(9.8 m/s2 )
and
FH,x = (1 kg)(9.8 m/s2 )(cos 80 )?

Analysis
Determine the total force and total torque on the
meter stick. For the forces, I think a graphical calculation will be easier than a numerical one.
Finally, repeat your calculation of the total torque
using a different point as your axis. Although youre
normally expected to do your analysis completely independently, for this lab its okay if you find the total
torque for one choice of axis, and your lab partners
do the calculation their own choices.
Error analysis is not required. For extra credit, you
can do error analysis for one of your total torques.

37

14

Absolute Zero

Note to the lab technician: The dessicant needs to


be dry before the experiment. If its blue, its dry. If
its pink, it needs to be pumped on for a few hours
with a vacuum pump while heating it with a hair
dryer. Also, please put 2 liters of alcohol in a freezer
overnight, then put them in the ice chest.

Apparatus
gas capillary tube
large test tube
mercury thermometer
glass syringe
electric heating pad
oven mitts
latex tubing
ice
string
funnels
clamps
gripper clamps

point. (If you leave the thermometer in the water


while its heating, youll be able to observe later the
interesting fact that the water stops heating up once
it reaches the boiling point.) If the water starts boiling before youre ready, just turn off the heat and
reheat it later it doesnt cool off very fast.

Introduction
If heat is a form of random molecular motion, then
it makes sense that there is some minimum temperature at which the molecules arent moving at all.
With fancy equipment, physicists have gotten samples of matter to within a fraction of a degree above
absolute zero, but they have never actually reached
absolute zero (and the laws of thermodynamics actually imply that they never can). Nevertheless, we
can determine how cold absolute zero is without even
getting very close to it. Kinetic theory tells us that
the volume of an ideal gas is proportional to how
high it is above absolute zero. In this lab, youll
measure the volume of a sample of air at temperatures between 0 and 100 degrees C, and determine
where absolute zero lies by extrapolating to the temperature at which it would have had zero volume.

Observations
Tie a short piece of string to the thermometer so
that youll be able to pull it back out of the beaker
when you want to without dipping your hands in
hot water. Start heating the water up to the boiling

38

Lab 14

Absolute Zero

The capillary tube is sealed at the bottom and open


at the top, with a large bulb full of dessicant just
below the top to keep the air inside dry. There is
a small amount of mercury inside the tube. Right
now, the mercury is probably floured, i.e., broken
up into small pieces sticking on the sides of the tube.
The idea is to collect the mercury into a single drop,
with a sample of air trapped in the capillary tube
under it. The mercury simply acts as a seal. As the
air is heated and cooled, it expands and contracts,
and you can measure its volume by watching the
mercury seal rise and drop. By the way, dont be
scared of the mercury; mercury vapor is a deadly
poison, but liquid mercury is entirely harmless unless
you ingest it or get it in an open cut. There is a small
filter made of glass wool at the top end of the bulb,
which will keep the mercury from getting out.
Remove the gas syringe from the box, being careful not to let the glass plunger drop out and break.
Connect it to the capillary tube with a piece of tubing.
First you need to get the mercury into a single blob
in the cavity at the top of the capillary, where it
widens out just below the bulb. If its already form-

ing a seal across the capillary tube, you wont be


able to get it to move, because its trapped between
the pressures of the inside air and the outside air.
You can break the seal by opening the stopcock and
drawing some air out with the syringe. (Note that
the stopcock has three holes; two are lined up with
the knob, and the third one is on the side marked
with a dot on the knob.) If this doesnt break the
seal, you can very gently shake the capillary tube
longitudinally. Shaking it longitudinally means moving it along its own length, like an arrow. Dont tap
it, and dont shake it transversely (like a fever thermometer or a magicians wand), because students
have broken tubes that way in the past. Now disconnect the tube from the syringe, and, if necessary,
shake it extremely gently upside-down to get all the
mercury droplets to collect in the cavity.
At this point, if you put the tube upright again, the
mercury drop will sit at the very top of the capillary, with a sample of air trapped below it filling the
entire tube. This is no good, because most of the
temperatures youll be using in this lab are hotter
than room temperature, so you need room for the
air sample to expand without forcing the mercury
out into the cavity. Heres how to get a smaller volume of air trapped under the mercury. Push the
plunger all the way into the syringe, open the stopcock, and connect the syringe to the tube, leaving
the tube horizontal with the mercury in the cavity.
Now pull the plunger out until youve created a 40%
vacuum. If you have the stopcock in the correct position, it should take quite a strong force to pull the
plunger out this far. Now bring the tube upright
again, and gently allow the plunger to slide back in.
At this point, the mercury should be about 40% below the top of the capillary, and you can disconnect
the syringe.
Detach the syringe and tubing, so from now on, everything is always at constant pressure! We want
temperature and volume to be the only variables
that change in this experiment. By leaving everything open to the air in the room, we guarantee that
the pressure will equal the air pressure in the room.
If necessary, bring the water back to a boil, and then
turn off the heat again. Being careful not to burn
yourself, lower the clamp so the test tube is almost
touching the tabletop; this way, if it slips out of the
clamp, it wont fall far enough to break. (I broke one
of the test tubes myself by letting it slip this way.)
Insert the thermometer and the capillary tube, and
give them a minute or so to come to equilibrium with
the water.

You can now start taking a series of temperature and


volume measurements as the water in the test tube
gradually cools down towards room temperature.
The cooling process is rapid at first. If you get impatient, you can gently pour a small amount of cool
water in the top, making sure to let it equilibrate for
a few minutes afterward before taking data. Dont
try to swirl the test tube around in order to speed
up the equilibration thats what I was trying to do
the time the test tube slipped out of the clamp and
broke.
When the water gets close to room temperature, the
cooling process slows down. At some point, you may
wish to fill a beaker with lukewarm water and immerse the end of the flask in it in order to speed up
the cooling. Meanwhile, you can start preparing a
sample of very cold alcohol mixed with ice.
Once you have data at temperatures down to near
room temperature, pour some liquid off of the alcoholice mixture, and use it to replace the water in the
flask. Make sure you dont get ice in the flask, which
makes it impossible to insert the capillary tube and
thermometer.

Analysis
Graph the temperature and volume against each other.
Does the graph appear to be linear? If so, extrapolate to find the temperature at which the volume
would be zero.
If your data are nice and linear, then your main
source of error will be random errors, and you should
then determine error bars for your value of absolute
zero using the techniques discussed in Appendix 4.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Should you measure the volume from the top,
the middle, or the bottom of the mercury? Explain.

39

15

The Clement-Desormes Experiment

Apparatus
large flask
glass syringe
water manometer
helium (medium size cylinder, $40 from Party City)
difluoroethane (sold in cans as gas duster at Frys)
stopwatch
hose clamps
grabber clamps
stands

Introduction
Although the theory that matter was made of atoms
started to be talked about seriously by scientists as
early as Galileos time, scientists generally didnt
think of it as something that was literally true. They
considered the atomic theory to be a useful model,
but they thought that any fundamental explanation
of real-world phenomena should avoid talking about
hypothetical things like atoms. This feeling was so
strong that the physicist Ludwig Boltzmann, who
came up with an atomic explanation of entropy, was
driven to suicide by the harsh criticism to which his
ideas were subjected. Even more suspect than the
existence of atoms was any attempt to discuss things
like the shapes of molecules that could be formed
by putting them together like tinkertoys; such ideas
seemed much too far removed from the possibility of
any experimental testing.
Surprisingly, then, a simple experiment, due to Clement and Desormes, is capable of distinguishing two
samples of gas that differ only by the shape of their
molecules, even if the gases have the same density
and are composed of molecules having the same mass.
Use the glass syringe to apply a slight overpressure
to the air inside the flask, causing the difference in
height between the water in the two sides of the
manometer to be about 30 cm. Wait one minute
to make sure the air is in thermal equilibrium with
the room, and then take a pressure reading, p1 . Release the pressure by popping the cork for precisely
one second, timed on a stopwatch. The air cools
slightly due to its expansion, because it does mechanical work as it exits throught the valve. However, because the expansion is rapid, and heat con-

40

Lab 15

duction is a slow process, we can treat this as insulated expansion, as discussed in Appendix 2 of Simple Nature. If the gas is a monoatomic one, such
as helium, then the amount of cooling of the gas, as
proved in the book, is given by the relation T P b ,
where b = 2/5. If the gas is not monoatomic, however, then its molecules can rotate,1 and at any given
time some of its energy is in the form of kinetic energy along the x, y, and z axes, but some is in the
form of rotational kinetic energy. Extracting a given
amount of energy from a diatomic or polyatomic gas,
therefore, doesnt cool it as much as it would cool a
monoatomic gas, and it turns out that b = 2/7 for a
diatomic gas, and 1/4 for a polyatomic gas.2
Wait one minute for the air to warm back up to room
temperature. The pressure comes back up somewhat
as the air warms back up, and although you should
wait a full minute to make sure its back in thermal
equilibrium, most of the rewarming occurs during
the first few seconds after you finish venting the initial pressure. The pressure will recover to a value
p2 which is less than p1 . The ratio p2 /p1 gives the
value of b for the gas.3
Im still working on improving this lab. The basic idea I have in mind is to have you do the lab
once with helium (monoatomic), air (diatomic), and
1 An individual atom in a monoatomic gas has essentially
all its mass concentrated in the nucleus exactly at its center,
so it takes an effectively infinite amount of energy to make it
rotate with a certain amount of angular momentum.
2 Youll often see this stated in terms of the variable =
1/(1 b), which takes on the values 5/3, 7/5, and 4/3.
3 In terms of the variable , we have = p /(p p ).
1
1
2

The Clement-Desormes Experiment

difluoroethane (polyatomic), and observe the differences in the results due to the different shapes of
the molecules. There are various systematic errors
in the experiment, so my own absolute results for
the b of air havent been of extremely high precision; however, in a comparative experiment, I think
it will be easy to see a difference in b between the
gases. One possible problem with the air is that it
contains water vapor, which messes up the thermodynamic properties of the air, because water droplets
can condense out of the air when the pressure is
dropped suddenly, as when you open a can of beer.
The helium and difluoroethane shouldnt have this
problem. In the spring semester of 2008, we tried
all three gases, and found that it was fairly easy to
detect a clear systematic difference between a higher
b for air (.20, .29, .33, .29, and .31 for the five lab
groups) and a lower one for difluoroethane (.18, .20,
.33, .25, and .24), but the results for helium were
much lower than theory, and barely distinguishable
from air (.29, .35, .35, .31, and .31, versus .40 according to theory). This may be because were not
actually getting the flasks as full of pure helium as
we think we are.
Some of the flasks have holes at both the top and the
bottom. With these flasks, its a good idea to introduce the helium through the bottom hole, since its
lighter than air, and will rise. The difluoroethane,
on the other hand, should be put in through the top
hole, because its heavier than air. I dont know if
it will be practical to use the helium with the flasks
that only have holes at the top.
Both the helium and the difluoroethane can displace
the beathable air in the classroom, and the amount
of helium in the large canister is particularly big. For
this reason, Ive been dispensing the helium outside
the classroom.
The difluoroethane is a liquid when its pressurized
inside the can. When you vent some of the pressure
through the nozzle, the pressure drops, and some of
it vaporizes and comes out. The vaporization consumes energy, so the can becomes cold. If you hold
the can upside down and spray it, liquid is emitted
rather than gas; this liquid is extremely cold, and
can cause frostbite if it gets on your skin. The gas is
not flammable, and does not harm the ozone layer.
Some teenagers have intentionally inhaled it to get
high, so the manufacturers have added a bitterant.

41

16

The Pendulum

Apparatus

Notation and Terminology

string
cylindrical pendulum bobs
hooked masses
protractor
stopwatch
computer with photogate and Vernier Timer software
clamps (not hooks) for holding the string
tape measures
meter sticks

When a moving thing, such as a wave, an orbiting planet, a wheel, or a pendulum, goes through
a repetitive cycle of motion, the time required for
one complete cycle is called the period, T . Note
that a pendulum visits any given point once while
traveling in one direction and once while traveling
in the opposite direction. The period is defined as
how long it takes to come back to the same point,
traveling in the same direction.

Goal
Find out how the period of a pendulum depends on
its length and mass, and on the amplitude of its
swing.

Introduction

From a to g is one full period of the pendulum. From a


to e is not a full period. Even though the pendulum has
returned at e to its original position in a, it is moving in the
opposite direction, and has not performed every type of
motion it will ever perform.

Until the industrial revolution, the interest of the


worlds cultures in the measurement of time was almost entirely concentrated on the construction of
calendars, so that agricultural cycles could be anticipated. Although the Egyptians were the first to
divide the day and night into 12 hours, there was no
technology for measuring time units smaller than a
day with great accuracy until four thousand years
later.
Galileo was the first to realize that a pendulum could
be used to measure time accurately previously, he
had been using his own pulse to measure the time required for objects to roll down inclined planes. The
legend is that the idea came to him while he watched
a chandelier swinging during a church service. Sentenced to house arrest for suspicion of heresy, he
spent the last years of his life trying to build a more
practical pendulum clock that would run for long
periods of time without tending. This technical feat
was only achieved later by Christian Huygens. Along
with the Chinese invention of the compass, accurate
clocks were vital for European exploration by sea,
because longitude can only be determined by astronomical observations combined with accurate measurements of time.

The amplitude of a repetitive motion is a way of


describing the amount of motion. We can define
the amplitude, A, of the pendulums motion as the
maximum angle to which it rises, i.e., half the total
angle swept out. Let us denote the mass of the bob,
or weight at the end of the pendulum, by m, and
the length of the pendulum, from the pivot to the
middle of the weight, as L.

Observations
Make observations to determine how the period, T ,
depends on A, L, and m. You will want to use the

42

Lab 16

The Pendulum

technique of isolation of variables. That means that


rather than trying many random combinations of
A, L, and m, you should keep two of them constant
while measuring T for various values of the third
variable. Then you should shift your attention to
the next variable, changing it while keeping the other
two constant, and so on. Be sure to try quite a few
values of the variable you are changing, so you can
see in detail how T depends on each variable.
The period can be measured using the photogate.
See appendix 6 for how to use the computer software; you want the mode thats meant specifically
for measuring the period of a pendulum. Note that
the bob is what is blocking the photogate, so if your
bob is irregularly shaped, your measurements could
be messed up if it changed orientation between one
pass through the photogate and the next. The easiest way to make sure this problem doesnt occur is
to use a bob with a circular cross-section, so it has
the same width no matter which way the photogate
cuts through it.
One of the notable differences between the way students and professional scientists approach experiments is that students tend to be timid about exploring extreme conditions. In this experiment, there is
a big advantage to taking measurements over wide
ranges of each of the three parameters, because it
may be impossible to ascertain how the period depends on a parameter if you only explore a small
range. When changing L, you can go up to four
meters if you hang the pendulum from the balcony;
however, you should avoid lengths so short that they
are comparable to the size of the bob itself, since
such short lengths would have anomalous behavior.
For large values of L, its not practical to use the
computer, so use a stopwatch instead. Dont just
time one oscillation, because then the precision of
your timing will be horrible. Measure the time required for some large number of oscillations.
Warning: Since L is measured to the middle of the
weight, you must change the length of the string
if you want to vary m while keeping L constant,
compensating for the different physical size of the
new weight.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise

youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.


P1 What is the maximum possible amplitude for
a pendulum of the type youll use, whose bob hangs
from a string? If you were using a pendulum with a
stiff rod instead of a string, you could release it from
straight up. What would its period be if you could
release it from exactly straight up?
P2 Referring to appendix 5, how will you tell from
your log-log plot whether the data follow a power
law, i.e., whether it is even appropriate to try to
extract p? (If youve already done lab 6, its exactly
the same technique.)

Self-Check
Figure out which variable T depends on most strongly,
and extract p (see below).

Analysis
Graph your data and state your conclusions about
whether T depends on A, L and m. Remember
that on a graph of experimental data, the horizontal
axis should always be the quantity you controlled directly, and the vertical axis should be the quantity
you measured but did not directly select. The photogate is so accurate that there is not much point
in putting error bars on your graph they would
be too small to see. Remember, however, that there
are some fairly significant systematic errors, e.g., it is
hard to accurately keep L the same when switching
masses.
It may happen that when you change one of the variables, there are only small, insignificant changes in
the period, but depending on how you graph the
data, it may look like these are real changes in the
period. Most computer graphing software has a default which is to make the y axis stretch only across
the range of actual y data. e.g., if your periods
were all between 0.567 and 0.574 s, then the software makes an extremely magnified graph, with the
y axis running only over the short range from 0.567
to 0.574 s. On such a scale, it may seem at first
glance that there are some major changes in the period. To help yourself interpret your graphs, you
should make them all with the same y scale, going
from zero all the way up to the highest period you
ever measured. Then youll be comparing all three
graphs on the same footing.
Of the three variables, find the one on which the
period depends the most strongly, and use the tech-

43

niques outlined in appendix 5 to see if you can find


an equation describing the relationship between the
period and that variable. Assume that the equation
is of the form
T = cxp

where x would actually be A, L or m, and c and p


are constants. The constant p is important, and is
expected to be the same for all pendula. For instance, if you find that the mass is the variable that
has the greatest effect on the period, and that the
relationship is of the form T = cm3 , then you have
discovered something that is probably generally true
for all pendula: that the period is proportional to the
cube of the mass. The constant c is just some boring number thats not worth extracting from your
graphs; its the exponent p thats interesting and
universally valid.

44

Lab 16

The Pendulum

45

17

Resonance

Apparatus
vibrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
stopwatch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
multimeter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
banana plug cables
Thornton power supplies (in lab benches in 416)
Leybold 521 545 17-volt DC power supplies1
24 V AC power supplies

Goals
Observe the phenomenon of resonance.

Electrical setup, top view.

Investigate how the width of a resonance depends on the amount of damping.

Introduction
To break a wine glass, an opera singer has to sing
the right note. To hear a radio signal, you have to
be tuned to the right frequency. These are examples
of the phenomenon of resonance: a vibrating system
will respond most strongly to a force that varies with
a particular frequency.

If the motor is stopped so that the arms are locked in


place, the metal disk can still swing clockwise and
counterclockwise because it is attached to the upright rod with a flexible spiral spring. A push on the
disk will result in vibrations that persist for quite
a while before the internal friction in the spring reduces their amplitude to an imperceptible level. This
would be an example of a free vibration, in which
energy is steadily lost in the form of heat, but no
external force pumps in energy to replace it.
Suppose instead that you initially stop the disk, but
then turn on the electric motor. There is no rigid
mechanical link to the disk, since the motor and disk
are only connected through the very flexible spiral
spring. But the motor will gently tighten and loosen
the spring, resulting in the gradual building up of a
vibration in the disk.

Observations
Simplified mechanical drawing of the vibrator, front view.

Apparatus
In this lab you will investigate the phenomenon of
resonance using the apparatus shown in the figure.
1 or HP6204B 40-volt supplies, if the Leybold supplies
arent bought because of budget issues

46

Lab 17

Resonance

A Period of Free Vibrations


Start without any of the electrical stuff hooked up.
Twist the disk to one side, release it, and determine
its period of vibration. (Both here and at points
later in the lab, you can improve your accuracy by
timing ten periods and dividing the result by ten.)
This is the natural period of the vibrations, i.e., the
period with which they occur in the absence of any
driving force.

B Damping
Note the coils of wire at the bottom of the disk.
These are electromagnets. Their purpose is not to
attract the disk magnetically (in fact the disk is
made of a nonmagnetic metal) but rather to increase
the amount of damping in the system. Whenever a
metal is moved through a magnetic field, the electrons in the metal are made to swirl around. As
they eddy like this, they undergo random collisions
with atoms, causing the atoms to vibrate. Vibration
of atoms is heat, so where did this heat energy come
from ultimately? In our system, the only source of
energy is the energy of the vibrating disk. The net
effect is thus to suck energy out of the vibration and
convert it into heat. Although this magnetic and
electrical effect is entirely different from mechanical
friction, the result is the same. Creating damping in
this manner has the advantage that it can be made
stronger or weaker simply by increasing or decreasing the strength of the magnetic field.
Turn off all the electrical equipment and leave it unplugged. Connect the circuit shown in the top left
of the electrical diagram, consisting of a power supply to run the electromagnet plus a meter . You do
not yet need the power supply for driving the motor.
The meter will tell you how much electrical current
is flowing through the electromagnet, which will give
you a numerical measure of how strong your damping is. It reads out in units of amperes (A), the
metric unit of electrical current. Although this does
not directly tell you the amount of damping force in
units of newtons (the force depends on velocity), the
force is proportional to the current.
Once you have everything hooked up, check with
your instructor before plugging things in and turning them on. If you do the setup wrong, you could
blow a fuse, which is no big deal, but a more serious goof would be to put too much current through
the electromagnet, which could burn it up, permanently ruining it. Once your instructor has checked
this part of the electrical setup she/he will show you
how to monitor the current on the meter to make
sure that you never have too much.
The Q of an oscillator is defined as the number of
oscillations required for damping to reduce the energy of the vibrations by a factor of 535 (a definition originating from the quantity e2 ). As planned
in your prelab, measure the Q of the system with
the electromagnet turned off, then with a low current through the electromagnet, and then a higher
current. There are differences among the oscillators,
possibly because they were dropped on the floor dur-

ing the move. To compensate for this, the currents


you should use should be based on which oscillator
you have. Groups 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 should use
the oscillators labeled 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, B, and D, respectively. If your oscillator is 2, 3, or 5, you should use
300 mA for the low current and 600 mA for the high;
if its 1, 4, B, or D, use 225 and 450 mA. You will be
using these two current values throughout the lab.
C Frequency of Driven Vibration
Now connect the 24 V AC power supply to the motor.2 The motor has coarse (0 to 100) and fine (-6 to
+6) adjustment knobs. (On the older models these
are marked gro and fein, and have different
scales.) These knobs are not calibrated in Hz, and
their readings dont even correlate linearly with frequency, so to measure the frequency of the motor
you need to use the stopwatch. However, it can be
useful to write down the knob settings that produced
a particular frequency, so that you can reproduce it
later. The older motors dont control their frequency
as accurately as the newer ones, so if you have one
of these you should do the low-Q setup in part F.
Set the damping current to the higher of the two
values. Turn on the motor and drive the system at a
frequency very different from its natural frequency.
You will notice that it takes a certain amount of
time, perhaps a minute or two, for the system to
settle into a steady pattern of vibration. This is
called the steady-state response to the driving force
of the motor.
Does the system respond by vibrating at its natural
frequency, at the same frequency as the motor, or at
some frequency in between?
D Resonance
With your damping current still set to the higher
value, try different motor frequencies, and observe
how strong the steady-state response is. At what
motor frequency do you obtain the strongest response?
When changing from one frequency to another, you
have to allow time for the vibrator to reach its steady
state. To make it easier to tell when the steady state
is happening, it helps if you stop the vibration by
hand after changing the frequency; otherwise you
can get complicated patterns of motion in which the
exponentially decaying motion left over from the old
frequency happens on top of the new driven motion.
2 We will probably get the 24 V AC power supplies sometime in 2009. If we dont have those yet, use one of the power
supplies in the lab benches in 416T, setting it on 12 V and
connecting to the +12 and 12 V plugs.

47

You can save yourself some time if you think of this


part and part F as one unit, and plan ahead so that
the data you take now are also the data you need for
part F.
In order to see whats going on, you should make
the graph as you go along, and let the spreadsheet
program plot each point as you type it in. This functionality doesnt seem to work properly in OpenOffice, so use Excel instead; although appendix 4 describes OpenOffice, Excel is very similar. You need
to make the software understand that you intend it
to graph every row of the spreadsheet that occurs
in the two columns, which Ill assume are A and B.
When you select the two columns, click on the gray
column header that says A, and then drag the mouse
onto B. It should highlight all the visible rows, not
just the ones in which youve already entered data.
E Resonance Strength
Set the motor to the resonant frequency, i.e., the
frequency at which you have found you obtain the
strongest response. Now measure the amplitude of
the vibrations you obtain with each of the two damping currents. How does the strength of the resonance
depend on damping?
With low amounts of damping, I have sometimes encountered a problem where the system, when driven
near resonance, never really settles down into a steady
state. The amplitude varies dramatically from one
minute to the next, perhaps because the power supply is not stable enough to control the driving frequency consistently enough. If this happens to you,
check with your instructor.
F Width of the Resonance
Now measure the response of the system for a large
number of driving frequencies, so that you can graph
the resonance curve and determine the width of the
resonance. Concentrate on the area near the top
and sides of the peak, which is whats important for
finding the full width at half maximum (FWHM).
To make this part less time-consuming, your instructor will assign your group to do only one of the two
graphs, low-Q or high-Q. Each group will have their
own data for one Q and another groups data for
another Q.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If

48

Lab 17

Resonance

you dont know the answers, make sure to come to


my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Plan how you will determine the Q of your oscillator in part B. [Hint: Note that the energy of a
vibration is proportional to the square of the amplitude.]

Self-Check
Make your graphs for part F (see below), and see if
they make sense. Make sure to make the frequency
axis expanded enough to get an accurate FWHM
from the graph,

Analysis
Compare your observations in parts C, D, and E
with theory.
For part F, construct graphs with the square of the
amplitude on the y axis and the frequency on the
x axis. The reason for using the square of the amplitude is that the standard way of specifying the
width of a resonance peak is to give its full width at
half resonance (FWHM), which is measured between
the two points where the energy of the steady-state
vibration equals half its maximum value. Energy is
proportional to the square of the amplitude. Determine the FWHM of the resonance for each value of
the damping current, and find whether the expected
relationship exists between Q and FWHM; make a
numerical test, not just a qualitative one. Obviously
there is no way you can get an accurate FWHM if
the peak is only as wide as a pencil on the graph
make an appropriate choice of the range of frequencies on the x axis.

49

18

Resonance (short version for physics


222)

This is a simplified version of lab 17, meant to introduce some concepts related to mechanical resonance, without any detailed data-taking. The idea
is to reinforce the relevant concepts from physics 221
so that they can be used as a metaphor for electrical
resonances in 222.

Apparatus
vibrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
Thornton power supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
stopwatch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
multimeter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
banana plug cables

Simplified mechanical drawing of the vibrator, front view.

Goals
Observe the phenomenon of resonance.
Learn how to visualize phases and amplitudes
in a plane.

Introduction
To break a wine glass, an opera singer has to sing
the right note. To hear a radio signal, you have to
be tuned to the right frequency. These are examples
of the phenomenon of resonance: a vibrating system
will respond most strongly to a force that varies with
a particular frequency.

Apparatus
In this lab you will investigate the phenomenon of
resonance using the apparatus shown in the figure.
If the motor is stopped so that the arms are locked in
place, the metal disk can still swing clockwise and
counterclockwise because it is attached to the upright rod with a flexible spiral spring. A push on the
disk will result in vibrations that persist for quite
a while before the internal friction in the spring reduces their amplitude to an imperceptible level. This
would be an example of a free vibration, in which
energy is steadily lost in the form of heat, but no
external force pumps in energy to replace it.

50

Lab 18

Electrical setup, top view.

Suppose instead that you initially stop the disk, but


then turn on the electric motor. There is no rigid
mechanical link to the disk, since the motor and disk
are only connected through the very flexible spiral
spring. But the motor will gently tighten and loosen
the spring, resulting in the gradual building up of a
vibration in the disk.

Observations
A Period of Free Vibrations
Start without any of the electrical stuff hooked up.
Twist the disk to one side, release it, and use the
stopwatch to determine its natural period of vibra-

Resonance (short version for physics 222)

tion. (Both here and at points later in the lab, you


can improve your accuracy by timing ten periods
and dividing the result by ten.)

A through the electromagnet, and then 0.50 A. You


will be using these two current values throughout
the lab.

B Damping

C Frequency of Driven Vibration

Note the coils of wire at the bottom of the disk.


These are electromagnets. Their purpose is not to
attract the disk magnetically (in fact the disk is
made of a nonmagnetic metal) but rather to increase
the amount of damping in the system. Whenever a
metal is moved through a magnetic field, the electrons in the metal are made to swirl around. As
they eddy like this, they undergo random collisions
with atoms, causing the atoms to vibrate. Vibration
of atoms is heat, so where did this heat energy come
from ultimately? In our system, the only source of
energy is the energy of the vibrating disk. The net
effect is thus to suck energy out of the vibration and
convert it into heat. Although this magnetic and
electrical effect is entirely different from mechanical
friction, the result is the same. Creating damping in
this manner has the advantage that it can be made
stronger or weaker simply by increasing or decreasing the strength of the magnetic field.

Now connect the labs DC power supply to the terminals on the motor labeled motorpanschlu. The
coarse and fine adjustments to the speed of the motor are marked gro (gross) and fein (fine).

Turn off all the electrical equipment and leave it unplugged. Connect the circuit shown in the top left
of the electrical diagram, consisting of a power supply to run the electromagnet plus a meter . You do
not yet need the power supply for driving the motor.
The meter will tell you how much electrical current
is flowing through the electromagnet, which will give
you a numerical measure of how strong your damping is. It reads out in units of amperes (A), the
metric unit of electrical current. Although this does
not directly tell you the amount of damping force in
units of newtons (the force depends on velocity), the
force is proportional to the current.
Once you have everything hooked up, check with
your instructor before plugging things in and turning them on. If you do the setup wrong, you could
blow a fuse, which is no big deal, but a more serious goof would be to put too much current through
the electromagnet, which could burn it up, permanently ruining it. Once your instructor has checked
this part of the electrical setup she/he will show you
how to monitor the current on the meter to make
sure that you never have too much.
The Q of an oscillator is defined as the number of
oscillations required for damping to reduce the energy of the vibrations by a factor of 535 (a definition
originating from the quantity e2 ). As planned in
your prelab, measure the Q of the system with the
electromagnet turned off, then with a current of 0.25

Set the damping current to the higher of the two


values. Turn on the motor and drive the system at a
frequency very different from its natural frequency.
You will notice that it takes a certain amount of
time, perhaps a minute or two, for the system to
settle into a steady pattern of vibration. This is
called the steady-state response to the driving force
of the motor.
Does the system respond by vibrating at its natural
frequency, at the same frequency as the motor, or at
some frequency in between?
D Resonance
With your damping current still set to the higher
value, try different motor frequencies, and observe
how strong the steady-state response is. At what
motor frequency do you obtain the strongest response?
E Resonance Strength
Set the motor to the resonant frequency, i.e., the
frequency at which you have found you obtain the
strongest response. Now measure the amplitude of
the vibrations you obtain with each of the two damping currents. How does the strength of the resonance
depend on damping?
F Phase Response
If the disk and the vertical arm were connected rigidly,
rather than through a spring, then they would always be in phase. For instance, the disk would reach
its most extreme clockwise angle at the same moment when the vertical arm was also all the way
clockwise. But since the connection is not rigid,
this need not be the case. Find a frequency significantly below the resonant frequency, at which
the amplitude of the steady-state response is perhaps one tenth of the value it would have at resonance. What do you observe about the relative
phase of the disk and the vertical arm? Are they in
phase or out of phase? You can describe the phase
by assigning positive phase angles to oscillations in
which the disk is ahead of the arm, and negative
phases when the disk is behind. These phase angles
can range from -180 to 180 . Actually +180 and

51

-180 would represent the same thing: the oscillations have phases that are exactly the opposite. Try
to estimate roughly what the phase angle is. You
dont have any way to measure it accurately, but you
should be able to estimate it to the nearest multiple
of 45 . Measure the amplitude of the steady-state
response as well.

tude.]

Now measure the phase and amplitude of the response when the driving force is at the resonant frequency.
Finally, do the same measurements when the driving
force is significantly above resonance.

Analysis
The point of this is to connect the mechanical analog
to what you know about the phase response of a
resonant LRC circuit. Youre measuring the phase
between F and x, which is analogous to the phase
between V and q in electrical terms. However, most
people think of AC circuits in terms of V and I, not
V and q. The phase relationships youre expecting,
therefore, are those that would hold between F and
v = dx/dt, which differ by 90 degrees from the F x
phases you actually measured as raw data.
To complete the electrical analogy, we would really
prefer to discuss the mechanical analog of impedance.
The (constant) driving force from the motor plays
the role of the voltage, while the frequency-dependent
amplitude of the vibration plays the role of the current. Dividing these two quantities gives us something analogous to impedance, and since the driving
force is always the same, we can say that the inverse of the amplitude is essentially a measure of
the impedance.
To summarize, you have a complex impedance whose
amplitude and phase angle you can determine from
your data. Plot the impedances at the various frequencies in the complex plane.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Plan how you will determine the Q of your oscillator in part B. [Hint: Note that the energy of a
vibration is proportional to the square of the ampli-

52

Lab 18

Resonance (short version for physics 222)

53

19

Standing Waves

Apparatus
string
weights, including 1-gram weights
pulley
vibrator
paperclips
metersticks
butcher paper
scissors
weight holders

Goals
Observe the resonant modes of vibration of a
string.

Setup
The apparatus allows you to excite vibrations at a
fixed frequency of 120 Hz (twice the frequency of
the alternating current that runs the vibrator). The
tension in the string can be controlled by varying the
weight.
You may find it helpful to put a strip of white butcher
paper behind the black string for better visual contrast.
Its important to get the vibrator set up properly
along the same line as the string, not at an angle.

Find how the speed of waves on a string depends on the tension in the string.

Introduction
The Greek philosopher Pythagoras is said to have
been the first to observe that two plucked strings
sounded good together when their lengths were in
the proportion of two small integers. (This is assuming the strings are of the same material and under
the same tension.) For instance, he thought a pleasant combination of notes was produced when one
string was twice the length of the other, but that the
combination was unpleasant when the ratio was, say,
1.4 to 1 (like the notes B and F). Although different
combinations of notes are used in different cultures
and different styles of music, there is at least some
scientific justification for Pythagoras statement. We
now know that a plucked string does not just vibrate
at a single frequency but simultaneously at a whole
series of frequencies f1 , 2f1 , 3f1 ,... These frequencies are called the harmonics. If one string is twice
the length of the other, then its lowest harmonic is at
half the frequency of the other strings, and its harmonics coincide with the odd-numbered harmonics
of the other string. If the ratio is 1.4 to 1, however,
then there is essentially no regular relationship between the two sets of frequencies, and many of the
harmonics lie close enough in frequency to produce
unpleasant beats.

54

Lab 19

Standing Waves

Observations
Observe as many modes of vibration as you can. You
will probably not be able to observe the fundamental (one hump) because it would require too much
weight. In each case, you will want to fine-tune the
weight to get as close as possible to the middle of
the resonance, where the amplitude of vibration is
at a maximum. When youre close to the peak of
a resonance, an easy way to tell whether to add or
remove weight is by gently pressing down or lifting
up on the weights with your finger to see whether
the amplitude increases or decreases.
For large values of N , you may find that you need to
use a paperclip instead of the weight holder, in order
to make the mass sufficiently small. Keep in mind,
however, that you wont really improve the quality
of your data very much by taking data for very high
values of N , since the 1-gram precision with which
you can locate these resonances results in a poor
relative precision compared to a small weight.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to

my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise


youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Should the whole length of the string be counted
in L, or just the part from the vibrator to the pulley?
P2 How is the tension in the string, T , related to
the mass of the hanging weight?

ity of the waves in the string and the tension in the


string. (Do not just try to find the correct power
law in the textbook, because besides observing the
phenomenon of resonance, the point of the lab is to
prove experimentally what the power-law relationship is.)

P3 The figure below shows the N = 1, 2, and 3


patterns of vibration. Suppose the length of the
string is one meter. In each case, find the wavelength.

P4 Generalize your numerical results from P3 to


give a general equation for in terms of N and L,
the length of the string. Check its units, and check
that it recovers the special cases done numerically in
P3.
P5 How can the velocity of the waves be determined if you know the frequency, f , the length of
the string, L, and the number of humps, N ?

Self-Check
Do your analysis in lab.

Analysis
Use the techniques given in appendix 5 to see if you
can find a power-law relationship between the veloc-

55

20

Resonances of Sound

Apparatus
wave generator (PASCO PI-9587C) . . . . . . . 1/group
speaker (Thornton) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
100 mL graduated cylinder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
Linux computers with FFT Explorer installed (Lassie,
Fang, and Buck in 416T)
flexible whistling tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
tuning fork marked with frequency, mounted on a
wooden box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
aluminum rod, 3/4-inch dia, about 1 m long
2

Goals
Find the resonant frequencies of the air inside
a cylinder by two methods.
Measure the speeds of sound in air and in aluminum.

Introduction
In the womb, your first sensory experiences were of
your mothers voice, and soon after birth you learned
to distinguish the particular sounds of your parents
voices from those of strangers. The human ear-brain
system is amazingly sophisticated in its ability to
classify vowels and consonants, recognize peoples
voices, and analyze musical sound. Until the 19thcentury investigations of Helmholtz, the whole process was completely mysterious. How could we so
easily tell a cello from a violin playing the same note?
A radio station in Chicago has a weekly contest in
which jazz fanatics are asked to identify instrumentalists simply by their distinctly individual timbres
how is this possible?
Helmholtz found (using incredibly primitive nonelectronic equipment) that part of the answer lay in the
relative strengths of the overtones. The psychological sensation of pitch is related to frequency, e.g., 440
Hz is the note A. But a saxophonist playing the
note A is actually producing a rich spectrum of
frequencies, including 440 Hz, 880 Hz, 1320 Hz, and
many other multiples of the lowest frequency, known
as the fundamental. The ear-brain system perceives
all these overtones as a single sound because they are
all multiples of the fundamental frequency. (The Javanese orchestra called the gamelan sounds strange

56

Lab 20

Resonances of Sound

to westerners partly because the various gongs and


cymbals have overtones that are not integer multiples of the fundamental.)
One of the things that would make A on a clarinet
sound different from A on a saxophone is that the
880 Hz overtone would be quite strong for the saxophone, but almost entirely missing for the clarinet.
Although Helmholtz thought the relative strengths
of the overtones was the whole story when it came
to musical timbre, actually it is more complex than
that, which is why electronic synthesizers still do not
sound as good as acoustic instruments. The timbre
depends not just on the general strength of the overtones but on the details of how they first build up
(the attack) and how the various overtones fade in
and out slightly as the note continues.
Why do different instruments have different sound
spectra, and why, for instance, does a saxophone
have an overtone that the clarinet lacks? Many musical instruments can be analyzed physically as tubes
that have either two open ends, two closed ends, or
one open end and one closed end. The overtones
correspond to specific resonances of the air column
inside the tube. A complete treatment of the subject
is given in your textbook, but the basic principle is
that the resonant standing waves in the tube must
have an antinode (point of maximum vibration) at
any closed end of the tube, and a node (point of zero
vibration) at any open end.
Using the Wave Generator
The wave generator works like the amplifier of your
stereo, but instead of playing a CD, it produces a
sine wave whose frequency and amplitude you can
control. By connecting it to a speaker, you can convert its electrical currents to sound waves, making
a pure tone. The frequency of the sine wave corresponds to musical pitch, and the amplitude corresponds to loudness. Use the output labeled LO
. The wave generator can create enough voltage to
give a mildly unpleasant tingling sensation in your
hand if you touch the leads. None of the electrical apparatus used in this lab, however, is any more
dangerous than a home TV or stereo.

Setup
Unplug the wave generator. Check the fuse in the
back of the wave generator to make sure it is not
blown, then put it back in. Plug in the wave generator and turn off the on/off switch at the top right.
Turn the amplitude knob of the wave generator to
zero, and then turn on the on/off switch.
Plug the speaker into the wave generator. The banana plugs go in the two holes on the right. Set the
frequency to something audible. Wait 30 seconds
for the wave generator to warm up, then turn the
amplitude knob up until you hear a sound.
The wave generator and the speaker are not really
designed to work together, so if you leave the volume
up very high for a long time, it is possible to blow
the speaker or damage the wave generator. Also, the
sine waves are annoying when played continuously at
loud volumes!

Preliminary Observations
Observations
This lab has three parts, A, B, and C. It is not really
possible for more than one group to do part A in the
same room, both because their sounds interfere with
one another and because the noise becomes annoying for everyone. Your instructor will probably have
three groups working on part A at one time, one
group in the main room, one in the small side room,
and one in the physics stockroom. Meanwhile, the
other groups will be doing parts B and C.
A Direct Measurement of Resonances by Listening
Set up the graduated cylinder so its mouth is covering the center of the speaker. Find as many frequencies as possible at which the cylinder resonates.
When you sweep through those frequencies, the sound
becomes louder. To make sure youre really hearing
a resonance of the cylinder, make sure to repeat each
observation with the cylinder removed, and make
sure the resonance goes away. For each resonance,
take several measurements of its frequency if you
are careful, you can pin it down to within 10 Hz
or so. You can probably speed up your search significantly by calculating approximately where you
expect the resonances to be, then looking for them.

Electronic Measurement of Resonances of


an Air Column

The resonances of the air column in a cylinder can


also be excited by a stream of air flowing over an
opening, as with a flute. In this part of the lab, you
will excite resonances of a long, flexible plastic tube
by grabbing it at one end and swinging it in a circle. The frequency of the sound will be determined
electronically. Note that your analysis for these resonances will be somewhat different, since the tube
is open at both ends, and it therefore has different
patterns of resonances from the graduated cylinder,
which was only open at one end.
To measure the frequency, you will use a computer to
analyze the sound. There are two Linux computers
that have the right software and hardware. As a
warmup before attempting the actual measurements
with the whistling tube, try the following. First,
start up the program if nobody else has already done
so. It is called FFT Explorer, and you can run it by
double-clicking on its icon on the desktop. In real
time, the program will monitor the sound coming
into the microphone, and display a graph of loudness
versus frequency. Try whistling. The frequency at
which you whistled should show up as a prominent
peak. You may need to play with the frequency and
loudness scales, using the two menus on the lower
right. If youre not careful, its easy to get confused
by setting a frequency range thats too narrow, so
that the peak you want isnt even on the graph. Its
a good idea to try it first on a very wide frequency
scale, and then narrow the scale to the narrowest one
that allows you to see the peak. When you get the
graph you want to see, you can freeze it by clicking
on the stop button. Although the software doesnt
give any convenient way to read off the frequency
of the peak with high precision, you can accomplish
that by measuring on the screen with a ruler, and
interpolating.
Debugging software problems:
If sound input doesnt work, or mysteriously
stops working, its typically because Linuxs
sound system (called ALSA) is upset; this can
be fixed by logging out, and then logging back
in again.
Now try the whole procedure with the tuning fork
instead of whistling, and make sure you can use the
computer to obtain the frequency inscribed on the
fork. You can put the mic inside the wooden box
that the tuning fork is mounted on. Although the
software doesnt let yu zoom in on the peak, you

57

can lay a ruler on the screen, and interpolate fairly


accurately.
Once you have done these warmups, you are ready to
analyze the sound from the whistling tube. You only
need to analyze data from one frequency, although
if youre not sure which mode you produced, it may
be helpful to observe the pattern of the frequencies.
(If you guess wrong about which mode it was, youll
find out, because the value you extract for the speed
of sound will be way off.)
C The Speed of Sound in Aluminum
The speed of sound in dense solid is much faster
than its speed in air. In this part of the lab, you
will extract the speed of sound in aluminum from
a measurement of the lowest resonant frequency of
a solid aluminum rod. You will use the computer
for an electronic measurement of the frequency, as
in part B.
Grab the rod with two fingers exactly in the middle,
hold it vertically, and tap it on the floor. You will
hear two different notes sounding simultaneously. A
quick look at their frequencies shows that they are
not in a 2:1 ratio as we would expect based on our
experiences with symmetric wave patterns. This is
because these two frequencies in the rod are actually two different types of waves. The higher note is
produced by longitudinal compression waves, which
means that an individual atom of aluminum is moving up and down the length of the rod. This type
of wave is analogous to sound waves in air, which
are also longitudinal compression waves. The lower
note comes from transverse vibrations, like a vibrating guitar string. In the transverse vibrations, atoms
are moving from side to side, and the rod as a whole
is bending.
If you listen carefully, you can tell that the transverse vibration (the lower note) dies out quickly, but
the longitudinal mode keeps going for a long time.
That gives you an easy way to isolate the longitudinal mode, which is the one were interested in; just
wait for the transverse wave to die out before you
freeze the graph on the computer.
The rod is symmetric, so we expect its longitudinal wave patterns to be symmetric, like those of the
whistling tube. The rod is different, however, because whereas we can excite a variety of wave patterns in the tube by spinning it at different speeds,
we find we only ever get one frequency from the rod
by tapping it at its end: it appears that there is
only one logitudinal wave pattern that can be excited strongly in the rod by this method. The prob-

58

Lab 20

Resonances of Sound

lem is that we then need to infer what the pattern is.


Since you hold the rod at its center, friction should
very rapidly damp out any mode of vibration that
has any motion at the center. Therefore there must
be a node at the center. We also know that at the
ends, the rod has nothing to interact with but the
air, and therefore there is essentially no way for any
significant amount of wave energy to leak out; we
therefore expect that waves reaching the ends have
100% of their energy reflected. Since energy is proportional to the square of amplitude, this means
that a wave with unit amplitude can be reflected
from the ends with an amplitude of either R = +1
(100% uninverted reflection) or 1 (100% inverted).
In the R = 1 case, the reflected wave would cancel out the incident wave at the end of the rod, and
we would have a node at the end, as in lab 19. In
the R = +1 case, there would be an antinode. But
when you tap the end of the rod on the floor, you are
evidently exciting wave motion by moving the end,
and it would not be possible to excite vibrations by
this method if the vibrations had no motion at the
end. We therefore conclude that the rods pattern
of vibration must have a node at the center, and
antinode at the ends. There is an infinite number of
possible wave patterns of this kind, but we will assume that the pattern that is excited strongly is the
one with the longest wavelength, i.e., the only node
is at the center, and the only antinodes are those at
the ends. If you feel like it, there are a couple of
possible tests you can try do to check whether this
is the right interpretation. One is to see if you can
detect any other frequencies of longitudinal vibration that are excited weakly. Another is to predict
where the other nodes would be, if there were more
than one, and then see if the vibration is killed by
touching the rod there with your other hand; if there
is a node there, touching it should have no effect.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Find an equation to predict the frequencies of
the resonances in parts A and B. Note that they
will not be the same equations, since one tube is
symmetric and the other is asymmetric.

Self-Check
Extract the speed of sound from either part A or
part B, without error analysis, and make sure you
get something close to the accepted value.

Analysis
Make a graph of wavelength versus period for the
resonances of the graduated cylinder, check whether
it looks like it theoretically should, and if so, find
the speed of sound from its slope, with error bars,
as discussed in appendix 4.
Use the data from part B to find a second value of
the speed of sound, also with error bars.
The effective length of the cylinder in part A should
be increased by 0.4 times its diameter to account for
the small amount of air beyond the end that also vibrates. For part B, where the whistling tube is open
at both ends, you should add 0.8 times its diameter.
When estimating error bars from part B, you may
be tempted to say that it must be perfectly accurate,
since its being done by a computer. Not so! You will
see that the peak is a little ragged, and that means
you cannot find the frequency with perfect accuracy.
Extract the speed of sound in aluminum from your
data in part C, including error bars.

59

21

Static Electricity

Apparatus
scotch tape
rubber rod
heat lamp
fur
bits of paper
rods and strips of various materials
30-50 cm rods, and angle brackets, for hanging charged
rods

Goal
Determine the qualitative rules governing electrical
charge and forces.

Newtons law of gravity gave a mathematical formula for the gravitational force, but his theory also
made several important non-mathematical statements
about gravity:
Every mass in the universe attracts every other
mass in the universe.
Gravity works the same for earthly objects as
for heavenly bodies.
The force acts at a distance, without any need
for physical contact.
Mass is always positive, and gravity is always
attractive, not repulsive.
The last statement is interesting, especially because
it would be fun and useful to have access to some
negative mass, which would fall up instead of down
(like the upsydaisium of Rocky and Bullwinkle
fame).
Although it has never been found, there is no theoretical reason why a second, negative type of mass
cant exist. Indeed, it is believed that the nuclear
force, which holds quarks together to form protons
and neutrons, involves three qualities analogous to
mass. These are facetiously referred to as red,
green, and blue, although they have nothing to
do with the actual colors. The force between two of

Lab 21

When your freshly laundered socks cling together,


that is an example of an electrical force. If the gravitational force involves one type of mass, and the
nuclear force involves three colors, how many types
of electrical stuff are there? In the days of Benjamin Franklin, some scientists thought there were
two types of electrical charge or fluid, while others thought there was only a single type. In this lab,
you will try to find out experimentally how many
types of electrical charge there are.

Observations

Introduction

60

the same colors is repulsive: red repels red, green


repels green, and blue repels blue. The force between two different colors is attractive: red and
green attract each other, as do green and blue, and
red and blue.

Static Electricity

Stick a piece of scotch tape on a table, and then lay


another piece on top of it. Pull both pieces off the
table, and then separate them. If you now bring
them close together, you will observe them exerting
a force on each other. Electrical effects can also be
created by rubbing the fur against the rubber rod.
Your job in this lab is to use these techniques to
test various hypotheses about electric charge. The
most common difficulty students encounter is that
the charge tends to leak off, especially if the weather
is humid. If you have charged an object up, you
should not wait any longer than necessary before
making your measurements. It helps if you keep your
hands dry.
A Repulsion and/or attraction
Test the following hypotheses. Note that they are
mutually exclusive, i.e., only one of them can be true.
A1) Electrical forces are always attractive.
A2) Electrical forces are always repulsive.
A3) Electrical forces are sometimes attractive and
sometimes repulsive.
Interpretation: Once you think you have tested these
hypotheses fairly well, discuss with your instructor
what this implies about how many different types of
charge there might be.

B Are there forces on objects that have not been


specially prepared?
So far, special preparations have been necessary in
order to get objects to exhibit electrical forces. These
preparations involved either rubbing objects against
each other (against resistance from friction) or pulling
objects apart (e.g. overcoming the sticky force that
holds the tape together). In everyday life, we do not
seem to notice electrical forces in objects that have
not been prepared this way.
Now try to test the following hypotheses. Bits of paper are a good thing to use as unprepared objects,
since they are light and therefore would be easily
moved by any force. Do not use tape as an uncharged object, since it can become charged a little
bit just by pulling off the roll.
B1) Objects that have not been specially prepared
are immune to electrical forces.
B2) Unprepared objects can participate in electrical
forces with prepared objects, and the forces involved
are always attractive.
B3) Unprepared objects can participate in electrical
forces with prepared objects, and the forces involved
are always repulsive.
B4) Unprepared objects can participate in electrical
forces with prepared objects, and the forces involved
can be either repulsive of attractive.
Hypotheses B1 through B4 are mutually exclusive.
C Rules of repulsion and/or attraction and the
number of types of charge
Test the following mutually exclusive hypotheses:
C1) There is only one type of electric charge, and
the force is always attractive.
C2) There is only one type of electric charge, and
the force is always repulsive.
C3) There are two types of electric charge, call them
X and Y. Like charges repel (X repels X and Y repels
Y) and opposite charges attract (X and Y attract
each other).
C4) There are two types of electric charge. Like
charges attract and opposite charges repel.

sion. To test C3 versus C5, youll need to see if you


can successfully explain your whole table by labeling
the objects with only two labels, X and Y.
Some of the equipment may look identical, but not
be identical. In particular, some of the clear rods
have higher density than others, which may be because theyre made different types of plastic, or glass.
This could affect your conclusions, so you may want
to check, for example, whether two rods with the
same diameter, that you think are made of the same
material, actually weigh the same.
In general, you will find that some materials, and
some combinations of materials, are more easily charged
than others. For example, if you find that the mahogony rod rubbed with the weasel fur doesnt charge
well, then dont keep using use it! The white plastic
strips tend to work well, so dont neglect them.
Discuss your conclusions with your instructor.

Self-Check
The following are examples of incorrect reasoning
about this lab. As a self-check, it would be a very
good idea to figure out for yourself in each case why
the reasoning is logically incorrect or inconsistent
with Newtons laws. You do not need to do this in
writing it is just to help you understand whats
going on. If you cant figure some of them out, ask
your instructor before leaving lab.
(1) The first piece of tape exerted a force on the
second, but the second didnt exert one on the first.
(2) The first piece of tape repelled the second, and
the second attracted the first.
(3) We observed three types of charge: two that
exert forces, and a third, neutral type.
(4) The piece of tape that came from the top was
positive, and the piece from the bottom was negative.
(5) One piece of tape had electrons on it, and the
other had protons on it.
(6) We know there were two types of charge, not
three, because we observed two types of interactions,
attraction and repulsion.

C5) There are three types of electric charge, X, Y


and Z. Like charges repel and unlike charges attract.
The only way to keep all your observations straight
is to make a square table, in which the rows and
columns correspond to the different objects youre
testing against each other for attraction and repul-

Writeup
Explain what you have concluded about electrical
charge and forces. Base your conclusions on your
data!

61

Notes For Next Week

see it unless I think theres a problem after reading


your abstract.

(1) Next week, when you turn in your writeup for


this lab, you also need to turn in a prelab writeup
for the next lab. The prelab questions are listed
at the end of the description of that lab in the lab
manual. Never start a lab without understanding
the answers to all the prelab questions; if you turn
in partial answers or answers youre unsure of, discuss the questions with your instructor or with other
students to make sure you understand whats going
on.
(2) You should exchange phone numbers with your
lab partners for general convenience throughout the
semester. You can also get each others e-mail addresses by logging in to Spotter and clicking on email.

Rules and Organization


Professor Crowells Labs

for

Collection of raw data is work you share with your


lab partners. Once youre done collecting data, you
need to do your own analysis. E.g., it is not okay for
two people to turn in the same calculations, or on a
lab requiring a graph for the whole group to make
one graph and turn in copies.
Youll do some labs as formal writeups, others as
informal check-off labs. As described in the syllabus, theyre worth different numbers of points, and
you have to do a certain number of each type by the
end of the semester.
The format of formal lab writeups is given in appendix 1 on page 158. The raw data section must
be contained in your bound lab notebook. Typically
people word-process the abstract section, and any
other sections that dont include much math, and
stick the printout in the notebook to turn it in. The
justification and reasoning section will usually just
consist of hand-written calculations you do in your
lab notebook. You need two lab notebooks, because
on days when you turn one in, you need your other
one to take raw data in for the next lab. You may
find it convenient to leave one or both of your notebooks in the cupboard at your lab bench whenever
you dont need to have them at home to work on;
this eliminates the problem of forgetting to bring
your notebook to school.
For a check-off lab, the main thing Ill pay attention
to is your abstract. The rest of your work for a
check-off lab can be informal, and I may not ask to

62

Lab 21

Static Electricity

63

22

The Oscilloscope

Apparatus
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
microphone (RS 33-1067) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
microphone (Shure C606) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
PI-9587C sine wave generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
various tuning forks
If theres an equipment conflict with respect to the
sine wave generators, the HP200CD sine wave generators can be used instead.

Goals
Learn to use an oscilloscope.
Observe sound waves on an oscilloscope.

your lips, the flowing air is like an electrical current,


and the difference in pressure between your mouth
and the room is like the difference in voltage. For
the purposes of this lab, it is not really necessary
for you to work with the fundamental definition of
voltage.
The input connector on the front of the oscilloscope
accepts a type of cable known as a BNC cable. A
BNC cable is a specific example of coaxial cable
(coax), which is also used in cable TV, radio, and
computer networks. The electric current flows in
one direction through the central conductor, and returns in the opposite direction through the outside
conductor, completing the circuit. The outside conductor is normally kept at ground, and also serves as
shielding against radio interference. The advantage
of coaxial cable is that it is capable of transmitting
rapidly varying signals without distortion.

Introduction
One of the main differences you will notice between
your second semester of physics and the first is that
many of the phenomena you will learn about are
not directly accessible to your senses. For example,
electric fields, the flow of electrons in wires, and the
inner workings of the atom are all invisible. The
oscilloscope is a versatile laboratory instrument that
can indirectly help you to see whats going on.
The Oscilloscope
An oscilloscope graphs an electrical signal that varies
as a function of time. The graph is drawn from left to
right across the screen, being painted in real time as
the input signal varies. In this lab, you will be using
the signal from a microphone as an input, allowing
you to see sound waves.
The input signal is supplied in the form of a voltage.
You are already familiar with the term voltage
from common speech, but you may not have learned
the formal definition yet in the lecture course. Voltage, measured in metric units of volts (V), is defined
as the electrical potential energy per unit charge.
For instance if 2 nC of charge flows from one terminal of a 9-volt battery to the other terminal, the
potential energy consumed equals 18 nJ. To use a
mechanical analogy, when you blow air out between

64

Lab 22

The Oscilloscope

Most of the voltages we wish to measure are not big


enough to use directly for the vertical deflection voltage, so the oscilloscope actually amplifies the input
voltage, i.e., the small input voltage is used to control a much large voltage generated internally. The
amount of amplification is controlled with a knob on
the front of the scope. For instance, setting the knob
on 1 mV selects an amplification such that 1 mV at
the input deflects the electron beam by one square
of the 1-cm grid. Each 1-cm division is referred to
as a division.
The Time Base and Triggering
Since the X axis represents time, there also has to
be a way to control the time scale, i.e., how fast
the imaginary penpoint sweeps across the screen.
For instance, setting the knob on 10 ms causes it to
sweep across one square in 10 ms. This is known as
the time base.
In the figure, suppose the time base is 10 ms. The

age otherwise there would always be at least two


points in a period where the voltage crossed your
trigger level.

Setup
To start with, well use a sine wave generator, which
makes a voltage that varies sinusoidally with time.
This gives you a convenient signal to work with while
you get the scope working. Use the black and white
outputs on the PI-9587C.

scope has 10 divisions, so the total time required for


the beam to sweep from left to right would be 100
ms. This is far too short a time to allow the user
to examine the graph. The oscilloscope has a builtin method of overcoming this problem, which works
well for periodic (repeating) signals. The amount
of time required for a periodic signal to perform its
pattern once is called the period. With a periodic
signal, all you really care about seeing what one period or a few periods in a row look like once youve
seen one, youve seen them all. The scope displays
one screenful of the signal, and then keeps on overlaying more and more copies of the wave on top of
the original one. Each trace is erased when the next
one starts, but is being overwritten continually by
later, identical copies of the wave form. You simply
see one persistent trace.
How does the scope know when to start a new trace?
If the time for one sweep across the screen just happened to be exactly equal to, say, four periods of the
signal, there would be no problem. But this is unlikely to happen in real life normally the second
trace would start from a different point in the waveform, producing an offset copy of the wave. Thousands of traces per second would be superimposed
on the screen, each shifted horizontally by a different amount, and you would only see a blurry band
of light.
To make sure that each trace starts from the same
point in the waveform, the scope has a triggering circuit. You use a knob to set a certain voltage level,
the trigger level, at which you want to start each
trace. The scope waits for the input to move across
the trigger level, and then begins a trace. Once that
trace is complete, it pauses until the input crosses
the trigger level again. To make extra sure that it is
really starting over again from the same point in the
waveform, you can also specify whether you want to
start on an increasing voltage or a decreasing volt-

The figure on the last page is a simplified drawing


of the front panel of a digital oscilloscope, showing
only the most important controls youll need for this
lab. When you turn on the oscilloscope, it will take
a while to start up.
Preliminaries:

Press DEFAULT SETUP.


Use the SEC/DIV knob to put the time base
on something reasonable compared to the period of the signal youre looking at. The time
base is displayed on the screen, e.g., 10 ms/div,
or 1 s/div.
Use the VOLTS/DIV knob to put the voltage
scale (Y axis) on a reasonable scale compared
to the amplitude of the signal youre looking
at.
The scope has two channels, i.e., it can accept input through two BNC connectors and
display both or either. Youll only be using
channel 1, which is the only one represented in
the simplified drawing. By default, the oscilloscope draws graphs of both channels inputs;
to get rid of ch. 2, hold down the CH 2 MENU
button (not shown in the diagram) for a couple
of seconds. You also want to make sure that
the scope is triggering on CH 1, rather than
CH 2. To do that, press the TRIG MENU
button, and use an option button to select CH
1 as the source. Set the triggering mode to
normal, which is the mode in which the triggering works as Ive described above. If the
trigger level is set to a level that the signal
never actually reaches, you can play with the
knob that sets the trigger level until you get
something. A quick and easy way to do this
without trial and error is to use the SET TO

65

50automatically sets the trigger level to midway between the top and bottom peaks of the
signal.
You want to select AC, not DC or GND, on
the channel youre using. You are looking at
a voltage that is alternating, creating an alternating current, AC. The DC setting is
only necessary when dealing with constant or
very slowly varying voltages. The GND simply draws a graph using y = 0, which is only
useful in certain situations, such as when you
cant find the trace. To select AC, press the
CH 1 MENU button, and select AC coupling.
Observe the effect of changing the voltage scale and
time base on the scope. Try changing the frequency
and amplitude on the sine wave generator.
You can freeze the display by pressing RUN/STOP,
and then unfreeze it by pressing the button again.

Preliminary Observations
Now try observing signals from the microphone. By
feeding the mics signal through the amplifier and
then to the scope, you can make the signals easier
to see.
As of fall 2008, were in the process of testing a better mic (Shure brand) to replace the Radio Shack
ones. We have one of the Shure ones. If your group
is the one that gets it, please relay the information
about how it worked through your instructor and
back to Ben Crowell. Some notes about this mic: As
with the Radio Shack mics, polarity matters. The
tip of the phono plug connector is the live connection, and the part farther back from the tip is the
grounded part. You can connect on to the phono
plug with alligator clips. You dont need the amplifier. Notes for instructors: This mic was $30 at
Frys. It has an unusually high gain, -52 dBV/Pa at
1 kHz, which helps to make the signals clean enough
to see well on a scope without preamplification. Its
output impedance is 600 ohms. The main reason the
RS 33-1067 mics have a poorer S/N ratio is that the
cables are not coax, so they pick up a lot of noise
in differential mode. The RS 33-3013 mics are not
really any better for this application; although they
do have coax cables, they have a very low gain. We
should buy phono-to-BNC connectors for the Shure
mics.
Once you have your setup working, try measuring
the period and frequency of the sound from a tuning
fork, and make sure your result for the frequency is

66

Lab 22

The Oscilloscope

the same as whats written on the tuning fork.


Dont crank the gain on the amplifier all the way
up. If you do, the amplifier will put out a distorted
waveform. Use the highest gain you can use without
causing distortion.

Observations
A Periodic and nonperiodic speech sounds
Try making various speech sounds that you can sustain continuously: vowels or certain consonants such
as sh, r, f and so on. Which are periodic and
which are not?
Note that the names we give to the letters of the
alphabet in English are not the same as the speech
sounds represented by the letter. For instance, the
English name for f is ef, which contains a vowel,
e, and a consonant, f. We are interested in the
basic speech sounds, not the names of the letters.
Also, a single letter is often used in the English writing system to represent two sounds. For example,
the word I really has two vowels in it, aaah plus
eee.
B Loud and soft
What differentiates a loud aaah sound from a soft
one?
C High and low pitch
Try singing a vowel, and then singing a higher note
with the same vowel. What changes?
D Differences among vowel sounds
What differentiates the different vowel sounds?
E Lowest and highest notes you can sing
What is the lowest frequency you can sing, and what
is the highest?

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 In the sample oscilloscope trace shown on page
64, what is the period of the waveform? What is its
frequency? The time base is 10 ms.
P2

In the same example, again assume the time

base is 10 ms/division. The voltage scale is 2 mV/division.


Assume the zero voltage level is at the middle of
the vertical scale. (The whole graph can actually be
shifted up and down using a knob called position.)
What is the trigger level currently set to? If the trigger level was changed to 2 mV, what would happen
to the trace?
P3 Referring to the chapter of your textbook on
sound, which of the following would be a reasonable
time base to use for an audio-frequency signal? 10
ns, 1 s, 1 ms, 1 s
P4 Does the oscilloscope show you the period of
the signal, or the wavelength? Explain. (If youre in
Physics 222, skip this one, because you dont know
about the definition of wavelength yet.)

Analysis
The format of the lab writeup can be informal. Just
describe clearly what you observed and concluded.

67

A simplified diagram of the controls on a digital oscilloscope.

68

Lab 22

The Oscilloscope

69

23

The Speed of Sound

Based on a lab by Hans Rau.

range, is used for imaging fetuses in the womb.

Apparatus
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
optical bench . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
HP function generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
transducers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group

Goal
Measure the speed of sound.

Setup

Introduction

The setup is shown below. A transducer is a device capable of acting as either a speaker or a microphone. The function generator is used to create a
voltage that varies sinusoidally over time. This voltage is connected through two coax cables, to the oscilloscope and the first transducer, used as a speaker.
The sound waves travel from the first transducer to
the second transducer, used as a microphone. You
will be using both channels of the scope to display
graphs of two waveforms at the same time on the
oscilloscope. As you slide one transducer along the
optical bench, changing the distance between them,
you will change the phase of one wave relative to the
other. Thus, you can determine the distance corresponding to a given number of wavelengths and extract the wavelength of the sound waves accurately.
The wavelength of the sound will be roughly a few
cm. The frequency can be read from the knob on
the function generator. (The time scale of an oscilloscope typically has a systematic error of about
2-5%, so you should not use a measurement of the
period from the scope for this purpose.)

There are several simple methods for getting a rough


estimate of the speed of sound, for instance timing an echo, or watching the kettledrum player at
a symphony and seeing how long the sound takes to
arrive after you see the mallet strike the drumhead.
The latter method, comparing vision against hearing, assumes that the speed of light is much greater
than the speed of sound, the same assumption that
is used when estimating the distance to a lightning
strike based on the interval between the flash and
the thunder. The assumption is a good one, since
light travels about a million times faster than sound.
Military jets routinely exceed the speed of sound,
but no human has ever traveled at speeds even remotely comparable to that of light. (The electrons
in your television set are moving at a few percent of
the speed of light, and velocities of 0.999999999999
times the speed of light can be attained in particle
accelerators. According to Einsteins theory of relativity, motion faster than light is impossible.)
In this lab, you will make an accurate measurement
of the speed of sound by measuring the wavelength
and frequency of a pure tone (sine wave) and computing
v = f .
We will be using sound with a frequency of about
35-40 kHz, which is too high to be audible. This has
the advantage of eliminating the annoying din of six
lab groups producing sine waves at once. Such highfrequency, inaudible sound is known as ultrasound.
Ultrasound at even higher frequencies, in the MHz

70

Lab 23

The Speed of Sound

When setting up the scope, you will need to select


one channel or the other to trigger on. You can
select the voltage scales for the two channels independently, but they always have the same time base.
The most common problem in this lab is that some
electrical current gets through the metal optical bench,
causing the receiving transducer to pick up the original input signal directly, rather than by receiving
the sound waves. A precaution that usually works
is to connect the optical bench to the ground contact of the scope (use an alligator clip to attach to
the body of the bench). It is easy to check whether

the problem exists: put your hand between the two


transducers to absorb the sound, and you should see
the amplitude of the signal from the receiver become
much smaller. The receiving transducer will receive
sound best at frequencies in the range of 35-40 kHz,
so keep the frequency in that range.
When you connect the function generator to both
the scope and the transmitting transducer, youll
probably end up connecting a BNC-to-banana connector to the function generator, and then putting a
second banana connector into the back of the first.
Its important to make sure that the little tabs marked
GND are on the same side of both connectors.
If you are still having problems after taking the above
steps, try replacing one of the transducers some
of the transducers are unreliable.

transducer from the position shown in the first drawing to the position shown in the second drawing, the
student swept one trace past five complete cycles
of the other trace. (The actual optical benches are
about a meter long, not 8 or 9 cm as shown.) What
is the wavelength of the ultrasound? [Self-check: you
should get 0.6 cm]
P2

Does it matter which transducer you move?

P3 You can choose through how many wavelengths


you will move the transducer. What effect will this
have on the accuracy of your determination of the
speed of sound?
P4 What is a reasonable value for the speed of
sound?

Self-Check
Observations
Determine the wavelength and frequency of the sound
waves using the oscilloscope. Find out the temperature in the lab.
Do a quick analysis, without error analysis, during
lab, to see if your result is reasonable.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.

Do an analysis without error bars before leaving lab,


and check that your speed of sound is reasonable.

Analysis
Determine the speed of sound from your data, and
use the techniques discussed in appendix 3 to derive
error bars.
Compare your result with the previously determined
value of

,
v = (20.1) T
where v is in m/s and T is the absolute temperature,
found by adding 273 to the Celsius temperature. Is
it statistically consistent with your value?

P1 The drawings show two different configurations


of the transducers on the optical bench.

The scales are in cm.

By sliding the right-hand

71

24

Electrical Resistance

Apparatus
DC power supply (Thornton) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
digital multimeters (Fluke and HP) . . . . . . . 2/group
resistors, various values
unknown electrical components
electrode paste
alligator clips
spare fuses for multimeters Let students replace
fuses themselves.

Goals
Measure curves of voltage versus current for
three objects: your body and two unknown
electrical components.
Determine whether they are ohmic, and if so,
determine their resistances.

Introduction
Your nervous system depends on electrical currents,
and every day you use many devices based on electrical currents without even thinking about it. Despite its ordinariness, the phenomenon of electric
currents passing through liquids (e.g., cellular fluids) and solids (e.g., copper wires) is a subtle one.
For example, we now know that atoms are composed
of smaller, subatomic particles called electrons and
nuclei, and that the electrons and nuclei are electrically charged, i.e., matter is electrical. Thus, we
now have a picture of these electrically charged particles sitting around in matter, ready to create an
electric current by moving in response to an externally applied voltage. Electricity had been used for
practical purposes for a hundred years, however, before the electrical nature of matter was proven at the
turn of the 20th century.
Another subtle issue involves Ohms law,
I=

V
R

where V is the voltage difference applied across an


object (e.g., a wire), and I is the current that flows
in response. A piece of copper wire, for instance,
has a constant value of R over a wide range of voltages. Such materials are called ohmic. Materials

72

Lab 24

Electrical Resistance

with non-constant are called non-ohmic. The interesting question is why so many materials are ohmic.
Since we know that electrons and nuclei are bound
together to form atoms, it would be more reasonable
to expect that small voltages, creating small electric
fields, would be unable to break the electrons and
nuclei away from each other, and no current would
flow at all only with fairly large voltages should
the atoms be split up, allowing current to flow. Thus
we would expect R to be infinite for small voltages,
and small for large voltages, which would not be
ohmic behavior. It is only within the last 50 years
that a good explanation has been achieved for the
strange observation that nearly all solids and liquids
are ohmic.

Terminology, Schematics, and Resistor Color Codes


The word resistor usually implies a specific type
of electrical component, which is a piece of ohmic
material with its shape and composition chosen to
give a desired value of R. Any piece of an ohmic
substance, however, has a constant value of R, and
therefore in some sense constitutes a resistor. The
wires in a circuit have electrical resistance, but the
resistance is usually negligible (a small fraction of an
Ohm for several centimeters of wire).
The usual symbol for a resistor in an electrical schematic
, but some recent schematics use
is this
this

. The symbol

represents a fixed

source of voltage such as a battery, while


represents an adjustable voltage source, such as the power
supply you will use in this lab.
In a schematic, the lengths and shapes of the lines
representing wires are completely irrelevant, and are
usually unrelated to the physical lengths and shapes
of the wires. The physical behavior of the circuit
does not depend on the lengths of the wires (unless the length is so great that the resistance of the
wire becomes non-negligible), and the schematic is
not meant to give any information other than that
needed to understand the circuits behavior. All that
really matters is what is connected to what.
For instance, the schematics (a) and (b) above are

completely equivalent, but (c) is different. In the


first two circuits, current heading out from the battery can choose which resistor to enter. Later on,
the two currents join back up. Such an arrangement
is called a parallel circuit. In the bottom circuit, a
series circuit, the current has no choice it must
first flow through one resistor and then the other.
Resistors are usually too small to make it convenient
to print numerical resistance values on them, so they
are labeled with a color code, as shown in the table
and example below.

the objects you are using are not necessarily resistors, or even ohmic.

Here is the actual circuit, with the meters included.


In addition to the unknown resistance RU , a known
resistor RK ( 1k is fine) is included to limit the
possible current that will flow and keep from blowing fuses or burning out the unknown resistance with
too much current. This type of current-limiting application is one of the main uses of resistors.

Observations
A Unknown component A

Setup
Obtain your two unknowns from your instructor.
Group 1 will use unknowns 1A and 1B, group 2 will
use 2A and 2B, and so on.
Here is a simplified version of the basic circuit you
will use for your measurements of I as a function of
V . Although Ive used the symbol for a resistor,

Set up the circuit shown above with unknown component A. Most of your equipment accepts the banana plugs that your cables have on each end, but
to connect to RU and RK you need to stick alligator
clips on the banana plugs. See Appendix 7 for information about how to set up and use the two multimeters. Do not use the pointy probes that come
with the multimeters, because there is no convenient
way to attach them to the circuit just use the banana plug cables. Note when you need three wires to

73

come together at one point, you can plug a banana


plug into the back of another banana plug.
Measure I as a function of V . Make sure to take
measurements for both positive and negative voltages.

Now interpret the following color code:


green orange yellow silver

=?

P2 Fit a line to the following sample data and use


the slope to extract the resistance (see Appendix 4).

Often when we do this lab, its the first time in several months that the meters have been used. The
small hand-held meters have a battery, which may
be dead. Check the battery icon on the LCD screen.
B Unknown component B
Repeat for unknown component B.
C The human body
Now do the same with the body of one member of
your group. This is not dangerous the maximum voltage available from your power supply is
not enough to hurt you. (Children usually figure
out at some point that touching the terminals of a 9
V battery to their tongue gives an interesting sensation. The currents you will use in this lab are ten to
a hundred times smaller.) You may wish to keep the
voltage below about 5 V or so. At voltages much
higher than that (10 to 12 V), a few subjects get
irritated skin.
You will not want to use the alligator clips. With
the power supply turned off, put small dabs of the
electrode paste on the subjects left wrist and just
below the elbow, and simply lay the banana plug
connectors in the paste. The subject should avoid
moving. The paste is necessary because without it,
most of the resistance would come from the connection through the dry epidermal skin layer, and the
resistance would change erratically. The paste is a
relatively good conductor, and makes a better electrical connection.

Your result should be consistent with a resistor color


code of green-violet-yellow.
P3 Plan how you will measure I versus V for
both positive and negative values of V , since the
power supply only supplies positive voltages.
P4 Would data like these indicate a negative resistance, or did the experimenter just hook something
up wrong? If the latter, explain how to fix it.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Check that you understand the interpretations
of the following color-coded resistor labels:
blue gray orange silver
blue gray orange gold
blue gray red silver
black brown blue silver

74

Lab 24

=
=
=
=

68 k 10%
68 k 5%
6.8 k 10%
1 M 10%

Electrical Resistance

P5 Explain why the following statements about


the resistor RK are incorrect:
a) You have to make RK small compared to RU , so
it wont affect things too much.
b) RK doesnt affect the measurement of RU , because the meters just measure the total amount the
power supply is putting out.
c) RK doesnt affect the measurement of RU , because the current and voltage only go through RK
after theyve already gone through RU .

Analysis
Graph I versus V for all three unknowns. Decide
which ones are ohmic and which are non-ohmic. For
the ones that are ohmic, extract a value for the resistance (see appendix 4). Dont bother with analysis
of random errors, because the main source of error in
this lab is the systematic error in the calibration of
the multimeters (and in part C the systematic error
from the subjects fidgeting).

Programmed Introduction to Practical Electrical Circuits


Physics courses in general are compromises between
the fundamental and the practical, between exploring the basic principles of the physical universe and
developing certain useful technical skills. Although
the electricity and magnetism labs in this manual
are structured around the sequence of abstract theoretical concepts that make up the backbone of the
lecture course, its important that you develop certain practical skills as you go along. Not only will
they come in handy in real life, but the later parts
of this lab manual are written with the assumption
that you will have developed them.
As you progress in the lab course, you will find that
the instructions on how to construct and use circuits
become less and less explicit. The goal is not to
make you into an electronics technician, but neither
should you emerge from this course able only to flip
the switches and push the buttons on prepackaged
consumer electronics. To use a mechanical analogy,
the level of electrical sophistication youre intended
to reach is not like the ability to rebuild a car engine
but more like being able to check your own oil.
In addition to the physics-based goals stated at the
beginning of this section, you should also be developing the following skills in lab this week:
(1) Be able to translate back and forth between schematics and actual circuits.
(2) Use a multimeter (discussed in Appendix 7),
given an explicit schematic showing how to connect
it to a circuit.
Further practical skills will be developed in the following lab.

75

25

The Loop and Junction Rules

Apparatus
DC power supply (Thornton) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
multimeter (Fluke) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
resistors

Goal
Test the loop and junction rules in two electrical
circuits.

sistors. Passing through the first resistor, our subatomic protagonist passes through a voltage difference of V1 , so its potential energy changes by eV1 .
To use a human analogy, this would be like going up
a hill of a certain height and gaining some gravitational potential energy. Continuing on, it passes
through more voltage differences, eV2 , eV3 ,
and so on. Finally, in a moment of religious transcendence, the electron realizes that life is one big
circuit you always end up coming back where you
started from. If it passed through N resistors before getting back to its starting point, then the total
change in its potential energy was

Introduction
If you ask physicists what are the most fundamentally important principles of their science, almost all
of them will start talking to you about conservation laws. A conservation law is a statement that a
certain measurable quantity cannot be changed. A
conservation law that is easy to understand is the
conservation of mass. No matter what you do, you
cannot create or destroy mass.
The two conservation laws with which we will be
concerned in this lab are conservation of energy and
conservation of charge. Energy is related to voltage,
because voltage is defined as V = P E/q. Charge
is related to current, because current is defined as
I = q/t.
Conservation of charge has an important consequence
for electrical circuits:
When two or more wires come together at a point in
a DC circuit, the total current entering that point
equals the total current leaving it.
Such a coming-together of wires in a circuit is called
a junction. If the current leaving a junction was,
say, greater than the current entering, then the junction would have to be creating electric charge out
of nowhere. (Of course, charge could have been
stored up at that point and released later, but then
it wouldnt be a DC circuit the flow of current
would change over time as the stored charge was
used up.)
Conservation of energy can also be applied to an
electrical circuit. The charge carriers are typically
electrons in copper wires, and an electron has a potential energy equal to eV . Suppose the electron
sets off on a journey through a circuit made of re-

76

Lab 25

e (V1 + . . . + VN )

But just as there is no such thing as a round-trip


hike that is all downhill, it is not possible for the
electron to have any net change in potential energy
after passing through this loop if so, we would
have created some energy out of nothing. Since the
total change in the electrons potential energy must
be zero, it must be true that V1 + . . . + VN = 0.
This is the loop rule:
The sum of the voltage differences around any closed
loop in a circuit must equal zero.
When you are hiking, there is an important distinction between uphill and downhill, which depends entirely on which direction you happen to be traveling
on the trail. Similarly, it is important when applying the loop rule to be consistent about the signs
you give to the voltage differences, say positive if
the electron sees an increase in voltage and negative
if it sees a decrease along its direction of motion.

Observations
A The junction rule
Construct a circuit like the one in the figure, using
the Thornton power supply as your voltage source.
To make things more interesting, dont use equal
resistors. Use nice big resistors (say 100 k to 1
M) this will ensure that you dont burn up the
resistors, and that the multimeters small internal
resistance when used as an ammeter is negligible in
comparison. Insert your multimeter in the circuit to
measure all three currents that you need in order to
test the junction rule.

The Loop and Junction Rules

Analysis
Discuss whether you think your observations agree
with the loop and junction rules, taking into account
systematic and random errors. If this is your first
time doing error analysis, read appendices 2 and 3.

B The loop rule


Now come up with a circuit to test the loop rule.
Since the loop rule is always supposed to be true, its
hard to go wrong here! Make sure that (1) you have
at least three resistors in a loop, (2) the whole circuit is not just a single loop, and (3) you hook in the
power supply in a way that creates non-zero voltage
differences across all the resistors. Measure the voltage differences you need to measure to test the loop
rule. Here it is best to use fairly small resistances, so
that the multimeters large internal resistance when
used in parallel as a voltmeter will not significantly
reduce the resistance of the circuit. Do not use resistances of less than about 100 , however, or you
may blow a fuse or burn up a resistor.

Prelab

Programmed Introduction to Practical Electrical Circuits


The following practical skills are developed in this
lab:
(1) Use a multimeter without being given an explicit
schematic showing how to connect it to your circuit.
This means connecting it in parallel in order to measure voltages and in series in order to measure currents.
(2) Use your understanding of the loop and junction rules to simplify electrical measurements. These
rules often guarantee that you can get the same current or voltage reading by measuring in more than
one place in a circuit. In real life, it is often much
easier to connect a meter to one place than another,
and you can therefore save yourself a lot of trouble
using the rules rules.

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Draw a schematic showing where you will insert the multimeter in the circuit to measure the
currents in part A.
P2 Invent a circuit for part B, and draw a schematic.
You need not indicate actual resistor values, since
you will have to choose from among the values actually available in lab.
P3 Pick a loop from your circuit, and draw a schematic
showing how you will attach the multimeter in the
circuit to measure the voltage differences in part B.
P4 Explain why the following statement is incorrect: We found that the loop rule was not quite
true, but the small error could have been because
the resistors value was off by a few percent compared to the color-code value.

Self-Check
Do the analysis in lab.

77

26

Electric Fields

Apparatus
board and U-shaped probe ruler
DC power supply (Thornton)
multimeter
scissors
stencils for drawing electrode shapes on paper

Goals
To be better able to visualize electric fields and
understand their meaning.
To examine the electric fields around certain
charge distributions.

Introduction
By definition, the electric field, E, at a particular
point equals the force on a test charge at that point
divided by the amount of charge, E = F/q. We can
plot the electric field around any charge distribution
by placing a test charge at different locations and
making note of the direction and magnitude of the
force on it. The direction of the electric field at
any point P is the same as the direction of the force
on a positive test charge at P. The result would be
a page covered with arrows of various lengths and
directions, known as a sea of arrows diagram..
In practice, Radio Shack does not sell equipment for
preparing a known test charge and measuring the
force on it, so there is no easy way to measure electric fields. What really is practical to measure at any
given point is the voltage, V , defined as the electrical energy (potential energy) that a test charge
would have at that point, divided by the amount
of charge (E/Q). This quantity would have units
of J/C (Joules per Coulomb), but for convenience
we normally abbreviate this combination of units as
volts. Just as many mechanical phenomena can be
described using either the language of force or the
language of energy, it may be equally useful to describe electrical phenomena either by their electric
fields or by the voltages involved.
Since it is only ever the difference in potential energy (interaction energy) between two points that
can be defined unambiguously, the same is true for

78

Lab 26

Electric Fields

voltages. Every voltmeter has two probes, and the


meter tells you the difference in voltage between the
two places at which you connect them. Two points
have a nonzero voltage difference between them if
it takes work (either positive or negative) to move
a charge from one place to another. If there is a
voltage difference between two points in a conducting substance, charges will move between them just
like water will flow if there is a difference in levels.
The charge will always flow in the direction of lower
potential energy (just like water flows downhill).
All of this can be visualized most easily in terms
of maps of constant-voltage curves (also known as
equipotentials); you may be familiar with topographical maps, which are very similar. On a topographical map, curves are drawn to connect points having the same height above sea level. For instance, a
cone-shaped volcano would be represented by concentric circles. The outermost circle might connect
all the points at an altitude of 500 m, and inside it
you might have concentric circles showing higher levels such as 600, 700, 800, and 900 m. Now imagine
a similar representation of the voltage surrounding
an isolated point charge. There is no sea level
here, so we might just imagine connecting one probe
of the voltmeter to a point within the region to
be mapped, and the other probe to a fixed reference point very far away. The outermost circle on
your map might connect all the points having a voltage of 0.3 V relative to the distant reference point,
and within that would lie a 0.4-V circle, a 0.5-V
circle, and so on. These curves are referred to as
constant-voltage curves, because they connect points
of equal voltage. In this lab, you are going to map
out constant-voltage curves, but not just for an isolated point charge, which is just a simple example
like the idealized example of a conical volcano.
You could move a charge along a constant-voltage
curve in either direction without doing any work,
because you are not moving it to a place of higher
potential energy. If you do not do any work when
moving along a constant-voltage curve, there must
not be a component of electric force along the surface
(or you would be doing work). A metal wire is a
constant-voltage curve. We know that electrons in a
metal are free to move. If there were a force along
the wire, electrons would move because of it. In fact
the electrons would move until they were distributed
in such a way that there is no longer any force on

them. At that point they would all stay put and


then there would be no force along the wire and it
would be a constant-voltage curve. (More generally,
any flat piece of conductor or any three-dimensional
volume consisting of conducting material will be a
constant-voltage region.)
There are geometrical and numerical relationships
between the electric field and the voltage, so even
though the voltage is what youll measure directly
in this lab, you can also relate your data to electric
fields. Since there is not any component of electric force parallel to a constant-voltage curve, electric field lines always pass through constant-voltage
curves at right angles. (Analogously, a stream flowing straight downhill will cross the lines on a topographical map at right angles.) Also, if you divide
the work equation (energy) = F d by q, you get
(energy)/q = (F/q)d, which translates into V =
Ed. (The minus sign is because V goes down when
some other form of energy is released.) This means
that you can find the electric field strength at a point
P by dividing the voltage difference between the two
constant-voltage curves on either side of P by the
distance between them. You can see that units of
V/m can be used for the E field as an alternative to
the units of N/C suggested by its definition the
units are completely equivalent.

A photo of the apparatus, being used with pattern 3 on


page 80.

Method
The first figure shows a simplified schematic of the
apparatus. The power supply provides an 8 V voltage difference between the two metal electrodes, drawn
in black. A voltmeter measures the voltage difference between an arbitrary reference voltage and a
point of interest in the gray area around the electrodes. The result will be somewhere between 0 and
8 V. A voltmeter wont actually work if its not part
of a complete circuit, but the gray area is intentionally made from a material that isnt a very good
insulator, so enough current flows to allow the voltmeter to operate.
The photo shows the actual apparatus. The electrodes are painted with silver paint on a detachable
board, which goes underneath the big board. What
you actually see on top is just a piece of paper on
which youll trace the equipotentials with a pen. The
voltmeter is connected to a U-shaped probe with a
metal contact that slides underneath the board, and
a hole in the top piece for your pen.

A simplified schematic of the apparatus, being used with


pattern 1 on page 80.

Turn your large board upside down. Find the small


detachable board with the parallel-plate capacitor
pattern (pattern 1 on page 80) on it, and screw it to
the underside of the equipotential board, with the
silver-painted side facing down toward the tabletop.
Use the washers to protect the silver paint so that it
doesnt get scraped off when you tighten the screws.
Now connect the voltage source (using the provided
wires) to the two large screws on either side of the
board. Referring to Appendix 7 on how to use a

79

multimeter, connect the multimeter so that you can


measure the voltage difference across the terminals
of the voltage source. Adjust the voltage source to
give 8 volts.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Looking at a plot of constant-voltage curves,
how could you tell where the strongest electric fields
would be? (Dont just say that the field is strongest
when youre close to the charge, because you may
have a complex charge distribution, and we dont
have any way to see or measure the charge distribution.)
P2 What would the constant-voltage curves look
like in a region of uniform electric field (i.e., one in
which the E vectors are all the same strength, and
all in the same direction)?

Self-Check
If you press down on the board, you can slip the paper between the board and the four buttons you see
at the corners of the board. Tape the paper to your
board, because the buttons arent very dependable.
There are plastic stencils in some of the envelopes,
and you can use these to draw the electrodes accurately onto your paper so you know where they are.
The photo, for example, shows pattern 3 traced onto
the paper.
Now put the U-probe in place so that the top is
above the equipotential board and the bottom of it
is below the board. You will first be looking for
places on the pattern board where the voltage is one
volt look for places where the meter reads 1.0 and
mark them through the hole on the top of your Uprobe with a pencil or pen. You should find a whole
bunch of places there the voltage equals one volt,
so that you can draw a nice constant-voltage curve
connecting them. (If the line goes very far or curves
strangely, you may have to do more.) You can then
repeat the procedure for 2 V, 3 V, and so on. Label
each constant-voltage curve. Once youve finished
tracing the equipotentials, everyone in your group
will need one copy of each of the two patterns you
do, so you will need to photocopy them or simply
trace them by hand.
Repeat this procedure with another pattern. Groups
1 and 4 should do patterns 1 and 2; groups 2 and 5
patterns 1 and 3; groups 3, 6, and 7 patterns 1 and
4.

80

Lab 26

Electric Fields

Calculate at least one numerical electric field value


to make sure you understand how to do it.
You have probably found some constant-voltage curves
that form closed loops. Do the electric field patterns
ever seem to close back on themselves? Make sure
you understand why or why not.
Make sure the people in your group all have a copy
of each pattern.

Analysis
A. After you have completed the plots for two patterns, you should try to draw in electric field vectors.
You will then have two different representations of
the field superimposed on one another. Remember
that electric field vectors are always perpendicular
to constant-voltage curves. The electric field lines
point from high voltage to low voltage, just as the
force on a rolling ball points downhill.
B. Select at least five places on each plot and determine the electric field strength (E) at each of them.
Make sure to include the two points that appear to
have the strongest and weakest fields.
C. For the parallel-plate capacitor, in what region
was the electric field relatively uniform?

81

27

Magnetism (Physics 206/211)

Apparatus
bar magnet (stack of 6 Nd)
compass
graph paper, with 1 cm squares
Hall effect magnetic field probes
LabPro interfaces, DC power supplies, and USB cables
2-meter stick

Goal
Find how the magnetic field of a bar magnet changes
with distance along one of the magnets lines of symmetry.

Introduction
A Qualitative Mapping of the Magnets Field
You can use a compass to map out part of the magnetic field of a bar magnet. The compass is affected
by both the earths field and the bar magnets field,
and points in the direction of their vector sum, but if
you put the compass within a few cm of the bar magnet, youre seeing mostly its field, not the earths.
Investigate the bar magnets field, and sketch it in
your lab notebook.
B Variation of Field With Distance: Deflection
of a Magnetic Compass
You can infer the strength of the bar magnets field
at a given point by putting the compass there and
seeing how much it is deflected.
The task can be simplified quite a bit if you restrict
yourself to measuring the magnetic field at points
along one of the magnets two lines of symmetry,
shown in the figure two pages after this one.
If the magnet is flipped across the vertical axis, the
north and south poles remain just where they were,
and the field is unchanged. That means the entire
magnetic field is also unchanged, and the field at a
point such as point b, along the line of symmetry,
must therefore point straight up.
If the magnet is flipped across the horizontal axis,
then the north and south poles are swapped, and the
field everywhere has to reverse its direction. Thus,

82

Lab 27

the field at points along this axis, e.g., point a, must


point straight up or down.
Line up your magnet so it is pointing east-west.
Choose one of the two symmetry axes of your magnet, and measure the deflection of the compass at
two points along that axis, as shown in the second
figure, at the end of the lab. As part of your prelab,
you will use vector addition to find an equation for
Bm /Be , the magnets field in units of the Earths, in
terms of the deflection angle . For your first point,
find the distance r at which the deflection is 70 degrees; this angle is chosen because its about as big
as it can be without giving very poor relative precision in the determination of the magnetic field. For
your second data-point, use twice that distance. By
what factor does the field decrease when you double
r?
Note that the measurements are very sensitive to the
relative position and orientation of the bar magnet
and compass. You can position them accurately by
laying them both on top of a piece of graph paper,
but before you set all that up, get a preliminary
estimate of the distances youll be using, because
otherwise you can end up wasting your time.
Based on your two data-points, form a hypothesis
about the variation of the magnets field with distance according to a power law B rp .
C Variation of Field With Distance: Hall Effect
Magnetometer
In this part of the lab, you will test your hypothesis
about the power law relationship B rp ; you will
find out whether the field really does obey such a

Magnetism (Physics 206/211)

law, and if it does, you will determine p accurately.

Prelab

This part of the lab uses a device called a Hall effect magnetometer for measuring magnetic fields. It
works by sending an electric current through a substance, and measuring the force exerted on those
moving charges by the surrounding magnetic field.
The probe only measures the component of the magnetic field vector that is parallel to its own axis. Plug
the probe into CH 1 of the LabPro interface, connect
the interface to the computers USB port, and plug
the interfaces DC power supply in to it. Start up
version 3 of Logger Pro, and it will automatically
recognize the probe and start displaying magnetic
fields on the screen, in units of mT (millitesla). The
probe has two ranges, one that can read fields up to
0.3 mT, and one that goes up to 6.4 mT. You can
select either one using the switch on the probe. To
test your hypothesis with good precision, you need to
obtain data over the widest possible range of fields.
Always use the more sensitive 0.3 mT scale whenever possible, because it will give better precision
for low fields. Be careful, however, because if you expose the probe to a field thats beyond its maximum
range, it will give incorrect readings. Although you
have an expectation about the direction of the field
(based both on symmetry arguments and on your
qualitative results from part A), its a good idea to
try orienting the probe in different ways to see what
happens.

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 In part B, suppose that when the compass is
11.0 cm from the magnet, it is 45 degrees away from
north. What is the strength of the bar magnets field
at this location in space, in units of the Earths field?
P2 Find Bm /Be in terms of the deflection angle .
As a special case, you should be able to recover your
answer to P1.

Analysis
Determine the magnetic field of the bar magnet as
a function of distance. No error analysis is required.
Look for a power-law relationship using the log-log
graphing technique described in appendix 5. Does
the power law hold for all the distances you investigated, or only at large distances?

Two extra complications are that the Earths field


is adding on to the magnets field, and the absolute calibration of the probe is very poor by default. You can make the computer take care of both
of these issues automatically, by zeroing the sensor
(Experiment>Zero) when it is exposed only to the
Earths field. This causes the computer to impose a
calibration such that the Earths field is considered
to be exactly zero. You may need to redo the calibration each time you switch scales. If you then carry
out the whole measurement with the probe and the
magnets field both aligned east-west, the Earths
field has no effect.
Another issue is that the lab benches contain iron or
steel parts that distort the magnetic field. You can
easily observe this simply by putting a compass on
the top of the bench and sliding it around to different
places. To work around this problem, lay a 2-meter
stick across the space between two lab benches, and
carry out the experiment along the line formed by
the stick.

83

Part B, measuring the variation of the bar magnets field with respect to distance

84

Lab 27

Magnetism (Physics 206/211)

85

28

The Dipole Field (Physics 222)

Apparatus
bar magnet
compass
graph paper, with 1 cm squares
Hall effect magnetic field probes
LabPro interfaces, DC power supplies, and USB cables

Goal

magnetic field. That is, we define the earths magnetic field to have a strength of exactly 1.0 in Fullerton.1 You can infer the strength of the bar magnets
field at a given point by putting the compass there
and seeing how much it is deflected. The standard
notation for magnetic field is B, so we can notate the
fields of the earth and the magnet as Be and Bm .
The task can be simplified quite a bit if you restrict
yourself to measuring the magnetic field at points
along one of the magnets two lines of symmetry,
shown in the figure.

Find how the magnetic field of a bar magnet changes


with distance along one of the magnets lines of symmetry.

Introduction
This lab is designed to be used along with section
10.3 of Simple Nature, which is about the superposition (i.e., addition) of fields. That section is about
electric fields, and the basic principle is that if we
have two sets of sources (charges) that would individually create fields E1 and E2 , then their combined
field is the vector sum E1 + E2 . Static electric fields,
however, are difficult to control and measure. Magnetic fields are much easier to work with, and the
same vector addition principle applies to them. In
this lab, youll expose a magnetic compass to the
superposed magnetic fields of the earth and a bar
magnet.
A Qualitative Mapping of the Dipoles Field
You can use a compass to map out part of the magnetic field of a bar magnet. It turns out that the
bar magnet is the magnetic equivalent of an electric
dipole. The compass is affected by both the earths
field and the bar magnets field, and points in the
direction of their vector sum, but if you put the compass within a few cm of the bar magnet, youre seeing
mostly its field, not the earths. Investigate the bar
magnets field, and sketch it in your lab notebook.
You should see that it looks like the field a dipole.
B Variation of Field With Distance: Deflection
of a Magnetic Compass
Magnetic fields are actually measured in units of
Tesla (T), but for the purposes of this part of the lab,
well just measure the fields in units of the earths

86

Lab 28

If the magnet is flipped across the vertical axis, the


north and south poles remain just where they were,
and the field is unchanged. That means the entire
magnetic field is also unchanged, and the field at a
point such as point b, along the line of symmetry,
must therefore point straight up.
If the magnet is flipped across the horizontal axis,
then the north and south poles are swapped, and the
field everywhere has to reverse its direction. Thus,
the field at points along this axis, e.g., point a, must
point straight up or down.
Line up your magnet so it is pointing east-west.
Choose one of the two symmetry axes of your magnet, and measure the deflection of the compass at
two points along that axis, as shown in the second
figure, at the end of the lab. As part of your prelab,
you will use vector addition to find an equation for
Bm /Be , the magnets field in units of the Earths, in
terms of the deflection angle . For your first point,
1 Actually were defining its horizontal component to be
one unit the compass cant respond to vertical fields. The
dip angle of the magnetic field in Fullerton is fairly steep.

The Dipole Field (Physics 222)

find the distance r at which the deflection is 70 degrees; this angle is choses because its about as big as
it can be without giving very poor relative precision
in the determination of the magnetic field. For your
second data-point, use twice that distance. By what
factor does the field decrease when you double r?
Note that the measurements are very sensitive to the
relative position and orientation of the bar magnet
and compass. You can position them accurately by
laying them both on top of a piece of graph paper,
but before you set all that up, get a preliminary
estimate of the distances youll be using, because
otherwise you can end up wasting your time.
Based on your two data-points, form a hypothesis
about the variation of the dipoles field with distance according to a power law B rp . (If youve
done homework problems 11 and 16 in chapter 10 of
Simple Nature, then you know what p should be for
an electric dipole, based on vector addition of the
electric fields of two charges.)
C Variation of Field With Distance: Hall Effect
Magnetometer
In this part of the lab, you will test your hypothesis
about the power law relationship B rp ; you will
find out whether the field really does obey such a
law, and if it does, you will determine p accurately.
This part of the lab uses a device called a Hall effect
magnetometer for measuring magnetic fields. You
dont know enough about magnetism yet to understand the theory behind the operation of the device, so you can just think of it as a mysterious little
probe, like a wand, that you can place at some point
in space and measure the magnetic field. The probe
only measures the component of the magnetic field
vector that is parallel to its own axis. Plug the probe
into the LabPro interface, connect the interface to
the computers USB port, and plug the interfaces
DC power supply in to it. Start up version 3 of
Logger Pro, and it will automatically recognize the
probe and start displaying magnetic fields on the
screen, in units of mT (millitesla). The probe has
two ranges, one that can read fields up to 0.3 mT,
and one that goes up to 6.4 mT. You can select either one using the switch on the probe. To test your
hypothesis with good precision, you need to obtain
data over the widest possible range of fields. Always use the more sensitive 0.3 mT scale whenever
possible, because it will give better precision for low
fields. Be careful, however, because if you expose the
probe to a field thats beyond its maximum range, it
will give incorrect readings. Although you have an
expectation about the direction of the field (based

both on symmetry arguments and on your qualitative results from part A), its a good idea to try
orienting the probe along different axes to see what
happens. In general, if you want to use the probe to
measure a field whose direction and magnitude are
both unknown, you need to orient the probe along
two different axes, and determine the two components separately.
Two extra complications are that the Earths field
is adding on to the magnets field, and the absolute calibration of the probe is very poor by default. You can make the computer take care of both
of these issues automatically, by zeroing the sensor
(Experiment>Zero) when it is exposed only to the
Earths field, and aligned perpendicular to it. This
causes the computer to impose a calibration such
that the Earths field is considered to be exactly zero.
You may need to redo the calibration each time you
switch scales. If you then carry out the whole measurement with the probe and the magnets field both
aligned east-west, the Earths field has no effect.
D Variation of Field With Angle: Hall Effect Magnetometer
Homework problems 11 and 16 in chapter 10 of Simple Nature, predict that for an electric dipole, the
field in the midplane is exactly half as strong as the
on-axis field, at the same distance. Test this prediction.
Also, find the magnitude of the field at an angle
of 45 degrees between the midplane and the axis.
Since you dont know the direction of the field at
this location based on symmetry arguments (and you
only know it very roughly based on mapping with a
compass in part A), youll need to measure both of
the fields components at this location.
As you plan your observations in this part, youll
need to think about what is the best distance at
which to place the probe. If the distance is too large,
you may find that the field is too weak to measure
with good precision. If the distance is too small, then
the physical size of the probe becomes an issue, since
the exact location at which the probe measures the
field is ill-defined. (The probe measures a voltage
created by the field in a sample of some material,
and that sample has a finite size.)
In part C, all the fields were along a single line, and
there were no angles involved. That made it simple
to get rid of the effect the Earths field. That doesnt
work in this part, however. One way of handling the
difficulty is to flip the magnet by 180 degrees, and
find the difference between the readings for the two

87

opposite orientations of the magnet, which should


equal twice the magnets field. The Earths field cancels out. This means that you need a total of four
different measurements at each point in space, covering all four possible combinations of the orientation
of the probe along x or y with both orientations of
the magnet.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Suppose that when the compass is 11.0 cm from
the magnet, it is 45 degrees away from north. What
is the strength of the bar magnets field at this location in space, in units of the Earths field?
P2 Find Bm /Be in terms of the deflection angle .
As a special case, you should be able to recover your
answer to P1.

Analysis
Determine the magnetic field of the bar magnet as
a function of distance. No error analysis is required.
Look for a power-law relationship using the log-log
graphing technique described in appendix 5. Does
the power law hold for all the distances you investigated, or only at large distances? Compare this
power law result with the result for the variation of
an electric dipoles field with distance.

88

Lab 28

The Dipole Field (Physics 222)

Measuring the variation of the bar magnets field with respect to distance.

89

29

The Earths Magnetic Field (Physics 222)

Apparatus
digital multimeter
neodymium magnet (6 discs stuck together)
magnetic compass
resistors
decade resistor boxes
rulers
thread
1-m aluminum rod
stopwatch
photogate
laser
aluminum rods, and clamps
D cell batteries and holders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
Helmholtz coils (e/m apparatus)
high-precision Helmholtz coil (one set)
Hall effect magnetic field probes
LabPro interfaces, DC power supplies, and USB cables

thread, and observe the period of its oscillations in


the Earths magnetic field. The idea is that if the
Earths field is stronger, there is a stronger torque
trying to align the magnet north-south, and the frequency of the oscillations will therefore be higher.
By measuring the frequency of the oscillations, we
can work backward and infer the strength of the horizontal component of the Earths field.

Goal
Determine the horizontal component of the Earths
magnetic field in Fullerton, to high precision.

Observations
Since youve already used the Hall effect magnetic
field probes in lab 28, you might think that it would
be relatively trivial to measure the Earths magnetic
field precisely. However, the calibration of those
probes is quite poor, so its not possible to get results
with error bars smaller than about 10-20%.

The geometry of a Helmholtz coil.

The basic idea of the more precise technique used


in this lab is to hang a permanent magnet from a

90

Lab 29

A contour map of the field of a Helmholtz coil (top view


of the horizontal plane cutting through the center).

One reason the technique isnt quite that simple is


that the frequency of the oscillations also depends
on other quantities, including the magnets dipole
moment and moment of inertia, that are very difficult to measure with better than about 10% precision. A trick for getting around this problem is to
superimpose a known southward magnetic field on
the Earths northward one, and adjust the known
field so as to cancel the Earths. Reducing the field
increases the period of the oscillations, and if we
could exactly cancel the horizontal component of the
Earths field, then the period would be infinite. The
known field is supplied by a type of electromagnet
called a Helmholtz coil, shown in the first figure. It
consists of two circular coils of wire, with their axes
coinciding. In the classic design (which is whats
really properly called a Helmholtz coil), the separation h between the planes of the two coils is equal to
their radius, b. Having h = b turns out to produce

The Earths Magnetic Field (Physics 222)

the most uniform possible field near the center of the


whole arrangement, in the sense that all the fields
derivatives up to the fourth derivative equal zero.
The second figure (from the Wikipedia article, copyleft licensed by Wikipedia) is a contour map showing
how little the field actually varies over a fairly large
volume in the center. The octopus in the middle
is the region in which the field is between 99% and
101% of its value at the center.
Even this version of the experiment turns out to need
some further tweaking. It is difficult to align the axis
of the coils with the Earths field, so we typically end
up with a misalignment, , which is a few degrees.
Therefore, the fields do not really cancel, and as the
current through the coils is tuned through the optimal value, the horizontal field becomes small, but
not zero, and swings around gradually from north
to south. It becomes difficult to pick off the current
that produces the maximum period, partly because
the period of the oscillations is not quite independent of amplitude, and it becomes difficult to control the amplitude of the oscillations properly when
the equilibrium orientation is constantly changing.
Even if we could precisely recognize the current that
gave the maximum period, that would be the current
that canceled out the component of the Earths field
along the coils axis, i.e., we would be taking the
vector (Bx , By ), and changing it to (Bx , 0), where
y is the axis of the coils. Thus we would really be
measuring, By = B cos , rather than |B|. To get
around this problem, you can use the following iterative method: (1) Align the coils axis approximately
with the earths field by eyeballing the alignment
against a magnetic compass. (2) Tune the current
in the coil to the point where the magnets equilibrium orientation is perpendicular to the earths field.
This is pretty close to the current that would have
canceled the earths field, if the alignment had been
perfect. In this state, the magnet will point either to
the east or to the west, depending on the direction of
the error in alignment. (3) Carefully, slowly rotate
the apparatus until the magnets equilibrium orientation shifts to the north-south line. This is a state
in which the coils field is exaclty on the same line
as the Earths, but their magnitudes are slightly different. (4) Tune the current again to maximize the
period. In this final step, it becomes important to
control the amplitude of the oscillations. As shown
in the figure, the error in the period is less than 0.1%
for amplitudes of less than about 10 degrees.
The problem now boils down to the accurate determination of the field at the center of the Helmholtz
coils for a given amount of current, i.e., the ratio

The dependence of the period on amplitude. For angles less than 20 degrees, the motion is nearly simple
harmonic, and the period is independent of amplitude to
within about 1%. Higher amplitudes can be used, but it
becomes much more important to control the initial amplitude.

B/I. Youll derive the relevant expression as one of


your prelab questions. It depends on the accurate
measurement of the dimensions b and h. In general
its fairly difficult to construct magnet coils so that
their dimensions are accurately determinable, and
the coils youll use are no exception. They consist
of somewhat irregular bundles of wire tied together
with cable ties, and they arent even circular; their
vertical diameter is significantly different from their
horizontal diameter. As closely as Ive been able to
determine, they have h = 14.7 0.3 cm, and an average b of about 15.1 0.3 cm, but these error bars
are uncomfortably large. They have N = 130 turns
of wire on each coil, i.e., 260 turns on each complete
set of Helmholtz coils.
Because of these problems, Ive constructed a Helmholtz coil that has a much more precisely measurable geometry. You can calculate B/I for the precise coils, whose dimensions are carefully constructed
and easy to measure: h = b = 11.15 .05 cm. They
have N = 5 turns of wire in each coil. Although
there is only one copy of the precise Helmholtz coil,
and it wouldnt be convenient to use for this lab
anyway (they produce weak fields, and their interior
is not very accessible), we can calibrate your coils
against them. Im planning to do this as a student
lab for the first time in spring 2009, and well use
the data from that semester as a calibration for the
coils, by comparing Bearth /I for them with Bearth /I
for the precise coils.
The Helmholtz coils were using are actually meant

91

for lab 31, and they have a big, extremely expensive


vacuum tube stuck inside them for that purpose.
With your instructors help, very carefully detach
the base from the tube. Then unscrew the yokes
that hold the tube in place, and put the tube out of
the way in the stockroom, with cusioning to make
sure it doesnt get broken.

field. To correct for this, measure the period of the


magnets oscillation inside and outside. If they are
significantly different, correct according to B1 /B2 =
2
(T2 /Tp
1 ) ; this follows from adapting the equation
= k/m for simple harmonic motion to the case
of rotation, with the torque = m B playing the
role of the restoring force.

You need precisely controlled, steady currents for


this lab, and DC power supplies arent stable enough,
so youll use batteries instead. To control the current precisely, youll use the decade resistor boxes,
which are variable resistors that let you dial up any
decimal number of ohms that you want.

(Note to myself: Some of my own further notes about


the lab are embedded in comments in the LaTeX
source code for the lab manual.)

We want to keep all magnetic materials far away


from the magnet. Clamp the 1-m aluminum rod to
the vertical steel post, and hang the magnet from it,
far from the post.

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.

There are several possible methods for measuring


the period of the oscillations, and one of my goals
for spring 2009 is to have my students test drive
them. One is to use a stopwatch to time, say, 20
oscillations. A second method would be to use the
magnetic field probe and graph the field as a function
of time. A third method would be to use a photogate, in pendulum mode as described in appendix
6. The photogates have steel screws in them, so you
cant use them in the ordinary way, with the magnet swinging through the infrared beam that goes
across the center of the gate. Instead, you can open
the shutter on the inside of the photogate to change
it into a mode where it senses light from the beam of
an external laser. The photogate can then be physically far away from the magnet so that the screws
dont affect the measurement. A possible problem
with the photogate method is that it requires the
amplitude of the oscillations to be big enough so
that the magnet blocks and unblocks the photogate,
but with oscillations that big, the dependence of the
period on amplitude could be a significant source
of error unless the amplitude was very accurately
controlled. This problem could possibly be solved
by attaching a cardboard vane to the magnet, and
that would also get rid of the safety problem caused
by reflecting the laser beam from the shiny magnet.
Of these methods, its possible that one might be
the most convenient for rough initial measurements,
while another would work best for the final, accurate
measurement.

Prelab

P1 For an electromagnet consisting of a single circular loop of wire of radius b, the field at a point on
its axis, at a distance z from the plane of the loop,
is given by
B=

Lab 29

Starting from this equation, derive an equation for


the magnetic field at the center of a pair of Helmholtz
coils, in terms of h, b, and N . Find B/I for both
the high-precision coils and the low-precision ones,
based on the given values of h, b, and N . (The B/I
for the low-precision ones is useful as a check, but has
poor precision, which is why youll calibrate against
the high-precision ones.)
P2 Estimate the current that will be required in
the low-precision coils in order to cancel the Earths
field, about 2 105 T.

Analysis
Find the earths magnetic field, with error bars.

When youre done with all this, what youve actually


measured is the magnetic field inside the building.
Many buildings have magnetic building materials, so
the fields inside them are different from the Earths

92

2kIb2
c2 (b2 + z 2 )3/2

The Earths Magnetic Field (Physics 222)

93

30

Relativity

We cannot currently do this lab because we dont


have a high-current DC power supply in the temporary buildings.

accurately determine this particular position of the


balance, and tell later on when youve reproduced it.

Apparatus
magnetic balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
meter stick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
multimeter (BK, not HP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
laser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
vernier calipers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
decade resistor box (General Radio) . . . . . . 1/group
staples
labs DC power supply (30 A)

Setup

If you put a current through the wires, it will raise


wire A. The torque made by the magnetic repulsion
is now canceling the torque made by gravity directly
on all the hardware, such as the masses C and D.
This gravitational torque was zero before, but now
you dont know what it is. The trick is to put a tiny
weight (a staple) on top of wire A, and adjust the
current so that the balance returns to the position it
originally had, as determined by the laser dot on the
wall. You now know that the gravitational torque
acting on the original apparatus (everything except
for the staple) is back to zero, so the only torques
acting are the torque of gravity on the staple and
the magnetic torque. Since both these torques are
applied at the same distance from the axis, the forces
creating these torques must be equal as well. By
weighing a block of staples, you can determine the
weight of one staple, and infer the magnetic force
that was acting.

The idea is to set up opposite currents in two wires,


A and B, one under the other, and use the repulsion
between the currents to create an upward force on
the top wire, A. The top wire is on the arm of a balance, which has a stable equilibrium because of the
weight C hanging below it. You initially set up the
balance with no current through the wires, adjusting
the counterweight D so that the distance between the
wires is as small as possible. What we care about is
really the center-to-center distance (which well call
R), so even if the wires are almost touching, theres
still a millimeter or two worth of distance between
them.) By shining a laser at the mirror, E, and observing the spot it makes on the wall, you can very

Its very important to get the wires A and B perfectly parallel. You also need to minimize the resistance of the apparatus, or else you wont be able to
get enough current through it to cancel the weight
of the staple. Most of the resistance is at the polished metal knife-edges that the moving part of the
balance rests on. It may be necessary to clean the
surfaces, or even to freshen them a little with a file
to remove any layer of oxidation. Since everyone
is sharing the same power supply, you cant turn a
knob to control the voltage being applied to your
setup. Instead, you need to put the decade resistor
box in series in your circuit, and use it to control the
current that flows.

Goal
Measure the speed of light.

Introduction
Oersted discovered that magnetism is an interaction of moving charges with moving charges, but
it wasnt until almost a hundred years later that
Einstein showed why such an interaction must exist:
magnetism occurs as a direct result of his theory of
relativity. Since magnetism is a purely relativistic
effect, and relativistic effects depend on the speed of
light, any measurement of a magnetic effect can be
used to determine the speed of light.

94

Lab 30

Relativity

Analysis
The mass of an aluminum atom is 4.48 1026 kg.
Lets assume that each aluminum atom contributes
one conduction electron, and that the wires have
masses per unit length of 2 g/m these two assumptions are only roughly right, but youll see later
that they end up not mattering.
You can now calculate the number of coulombs per
meter of conduction electrons, , in your wires. By
combining this with your measured levitation current, you can find the average velocity, v, at which
the electrons were drifting through the wire. This velocity is quite small compared to the speed of light,
so the relativistic effect is slight. However, as you
found when you did the prelab, the amount of charge
in a piece of ordinary matter is huge, so even a slight
effect is enough to produce a measurable result.
Now imagine yourself as one of the moving electrons
in the top wire. In your frame of reference, the electrons in the other strip are moving at velocity 2v,
and for each such electron there is a corresponding
proton moving at velocity v relative to you. (You
dont care about the protons and electrons that are
paired off in atoms, because they cancel each other.)
Both the electrons and the protons are squashed together by the relativistic contraction of space, so we
have
1

p = p

1 v 2 /c2
1
e = p
1 (2v)2 /c2

= p

1 v 2 /c2

3v 2
4c2

E` = mg
mg
6k2 v 2
=
4Rc2
`
But v is just the current, so
6kI 2
mg
=
2
4Rc
`

Solving for c, we have


s
c=I

6k`
4Rgm

Note that although I asked you to calculate v and


for physical insight, it turns out that all you really need to know is their product, which equals the
current you read on your meter.

Prelab

1 (2v)2 /c2

You may want to try calculating this directly just


for fun, but unless your calculator has unusually
high precision, it will round off to zero, since the
gamma factors are both very close to one. To get
a useful result, we need to use the approximation
(1 )1/2 1 + /2, which results in
total

E = 4kqin
(E)(2R`) = 4ktotal `
2ktotal
E=
R
The electrical force Eq = E` cancels out the gravitational force mg acting on the staple, so ignoring
plus and minus signs, we have

Your final result is the speed of light, with error bars.

In the frame of reference fixed to the tabletop, these


would have canceled each other out, but in your
frame of reference, we have
total = p + e
"

causing the upward electric force on the wire. The


electric force can be calculated by applying Gauss
law to a cylinder of radius R and length `:

In your frame of reference, the electric field of this


charge is what is responsible for repelling you and

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
Do the laser safety checklist, Appendix 9, tear it out,
and turn it in at the beginning of lab. If you dont
understand something, dont initial that point, and
ask your instructor for clarification before you start
the lab.
P1 Calculate , the number of coulombs per meter in the tabletops frame of reference, using the
assumptions given above. Answer: 7 103 C/m
P2 This is a huge amount of charge! Why doesnt
it produce any measurable electrical forces when the
wire is just lying there without being connected to
any electrical circuit?

95

31

The Charge to Mass Ratio of the Electron

Apparatus
vacuum tube with Helmholtz
coils (Leybold ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Cenco 33034 HV supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
12-V DC power supplies (Thornton) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
multimeters (Fluke or HP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
compass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
ruler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
banana-plug cables

Goal
Measure the charge-to-mass ratio of the electron.

of the magnetic field on the electrons is


F = qvB

Introduction
Why should you believe electrons exist? By the turn
of the twentieth century, not all scientists believed
in the literal reality of atoms, and few could imagine smaller objects from which the atoms themselves
were constructed. Over two thousand years had
elapsed since the Greeks first speculated that atoms
existed based on philosophical arguments without
experimental evidence. During the Middle Ages in
Europe, atomism had been considered highly suspect, and possibly heretical. Finally by the Victorian era, enough evidence had accumulated from
chemical experiments to make a persuasive case for
atoms, but subatomic particles were not even discussed.
If it had taken two millennia to settle the question
of atoms, it is remarkable that another, subatomic
level of structure was brought to light over a period
of only about five years, from 1895 to 1900. Most
of the crucial work was carried out in a series of
experiments by J.J. Thomson, who is therefore often
considered the discoverer of the electron.
In this lab, you will carry out a variation on a crucial
experiment by Thomson, in which he measured the
ratio of the charge of the electron to its mass, q/m.
The basic idea is to observe a beam of electrons in
a region of space where there is an approximately
uniform magnetic field, B. The electrons are emitted
perpendicular to the field, and, it turns out, travel
in a circle in a plane perpendicular to it. The force

96

Lab 31

(1)

directed towards the center of the circle. Their acceleration is


a=

v2
r

(2)

so using F = ma, we can write


qvB =

mv 2
r

(3)

If the initial velocity of the electrons is provided by


accelerating them through a voltage difference V ,
they have a kinetic energy equal to qV , so
1
mv 2 = qV
2

(4)

From equations 3 and 4, you can determine q/m.


Note that since the force of a magnetic field on a
moving charged particle is always perpendicular to
the direction of the particles motion, the magnetic
field can never do any work on it, and the particles
KE and speed are therefore constant.
You will be able to see where the electrons are going,
because the vacuum tube is filled with a hydrogen
gas at a low pressure. Most electrons travel large
distances through the gas without ever colliding with
a hydrogen atom, but a few do collide, and the atoms
then give off blue light, which you can see. Although
I will loosely refer to seeing the beam, you are
really seeing the light from the collisions, not the

The Charge to Mass Ratio of the Electron

beam of electrons itself. The manufacturer of the


tube has put in just enough gas to make the beam
visible; more gas would make a brighter beam, but
would cause it to spread out and become too broad
to measure it precisely.
The field is supplied by an electromagnet consisting
of two circular coils, each with 130 turns of wire
(the same on all the tubes we have). The coils are
placed on the same axis, with the vacuum tube at
the center. A pair of coils arranged in this type of
geometry are called Helmholtz coils. Such a setup
provides a nearly uniform field in a large volume
of space between the coils, and that space is more
accessible than the inside of a solenoid.
Safety
You will use the Cenco high-voltage supply to make
a DC voltage of about 300 V . Two things automatically keep this from being very dangerous:
Several hundred DC volts are far less dangerous than a similar AC voltage. The household
AC voltages of 110 and 220 V are more dangerous because AC is more readily conducted
by body tissues.
The HV supply will blow a fuse if too much
current flows.
Do the high voltage safety checklist, Appendix 8,
tear it out, and turn it in at the beginning of lab. If
you dont understand something, dont initial that
point, and ask your instructor for clarification before
you start the lab.

Setup
Before beginning, make sure you do not have any
computer disks near the apparatus, because the magnetic field could erase them.
Heater circuit: As with all vacuum tubes, the cathode is heated to make it release electrons more easily.
There is a separate low-voltage power supply built
into the high-voltage supply. It has a set of plugs
that, in different combinations, allow you to get various low voltage values. Use it to supply 6 V to the
terminals marked heater on the vacuum tube. The
tube should start to glow.
Electromagnet circuit: Connect the other Thornton
power supply, in series with an ammeter, to the terminals marked coil. The current from this power

supply goes through both coils to make the magnetic


field. Verify that the magnet is working by using it
to deflect a nearby compass.
High-voltage circuit: Leave the Cenco HV supply
unplugged. It is really three HV circuits in one box.
Youll be using the circuit that goes up to 500 V.
Connect it to the terminals marked anode. Ask
your instructor to check your circuit. Now plug in
the HV supply and turn up the voltage to 300 V .
You should see the electron beam. If you dont see
anything, try it with the lights dimmed.

Observations
Make the necessary observations in order to find
q/m, carrying out your plan to deal with the effects
of the Earths field. The high voltage is supposed
to be 300 V, but to get an accurate measurement
of what it really is youll need to use a multimeter
rather than the poorly calibrated meter on the front
of the high voltage supply.
The beam can be measured accurately by using the
glass rod inside the tube, which has a centimeter
scale marked on it.
Be sure to compute q/m before you leave the lab.
That way youll know you didnt forget to measure
something important, and that your result is reasonable compared to the currently accepted value.
There is a glass rod inside the vacuum tube with a
centimeter scale on it, so you can measure the diameter d of the beam circle simply by looking at the
place where the glowing beam hits the scale. This is
much more accurate than holding a ruler up to the
tube, because it eliminates the parallax error that
would be caused by viewing the beam and the ruler
along a line that wasnt perpendicular to the plane of
the beam. However, the manufacturing process used
in making these tubes (theyre probably hand-blown
by a glass blower) isnt very precise, and on many of
the tubes you can easily tell by comparison with the
a ruler that, e.g., the 10.0 cm point on the glass rod
is not really 10.0 cm away from the hole from which
the beam emerges. Past students have painstakingly
determined the appropriate corrections, a, to add to
the observed diameters by the following electrical
method. If you look at your answer to prelab question P1, youll see that the product Br is always a
fixed quantity in this experiment. It therefore follows that Id is also supposed to be constant. They
measured I and d at two different values of I, and
determined the correction k that had to be added to
their d values in order to make the two values of Id

97

equal. The results are as follows:


serial number
98-16
99-08
99-10
99-17
99-56

coils. Devise a plan to eliminate, correct for, or at


least estimate the effect of the Earths magnetic field
on your final q/m value.

a (cm)
0.0
-0.6
-0.2
+0.2
+0.3

P5 Of the three circuits involved in this experiment, which ones need to be hooked up with the
right polarity, and for which ones is the polarity irrelevant?

If your apparatus is one that hasnt already had its a


determined, then you should do the necessary measurements to calibrate it.

P6 What would you infer if you found the beam


of electrons formed a helix rather than a circle?

Analysis

Prelab

Determine q/m, with error bars.

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
The week before you are to do the lab, briefly familiarize yourself visually with the apparatus.
Do the high voltage safety checklist, Appendix 8,
tear it out, and turn it in at the beginning of lab. If
you dont understand something, dont initial that
point, and ask your instructor for clarification before
you start the lab.
P1 Derive an equation for q/m in terms of V , r
and B.
P2 For an electromagnet consisting of a single circular loop of wire of radius b, the field at a point on
its axis, at a distance z from the plane of the loop,
is given by
B=

2kIb2
+ z 2 )3/2

c2 (b2

Answer the following questions:


Q1. Thomson started to become convinced during
his experiments that the cathode rays observed
coming from the cathodes of vacuum tubes were
building blocks of atoms what we now call electrons. He then carried out observations with cathodes made of a variety of metals, and found that
q/m was the same in every case. How would that
observation serve to test his hypothesis?
Q2. Why is it not possible to determine q and m
themselves, rather than just their ratio, by observing
electrons motion in electric or magnetic fields?
Q3. Thomson found that the q/m of an electron
was thousands of times larger than that of ions in
electrolysis. Would this imply that the electrons had
more charge? Less mass? Would there be no way to
tell? Explain.

Starting from this equation, derive an equation for


the magnetic field at the center of a pair of Helmholtz
coils. Let the number of turns in each coil be N (in
our case, N = 130), let their radius be b, and let the
distance between them be h. (In the actual experiment, the electrons are never exactly on the axis of
the Helmholtz coils. In practice, the equation you
will derive is sufficiently accurate as an approximation to the actual field experienced by the electrons.)
If you have trouble with this derivation, see your instructor in his/her office hours.
P3 Find the currently accepted value of q/m for
the electron.
P4 The electrons will be affected by the Earths
magnetic field, as well as the (larger) field of the

98

Lab 31

The Charge to Mass Ratio of the Electron

99

32

Energy in Fields

Apparatus
Heath coils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
0.01 F capacitors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
Daedalon function generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
PASCO PI-9587C sine-wave generator . . . . 1/group
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group

Goal
Observe how the energy content of a field relates to
the field strength.

Introduction

A simplified version of the circuit.

The basic idea of this lab is to observe a circuit like


the one shown in the figure above, consisting of a capacitor and a coil of wire (inductor). Imagine that
we first deposit positive and negative charges on the
plates of the capacitor. If we imagined that the universe was purely mechanical, obeying Newtons laws
of motion, we would expect that the attractive force
between these charges would cause them to come
back together and reestablish a stable equilibrium
in which there was zero net charge everywhere in
the circuit.
However, the capacitor in its initial, charged, state
has an electric field between its plates, and this field
possesses energy. This energy cant just go away,
because energy is conserved. What really happens
is that as charge starts to flow off of the capacitor
plates, a current is established in the coil. This current creates a magnetic field in the space inside and
around the coil. The electric energy doesnt just
evaporate; it turns into magnetic energy. We end
up with an oscillation in which the capacitor and
the coil trade energy back and forth. Your goal is
to monitor this energy exchange, and to use it to
deduce a power-law relationship between each field
and its energy.

100

Lab 32

Energy in Fields

The actual circuit.

The practical realization of the circuit involves some


further complications, as shown in the second figure.
The wires are not superconductors, so the circuit has
some nonzero resistance, and the oscillations would
therefore gradually die out, as the electric and magnetic energies were converted to heat. The sine wave
generator serves both to initiate the oscillations and
to maintain them, replacing, in each cycle, the energy that was lost to heat.
Furthermore, the circuit has a resonant frequency
at it prefers to oscillate, and when the resistance is
very small, the width of the resonance is very narrow. To make the resonance wider and less finicky,
we intentionally insert a 10 k resistor. The inductance of the coil is about 1 H, which gives a resonant
frequency of about 1.5 kHz.
The actual circuit consists of the 1 H Heath coil, a
0.01 F capacitance supplied by the decade capacitor box, a 10 k resistor, and the PASCO sine wave
generator (using the GND and LO terminals).

Observations
Let E be the magnitude of the electric field between
be the maximum
the capacitor plates, and let E
value of this quantity. It is then convenient to define
a unitless quantity ranging from 1 to 1.
x = E/E,
for the corresponding magSimilarly, let y = B/B
netic quantities. The electric field is proportional
to the voltage difference across the capacitor plates,
which is something we can measure directly using
the oscilloscope:
VC
E
=
x=

E
VC
Magnetic fields are created by moving charges, i.e.,
by currents. Unfortunately, an oscilloscope doesnt
measure current, so theres no equally direct way to
get a handle on the magnetic field. However, all
the current that goes through the coil must also go
through the resistor, and Ohms law relates the current through the resistor to the voltage drop across

it. This voltage drop is something we can measure


with the oscilloscope, so we have
y=

B
I
VR
= =

B
I
VR

To measure x and y, you need to connect channels


1 and 2 of the oscilloscope across the resistor and
the capacitor. Since both channels of the scope are
grounded on one side (the side with the ground tab
on the banana-to-bnc connector), you need to make
sure that their grounded sides both go to the piece of
wire between the resistor and the capacitor. Furthermore, one output of the sine wave generator is normally grounded, which would mess everything up:
two different points in the circuit would be grounded,
which would mean that there would be a short across
some of the circuit elements. To avoid this, loosen
the banana plug connectors on the sine wave generator, and swing away the piece of metal that normally
connects one of the output plugs to the ground.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Sketch what your graph would look like for
p = 0.1, p = 1, p = 2, and p = 10. (You should
be able to do p = 1 and p = 2 without any computations. For p = 0.1 and p = 10, you can either run
some numbers on your calculator or use your mathematical knowledge to sketch what they would turn
out like.)

Tune the sine wave generators frequency to resonance, and take the data youll need in order to determine x and y at a whole bunch of different places
over one cycle.
Some of the features of the digital oscilloscopes can
make the measurements a lot easier. Doing Acquire>Average
tells the scope to average together a series of up to
128 measurements in order to reduce the amount
of noise. Doing CH 1 MENU>Volts/Div>Fine allows you to scale the display arbitrarily. Rather than
reading voltages by eye from the scopes x-y grid, you
can make the scope give you a measuring cursor. Do
Cursor>Type>Time. Use the top left knob to move
the cursor to different times. Doing Source>CH 1
and Source>CH 2 gives you the voltage measurement for each channel. (Always use Cursor 1, never
Cursor 2.)
The quality of the results can depend a lot on the
quality of the connections. If the display on the
scope changes noticeably when you wiggle the wires,
you have a problem.

Analysis
Plot y versus x on a piece of graph paper. Lets
assume that the energy in a field depends on the
fields strength raised to some power p. Conservation
of energy then gives
|x|p + |y|p = 1

Use your graph to determine p, and interpret your


result.

101

33

RC Circuits

Apparatus
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
Pasco PI-9587C function generator
1/group unknown capacitor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
known capacitors, 0.05 F . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
resistors of various values

Goals
Observe the exponential curve of a discharging
capacitor.
Determine the capacitance of an unknown capacitor.

Introduction
God bless the struggling high school math teacher,
but some of them seem to have a talent for making interesting and useful ideas seem dull and useless. On certain topics such as the exponential function, ex, the percentage of students who figure out
from their teachers explanation what it really means
and why they should care approaches zero. Thats
a shame, because there are so many cases where its
useful. The graphs show just a few of the important
situations in which this function shows up.
The credit card example is of the form
y = aet/k

while the Chernobyl graph is like


y = aet/k

In both cases, e is the constant 2.718 . . ., and k is


a positive constant with units of time, referred to
as the time constant. The first type of equation is
referred to as exponential growth, and the second
as exponential decay. The significance of k is that
it tells you how long it takes for y to change by a
factor of e. For instance, an 18% interest rate on
your credit card converts to k = 6.0 years. That
means that if your credit card balance is $1000 in
1996, by 2002 it will be $2718, assuming you never
really start paying down the principal.

closer and closer to zero. For instance, the radioactivity near Chernobyl will never ever become exactly
zero. After a while it will just get too small to pose
any health risk, and at some later time it will get too
small to measure with practical measuring devices.

An important fact about the exponential function is


that it never actually becomes zero it only gets

Why is the exponential function so ubiquitous? Because it occurs whenever a variables rate of change

102

Lab 33

RC Circuits

is proportional to the variable itself. In the credit


card and Chernobyl examples,
(rate of increase of credit card debt)
(current credit card debt)
(rate of decrease of the number of radioactive atoms)
(current number of radioactive atoms)
For the credit card, the proportionality occurs because your interest payment is proportional to how
much you currently owe. In the case of radioactive
decay, there is a proportionality because fewer remaining atoms means fewer atoms available to decay and release radioactive particles. This line of
thought leads to an explanation of whats so special
about the constant e. If the rate of increase of a variable y is proportional to y, then the time constant
k equals one over the proportionality constant, and
this is true only if the base of the exponential is e,
not 10 or some other number.
Exponential growth or decay can occur in circuits
containing resistors and capacitors. Resistors and
capacitors are the most common, inexpensive, and
simple electrical components. If you open up a cell
phone or a stereo, the vast majority of the parts you
see inside are resistors and capacitors. Indeed, many
useful circuits, known as RC circuits, can be built
out of nothing but resistors and capacitors. In this
lab, you will study the exponential decay of the simplest possible RC circuit, shown below, consisting of
one resistor and one capacitor in series.

Suppose we initially charge up the capacitor, making an excess of positive charge on one plate and an
excess of negative on the other. Since a capacitor
behaves like V = Q/C, this creates a voltage difference across the capacitor, and by Kirchoffs loop
rule there must be a voltage drop of equal magnitude across the resistor. By Ohms law, a current
I = V /R = Q/RC will flow through the resistor,
and we have therefore established a proportionality,

of the decay equals the product of R and C. (It may


not be immediately obvious that Ohms times Farads
equals seconds, but it does.)
Note that even if we put the charge on the capacitor very suddenly, the discharging process still occurs at the same rate, characterized by RC. Thus
RC circuits can be used to filter out rapidly varying
electrical signals while accepting more slowly varying
ones. A classic example occurs in stereo speakers. If
you pull the front panel off of the wooden box that
we refer to as a speaker, you will find that there
are actually two speakers inside, a small one for reproducing high frequencies and a large one for the
low notes. The small one, called the tweeter, not
only cannot produce low frequencies but would actually be damaged by attempting to accept them.
It therefore has a capacitor wired in series with its
own resistance, forming an RC circuit that filters
out the low frequencies while permitting the highs
to go through. This is known as a high-pass filter.
A slightly different arrangement of resistors and inductors is used to make a low-pass filter to protect
the other speaker, the woofer, from high frequencies.

Observations
In typical filtering applications, the RC time constant is of the same order of magnitude as the period of a sound vibration, say 1 ms. It is therefore
necessary to observe the changing voltages with an
oscilloscope rather than a multimeter. The oscilloscope needs a repetitive signal, and it is not possible for you to insert and remove a battery in the
circuit hundreds of times a second, so you will use
a function generator to produce a voltage that becomes positive and negative in a repetitive pattern.
Such a wave pattern is known as a square wave. The
mathematical discussion above referred to the exponential decay of the charge on the capacitor, but an
oscilloscope actually measures voltage, not charge.
As shown in the graphs below, the resulting voltage patterns simply look like a chain of exponential
curves strung together.

(rate of decrease of charge on capacitor)


(current charge on capacitor)

It follows that the charge on the capacitor will decay


exponentially. Furthermore, since the proportionality constant is 1/RC, we find that the time constant

Make sure that the yellow or red VAR knob, on


the front of the knob that selects the time scale, is

103

the RC time constant, which is just a property of


the resistor and the capacitor.
If you think you have a working setup, observe the
effect of temporarily placing a second capacitor in
parallel with the first capacitor. If your setup is
working, the exponential decay on the scope should
become more gradual because you have increased
RC. If you dont see any effect, it probably means
youre measuring behavior coming from the internal
R and C of the function generator and the scope.
clicked into place, not in the range where it moves
freely otherwise the times on the scope are not
calibrated.
A Preliminary observations
Pick a resistor and capacitor with a combined RC
time constant of 1 ms. Make sure the resistor is
at least 10k, so that the internal resistance of
the function generator is negligible compared to the
resistance you supply.
Note that the capacitance values printed on the sides
of capacitors often violate the normal SI conventions
about prefixes. If just a number is given on the capacitor with no units, the implied units are microfarads, mF. Units of nF are avoided by the manufacturers in favor of fractional microfarads, e.g., instead
of 1 nF, they would use 0.001, meaning 0.001 F.
For picofarads, a capital P is used, PF, instead of
the standard SI pF.
Use the oscilloscope to observe what happens to the
voltages across the resistor and capacitor as the function generators voltage flips back and forth. Note
that the oscilloscope is simply a fancy voltmeter,
so you connect it to the circuit the same way you
would a voltmeter, in parallel with the component
youre interested in. Make sure the scope is set on
DC, not AC, by doing CH 1>Coupling>DC. A complication is added by the fact that the scope and
the function generator are fussy about having the
grounded sides of their circuits connected to each
other. The banana-to-BNC converter that goes on
the input of the scope has a small tab on one side
marked GND. This side of the scopes circuit must
be connected to the LO terminal of the function
generator. This means that when you want to switch
from measuring the capacitors voltage to measuring
the resistors, you will need to rearrange the circuit
a little.
If the trace on the oscilloscope does not look like the
one shown above, it may be because the function
generator is flip-flopping too rapidly or too slowly.
The function generators frequency has no effect on

104

Lab 33

RC Circuits

Use the scope to determine the RC time constant,


and check that it is correct. Rather than reading
times and voltages by eye from the scopes x-y grid,
you can make the scope give you a measuring cursor. Do Cursor>Type>Time, and Source>CH 1 .
Use the top left knob to move the cursor to different
times.
B Unknown capacitor
Build a similar circuit using your unknown capacitor
plus a known resistor. Use the unknown capacitor
with the same number as your group number. Take
the data you will need in order to determine the RC
time constant, and thus the unknown capacitance.
As a check on your result, obtain a known capacitor
with a value similar to the one you have determined
for your unknown, and see if you get nearly the same
curve on the scope if you replace the unknown capacitor with the new one.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Plan how you will determine the capacitance
and what data you will need to take.

Analysis
Determine the capacitance, with error analysis (appendices 2 and 3).

105

34

LRC Circuits

Apparatus
Heath coils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
0.05 F capacitor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
Pasco PI-9587C generator (under lab benches in 416)
1/group
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group

Goals
Observe the resonant behavior of an LRC circuit.
Observe how the properties of the resonance
curve change when the L, R, and C values are
changed.

Introduction
Radio, TV, cellular phones its mind-boggling
to imagine the maelstrom of electromagnetic waves
that are constantly pass through us and our surroundings. Perhaps equally surprising is the fact
that a radio can pick up a wave with one particular frequency while rejecting all the others nearly
perfectly. No seasoned cocktail-party veteran could
ever be so successful at tuning out the signals that
are not of interest. What makes radio technology
possible is the phenomenon of resonance, the property of an electrical or mechanical system that makes
it respond far more strongly to a driving force that
varies at the same frequency as that at which the device naturally vibrates. Just as an opera singer can
only break a wineglass by singing the right note, a
radio can be tuned to respond strongly to electrical
forces that oscillate at a particular frequency.

A simplified version of the circuit.

Circuit
As shown in the figure, the circuit consists of the
Heath coil, a 0.05 F capacitor, a 47-ohm resistor,

106

Lab 34

LRC Circuits

and the sine wave generator to supply a driving voltage. You will study the way the circuit resonates,
i.e., responds most strongly to a certain frequency.
Some added complications come from the fact that
the function generator, coil, and oscilloscope do not
behave quite like their idealized versions. The coil
doesnt act like a pure inductor; it also has a certain
amount of DC resistance, simply because the wire
has finite resistance. So in addition to the 47-ohm
resistor, you will have 62 ohms of resistance coming
from the resistance of the wire in the coil. There is
also some internal resistance from the function generator itself, amounting to 600 ohms when you use
the outputs marked high . The R of the circuit
is really the sum of these three series resistances.
You will also want to put the oscilloscope in AC
coupling mode, which filters out any DC component
(additive constant) on the signal. The scope accomplishes this filtering by adding in a very small (20
pF) capacitor, which appears in parallel in the circuit because an oscilloscope, being a voltmeter, is
always used in parallel. In reality, this tiny parallel
capacitance is so small compared to capacitance of
the 0.05 F capacitor that the resulting correction
is negligible (and thats a good thing, because if it
wasnt negligible, the circuit wouldnt be a simple
series LRC circuit, and its behavior would be much
more complicated).

Observations
A Observation of Resonance
By connecting the oscilloscope to measure the voltage across the resistor, you can determine the amount
of power, P = V 2 /R, being taken from the sine
wavegenerator by the circuit and then dissipated as
heat in the resistor. Make sure that your circuit is
hooked up with the resistor connected to the grounded
output of the amplifier, and hook up the oscilloscope
so its grounded connection is on the grounded side
of the resistor. As you change the frequency of the
function generator, you should notice a very strong
response in the circuit centered around one particular frequency, the resonant frequency fo . (You could
measure the voltage drop across the capacitor or the
inductor instead, but all the pictures of resonance
curves in your textbook are graphs of the behavior
of the resistor. The response curve of a capacitor or

inductor still has a peak at the resonant frequency,


but looks very different off to the sides.)
The inductance of your solenoid is roughly 1 H based
on the approximation that its a long, skinny solenoid
(which is not a great approximation here). Based on
this, estimate the resonant frequency of your circuit,
o =

1
LC

Locate o accurately, and use it to determine the


inductance of the Heath coil accurately.
B Effect of Changing C
Change the capacitance value by putting two capacitors in parallel, and determine the new resonant
frequency. Check whether the resonant frequency
changes as predicted by theory. This is like tuning
your radio to a different frequency. For the rest of
the lab, go back to your original value of C.

unforced behavior is known as ringing.Drive your


circuit with a square wave. You can think of this as
if you are giving the circuit repeated kicks, so that
it will ring after each kick.
Choose a frequency many many times lower than
the resonant frequency, so that the circuit will have
time to oscillate many times in between kicks. You
should observe an exponentially decaying sine wave.
The rapidity of the exponential decay depends on
how much resistance is in the circuit, since the resistor is the only component that gets rid of energy
permanently. The rapidity of the decay is customarily measured with the quantity Q (for quality),
defined as the number of oscillations required for the
potential energy in the circuit to drop by a factor of
535 (the obscure numerical factor being e2 ). For
our purposes, it will be more convenient to extract
Q from the equation

C The Width of the Resonance


The width of a resonance is customarily expressed as
the full width at half maximum, f , defined as the
difference in frequency between the two points where
the power dissipation is half of its maximum value.
Determine the FWHM of your resonance. You are
measuring voltage directly, not power, so you need
to find the points where the amplitude of the voltage
across theresistor drops below its peak value by a
factor of 2.



t
Vpeak,i = Vpeak,0 exp
QT

where T is the period of the sine wave, Vpeak,0 is the


voltage across the resistor at the peak that we use
to define t = 0, and Vpeak,i is the voltage of a later
peak, occurring at time t.
Collect the data you will need in order to determine
the Q of the circuit, and then do the same for the
other resistance value.
F The Resonance Curve

D Effect of Changing R
Replace the resistor with a 2200-ohm resistor, and
remeasure the FWHM. You should find that the
FWHM has increased in proportion to the resistance.
(Remember that your resistance always includes the
resistance of the coil and the output side of the amplifier.)

Going back to your low-resistance setup, collect voltage data over a wide range of frequencies, covering
at least a factor of 10 above and below the resonant
frequency. You will want to take closely spaced data
near the resonance peak, where the voltage is changing rapidly, and less closely spaced points elsewhere.
Far above and far below the resonance, it will be convenient just to take data at frequencies that change
by successive factors of two.

E Ringing

(At very high frequencies, above 104 Hz or so, you


may find that rather than continuing to drop off, the
response curve comes back up again. I believe that
this effect arises from nonideal behavior of the coil at
high frequencies: there is stray capacitance between
one loop and the next, and this capacitance acts like
it is in parallel with the coil.)

An LRC circuit will continue oscillating even when


there is no oscillating driving force present. This

In engineering work, it is useful to create a graph of


the resonance curve in which the y axis is in decibels,

107

P
Pmax


V
= 20 log10
Vmax

db = 10 log10

and the x axis is a logarithmic frequency scale. (On


this graph, the FWHM is the width of the curve at 3
db below the peak.) You will construct such a graph
from your data.

Analysis
Check whether the resonant frequency changed by
the correct factor when you changed the capacitance.
For both versions of the circuit, compare the FWHM
of the resonance and the circuits Q to the theoretical
equations
=

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Using the rough value of L given in the lab
manual, compute a preliminary estimate of the angular frequency o , and find the corresponding frequency fo .
P2

P3 Show that your answer to P2 has the right


units.

P4 Using the rough value of L given in the lab


manual, plug numbers into your answer to P2, and
make a preliminary estimate of the Q that you expect when using the lower of the two resistance values. Your result should come out to be 6 (to one sig
fig of precision).

Note that there are a total of three resistances in


series: the 62-ohm resistance of the coil, the 47ohm resistor, and the 50-ohm resistance of the
sine-wave generators output. No error analysis is
required, since the main errors are systematic ones
introduced by the nonideal behavior of the coil and
the difficulty of determining an exact, fixed value for
the internal resistance of the output of the amplifier.

P5 In part D, you could measure t and T using


the time scale on the scope. However, all we care
about is their ratio t/T ; think of a technique for
determining t/T that is both more precise and easier
to carry out.

Graph the resonance curve you can probably save


yourself a great deal of time by using a computer to
do the calculations and graphing. To do the calculations, you can go to my web page, www.lightandmatter.com
. Go to the lab manuals web page, and then click on
data-analysis tool for the LRC circuits lab. Once
your data are ready to graph, I suggest using computer software to make your graph (see Appendix
4).
On the high-frequency end, the impedance is dominated by the impedance of the inductor, which is
proportional to frequency. Doubling the frequency
doubles the impedance, thereby cutting the current
by a factor of two and the power dissipated in the resistor by a factor of 4, which is 6.02 db. Since a factor
of 2 in frequency corresponds in musical terms to one
octave, this is referred to as a 6 db/octave roll-off.
Check this prediction against your data. You should

108

Lab 34

Express Q in terms of L, R, and C.

R
L

and
Q=

also find a 6 db/octave slope in the limit of low frequencies here the impedance is dominated by the
capacitor, but the idea is similar. (More complex filtering circuits can achieve roll-offs more drastic than
6 db/octave.)

LRC Circuits

109

35

Faradays Law

Apparatus
function generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
solenoid (Heath) 1/group plus a few more
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
10-ohm power resistor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
4-meter wire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
palm-sized pieces of iron or steel
masking tape
rulers

charges. (Even the magnetic field of a bar magnet is


due to currents, the currents created by the orbiting
electrons in its atoms.)
Faraday took Oersteds work a step further, and
showed that the relationship between electricity and
magnetism was even deeper. He showed that a changing electric field produces a magnetic field, and a
changing magnetic field produces an electric field.
Faradays law,
E = dB /dt

Goals
Observe electric fields induced by changing magnetic fields.

relates the circulation of the electric field around a


closed loop to the rate of change of the magnetic
flux through the loop. It forms the basis for such
technologies as the transformer, the electric guitar,
the amplifier, and generator, and the electric motor.

Test Faradays law.

Observations

Introduction

A Qualitative Observations

Physicists hate complication, and when physicist Michael Faraday was first learning physics in the early
19th century, an embarrassingly complex aspect of
the science was the multiplicity of types of forces.
Friction, normal forces, gravity, electric forces, magnetic forces, surface tension the list went on and
on. Today, 200 years later, ask a physicist to enumerate the fundamental forces of nature and the
most likely response will be four: gravity, electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force and the weak
nuclear force. Part of the simplification came from
the study of matter at the atomic level, which showed
that apparently unrelated forces such as friction, normal forces, and surface tension were all manifestations of electrical forces among atoms. The other
big simplification came from Faradays experimental
work showing that electric and magnetic forces were
intimately related in previously unexpected ways, so
intimately related in fact that we now refer to the
two sets of force-phenomena under a single term,
electromagnetism.
Even before Faraday, Oersted had shown that there
was at least some relationship between electric and
magnetic forces. An electrical current creates a magnetic field, and magnetic fields exert forces on an
electrical current. In other words, electric forces
are forces of charges acting on charges, and magnetic forces are forces of moving charges on moving

110

Lab 35

Faradays Law

To observe Faradays law in action you will first need


to produce a varying magnetic field. You can do this
by using a function generator to produce a current
in a solenoid that that varies like a sine wave as a
function of time. The solenoids magnetic field will
thus also vary sinusoidally.
The emf in Faradays law can be observed around a
loop of wire positioned inside or close to the solenoid.
To make the emf larger and easier to see on an oscilloscope, you will use 5-10 loops, which multiplies
the flux by that number of loops.
The only remaining complication is that the rate of
change of the magnetic flux, dB /dt, is determined
by the rate of change of the magnetic field, which
relates to the rate of change of the current through
the solenoid, dI/dt. The oscilloscope, however, measures voltage, not current. You might think that
you could simply observe the voltage being supplied
to the solenoid and divide by the solenoids 62-ohm
resistance to find the current through the solenoid.
This will not work, however, because Faradays law
produces not only an emf in the loops of wire but also
an emf in the solenoid that produced the magnetic
field in the first place. The current in the solenoid is
being driven not just by the emf from the function
generator but also by this self-induced emf. Even
though the solenoid is just a long piece of wire, it

does not obey Ohms law under these conditions.


To get around this difficulty, you can insert the 10ohm power resistor in the circuit in series with the
function generator and the solenoid. (A power resistor is simply a resistor that can dissipate a large
amount of power without burning up.) The power
resistor does obey Ohms law, so by using the scope
to observe the voltage drop across it you can infer
the current flowing through it, which is the same as
the current flowing through the solenoid.
Create the solenoid circuit, and hook up one channel
of the scope to observe the voltage drop across the
power resistor. A sine wave with a frequency on the
order of 1 kHz will work.
Wind the 2-m wire into circular loops small enough
to fit inside the solenoid, and hook it up to the other
channel of the scope.

Make sure you understand in the resulting variations


of the strength of the emf in terms of Faradays law.
B A Metal Detector
Obtain one of the spare solenoids so that you have
two of them. Substitute it for the loops of wire, so
that you can observe the emf induced in the second
solenoid by the first solenoid. If you put the two
solenoids close together with their mouths a few cm
apart and then insert a piece of iron or steel between
them, you should be able to see a small increase in
the induced emf. The iron distorts the magnetic field
pattern produced by the first solenoid, channeling
more of the field lines through the second solenoid.
C Quantitative Observations
This part of the lab is a quantitative test of Faradays law. Going back to the setup for part A, measure the amplitude (peak-to-peak height) of the voltage across the power resistor. Choose a position
for the loops of wire that you think will make it
as easy as possible to calculate dB /dt accurately
based on knowledge of the variation of the current
in the solenoid as a function of time. Put the loops
in that position, and measure the amplitude of the
induced emf. Repeat these measurements with a frequency that is different by a factor of two.

Self-Check

As always, you need to watch out for ground loops.


The output of the function generator has one of its
terminals grounded, so that ground and the grounded
side of the scopes input have to be at the same place
in the circuit.

Before leaving, analyze your results from part C and


make sure you get reasonable agreement with Faradays law.

Analysis
Describe your observations in parts A and B and
interpret them in terms of Faradays law.

The signals tend to be fairly noise. You can clean


Compare your observations in part C quantitatively
them up a little by having the scope average over a
with Faradays law. The solenoid isnt very long, so
series of traces. To turn on averaging, do Acquire>Average>128.
the approximate expression for the interior field of a
To turn it back off, press Sample.
long solenoid isnt very accurate here. To correct for
First try putting the loops at the mouth of the solenoid, that, multiply the expression for the field by (cos +
and observe the emf induced in them. Observe what
cos )/2, which you derived in homework problem
happens when you flip the loops over. You will ob11-30 in Simple Nature, where and are angles
serve that the two sine waves on the scope are out of
between the axis and the lines connecting the point
phase with each other. Sketch the phase relationship
of interest to the edges of the solenoids mouths.
in your notebook, and make sure you understand in
terms of Faradays law why it is the way it is, i.e.,
why the induced emf has the greatest value at a cerPrelab
tain point, why it is zero at a certain point, etc.
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
Observe the induced emf at with the loops at several
you understand what youre doing, why youre doother positions such as those shown in the figure.

111

ing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If


you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Plan what raw data youll need to collect for
part C, and figure out the equation youll use to
test whether your observations are consistent with
Faradays law.

112

Lab 35

Faradays Law

113

36

Electromagnetism

Apparatus
solenoid (Heath) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
oscilloscope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
2-meter wire with banana plugs . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
magnet (stack of 6 Nd) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
masking tape
string

Goals
Observe electric fields induced by changing magnetic fields.

charges. (Even the magnetic field of a bar magnet is


due to currents, the currents created by the orbiting
electrons in its atoms.)
Faraday took Oersteds work a step further, and
showed that the relationship between electricity and
magnetism was even deeper. He showed that a changing electric field produces a magnetic field, and a
changing magnetic field produces an electric field.
Faradays work forms the basis for such technologies
as the transformer, the electric guitar, the transformer, and generator, and the electric motor. It
also led to the understanding of light as an electromagnetic wave.

Qualitative Observations

Build a generator.

In this lab you will use a permanent magnet to produce changing magnetic fields. This causes an electric field to be induced, which you will detect using
a solenoid (spool of wire) connected to an oscilloIntroduction
scope. The electric field drives electrons around the
Physicists hate complication, and when physicist Mich- solenoid, producing a current which is detected by
ael Faraday was first learning physics in the early
the oscilloscope. If you havent used an oscilloscope
19th century, an embarrassingly complex aspect of
before, your instructor will help you to get started.
the science was the multiplicity of types of forces.
Its simply a device for graphing a measured voltage
Friction, normal forces, gravity, electric forces, magas a function of time.
netic forces, surface tension the list went on and
A A constant magnetic field
on. Today, 200 years later, ask a physicist to enumerate the fundamental forces of nature and the
Do you detect any signal on the oscilloscope when
most likely response will be four: gravity, electrothe magnet is simply placed at rest inside the solenoid?
magnetism, the strong nuclear force and the weak
Try the most sensitive voltage scale.
nuclear force. Part of the simplification came from
B A changing magnetic field
the study of matter at the atomic level, which showed
that apparently unrelated forces such as friction, norDo you detect any signal when you move the magnet
mal forces, and surface tension were all manifestaor wiggle it inside the solenoid or near it? What
tions of electrical forces among atoms. The other
happens if you change the speed at which you move
big simplification came from Faradays experimental
the magnet?
work showing that electric and magnetic forces were
intimately related in previously unexpected ways, so
C Moving the solenoid
intimately related in fact that we now refer to the
What happens if you hold the magnet still and move
two sets of force-phenomena under a single term,
the solenoid?
electromagnetism.
The poles of the magnet are its flat faces. In later
Even before Faraday, Oersted had shown that there
parts of the lab you will need to know which is north.
was at least some relationship between electric and
Determine this now by hanging it from a string and
magnetic forces. An electrical current creates a magseeing how it aligns itself with the Earths field. The
netic field, and magnetic fields exert forces on an
pole that points north is called the north pole of the
electrical current. In other words, electric forces
magnet. The field pattern funnels into the body of
are forces of charges acting on charges, and magthe magnet through its south pole, and reemerges at
netic forces are forces of moving charges on moving
Discover Lenzs law.

114

Lab 36

Electromagnetism

its north pole.


D A generator
Tape the magnet securely to the eraser end of a pencil so that its flat face (one of its two poles) is like the
head of a hammer, and mark the north and south
poles of the magnet for later reference. Spin the pencil near the solenoid and observe the induced signal.
You have built a generator. (I have unfortunately
not had any luck lighting a lightbulb with the setup,
due to the relatively high internal resistance of the
solenoid.)

Trying Out Your Understanding


E Changing the speed of the generator
If you change the speed at which you spin the pencil,
you will of course cause the induced signal to have a
longer or shorter period. Does it also have any effect
on the amplitude of the wave?

terclockwise when viewed along the direction of the


B vector of the changing magnetic field.
Your job is to figure out which is correct.
The most direct way to figure out Lenzs law is to
chopping motion that ends up with the magnet in
the solenoid, observing whether the pulse induced
is positive or negative. What happens when you
reverse the chopping motion, or when you reverse
the north and south poles of the magnet? Try all
four possible combinations and record your results.
To set up the scope, press DEFAULT SETUP. This
should have the effect of setting the scope on DC
coupling, which is what you want. (If its on AC coupling, it tries to filter out any DC part of the input
signals, which distorts the results.) To check that
youre on DC coupling, you can do CH 1 MENU,
and check that Coupling says DC. Set the triggering
mode (Mode) to Auto.
Make sure the scope is on DC coupling, not AC coupling, or your pulses will be distorted.

F A solenoid with fewer loops


Use the two-meter cable to make a second solenoid
with the same diameter but fewer loops. Compare
the strength of the induced signals.
G Dependence on distance
How does the signal picked up by your generator
change with distance?
Try to explain what you have observed, and discuss
your interpretations with your instructor.

Lenzs Law
Lenzs law describes how the clockwise or counterclockwise direction of the induced electric fields whirlpool pattern relates to the changing magnetic field.
The main result of this lab is a determination of how
Lenzs law works. To focus your reasoning, here are
four possible forms for Lenzs law:
1. The electric field forms a pattern that is clockwise
when viewed along the direction of the B vector of
the changing magnetic field.
2. The electric field forms a pattern that is counterclockwise when viewed along the direction of the B
vector of the changing magnetic field.
3. The electric field forms a pattern that is clockwise
when viewed along the direction of the B vector of
the changing magnetic field.
4. The electric field forms a pattern that is coun-

It can be tricky to make the connection between the


polarity of the signal on the screen of the oscilloscope
and the direction of the electric field pattern. The
figure shows an example of how to interpret a positive pulse: the current must have flowed through the
scope from the center conductor of the coax cable to
its outer conductor (marked GND on the coax-tobanana converter).

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.

115

P1 The time-scale for all the signals is determined


by the fact that youre wiggling and waving the magnet by hand, so whats a reasonable order of magnitude to choose for the time base on the oscilloscope?

Self-Check
Determine which version of Lenzs law is correct.

116

Lab 36

Electromagnetism

117

37

Impedance
Observe how the impedances of capacitors and
inductors change with frequency.

would cause ch. 1 to read zero, and would short


across the capacitor as well. Instead, we need this:

Observe how impedances combine according to


the arithmetic of complex numbers.

Setup
Well start by observing the impedance of a capacitor. Ideally, what we want is this:

However, we want to know not just the amplitude


of the voltage and current sine-waves but the phase
relationship between them as well, which we cant
get from a regular meter. We need to use an oscilloscope, and oscilloscopes only measure voltage, not
current. This leads us to something like the following setup:

Now both GND connections are going to the same


point in the circuit. Because weve swapped the connections to ch. 1, its trace will be upside-down, and
inconsistent with ch. 2. There is a special control on
the scope for inverting ch. 2, which makes the two
channels consistent again.

Observations
A Impedance of the capacitor
Hook up the circuit as shown, using a 1 k resistance
and a 0.2 F capacitance. The HP signal generator has a ground strap connecting one of its output
terminals to ground. Disconnect this ground strap,
since grounding either side of the signal generator
would mean that either the resistor or the capacitor
would be connected to ground on both sides. Try a
frequency of 100 Hz.

Here ch. 2 tells us the voltage across the resistor,


which is related to the current in the resistor according to Ohms law. By the junction rule, the current
in the resistor is the same as the current through the
capacitor.
But even now, were not out of the woods. In this
setup, the ground of ch. 2 is connected to the same
wire as the active (+) connection to ch. 1, which

118

Lab 37

Impedance

Observe the phase relationship between VC , on ch.


1, and the signal on ch. 2, which essentially tells
us the current IC except for a factor of 1/R. Sketch
this phase relationship in your raw data. Because
VC = q/C and I = dq/dt, the current through the
capacitor should be proportional to dV/dt. Based
on the phase relationship you observed, does this
seem to be true?
Measure the phase angle numerically from the oscilloscope. Is it what you expect?
Determine the magnitude of the capacitors impedance.

Suppose you represent the signal that is ahead in


phase using a point that is more counterclockwise
in the complex plane. Sketch the locations of the
voltage and current in the complex plane. (You can
arbitrarily choose one of them to be along the real
axis if you like.) Where would the impedance then
lie in the plane?
Now change the frequency to 1000 Hz, and see what
changes. Sketch your new impedance in the complex plane. Do you find the expected relationship
between impedance and frequency?
B Inductance of the Heath coil
Make the measurements you need in order to calculate the theoretical inductance of the inductor, using
the equation derived in the prelab. The approximation may be off by as much as a factor of two, since
the solenoid isnt long and skinny, but its useful so
you have some idea of what to expect.
C Impedance of the inductor
Now repeat all the above steps using the Heath coil
as an inductor.
D Impedances in series
Put the capacitor and inductor in series, and collect
the data youll need in order to determine their combined impedance at several frequencies ranging from
100 to 1000 Hz.

Analysis
Use your data from part C to determine an experimental value of the coils inductance, and compare
with the theoretical result based on your measurements in part B.
Graph the theoretical and experimental impedance
of the series combination in part D, overlaying them
on the same graph. Show theory as a curve and experiment as discrete data-points. Do the same kind
of graph for the parallel combination.

119

38

Refraction and Images

Apparatus
rectangular block of plastic (20x10x5 cm,
from blackboard optics kit), or plastic box with water in it
laser
spiral plastic tube and fiber optic cable for demonstrating total internal reflection
ruler
protractor
butcher paper

and is slowed down. The other side of the beam,


however, gets to travel in air, at its faster speed, for
longer, because it enters the water later by the
time it enters the water, the other side of the beam
has been limping along through the water for a little
while, and has not gotten as far. The wavefront is
therefore twisted around a little, in the same way
that a marching band turns by having the people on
one side take smaller steps.

Goals
Observe the phenomena of refraction and total
internal reflection.
Locate a virtual image in a plastic block by
ray tracing, and compare with the theoretically
predicted position of the image.

Introduction
Without the phenomenon of refraction, the lens of
your eye could not focus light on your retina, and you
would not be able to see. Refraction is the bending of
rays of light that occurs when they pass through the
boundary between two media in which the speed of
light is different. Light entering your eye passes from
air, in which the speed of light is 3.0 108 m/s, into
the watery tissues of your eye, in which it is about
2.2 108 m/s. Since it is inconvenient to write or
say the speed of light in a particular medium, we
usually speak in terms of the index of refraction, n,
defined by
n = c/v,
where c is the speed of light in a vacuum, and v is
the speed of light in the medium in question. Thus,
vacuum has n = 1 by definition. Air, which is not
very dense, does not slow light down very much, so
it has an index of refraction very close to 1. Water
has an index of refraction of about 1.3, meaning that
light moves more slowly in water by a factor of 1/1.3.
Refraction, the bending of light, occurs for the following reason. Imagine, for example, a beam of light
entering a swimming pool at an angle. Because of
the angle, one side of the beam hits the water first,

120

Lab 38

Refraction and Images

Quantitatively, the amount of bending is given by


Snells law:
ni sin i = nt sin t ,
where the index i refers to the incident light and incident medium, and t refers to the transmitted light
and the transmitting medium. Note that the angles are defined with respect to the normal, i.e., the
imaginary line perpendicular to the boundary.
Also, not all of the light is transmitted. Some is reflected the amount depends on the angles. In fact,
for certain values of ni , nt , and i , there is no value
of t that will obey Snells law (sin t would have
to be greater than one). In such a situation, 100%
of the light must be reflected. This phenomenon is
known as total internal reflection. The word internal is used because the phenomenon only occurs for
ni > nt . If one medium is air and the other is plastic
or glass, then this can only happen when the incident
light is in the plastic or glass, i.e., the light is trying to escape but cant. Total internal reflection is
used to good advantage in fiber-optic cables used to
transmit long-distance phone calls or data on the internet light traveling down the cable cannot leak
out, assuming it is initially aimed at an angle close
enough to the axis of the cable.
Although most of the practical applications of the
phenomenon of refraction involve lenses, which have
curved shapes, in this lab you will be dealing almost

exclusively with flat surfaces.


Preliminaries
Check whether your lasers beam seems to be roughly
parallel.

Observations
A Index of refraction of plastic
Make the measurements you have planned in order
to determine the index of refraction of the plastic
block (or the water, whichever you have). The laser
and the block of plastic can simply be laid flat on the
table. Make sure that the laser is pointing towards
the wall.
B Total internal reflection
Try shining the laser into one end of the spiralshaped plastic rod. If you aim it nearly along the
axis of the cable, none will leak out, and if you put
your hand in front of the other end of the rod, you
will see the light coming out the other end. (It will
not be a well-collimated beam any more because the
beam is spread out and distorted when it undergoes
the many reflections on the rough and curved inside
the rod.)
Theres no data to take. The point of having this as
part of the lab is simply that its hard to demonstrate
to a whole class all at once.
C A virtual image
Pick up the block, and have your partner look sideways through it at your finger, touching the surface of the block. Have your partner hold her own
finger next to the block, and move it around until it appears to be as far away as your own finger.
Her brain achieves a perception of depth by subconsciously comparing the images it receives from her
two eyes. Your partner doesnt actually need to be
able to see her own finger, because her brain knows
how to position her arm at a certain point in space.
Measure the distance di , which is the depth of the
image of your finger relative to the front of the block.
Now trace the outline of the block on a piece of paper, remove the block, mark the location of the image, and put the block back on the paper. Shine
the laser at the point where your finger was originally touching the block, observe the refracted beam,
and draw it in. Repeat this whole procedure several
times, with the laser at a variety of angles. Finally,

extrapolate the rays leaving the block back into the


block. They should all appear to have come from the
same point, where you saw the virtual image. Youll
need to photocopy the tracing so that each person
can turn in a copy with his or her writeup.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise

121

youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.


Do the laser safety checklist, Appendix 9, tear it out,
and turn it in at the beginning of lab. If you dont
understand something, dont initial that point, and
ask your instructor for clarification before you start
the lab.
P1 Laser beams are supposed to be very nearly
parallel (not spreading out or contracting to a focal
point). Think of a way to test, roughly, whether this
is true for your laser.
P2 Plan how you will determine the index of refraction in part A.
P3 You have complete freedom to choose any incident angle you like in part A. Discuss what choice
would give the highest possible precision for the measurement of the index of refraction.

Analysis
Using your data for part A, extract the index of refraction. Estimate the accuracy of your raw data,
and determine error bars for your index of refraction.
Using trigonometry and Snells law, make a theoretical calculation of di . Youll need to use the
small-angle approximation sin tan , for
measured in units of radians. (For large angles, i.e.
viewing the finger from way off to one side, the rays
will not converge very closely to form a clear virtual
image.)
Explain your results in part C and their meaning.
Compare your three values for di : the experimental
value based on depth perception, the experimental
value found by ray-tracing with the laser, and the
theoretical value found by trigonometry.

122

Lab 38

Refraction and Images

123

39

Geometric Optics

Apparatus
optical bench . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
converging lens (unknown focal
length to be measured) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
converging lens, longest available
focal length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1/group
converging lens, f = 50 mm
1/group lamp and arrow-shaped mask . . . . 1/group
frosted glass screen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group

Goals
Observe a real image formed by a convex lens,
and determine its focal length.
Construct a telescope and measure its angular
magnification.

Introduction
The credit for invention of the telescope is disputed,
but Galileo was probably the first person to use one
for astronomy. He first heard of the new invention
when a foreigner visited the court of his royal patrons and attempted to sell it for an exorbitant price.
Hearing through second-hand reports that it consisted of two lenses, Galileo sent an urgent message
to his benefactors not to buy it, and proceeded to
reproduce the device himself. An early advocate of
simple scientific terminology, he wanted the instrument to be called the occhialini, Italian for eyething, rather than the Greek telescope.
His astronomical observations soon poked some gaping holes in the accepted Aristotelian view of the
heavens. Contrary to Aristotles assertion that the
heavenly bodies were perfect and without blemishes,
he found that the moon had mountains and the sun
had spots (the marks on the moon visible to the
naked eye had been explained as optical illusions or
atmospheric phenomena). This put the heavens on
an equal footing with earthly objects, paving the
way for physical theories that would apply to the
whole universe, and specifically for Newtons law of
gravity. He also discovered the four largest moons
of Jupiter, and demonstrated his political savvy by
naming them the Medicean satellites after the powerful Medici family. The fact that they revolved

124

Lab 39

Geometric Optics

around Jupiter rather than the earth helped make


more plausible Copernicus theory that the planets
did not revolve around the earth but around the sun.
Galileos ideas were considered subversive, and many
people refused to look through his telescope, either
because they thought it was an illusion or simply
because it was supposed to show things that were
contrary to Aristotle.
The figure on the next page shows the simplest refracting telescope. The object is assumed to be at
infinity, so a real image is formed at a distance from
the objective lens equal to its focal length, fo . By
setting up the eyepiece at a distance from the image
equal to its own focal length, fE , light rays that were
parallel are again made parallel.
The point of the whole arrangement is angular magnification. The small angle 1 is converted to a large
2 . It is the small angular size of distant objects that
makes them hard to see, not their distance. There is
no way to tell visually whether an object is a thirty
meters away or thirty billion. (For objects within a
few meters, your brain-eye system gives you a sense
of depth based on parallax.) The Pleiades star cluster can be seen more easily across many light years
than Mick Jaggers aging lips across a stadium. People who say the flying saucer looked as big as an
aircraft carrier or that the moon looks as big as
a house dont know what theyre talking about.
The telescope does not make things seem closer
since the rays coming at your eye are parallel,
the final virtual image you see is at infinity. The
angular magnification is given by
MA = 2 /1
(to be measured directly in this lab)
MA = fo /fE
(theory)

Observations
A Focal length of a convex lens
In this part of the lab, youll determine the focal
length of a convex lens. Use your unknown lens
to project a real image on the frosted glass screen.
For your object, use the lamp with the arrow-shaped

aperture in front of it. Make sure to lock down the


parts on the optical bench, or else they may tip over
and break the optics!
B The telescope
Use your optical bench and your two known lenses
to build a telescope. Since the telescope is a device
for viewing objects at infinity, youll want to take it
outside.
The best method for determining the angular magnification is to observe the same object with both eyes
open, with one eye looking through the telescope and
one seeing the object without the telescope. Good
precision can be obtained, for example, by looking at
a large object like a coke machine, and determining
that a small part of it, whose size you can measure
with a ruler, appears, when magnified, to cover some
larger part of it, which you can also measure.

P3 Its disappointing to construct a telescope with


a very small magnification. Given a selection of
lenses, plan how you can make a telescope with the
greatest possible magnification.

Analysis
Determine the focal length of the unknown lens, with
error bars.
Find the angular magnification of your telescope from
your data, with error bars, and compare with theory. Do they agree to within the accuracy of the
measurement?

Your brain is not capable of focusing one eye at one


distance, and the other at another distance. Therefore its important to get your telescope adjusted
precisely so that the image is at infinity. You can do
this by focusing your naked eye on a distant object,
and then moving the objective until the image pops
into focus in the other eye. Theoretically this would
be accomplished simply by setting the lenses at the
distance shown in the diagram, but in reality, a small
amount of further adjustment is necessary, perhaps
because the quality control on the focal lengths of
the lenses is not perfect.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
Do the laser safety checklist, Appendix 9, tear it out,
and turn it in at the beginning of lab. If you dont
understand something, dont initial that point, and
ask your instructor for clarification before you start
the lab.
P1 In part A, do you want the object to be closer
to the lens than the lens focal length, exactly at a
distance of one focal length, or farther than the focal
length? What about the screen?
P2 Plan what measurements you will make in part
A and how you will use them to determine the lens
focal length.

125

A refracting telescope

126

Lab 39

Geometric Optics

127

40

Two-Source Interference

Apparatus
ripple tank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
yellow foam pads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4/group
lamp and unfrosted straight-filament bulb
1/group wave generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1/group
big metal L-shaped arms for hanging
the wave generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
little metal L-shaped arms with yellow
plastic balls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
rubber bands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
Thornton DC voltage source . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
small rubber stopper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
power strip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
bucket . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
mop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
flathead screwdriver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
rulers and protractors
kimwipes and alcohol for cleaning
butcher paper

in one simple experiment, shown in the first figure.1


A wave comes up from the bottom of the page, and
encounters a wall with two slits chopped out of it.
The result is a fan pattern, with strong wave motion
coming out along directions like X and Z, but no
vibration of the water at all along lines like Y. The
reason for this pattern is shown in the second figure.
The two parts of the wave that get through the slits
create an overlapping pattern of ripples. To get to
a point on line X, both waves have to go the same
distance, so theyre in step with each other, and reinforce. But at a point on line Y, due to the unequal
distances involved, one wave is going up while the
other wave is going down, so there is cancellation.
The angular spacing of the fan pattern depends on
both the wavelength of the waves, , and the distance between the slits, d.

Goals
Observe how a 2-source interference pattern of
water waves depends on the distance between
the sources.

Observations
Light is really made of waves, not rays, so when we
treated it as rays, we were making an approximation.
You might think that when the time came to treat
light as a wave, things would get very difficult, and
it would be hard to predict or understand anything
without doing complicated calculations.

The ripple tank is tank that sits about 30 cm above


the floor. You put a little water in the tank, and
produce waves. There is a lamp above it that makes
a point-like source of light, and the waves cast patterns of light on a screen placed on the floor. The
patterns of light on the screen are easier to see and
measure than the ripples themselves.
In reality, its not very convenient to produce a doubleslit diffraction pattern exactly as depicted in the first
figure, because the waves beyond the slits are so
weak that they are difficult to observe clearly. Instead, youll simply produce synchronized circular
ripples from two sources driven by a motor.
Put the tank on the floor. Plug the hole in the side of
the tank with the black rubber stopper. If the plastic
is dirty, clean it off with alcohol and kimwipes. Wet
the four yellow foam pads, and place them around
the sides of the tank. Pour in water to a depth of
about 5-7 mm. Adjust the metal feet to level the
tank, so that the water is of equal depth throughout
the tank. (Do not rotate the wooden legs them-

Life isnt that bad. It turns out that all of the most
important ideas about light as a wave can be seen

128

Lab 40

Two-Source Interference

1 The photo is from the textbook PSSC Physics, which has


a blanket permission for free use after 1970.

selves, just the feet.) If too many bubbles form on


the plastic, wipe them off with a ruler.
Make sure the straight-filament bulb in the light
source is rotated so that when you look in through
the hole, you are looking along the length of the filament. This way the lamp acts like a point source
of light above the tank. To test that its oriented
correctly, check that you can cast a perfectly sharp
image of the tip of a pen.
The light source is intended to be clamped to the
wooden post, but Ive found that that works very
poorly, since the clamp doesnt hold it firmly enough.
Instead, clamp the light source to the lip of the lab
bench. Turn it on. Put the butcher paper on the
floor under the tank. If you make ripples in the
water, you should be able to see the wave pattern
on the screen.
The wave generator consists of a piece of wood that
hangs by rubber bands from the two L-shaped metal
hangers. There is a DC motor attached, which spins
an intentionally unbalanced wheel, resulting in vibration of the wood. The wood itself can be used
to make straight waves directly in the water, but
in this experiment youll be using the two little Lshaped pieces of metal with the yellow balls on the
end to make two sources of circular ripples. The DC
motor runs off of the DC voltage source, and the
more voltage you supply, the faster the motor runs.
Start just by sticking one little L-shaped arm in the
piece of wood, and observing the circular wave pattern it makes. Now try two sources at once, in neighboring holes. Pick a speed (frequency) for the motor
that youll use throughout the experiment a fairly
low speed works well. Measure the angular spacing
of the resulting diffraction pattern for several values
of the spacing, d, between the two sources of ripples.
How do you think the angular spacing of the wave
pattern seems to depend mathematically on d? Construct a graph to test whether this was really true.
If youre not sure what mathematical rule to guess,
you can use the methods explained in Appendix 5
and look for any kind of a power law relationship.

129

41

Wave Optics

Apparatus
helium-neon laser
1/group optical bench with posts & holders 1/group
high-precision double slits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
rulers
meter sticks
tape measures
butcher paper

Goals
Observe evidence for the wave nature of light.
Determine the wavelength of the red light emitted by your laser, by measuring a double-slit
diffraction pattern. (The part of the spectrum
that appears red to the human eye covers quite
a large range of wavelengths. A given type of
laser, e.g., He-Ne or solid-state, will produce
one very specific wavelength.)
Determine the approximate diameter of a human hair, using its diffraction pattern.

Introduction
Isaac Newtons epitaph, written by Alexander Pope,
reads:
Nature and Natures laws lay hid in night.
God said let Newton be, and all was light.
Notwithstanding Newtons stature as the greatest
physical scientist who ever lived, its a little ironic
that Pope chose light as a metaphor, because it was
in the study of light that Newton made some of his
worst mistakes. Newton was a firm believer in the
dogma, then unsupported by observation, that matter was composed of atoms, and it seemed logical to
him that light as well should be composed of tiny
particles, or corpuscles. His opinions on the subject were so strong that he influenced generations
of his successors to discount the arguments of Huygens and Grimaldi for the wave nature of light. It
was not until 150 years later that Thomas Young
demonstrated conclusively that light was a wave.
Youngs experiment was incredibly simple, and could
probably have been done in ancient times if some

130

Lab 41

Wave Optics

savvy Greek or Chinese philosopher had only thought


of it. He simply let sunlight through a pinhole in a
window shade, forming what we would now call a
coherent beam of light (that is, a beam consisting
of plane waves marching in step). Then he held a
thin card edge-on to the beam, observed a diffraction pattern on a wall, and correctly inferred the
wave nature and wavelength of light. Since Roemer
had already measured the speed of light, Young was
also able to determine the frequency of oscillation of
the light.
Today, with the advent of the laser, the production
of a bright and coherent beam of light has become
as simple as flipping a switch, and the wave nature
of light can be demonstrated very easily. In this lab,
you will carry out observations similar to Youngs,
but with the benefit of hindsight and modern equipment.

Observations
A Determination of the wavelength of red light
Set up your laser on your optical bench. You will
want as much space as possible between the laser
and the wall, in order to let the diffraction pattern
spread out as much as possible and reveal its fine
details.
Tear off two small scraps of paper with straight edges.
Hold them close together so they form a single slit.
Hold this improvised single-slit grating in the laser
beam and try to get a single-slit diffraction pattern.
You may have to play around with different widths
for the slit. No quantitative data are required. This
is just to familiarize you with single-slit diffraction.
Make a diffraction pattern with the double-slit grating. See what happens when you hold it in your
hand and rotate it around the axis of the beam.
The diffraction pattern of the double-slit grating consists of a rapidly varying pattern of bright and dark
bars, with a more slowly varying pattern superimposed on top. (See the figure two pages after this
page.) The rapidly varying pattern is the one that
is numerically related to the wavelength, , and the
distance between the slits, d, by the equation
= /d,
where is measured in radians. To make sure you

can see the fine spacing, put your slits several meters
away from the wall. This will necessitate shining it
across the space between lab tables. To make it less
likely that someone will walk through the beam and
get the beam in their eye, put some of the small
desks under the beam. The slit patterns were using
actually have three sets of slits, with the following
dimensions:
w (mm) d (mm)
A .12
.6
B .24
.6
C .24
1.2
The small value of d is typically better, for two reasons: (1) it produces a wider diffraction pattern,
which is easier to see; (2) its easy to get the beam of
the laser to cover both slits. If your diffraction pattern doesnt look like the one in the figure on page
130, typically the reason is that youre only covering one slit with the beam (in which case you get a
single-slit diffraction pattern), or youre not illuminating the two slits equally (giving a funny-looking
pattern with little dog-bones and things in it).
Think about the best way to measure the spacing of
the pattern accurately. Is it best to measure from a
bright part to another bright part, or from dark to
dark? Is it best to measure a single spacing, or take
several spacings and divide by the number to find
what one spacing is? Do it.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
Read the safety checklist.
P1 Roughly what wavelength do you expect red
light to have?
P2 It is not practical to measure directly using a protractor. Plan how you will determine
indirectly, via trigonometry.
P3 Make a rough order-of-magnitude guess of the
diameter of a human hair.

Analysis
Determine the wavelength of the light and the diameter of the hair, with error bars.

Determine the wavelength of the light, in units of


nanometers. Make sure it is in the right range for
red light.
B Diameter of a human hair
Pull out one of your own hairs, hold it in the laser
beam, and observe a diffraction pattern. It turns
out that the diffraction pattern caused by a narrow
obstruction, such as your hair, has the same spacing as the pattern that would be created by a single slit whose width was the same as the diameter
of your hair. (This is an example of a general theorem called Babinets principle.) Measure the spacing
of the diffraction pattern. (Since the hairs diameter is the only dimension involved, there is only one
diffraction pattern with one spacing, not superimposed fine and coarse patterns as in part A.) Determine the diameter of your hair. Make sure the
value you get is reasonable, and compare with the
order-of-magnitude guess you made in your prelab
writeup.

131

A double-slit diffraction pattern.

132

Lab 41

Wave Optics

133

42

Polarization

Apparatus
laser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
calcite crystal (flattest available) . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
polarizing films . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/group
Na gas discharge tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
photovoltaic cell and collimator . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group

Goals

tect polarization, and a neuroscientist at the University of Pennsylvania has recently found evidence that
a freshwater fish called the green sunfish can see the
polarization of light (Discover magazine, Oct. 1996).
Most sources of visible light (such as the sun or a
light bulb) are unpolarized. An unpolarized beam
of light contains a random mixture of waves with
many different directions of polarization, all of them
changing from moment to moment, and from point
to point within the beam.

Make qualitative observations about the polarization of light.

Qualitative Observations

Test quantitatively the hypothesis that polarization relates to the direction of the field vectors in an electromagnetic wave.

Before doing anything else, turn on your gas discharge tube, so it will be warmed up when you are
ready to do part E.
A Double refraction in calcite

Introduction

Place a calcite crystal on this page. You will see two


images of the print through the crystal.

Its common knowledge that theres more to light


than meets the eye: everyone has heard of infrared
and ultraviolet light, which are visible to some other
animals but not to us. Another invisible feature of
the wave nature of light is far less well known. Electromagnetic waves are transverse, i.e., the electric
and magnetic field vectors vibrate in directions perpendicular to the direction of motion of the wave.
Two electromagnetic waves with the same wavelength
can therefore be physically distinguishable, if their
electric and magnetic fields are twisted around in
different directions. Waves that differ in this way
are said to have different polarizations.

An electromagnetic wave has electric and magnetic field


vectors that vibrate in the directions perpendicular to its
direction of motion. The waves direction of polarization is
defined as the line along which the electric field lies.

Maybe we polarization-blind humans are missing out


on something. Some insects and crustaceans can de-

134

Lab 42

Polarization

To understand why this happens, try shining the


laser beam on a piece of paper and then inserting
the calcite crystal in the beam. If you rotate the
crystal around in different directions, you should be
able to get two distinct spots to show up on the
paper. (This may take a little trial and error, partly
because the effect depends on the correct orientation
of the crystal, but also because the crystals are not
perfect, and it can be hard to find a nice smooth
spot through which to shine the beam.)
In the refraction lab, youve already seen how a beam
of light can be bent as it passes through the interface
between two media. The present situation is similar
because the laser beam passes in through one face of
the crystal and then emerges from a parallel face at
the back. You have already seen that in this type of
situation, when the beam emerges again, its direction is bent back parallel to its original direction, but
the beam is offset a little bit. What is different here
is that the same laser beam splits up into two parts,
which bumped off course by different amounts.
Whats happening is that calcite, unlike most substances, has a different index of refraction depending
on the polarization of the light. Light travels at a
different speed through calcite depending on how the
electric and magnetic fields are oriented compared to
the crystal. The atoms inside the crystal are packed
in a three-dimensional pattern sort of like a stack of

oranges or cannonballs. This packing arrangement


has a special axis of symmetry, and light polarized
along that axis moves at one speed, while light polarized perpendicular to that axis moves at a different
speed.
It makes sense that if the original laser beam was
a random mixture of all possible directions of polarization, then each part would be refracted by a
different amount. What is a little more surprising is
that two separated beams emerge, with nothing in
between. The incoming light was composed of light
with every possible direction of polarization. You
would therefore expect that the part of the incoming
light polarized at, say, 45 compared to the crystals
axis would be refracted by an intermediate amount,
but that doesnt happen. This surprising observation, and all other polarization phenomena, can be
understood based on the vector nature of electric
and magnetic fields, and the purpose of this lab is
to lead you through a series of observations to help
you understand whats really going on.
B A polarized beam entering the calcite

A single laser beam entering a calcite crystal breaks up


into two parts, which are refracted by different amounts.

The calcite splits the wave into two parts, polarized in


perpendicular directions compared to each other.

We need not be restricted to speculation about what


was happening to the part of the light that entered
the calcite crystal polarized at a 45 angle. You can
use a polarizing film, often referred to informally as a
Polaroid, to change unpolarized light into a beam
of only one specific polarization. In this part of the
lab, you will use a polarizing film to produce a beam
of light polarized at a 45 angle to the crystals in-

ternal axis.
If you simply look through the film, it doesnt look
like anything special everything just looks dimmer, like looking through sunglasses. The light reaching your eye is polarized, but your eye cant tell that.
If you looked at the film under a microscope, youd
see a pattern of stripes, which select only one direction of polarization of the light that passes through.
Now try interposing the film between the laser and
the crystal. The beam reaching the crystal is now
polarized along some specific direction. If you rotate
the film, you change beams direction of polarization. If you try various orientations, you will be able
to find one that makes one of the spots disappear,
and another orientation of the film, at a 90 angle
compared to the first, that makes the other spot go
away. When you hold the film in one of these directions, you are sending a beam into the crystal that
is either purely polarized along the crystals axis or
purely polarized at 90 to the axis.
By now you have already seen what happens if the
film is at an intermediate angle such as 45 . Two
spots appear on the paper in the same places produced by an unpolarized source of light, not just a
single spot at the midpoint. This shows that the
crystal is not just throwing away the parts of the
light that are out of alignment with its axis. What
is happening instead is that the crystal will accept a
beam of light with any polarization whatsoever, and
split it into two beams polarized at 0 and 90 compared
to the crystals axis.
This behavior actually makes sense in terms of the
wave theory of light. Light waves are supposed to
obey the principle of superposition, which says that
waves that pass through each other add on to each
other. A light wave is made of electric and magnetic
fields, which are vectors, so it is vector addition were

135

talking about in this case. A vector at a 45 angle


can be produced by adding two perpendicular vectors of equal length. The crystal therefore cannot
respond any differently to 45-degree polarized light
than it would to a 50-50 mixture of light with 0degree and 90-degree polarization.

ures above. Make a prediction about what will happen, and discuss your prediction with your instructor
before you make the actual observation.
The principle of superposition implies that if the 0 and
90 polarizations produce two different spots, then the
two waves superimposed must produce those two spots,
not a single spot at an intermediate location.

C Two polarizing films


So far Ive just described the polarizing film as a
device for producing polarized light. But one can
apply to the polarizing film the same logic of superposition and vector addition that worked with the
calcite crystal. It would not make sense for the film
simply to throw away any waves that were not perfectly aligned with it, because a field oriented on a
slant can be analyzed into two vector components,
at 0 and 90 with respect to the film. Even if one
component is entirely absorbed, the other component should still be transmitted.

Based on these considerations, now think about what


will happen if you look through two polarizing films
at an angle to each other, as shown in the figure
above. Do not look into the laser beam! Just look
around the room. What will happen as you change
the angle ?
D Three polarizing films
Now suppose you start with two films at a 90 angle
to each other, and then sandwich a third film between them at a 45 angle, as shown in the two fig-

136

Lab 42

Polarization

Quantitative Observations
E Intensity of light passing through two polarizing films
In this part of the lab, you will make numerical measurements of the transmission of initially unpolarized
light transmitted through two polarizing films at an
angle to each other. To measure the intensity of
the light that gets through, you will use a photocell,
which is a device that converts light energy into an
electric current.
You will use a voltmeter to measure the voltage
across the photocell when light is shining on it. A
photovoltaic cell is a complicated nonlinear device,
but Ive found empirically that under the conditions
were using in this experiment, the voltage is proportional to the power of the light striking the cell:
twice as much light results in twice the voltage.
This measurement requires a source of light that is
unpolarized, constant in intensity, and comes from
a specific direction so it cant get to the photocell
without going through the polaroids. The ambient
light in the room is nearly unpolarized, but varies
randomly as people walk in front of the light fixtures,
etc. The laser beam is constant in intensity, but as
I was creating this lab I found to my surprise that it
is partially polarized, with a polarization that varies
over time. A more suitable source of light is the
sodium gas discharge tube, which makes a nearly
monochromatic, unpolarized yellow light. Make sure
you have allowed it to warm up for at least 15-20
minutes before using it; before it warms up, it makes
a reddish light, and the polaroids do not work very
well on that color.
Make measurements of the relative intensity of light
transmitted through the two polarizing films, using a
variety of angles . Dont assume that the notches on
the plastic housing of the polarizing films are a good

indication of the orientation of the films themselves.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
P1 Given the angle between the polarizing films,
predict the ratio |E0 |/|E| of the transmitted electric
field to the incident electric field.
P2 Based on your answer to P1, predict the ratio P 0 /P of the transmitted power to the incident
power.
P3 Sketch a graph of your answer to P2. Superimposed on the same graph, show a qualitative prediction of how it would change if the polaroids were
not 100% perfect at filtering out one component of
the field.

Analysis
Discuss your qualitative results in terms of superposition and vector addition.
Graph your results from part E, and superimpose a
theoretical curve for comparison. Discuss how your
results compare with theory. Since your measurements of light intensity are relative, just scale the
theoretical curve so that its maximum matches that
of the experimental data. (You might think of comparing the intensity transmitted through the two polaroids with the intensity that you get with no polaroids in the way at all. This doesnt really work,
however, because in addition to acting as polarizers,
the polaroids simply absorb a certain percentage of
the light, just as any transparent material would.)

137

43

The Photoelectric Effect

Apparatus
Hg gas discharge tube
light aperture assembly
lens/grating assembly
photodiode module, support base, and coupling rod
digital multimeter (Fluke)
pieces of plywood
green and yellow filters

of light could be visualized as a stream of machinegun bullets. The electrons would be small targets,
but when a light bullet did score a hit, it packed
enough of an individual wallop to knock the electron out immediately. Based on other experiments
involving the spectrum of light emitted by hot, glowing objects, Einstein also proposed that each photon
had an energy given by
E = hf ,
where f is the frequency of the light and h is Plancks
constant.

Goals
Observe evidence that light has particle properties as well as wave properties.
Measure Plancks constant.

Introduction
The photoelectric effect, a phenomenon in which
light shakes an electron loose from an object, provided the first evidence for wave-particle duality:
the idea that the basic building blocks of light and
matter show a strange mixture of particle and wave
behaviors. At the turn of the twentieth century,
physicists assumed that particle and wave phenomena were completely distinct. Young had shown that
light could undergo interference effects such as diffraction, so it had to be a wave. Since light was a wave
composed of oscillating electric and magnetic fields,
it made sense that when light encountered matter,
it would tend to shake the electrons. It was only
to be expected that something like the photoelectric
effect could happen, with the light shaking the electrons vigorously enough to knock them out of the
atom. The best theoretical estimates, however, were
that light of ordinary intensity would take millions
of years to do the trick it would take that long
for the electron slowly to absorb enough energy to
escape.
The actual experimental observation of the photoelectric effect was therefore an embarrassment. It
started up immediately, not after a million years.
Albert Einstein, better known today for the theory
of relativity, was the first to come up with the radical, and correct, explanation. Einstein simply suggested that in the photoelectric effect, light was behaving as a particle, now called a photon. The beam

138

Lab 43

The Photoelectric Effect

In this lab, you will perform the classic experiment


used to test Einsteins theory. You should refer to
the description of the experiment in your textbook.
Briefly, you will expose the metal cathode of a vacuum tube to light of various frequencies, and determine the voltage applied between the cathode and
anode that just barely suffices to cut off the photoelectric current completely. This is known as the
stopping voltage, Vs . According to Einsteins theory,
the stopping voltage should obey the equation
eVs = hf Es ,
where Es is the amount of energy required by an
electron to penetrate the surface of the cathode and
escape.

Optical setup.

Setup
You can use the Hg gas discharge tube to produce
monochromatic light with the following wavelengths:

color
ultraviolet
violet
blue
green
yellow

wavelength (nm)
365
405
436
546
578

The diffraction grating splits up the light into these


lines, so you can make one line at a time enter the
photodiode. Slit 1 slides into the slot in the front of
the discharge tube. The lens serves to create focused
images of slit 1 at the photodiode. The lens and
diffraction grating are housed in a single unit, which
is attached to a pair of rods (not shown) projecting
from slit 1. Do not drop the lens and diffraction
grating I have already damaged one by dropping
it, and they cost $200 to replace. For measurements
with the green and yellow lines, green and yellow
filters are used to help eliminate stray light of other
colors they stick magnetically on the front of the
collimator tube. Slit 2 and the collimator tube keep
stray light from getting in.
The photodiode module is held on top of a post on
a rotating arm. The ultraviolet line is invisible, but
the front of slit 2 is coated with a material that fluoresces in UV light, so you can see where the line
is.

photocurrent. If the voltage is turned on, the electric


field repels the electrons from the wire electrode, and
the current is reduced or eliminated. The stopping
voltage would be measured by increasing the voltage
until no more current was flowing. We used to use
a setup very similar to this in this course, but it
was difficult to get good data because it was hard to
judge accurately when the current had reached zero.
The circuit we now use, shown in fig. (b), uses a
cute trick to determine the stopping voltage. The
photocurrent transports electrons from the cathode
to the anode, so a net positive charge builds up on
the cathode, and a negative charge on the anode. As
the charge and the voltage increase, the photocurrent is reduced, until finally the voltage reaches the
stopping voltage, and no more current can flow. You
then read the voltage off of the voltmeter. When
you have the next color of light shining on the cathode, you momentarily close the switch, discharging
the photodiode, and then take your next measurement. The only disadvantage of this setup is that
you cannot adjust the voltage yourself and see how
the photocurrent varies with voltage.

Setup
Move the housing containing the grating and lens
until you get a good focus at the front of the photodiode box. The square side needs to be facing away
from the discharge tube.
Diffraction patterns are supposed to be symmetric,
i.e., the m = 1 and m = 1 maxima should be identical. In reality, there is something strange about
this setup that can cause the shorter wavelength
lines (especially the UV line) to be extremely dim
on one side. Check which one is brighter on your
apparatus.

Circuit.

Circuit
The circuit in fig. (a) above is the one shown in
textbooks for this type of experiment. Light comes
in and knocks electrons out of the curved cathode.
If the voltage is turned off, there is no electric field,
so the electrons travel in straight lines; some will
hit the anode, creating a current referred to as the

Just because the light gets in through slit 2 does


not mean it is getting in to the photodiode. The
original design of the apparatus allowed the photodiode module to twist around on its post, and it
had to be adjusted carefully by trial and error. Because students were getting frustrated with this, I
epoxied the photodiode modules onto their posts in
the right orientation. This makes it impossible to
disassemble the apparatus and put it in its storage
box, but should get rid of the hassles with orienting
it. However, you should still check that its oriented
correctly, because its possible that your setup was a
little different from mine, the epoxy can be cracked
by rough handling, and the screw at the base of the
post can also get loose. There are three things you

139

should check to make sure the orientation is right:


(1) Sighting along the tube like a gun, you should
see that it looks like its lined up with the center
of the grating. (2) The tube can be lifted out on a
hinge so that you can see the glass photodiode tube
inside the box; check that light is actually falling on
the opening on the side of the tube. (3) Take data
using the UV line. If you dont get a bigger voltage
for this line than for the others, then the light is not
making it in to the photodiode.

Observations
You can now determine the stopping voltages corresponding to the five different colors of light.

focus, check and make sure that the square side


of the unit is away from the Hg tube.
The photodiode module can be rotated on its
post so that the light goes straight down the
tube. If you dont line it up correctly, youll
be able to tell because the voltage will creep
up slowly, rather than shooting up to a certain
value and stopping. There is a screw that is
supposed to allow you to lock the photodiode
into position at the correct angle. Make sure
to loosen the screw before trying to aim the
photodiode, and lock it once its aimed correctly. If your photodiode wont lock in place,
you need to tighten the aluminum post that
forms the base of the box.

Hints:
The biggest possible source of difficulty is stray
light. The room should be dark when you do
your measurements.
The shortest wavelengths of light (highest frequencies), for which the energy of the photons is the highest, readily produce photoelectrons. The photocurrent is much weaker for
the longer wavelengths. Start with the shortwavelength line and graduate to the more difficult, lower frequencies. Dont forget the filters
for the yellow and green lines!

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
The week before you are to do the lab, briefly familiarize yourself visually with the apparatus.
P1 In the equation eVs = hf Es , verify that all
three terms have the same units.

If the button to zero the voltage doesnt work,


it is because the batteries are dead.

P2 Plan how you will analyze your data to determine Plancks constant.

When you hit the button to zero the voltage, it


may actually pop up high and then come back
down. This is normal. (Its acting like an RC
circuit with a long RC time constant).

Analysis

Check the batteries in your photodiode module


before you start, using the two banana plugs
designed for this purpose. If your batteries are
dead, you need to replace them. Ive also seen
cases where the batteries are on the borderline
at the beginning of the lab, and then die completely during the lab; in this situation, youll
notice that the stopping voltages youre measuring change over the course of the lab, and
dont make sense. It wont hurt to check the
batteries at the end of the lab as well as at the
beginning.
Where the lines hit the white front of slit 2,
they should be sharp, and should not overlap.
You can adjust the focus by moving the lens
and grating in or out. If you cant get a good

140

Prelab

Lab 43

The Photoelectric Effect

Extract Plancks constant from your data, with error


bars (see appendix 4). Is your value consistent with
the accepted value given in your textbook?
Every electron that absorbs a photon acquires a kinetic energy equal to hf . Thus it would seem that
if the voltage is less than the stopping voltage, every electron should have enough energy to reach the
other electrode. Give two reasons why many electrons do not reach the other electrode even when
the voltage is less than the stopping voltage.

141

44

Electron Diffraction

Apparatus
cathode ray tube (Leybold 555 626)
high-voltage power supply (new Leybold)
100-k resistor with banana-plug connectors
Vernier calipers

Goals
Observe wave interference patterns (diffraction
patterns) of electrons, demonstrating that electrons exhibit wave behavior as well as particle
behavior.

Learn what it is that determines the wavelength of an electron.

Introduction
The most momentous discovery of 20th-century physics
has been that light and matter are not simply made
of waves or particles the basic building blocks of
light and matter are strange entities which display
both wave and particle properties at the same time.
In our course, we have already learned about the
experimental evidence from the photoelectric effect
showing that light is made of units called photons,
which are both particles and waves. That probably disturbed you less than it might have, since you
most likely had no preconceived ideas about whether
light was a particle or a wave. In this lab, however,
you will see direct evidence that electrons, which you
had been completely convinced were particles, also
display the wave-like property of interference. Your
schooling had probably ingrained the particle interpretation of electrons in you so strongly that you
used particle concepts without realizing it. When
you wrote symbols for chemical ions such as Cl
and Ca2+ , you understood them to mean a chlorine
atom with one excess electron and a calcium atom
with two electrons stripped off. By teaching you to
count electrons, your teachers were luring you into
the assumption that electrons were particles. If this
labs evidence for the wave properties of electrons
disturbs you, then you are on your way to a deeper
understanding of what an electron really is both
a particle and a wave.

142

Lab 44

Electron Diffraction

The electron diffraction tube. The distance labeled as


13.5 cm in the figure actually varies from about 12.8 cm
to 13.8 cm, even for tubes that otherwise appear identical.

Method
What you are working with is basically the same
kind of vacuum tube as the picture tube in your television. As in a TV, electrons are accelerated through
a voltage and shot in a beam to the front (big end)
of the tube, where they hit a phosphorescent coating and produce a glow. You cannot see the electron
beam itself. There is a very thin carbon foil (it looks
like a tiny piece of soap bubble) near where the neck
joins the spherical part of the tube, and the electrons must pass through the foil before crossing over
to the phosphorescent screen.
The purpose of the carbon foil is to provide an ultrafine diffraction grating the grating consists of
the crystal lattice of the carbon atoms themselves!

As you will see in this lab, the wavelengths of the


electrons are very short (a fraction of a nanometer),
which makes a conventional ruled diffraction grating
useless the closest spacing that can be achieved on
a conventional grating is on the order of one micrometer. The carbon atoms in graphite are arranged in
sheets, each of which consists of a hexagonal pattern
of atoms like chicken wire. That means they are not
lined up in straight rows, so the diffraction pattern
is slightly different from the pattern produced by a
ruled grating.
Also, the carbon foil consists of many tiny graphite
crystals, each with a random orientation of its crystal lattice. The net result is that you will see a bright
spot surrounded by two faint circles. The two circles
represent cones of electrons that intersect the phosphor. Each cone makes an angle with respect to
the central axis of the tube, and just as with a ruled
grating, the angle is given by
sin = /d
where is the wavelength of the wave. For a ruled
grating, d would be the spacing between the lines.
In this case, we will have two different cones with
two different s, 1 and 2 , corresponding to two
different d0 s, d1 and d2 . Their geometrical meaning
is shown below.

high voltage in Appendix 8. Before beginning the


lab, make sure you understand the safety rules, initial them, and show your safety checklist to your
instructor. If you dont understand something, ask
your instructor for clarification.
In addition to the high-voltage safety precautions,
please observe the following rules to avoid damaging
the apparatus:
The tubes cost $1000. Please treat them with
respect! Dont drop them! Dropping them would
also be a safety hazard, since theyre vacuum tubes,
so theyll implode violently if they break.
Do not turn on anything until your instructor
has checked your circuit.
Dont operate the tube continuously at the
highest voltage values (5000-6000 V). It produces
x-rays when used at these voltages, and the strong
beam also decreases the life of the tube. You can
use the circuit on the right side of the HV supplys
panel, which limits its own voltage to 5000 V. Dont
leave the tubes heater on when youre not actually
taking data, because it will decrease the life of the
tube.

Setup
You setup will consist of two circuits, a heater circuit
and the high-voltage circuit.
The heater circuit is to heat the cathode, increasing the velocity with which the electrons move in
the metal and making it easier for some of them
to escape from the cathode. This will produce the
friendly and nostalgia-producing yellow glow which
is characteristic of all vacuum-tube equipment. The
heater is simply a thin piece of wire, which acts as
a resistor when a small voltage is placed across it,
producing heat. Connect the heater connections, labeled F1 and F2, to the 6-V AC outlet at the back
of the HV supply.

The carbon atoms in the graphite crystal are arranged


hexagonally.

Safety
This lab involves the use of voltages of up to 6000 V.
Do not be afraid of the equipment, however; there
is a fuse in the high-voltage supply that limits the
amount of current that it can produce, so it is not
particularly dangerous. Read the safety checklist on

The high-voltage circuits job is to accelerate the


electrons up to the desired speed. An electron that
happens to jump out of the cathode will head downhill to the anode. (The anode is at a higher voltage
than the cathode, which would make it seem like
it would be uphill from the cathode to the anode.
However, electrons have negative charge, so theyre
like negative-mass water that flows uphill.) The high
voltage power supply is actually two different power
supplies in one housing, with a left-hand panel for
one and a right-hand panel for the other. Connect
the anode (A) and cathode (C) to the right-hand

143

panel of the HV supply, and switch the switch on


the HV supply to the right, so it knows youre using
the right-hand panel.
The following connections are specified in the documentation, although I dont entirely understand
what theyre for. First, connect the electrode X to
the same plug as the cathode.1 Also, connect F1 to
C with the wire that has the 100-k resistor spliced
into it. The circuit diagram on page 146 summarizes
all this.
Check your circuit with your instructor before turning it on!

Observations
You are now ready to see for yourself the evidence of
the wave nature of electrons, observe the diffraction
pattern for various values of the high voltage, and
figure out what determines the wavelength of the
electrons. You will need to do your measurements
in the dark.
You will measure the s, and thus determine the
wavelength, , for several different voltages. Each
voltage will produce electrons with a different velocity, momentum, and energy.
Hints:
While measuring the diffraction pattern, dont
touch the vacuum tube the static electric
fields of ones body seem to be able to perturb
the pattern.
It is easiest to take measurements at the highest voltages, where the electrons pack a wallop
and make nice bright rings on the phosphor.
Start with the highest voltages and take data
at lower and lower voltages until you cant see
the rings well enough to take precise data. To
get unambiguous results, youll need to take
data with the widest possible range of voltages.
In order to reach a definite conclusion about
what is proportional to, you will need accurate data. Do your best to get good measurements. Pay attention to possible problems incurred by viewing the diffraction patterns from
different angles on different occasions. Try repeating a measurement more than once, and
seeing how big your random errors are.
1 If

you look inside the tube, you can see that X is an extra
electrode sandwiched in between the anode and the cathode.
I think its meant to help produce a focused beam.

144

Lab 44

Electron Diffraction

You need to get data down to about 2 or 3


kV in order to get conclusive results from this
experiment. The tubes are not quite identical, and were not designed to operate at such
low voltages, so they havent been tested under those conditions. Experience has shown
that some of the tubes work at lower voltages
than others. The group that has the tube that
works the best at low voltages can share their
low-voltage data with the other groups.

Prelab
The point of the prelab questions is to make sure
you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
The week before you are to do the lab, briefly familiarize yourself visually with the apparatus.
Read the high voltage safety checklist.
P1 It is not practical to measure 1 and 2 directly
with a protractor. Come up with a plan for how to
get the angles indirectly using trigonometry.
The figure shows the vacuum tube as having a particular shape, which is a sphere with the foil and
phosphor at opposite ends of a diamater. In reality,
the tubes were using now are not quite that shape.
To me, they look like they may have been shaped
so that the phosphor surface is a piece of a sphere
centered on the foil. If so, then arc lengths across
the phosphor can be connected to diffraction angles
very simply via the definition of radian measure.
P2 If the voltage difference across which the electrons are accelerated is V , and the known mass and
charge of the electron are m and e, what are the
electrons kinetic energy and momentum, in terms
of V , m, and e? (As a numerical check on your results, you should find that V = 5700 V gives KE =
9.1 1016 J and p = 4.1 1023 kgm/s.)
P3 All youre trying to do based on your graphs is
judge which one could be a graph of a proportionality, i.e., a line passing through the origin. Because
of this, you can omit any constant factors from the
equations you found in P2. When you do this, what
do your expressions turn out to be?
P4 Why is it not logically possible for the wavelength to be proportional to both p and KE? To
both 1/p and 1/KE?

P5 I have suggested plotting as a function of


p, KE, 1/p and 1/KE to see if is directly proportional to any of them. Once you have your raw data,
how can you immediately rule out two of these four
possibilities and avoid drawing the graphs?
P6 On each graph, you will have two data-points
for each voltage, corresponding to two different measurements of the same wavelength. The two wavelengths will be almost the same, but not exactly
the same because of random errors in measuring the
rings. Should you get the wavelengths by combining
the smaller angle with d1 and the larger angle with
d2 , or vice versa?

Analysis
Once you have your data, you can try plotting as
a function of, say, the kinetic energy, KE, of the
electrons, and see if it makes something simple like
a straight line. Make sure your graph includes the
origin (see below). You could also try plotting
as a function of the electrons momentum, p, or as
a function of other quantities such as 1/KE, 1/p,
etc. You can simplify your analysis by leaving out
constant factors.
What does seem to be proportional to? Your data
may cover a small enough range of voltage that more
than one graph may look linear. You can rule one
out by checking whether a line fit through the data
points would pass near the origin, as it must for a
proportionality. This is why it is important to have
your graph include the origin.

145

The circuit for the new setup.

146

Lab 44

Electron Diffraction

147

45

The Hydrogen Atom

Apparatus
H gas discharge tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
Hg gas discharge tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
spectrometer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
diffraction grating, 600 lines/mm . . . . . . . . . 1/group
small screwdriver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
black cloth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
piece of plywood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
block of wood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
penlight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
light block

Goals
Observe the visible line spectrum of hydrogen.
Determine the mass of the electron.

Introduction
Whats going on inside an atom? The question would
have seemed nonsensical to physicists before the 20th
century the word atom is Greek for unsplittable, and there was no evidence for subatomic
particles. Only after Thomson and Rutherford had
demonstrated the existence of electrons and the nucleus did the atom begin to be imagined as a tiny
solar system, with the electrons moving in elliptical
orbits around the nucleus under the influence of its
electric field. The problem was that physicists knew
very well that accelerating charges emit electromagnetic radiation, as for example in a radio antenna, so
the acceleration of the electrons should have caused
them to emit light, steadily lose energy, and spiral
into the nucleus, all within a microsecond,.
Luckily for us, atoms do not spontaneously shrink
down to nothing, but there was indeed evidence that
atoms could emit light. The spectra emitted by very
hot gases were observed to consist of patterns of discrete lines, each with a specific wavelength. The
process of emitting light always seemed to stop short
of finally annihilating the atom why? Also, why
were only those specific wavelengths emitted?
In this lab, you will study the spectrum of light emitted by the hydrogen atom, the simplest of all atoms,
with just one proton and one electron. In 1885, be-

148

Lab 45

The Hydrogen Atom

fore electrons and protons had even been imagined,


a Swiss schoolteacher named Johann Balmer discovered that the wavelengths emitted by hydrogen were
related by mysterious ratios of small integers. For instance, the wavelengths of the red line and the bluegreen line form a ratio of exactly 20/27. Balmer even
found a mathematical rule that gave all the wavelengths of the hydrogen spectrum (both the visible
ones and the invisible ones that lay in the infrared
and ultraviolet). The formula was completely empirical, with no theoretical basis, but clearly there were
patterns lurking in the seemingly mysterious atomic
spectra.
The first step toward understanding Balmers numerology was Einsteins theory that light consisted
of particles (photons), whose energy was related to
their frequency by the equation Ephoton = hf , or
substituting f = c/, Ephoton = hc/ .
According to this theory, the discrete wavelengths
that had been observed came from photons with specific energies. It seemed that the atom could exist
only in specific states of specific energies. To get
from an initial state with energy Ei to a final state
with a lower energy Ef , conservation of energy required the atom to release a photon with an energy
of Ephoton = Ei Ef .
Not only could the discrete line spectra be explained,
but if the atom possessed a state of least energy
(called a ground state), then it would always end
up in that state, and it could not collapse entirely.
Knowing the differences between the energy levels of
the atom, it was not too difficult to figure out the
atomic energy levels themselves. Niels Bohr showed
that they obey a relatively simple equation,
mk 2 e4 1
2
En =
2~2
n
where n is an integer labeling the level, k is the
Coulomb constant, e is the fundamental unit of charge,
~ is Plancks constant over 2, and me is the mass of
the electron. All the energies of the photons in the
emission spectrum could now be explained as differences in energy between specific states of the atom.
For instance the four visible wavelengths observed by
Balmer all came from cases where the atom ended up
in the n = 2 state, dropping down from the n = 3,
4, 5, and 6 states.
Although the equations sheer size may appear formidable, keep in mind that the quantity mk 2 e4 /2~2

in front is just a numerical constant, and the variation of energy from one level to the next is of the very
simple mathematical form 1/n2 . It was because of
this basic simplicity that the wavelength ratios like
20/27 occurred. The minus sign occurs because the
equation includes both the electrons potential energy and its kinetic energy, and the standard choice
of a reference-level for the potential energy results
in negative values.
Along with the nice formulas came a whole new
set of subversive concepts: that nature is random
in certain ways, that the building blocks of nature
are both particles and waves, and that subatomic
particles do not follow well-defined trajectories as
they travel through space. Today these ridiculoussounding ideas are taken for granted by working physicists, and we are so sure of the theory behind Bohrs
equation that it is now used as one of the most accurate ways of determining the mass of the electron. In
a previous lab, you measured the charge-to-mass ratio of the electron, but like the experiment by Thomson on which it was based, that technique was unable to give the charge and mass separately. Modern techniques allow us to measure wavelengths of
light, and therefore energies of photons, with high
precision, so if all the other fundamental constants
in Bohrs equation are known, we can solve for the
mass of the electron. This lab is really the only example of a high-precision experiment that youll do
in this course done correctly, it allows the determination of the electrons mass to five significant
figures!
Method

There are three sources of systematic error:


angular scale out of alignment: If the angular
scale is out of alignment, then all the angles
will be off by a constant amount.
factorys calibration of d: The factory that
made the grating labeled it with a certain spacing (in lines per millimeter) which can be converted to d (center-to-center distance between
lines). But their manufacturing process is not
all that accurate, so the actual spacing of the
lines is a little different from what the label
says.
orientation of the grating: Errors will be caused
if the grating is not perpendicular to the beam
from the collimator, or if the lines on the grating are not vertical (perpendicular to the plane
of the circle).

Eliminating systematic errors


A trick to eliminate the error due to misalignment of
the angular scale is to observe the same line on both
the right and the left, and take to be half the difference between the two angles, i.e., = (R L )/2.
Because you are subtracting two angles, any source
of error that adds a constant offset onto the angles
is eliminated. A few of the spectrometers have their
angular scales out of alignment with the collimators
by as much as a full degree, but thats of absolutely
no consequence if this technique is used.

The apparatus you will use to observe the spectrum


of hydrogen is shown in the first figure below. For
a given wavelength, the grating produces diffracted
light at many different angles: a central zeroth-order
line at = 0, first-order lines on both the left and
right, and so on through higher-order lines at larger
angles. The line of order m occurs at an angle satisfying the equation m = d sin .

Regarding the calibration of d, the first person who


ever did this type of experiment simply had to make
a diffraction grating whose d was very precisely constructed. But once someone has accurately measured at least one wavelength of one emission line
of one element, one can simply simply to determine
the spacing, d, of any grating using a line whose
wavelength is known.

To measure a wavelength, you will move the telescope until the diffracted first-order image of the slit
is lined up with the telescopes cross-hairs and then
read off the angle. Note that the angular scale on
the table of the spectroscope actually gives the angle
labeled in the figure, not .

You might think that these two tricks would be enough


to get rid of any error due to misorientation of the
grating, but theyre not. They will get rid of any
error of the form + c or sin c sin , but
misorientation of the grating produces errors of the
form sin sin + c. The adjustment of the orientation of the grating is described later.

Sources of systematic errors

Optics

149

The second figure below shows the optics from the


side, with the telescope simply looking down the
throat of the collimator at = 0. You are actually using the optics to let you see an image of the
slit, not the tube itself. The point of using a telescope is that it provides angular magnification, so
that a small change in angle can be seen visually.
A lens is used inside the collimator to make the light
from the slit into a parallel beam. This is important,
because we are using m = d sin to determine the
wavelength, but this equation was derived under the
assumption that the light was coming in as a parallel
beam. To make a parallel beam, the slit must be
located accurately at the focal point of the lens. This
adjustment should have already been done, but you
will check later and make sure. A further advantage
of using a lens in the collimator is that a telescope
only works for objects far away, not nearby objects
from which the reflected light is diverging strongly.
The lens in the collimator forms a virtual image at
infinity, on which the telescope can work.
The objective lens of the telescope focuses the light,
forming a real image inside the tube. The eyepiece
then acts like a magnifying glass to let you see the
image. In order to see the cross-hairs and the image
of the slit both in focus at the same time, the crosshairs must be located accurately at the focal point
of the objective, right on top of the image.

Setup
Turn on both gas discharge tubes right away, to let
them get warmed up.
Adjusting the optics at the start of the experiment is
vital. You do not want to fail to get the adjustments
right and then spend several frustrating hours trying
fruitlessly to make your observations.
First you must check that the cross-hairs are at the
focal point of the objective. If they are, then the image of the slits formed by the objective will be at the
same point in space as the crosshairs. Youll be able
to focus your eye on both simultaneously, and there
will be no parallax error depending on the exact position of your eye. The easiest way to check this is
to look through the telescope at something far away
(& 50 m), and move your head left and right to see if
the crosshairs move relative to the image. Slide the
eyepiece in and out to achieve a comfortable focus.
If this adjustment is not correct, you may need to
move the crosshairs in or out; this is done by sliding
the tube that is just outside the eyepiece tube. (You
need to use the small screwdriver to loosen the screw

150

Lab 45

The Hydrogen Atom

on the side, which is recessed inside a hole. The hole


may have a dime-sized cover over it.)
The white plastic pedestal should have already been
adjusted properly to get the diffraction grating oriented correctly in three dimensions, but you should
check it carefully. There are some clever features
built into the apparatus to help in accomplishing
this. As shown in the third figure, there are three
axes about which the grating could be rotated. Rotation about axis 1 is like opening a door, and this
is accomplished by rotating the entire pedestal like
a lazy Susan. Rotation about axes 2 (like folding
down a tailgate) and 3 are accomplished using the
tripod of screws underneath the pedestal. The eyepiece of the telescope is of a type called a Gauss
eyepiece, with a diagonal piece of glass in it. When
the grating is oriented correctly about axes 1 and 2
and the telescope is at = 0, a beam of light that
enters through the side of the eyepiece is partially
reflected to the grating, and then reflected from the
grating back to the eye. If these two axes are correctly adjusted, the reflected image of the crosshairs
is superimposed on the crosshairs.
First get a rough initial adjustment of the pedestal
by moving the telescope to 90 degrees and sighting along it like a gun to line up the grating. Now
loosen the screw (not shown in the diagram) that
frees the rotation of the pedestal. Put a desk lamp
behind the slits of the collimator, line up the telescope with the m = 0 image (which may not be
exactly at = 180 degrees), remove the desk lamp,
cover the whole apparatus with the black cloth, and
position a penlight so that it shines in through the
hole in the side of the eyepiece. Adjust axes 1 and
2. If youre far out of adjustment, you may see part
of a circle of light, which is the reflection of the penlight; start by bringing the circle of light into your
field of view. When youre done, tighten the screw
that keeps the pedestal from rotating. The pedestal
is locked down to the tripod screws by the tension
in a spring, which keeps the tips of two of the screws
secure in dimples underneath the platform. Dont
lower the screws too much, or the pedestal will no
longer stay locked; make a habit of gently wiggling
the pedestal after each adjustment to make sure its
not floating loose. Two of the spectrometers have
the diagonal missing from their eyepieces, so if you
have one of those, youll have to borrow an eyepiece
from another group to do this adjustment.
For the adjustment of axis 3, place a piece of masking
tape so that it covers exactly half of the slits of the
collimator. Put the Hg discharge tube behind the
slits. The crosshairs should be near the edge of the

tape in the m = 0 image. Move the telescope out to a


large angle where you see one of the high-m Hg lines,
and adjust the tripod screws so that the crosshairs
are at the same height relative to the edge of the
tape.

Observations
Now put the Hg tube behind the collimator. Make
sure the hottest part of the tube is directly in front of
the slits; you will need to use the piece of plywood to
raise the spectrometer to the right height. You want
the tube as close to the slits as possible, and lined
up with the slits as well as possible; you can adjust
this while looking through the telescope at an m = 1
line, so as to make the line as bright as possible.
If your optics are adjusted correctly, you should be
able to see the microscopic bumps and scratches on
the knife edges of the collimator, and there should
be no parallax of the crosshairs relative to the image
of the slits.
Here is a list of the wavelengths of the visible Hg
lines, in nm, to high precision:
404.656

violet

435.833
491.604
546.074

blue
blue-green
green
yellow

There is a dimmer violet


line nearby at 407.781 nm.
dim
There is also a dimmer
blue-green line.
This is actually a complex
set of lines, so its not useful for calibration.

Youve seen the mercury spectrum before, in the


photoelectric effect lab, but you will notice some differences here. You will be able to see various dimmer lines as well as the bright ones, and you want
to avoid mistaking those for the bright ones that
were using for calibration. Also, as noted above,
some lines that appear to be single lines in a lowresolution spectrum are actually mutliple lines. The
table gives the wavelengths in vacuum. Although
were doing the lab in air, our goal is to find what
the hydrogen wavelengths would have been in vacuum; by calibrating using vacuum wavelengths for
mercury, we end up getting vacuum wavelengths for
hydrogen as well.
Start by making sure that you can find all of the
mercury lines in the correct sequence if not, then
you have probably found some first-order lines and
some second-order ones. If you can find some lines
but not others, use your head and search for them

in the right area based on where you found the lines


you did see. You may see various dim, fuzzy lights
through the telescope dont waste time chasing
these, which could be coming from other tubes or
from reflections. The real lines will be bright, clear
and well-defined. By draping the black cloth over
the discharge tube and the collimator, you can get
rid of stray light that could cause problems for you
or others. The discharge tubes also have holes in
the back; to block the stray light from these holes,
either put the two discharge tubes back to back or
use one of the small light blocks that slide over the
hole. Do a quick and rough check that the angles at
which you observe the violet line are close to the
approximate ones predicted in prelab question P1.
Now try swapping in the hydrogen tube in place of
the mercury tube, and go through a similar process
of acquainting yourself with the four lines in its visible spectrum, which are as follows:
violet
purple
blue-green
red

dim

Again youll again have to make sure the hottest


part of the tube is in front of the collimator; this
requires putting books and/or blocks of wood under
the discharge tube.
By coincidence, three of the mercury lines lie very
close to three of the hydrogen lines: violet next to
violet, blue next to purple, and blue-green next to
blue-green. Well exploit this coincidence to reduce
systematic errors. The idea is that if we have a hydrogen wavelength, , that we want to measure, and
a nearby known line c from the mercury spectrum
that we can use for calibration, then we can sidestep
the determination of the gratings spacing entirely
by using the relation
=

sin
c
sin c

Although weve tried hard to eliminate systematic


errors through careful adjustment of the optics, some
errors will still remain. But these errors vary smoothly with angle, so by calibrating against known lines
that occur at nearly the same angle, we can minimize their effects. For each line, youll need a total
of four angles: L and R for the calibration line
at m = 1, and a similar pair of angles for the hydrogen line. Note that the knob that adjusts the
width of the slit only moves the right-hand knifeedge, which appears to be on the left in the inverted
image. Therefore, adjusting the slit changes the location of the center of the slit, and such adjustments

151

should not be done between the L and R measurements of the same line. My experience is that the
dimness of the violet hydrogen line makes its wavelength difficult to measure accurately, so including
the violet-violet pair actually worsens the quality of
the final result. Therefore you end up just measuring
two pairs (eight angles).
The angles are measured using a vernier scale, which
is similar to the one on the vernier calipers you have
already used in the first-semester lab course. Your
final reading for an angle will consist of degrees plus
minutes. (One minute of arc, abbreviated 1, is 1/60
of a degree.) The main scale is marked every 30
minutes. Your initial, rough reading is obtained by
noting where the zero of the vernier scale falls on the
main scale, and is of the form xxx 0 plus a little
more or xxx 30 plus a little more. Next, you
should note which line on the vernier scale lines up
most closely with one of the lines on the main scale.
The corresponding number on the vernier scale tells
you how many minutes of arc to add for the plus a
little more.
As a check on your results, everybody in your group
should take independent readings of every angle you
measure in the lab, nudging the telescope to the side
after each reading. Once you have independent results for a particular angle, compare them. If theyre
consistent to within one or two minutes of arc, average them. If theyre not consistent, figure out what
went wrong.

sequence of the angles as you go out from =0.


P4 The visible lines of hydrogen come from the
3 2, 4 2, 5 2, and 6 2 transitions. Based
on E = hf , which of these should correspond to
which colors?
P5

Based on the Bohr equation, predict the ratio


bluegreen
purple

for hydrogen, expressing your answer as the ratio of


two integers.

Self-Check
Before leaving lab, make sure that your wavelengths
are consistent with your prediction from prelab question P5, to a precision of no worse than about one
part per thousand.

Analysis
Throughout your analysis, remember that this is
a high-precision experiment, so you dont want to
round off to less than five significant figures.
We assume that the following constants are already
known:
e = 1.6022 1019 C
k = 8.9876 109 Nm2 /C2
h = 6.6261 1034 Js

Prelab

c = 2.9979 108 m/s

The point of the prelab questions is to make sure


you understand what youre doing, why youre doing it, and how to avoid some common mistakes. If
you dont know the answers, make sure to come to
my office hours before lab and get help! Otherwise
youre just setting yourself up for failure in lab.
The week before you are to do the lab, briefly familiarize yourself visually with the apparatus.
P1 The nominal (and not very accurate) spacing
of the grating is stated as 600 lines per millimeter.
From this information, find d, and predict the angles
L and R at which you will observe the 404.656 nm
violet mercury line.
P2 Make sure you understand the first three vernier
readings in the fourth figure, and then interpret the
fourth reading.
P3 In what sequence do you expect to see the Hg
lines on each side? Make a drawing showing the

152

Lab 45

The Hydrogen Atom

The energies of the four types of visible photons


emitted by a hydrogen atom equal En E2 , where
n = 3, 4, 5, and 6. Using the Bohr equation, we have


1
1
Ephoton = A

,
4 n2
where A is the expression from the Bohr equation
that depends on the mass of the electron. From the
two lines youve measured, extract a value for A.
If your data passed the self-check above, then you
should find that these values for A agree to no worse
than a few parts per thousand at worst. Compute
an average value of A, and extract the mass of the
electron, with error bars.
Finally, there is a small correction that should be
made to the result for the mass of the electron because actually the proton isnt infinitely massive compared to the electron; in terms of the quantity m

given by the equation on page 148, the mass of the


electron, me , would actually be given by me = m/(1
m/mp ), where mp is the mass of the proton, 1.6726
1027 kg.

153

The spectrometer

Optics.

Orienting the grating.

Prelab question 2.

154

Lab 45

The Hydrogen Atom

155

46

The Michelson Interferometer

Apparatus
Michelson interferometer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1/group
Na and H gas discharge tubes . . . . . . . . . . . . 1/group
tools inside drawer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 set/group
2 4 piece of wood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3/group
colored filters (Cambosco and others)

Goals
Determine the wavelength of a line of the emission spectrum of sodium or hydrogen.
The Michelson interferometer is a device for measuring the wavelength of light, used most famously in
the Michelson-Morley experiment of 1887, which was
later interpreted as disproving the existence of the
luminiferous aether and supporting Einsteins theory
of special relativity.

by distance equal to a quarter of a wavelength of the


light, the total round-trip distance traveled by the
wave is changed by half a wavelength, which switches
from constructive to destructive interference, or vice
versa. Thus if the mirror is moved by a distance d,
and you see the light go through n complete cycles
of appearance and disappearance, you can conclude
that the wavelength of the light was = 2d/n.
To make small and accurate adjustments of the mirror easier to do, the micrometer is connected to it
through a level that reduces the amount of movement by a factor k, approximately equal to 5.23;
the micrometer reads the bigger distance D = kd
that it actually travels itself, so the wavelength is
= 2D/kn.
Another trick to make the apparatus easier to use
is that the mirrors A and B are slightly curved.
This means that instead of seeing a field of light
that varies uniformly between dark and bright as
you turn the knob, instead you see a set of concentric rings (called fringes), which expand or contract
depending on which direction you turn the knob.
Turn on the sodium discharge tube, and let it warm
up until its yellow.
Remove the drawer from the box, and take out the
tool kit. Unscrew the screws on the bottom of the
box that lock the interferometer to the floor of the
box, and very carefully take the instrument out of
the box. Screw the two aluminum legs into the bottom of the interferometer, and lay a piece of wood
flat under the third leg, which is a threaded rod; this
makes the apparatus level.

As shown in the figure, the idea is to take a beam


of light from the source, split it into two perpendicular beams, send it to two mirrors, and then recombine the beams again. If the two light waves are in
phase when recombined, they will reinforce, but if
they are out of phase, they will cancel. Since the
two waves originated from the splitting of a single
wave, the only reason they would be out of phase
was if the lengths of the two arms of the apparatus
were unequal. Mirror A is movable, and the distance
through which it moves can be controlled and measured extremely accurately using a micrometer connected to the mirror via a lever. If mirror A is moved

156

Lab 46

Place the discharge tube near the entrance window


of the apparatus. If you look through the viewing
window, you will see the image of the tube itself,
reflected through the mirrors. To make this into a
uniform circle of light, place the ground glass screen
(inside the bag of tools) in the bracket at the entrance window.
Mirror B needs to be perfectly perpendicular to mirror A, and its vertical plane needs to be matched to
mirror As. This is adjusted using the knobs on mirror B, one for vertical adjustment and one for horizontal. A rough initial adjustment can be done by
aligning the two images of the circular entrance window. You can then hang the metal pointer (from the
bag of tools) on the top of the ground glass screen,

The Michelson Interferometer

and do a better adjustment so that the two images of


the pointers tip coincide. You should now see a set
of very fine concentric circular interference fringes,
centered on a point outside of the field of view. The
final, fine adjustment is obtained by bringing the
center of this pattern to the center of the field of
view.

make more progress in measuring lines of the hydrogen spectrum accurately.

The micrometer has a millimeter scale running from


0 to 25 mm, with half-millimeter divisions on the
bottom. To take a reading on it, first read the
number of millimeters and half-millimeters based on
where the edge of the cylindrical rotating part lies on
this scale. Then add on the reading from the vernier
scale that runs around the circumference of the rotating part, which runs from 0.000 to 0.500 mm. You
should be able to estimate to the nearest thousandth
of a millimeter (tenth of a vernier division).
While looking at the interference fringes, turn the
knob on the micrometer. You will see them either
expand like smoke rings, or contract and disappear
into the center, depending on which way you turn
the knob. Rotate the knob while counting about 50
to 100 fringes, and record the two micrometer readings before and after. The difference between these
is D. It helps if you prop your head on the table,
and move the micrometer knob smoothly and continuously. Moving your head disturbs the pattern, and
halting the micrometer knob tends to cause backlash
that confuses the count of fringes by plus or minus
one.
It has been an ongoing project to get these spectrometers back in operation and fully calibrated for
the first time in many years. In spring 2006, my students in physics 223 gave them a thorough test drive.
In spring 2007, we started taking data to determine
k accurately for each spectrometer, using the known
wavelength of the sodium emission line at 589 nm.
Their data are on sheets inside each spectrometers
box. That class also experimented with using the
apparatus to measure the wavelengths of some lines
in the spectrum of hydrogen, which is of some fundamental interest because it is the simplest of all
atoms. Since hydrogens spectrum, unlike sodiums,
includes several different visible lines of similar intensity, this required using colored filters to select
the desired line. They found that filter #2 from
the Cambosco box worked well for the red line, and
#8 for the blue-green line. Lines with short wavelengths were more difficult to do. For the next class
that does the lab, my goal is to accumulate more
calibration data, so we can start to detect whether
certain data points are off because of 1 errors in
counting the number of fringes. I would also like to

157

Appendix 1: Format of Lab Writeups


Lab reports must be three pages or less, not counting
your raw data. The format should be as follows:
Title
Raw data Keep actual observations separate from
what you later did with them.
These are the results of the measurements you take
down during the lab, hence they come first. You
should clearly mark the beginning and end of your
raw data, so I dont have to sort through many pages
to find your actual presentation of your work, below.
Write your raw data directly in your lab book; dont
write them on scratch paper and recopy them later.
Dont use pencil. The point is to separate facts from
opinions, observations from inferences.
Procedure Did you have to create your own
methods for getting some of the raw data?
Do not copy down the procedure from the manual.
In this section, you only need to explain any methods you had to come up with on your own, or cases
where the methods suggested in the handout didnt
work and you had to do something different. Do not
discuss how you did your calculations here, just how
you got your raw data.
Abstract What did you find out? Why is it important?
The abstract of a scientific paper is a short paragraph at the top that summarizes the experiments
results in a few sentences. If your results deviated
from the ideal equations, dont be afraid to say so.
After all, this is real life, and many of the equations we learn are only approximations, or are only
valid in certain circumstances. However, (1) if you
simply mess up, it is your responsibility to realize
it in lab and do it again, right; (2) you will never
get exact agreement with theory, because measurements are not perfectly exact the important issue
is whether your results agree with theory to roughly
within the error bars.
The abstract comes first in your writeup, but youll
write it last, so leave a little space for it.
The abstract is not a statement of what you hoped
to find out. Its a statement of what you did find
out. Its like the brief statement at the beginning
of a debate: The U.S. should have free trade with
China. Its not this: In this debate, we will discuss
whether the U.S. should have free trade with China.

158

Lab

If this is a lab that has just one important numerical


result (or maybe two or three of them), put them
in your abstract, with error bars where appropriate.
There should normally be no more than two to four
numbers here. Do not recapitulate your raw data
here this is for your final results.
If youre presenting a final result with error bars,
make sure that the number of significant figures is
consistent with your error bars. For example, if you
write a result as 323.54 6 m/s, thats wrong. Your
error bars say that you could be off by 6 in the ones
place, so the 5 in the tenths place and the four in
the hundredths place are completely meaningless.
If youre presenting a number in scientific notation,
with error bars, dont do it like this
1.234 1089 m/s 3 1092 m/s

do it like this
(1.234 0.003) 1089 m/s

so that we can see easily which digit of the result the


error bars apply to.
Justification and Reasoning Convince me of
what you claimed in your abstract.
Cconvince me that the statements you made about
your results in the abstract follow logically from your
data. This will typically involve both calculations
and logical arguments. Continuing the debate metaphor, if your abstract said the U.S. should have free
trade with China, this is the rest of the debate, where
you convince me, based on data and logic, that we
should have free trade.
In your calculations, the more clearly you show what
you did, the easier it is for me to give you partial
credit if there is something wrong with your final result. If you have a long series of similar calculations,
you may just show one as a sample. If your prelab
involved deriving equations that you will need, repeat them here without the derivation. Try to lay
out complicated calculations in a logical way, going straight down the page and using indentation to
make it easy to understand. When doing algebra,
try to keep everything in symbolic form until the
very end, when you will plug in numbers.

Appendix 1: Format of Lab Writeups

Model Lab Writeup


Comparison of Heavy and Light Falling Objects
- Galileo Galilei
Raw Data
(Galileos original, somewhat messy notes go here.)

the cannon ball leading at the bottom by a slight


margin (1 hands breadth), but we could not be sure.
It is possible that the musket ball was just noticeably affected by air resistance. In any case, the Aristotelian theory is clearly wrong, since it predicts that
the cannon ball, which was 400 times heavier, would
have taken one 400th the time to hit the ground.

He does not recopy the raw data to make them look


nicer, or mix calculations with raw data.
Procedure
We followed the procedure in the lab manual with
the following additions: (1) To make sure both objects fell at the same time, we put them side by side
on a board and then tipped the board. (2) We waited
until there was no wind.
Abstract
We dropped a cannon ball weighing two hundred
pounds and a musket ball weighing half a pound simultaneously from the same height. Both hit the
ground at nearly the same time. This contradicts
Aristotles theory that heavy objects always fall faster
than light ones.

height of drop = 200 4 cubits


amount by which cannon
ball was ahead at the bottom < 1 hands breadth

Justification and Reasoning


From a point 100 cubits away from the base of the
tower, the top was at a 63 angle above horizontal.
The height of the tower was therefore
100 cubits tan 63 = 200 cubits.
We estimated the accuracy of the 100-cubit horizontal measurement to be 2 cubits, with random errors
mainly from the potholes in the street, which made
it difficult to lay the cubit-stick flat. If it was 102
cubits instead of 100, our result for the height of the
tower would have been 204 cubits, so our error bars
on the height are 4 cubits.
It is common knowledge that a feather falls more
slowly than a stone, but our experiment shows that
heavy objects do not always fall much more rapidly.
We do not have any data on feathers, but we suggest that extremely light objects like feathers are
strongly affected by air resistance, which would be
nearly negligible for a cannonball. We think we saw

159

Appendix 2: Basic Error Analysis


No measurement is perfectly exact.
One of the most common misconceptions about science is that science is exact. It is always a struggle to get beginning science students to believe that
no measurement is perfectly correct. They tend to
think that if a measurement is a little off from the
true result, it must be because of a mistake if
a pro had done it, it would have been right on the
mark. Not true!
What scientists can do is to estimate just how far
off they might be. This type of estimate is called
an error bar, and is expressed with the symbol,
read plus or minus. For instance, if I measure my
dogs weight to be 52 2 pounds, I am saying that
my best estimate of the weight is 52 pounds, and I
think I could be off by roughly 2 pounds either way.
The term error bar comes from the conventional
way of representing this range of uncertainty of a
measurement on a graph, but the term is also used
when no graph is involved.
Some very good scientific work results in measurements that nevertheless have large error bars. For
instance, the best measurement of the age of the universe is now 15 5 billion years. That may not seem
like wonderful precision, but the people who did the
measurement knew what they were doing. Its just
that the only available techniques for determining
the age of the universe are inherently poor.
Even when the techniques for measurement are very
precise, there are still error bars. For instance, electrons act like little magnets, and the strength of a
very weak magnet such as an individual electron is
customarily measured in units called Bohr magnetons. Even though the magnetic strength of an electron is one of the most precisely measured quantities
ever, the best experimental value still has error bars:
1.0011596524 0.0000000002 Bohr magnetons.
There are several reasons why it is important in scientific work to come up with a numerical estimate
of your error bars. If the point of your experiment
is to test whether the result comes out as predicted
by a theory, you know there will always be some
disagreement, even if the theory is absolutely right.
You need to know whether the measurement is reasonably consistent with the theory, or whether the
discrepancy is too great to be explained by the lim-

160

Lab

itations of the measuring devices.


Another important reason for stating results with error bars is that other people may use your measurement for purposes you could not have anticipated.
If they are to use your result intelligently, they need
to have some idea of how accurate it was.

Error bars are not absolute limits.


Error bars are not absolute limits. The true value
may lie outside the error bars. If I got a better scale I
might find that the dogs weight is 51.30.1 pounds,
inside my original error bars, but its also possible
that the better result would be 48.7 0.1 pounds.
Since theres always some chance of being off by a
somewhat more than your error bars, or even a lot
more than your error bars, there is no point in being extremely conservative in an effort to make absolutely sure the true value lies within your stated
range. When a scientist states a measurement with
error bars, she is not saying If the true value is
outside this range, I deserve to be drummed out of
the profession. If that was the case, then every scientist would give ridiculously inflated error bars to
avoid having her career ended by one fluke out of
hundreds of published results. What scientists are
communicating to each other with error bars is a
typical amount by which they might be off, not an
upper limit.
The important thing is therefore to define error bars
in a standard way, so that different peoples statements can be compared on the same footing. By
convention, it is usually assumed that people estimate their error bars so that about two times out of
three, their range will include the true value (or the
results of a later, more accurate measurement with
an improved technique).

Random and systematic errors.


Suppose you measure the length of a sofa with a
tape measure as well as you can, reading it off to
the nearest millimeter. If you repeat the measurement again, you will get a different answer. (This
is assuming that you dont allow yourself to be psychologically biased to repeat your previous answer,
and that 1 mm is about the limit of how well you
can see.) If you kept on repeating the measurement,

Appendix 2: Basic Error Analysis

you might get a list of values that looked like this:


203.1 cm
203.4

203.4
203.1

202.8
202.9

203.3
202.9

203.2
203.1

Variations of this type are called random errors, because the result is different every time you do the
measurement.
The effects of random errors can be minimized by averaging together many measurements. Some of the
measurements included in the average are too high,
and some are too low, so the average tends to be
better than any individual measurement. The more
measurements you average in, the more precise the
average is. The average of the above measurements
is 203.1 cm. Averaging together many measurements
cannot completely eliminate the random errors, but
it can reduce them.
On the other hand, what if the tape measure was a
little bit stretched out, so that your measurements
always tended to come out too low by 0.3 cm? That
would be an example of a systematic error. Since
the systematic error is the same every time, averaging didnt help us to get rid of it. You probably
had no easy way of finding out exactly the amount
of stretching, so you just had to suspect that there
might a systematic error due to stretching of the
tape measure.
Some scientific writers make a distinction between
the terms accuracy and precision. A precise
measurement is one with small random errors, while
an accurate measurement is one that is actually close
to the true result, having both small random errors
and small systematic errors. Personally, I find the
distinction is made more clearly with the more memorable terms random error and systematic error.
The sign used with error bars normally implies
that random errors are being referred to, since random errors could be either positive or negative, whereas
miles by gallons, to get your final result. When you
systematic errors would always be in the same direccommunicate your result to someone else, they are
tion.
completely uninterested in how accurately you measured the number of miles and how accurately you
measured the gallons. They simply want to know
The goal of error analysis
how accurate your final result was. Was it 22 2
mi/gal, or 22.137 0.002 mi/gal?
Very seldom does the final result of an experiment
come directly off of a clock, ruler, gauge or meter.
Of course the accuracy of the final result is ultiIt is much more common to have raw data consistmately based on and limited by the accuracy of your
ing of direct measurements, and then calculations
raw data. If you are off by 0.2 gallons in your meabased on the raw data that lead to a final result.
surement of the amount of gasoline, then that amount
As an example, if you want to measure your cars
of error will have an effect on your final result. We
gas mileage, your raw data would be the number of
say that the errors in the raw data propagate through
gallons of gas consumed and the number of miles
the calculations. When you are requested to do eryou went. You would then do a calculation, dividing
ror analysis in a lab writeup, that means that you

161

are to use the techniques explained below to determine the error bars on your final result. There are
two sets of techniques youll need to learn:
techniques for finding the accuracy of your raw
data
techniques for using the error bars on your raw
data to infer error bars on your final result

Estimating random errors in raw


data
We now examine three possible techniques for estimating random errors in your original measurements, illustrating them with the measurement of
the length of the sofa.
Method #1: Guess
If youre measuring the length of the sofa with a
metric tape measure, then you can probably make a
reasonable guess as to the precision of your measurements. Since the smallest division on the tape measure is one millimeter, and one millimeter is also near
the limit of your ability to see, you know you wont
be doing better than 1 mm, or 0.1 cm. Making allowances for errors in getting tape measure straight
and so on, we might estimate our random errors to
be a couple of millimeters.
Guessing is fine sometimes, but there are at least two
ways that it can get you in trouble. One is that students sometimes have too much faith in a measuring
device just because it looks fancy. They think that
a digital balance must be perfectly accurate, since
unlike a low-tech balance with sliding weights on it,
it comes up with its result without any involvement
by the user. That is incorrect. No measurement is
perfectly accurate, and if the digital balance only
displays an answer that goes down to tenths of a
gram, then there is no way the random errors are
any smaller than about a tenth of a gram.
Another way to mess up is to try to guess the error
bars on a piece of raw data when you really dont
have enough information to make an intelligent estimate. For instance, if you are measuring the range
of a rifle, you might shoot it and measure how far
the bullet went to the nearest centimeter, concluding that your random errors were only 1 cm. In
reality, however, its range might vary randomly by
fifty meters, depending on all kinds of random factors you dont know about. In this type of situation,
youre better off using some other method of estimating your random errors.

162

Lab

Method #2: Repeated Measurements and the TwoThirds Rule


If you take repeated measurements of the same thing,
then the amount of variation among the numbers can
tell you how big the random errors were. This approach has an advantage over guessing your random
errors, since it automatically takes into account all
the sources of random error, even ones you didnt
know were present.
Roughly speaking, the measurements of the length
of the sofa were mostly within a few mm of the average, so thats about how big the random errors
were. But lets make sure we are stating our error
bars according to the convention that the true result
will fall within our range of errors about two times
out of three. Of course we dont know the true
result, but if we sort out our list of measurements
in order, we can get a pretty reasonable estimate of
our error bars by taking half the range covered by
the middle two thirds of the list. Sorting out our list
of ten measurements of the sofa, we have
202.8 cm
203.1

202.9
203.2

202.9
203.3

203.1
203.4

203.1
203.4

Two thirds of ten is about 6, and the range covered


by the middle six measurements is 203.3 cm - 202.9
cm, or 0.4 cm. Half that is 0.2 cm, so wed estimate our error bars as 0.2 cm. The average of the
measurements is 203.1 cm, so your result would be
stated as 203.1 0.2 cm.
One common mistake when estimating random errors by repeated measurements is to round off all
your measurements so that they all come out the
same, and then conclude that the error bars were
zero. For instance, if wed done some overenthusiastic rounding of our measurements on the sofa,
rounding them all off to the nearest cm, every single
number on the list would have been 203 cm. That
wouldnt mean that our random errors were zero!
The same can happen with digital instruments that
automatically round off for you. A digital balance
might give results rounded off to the nearest tenth of
a gram, and you may find that by putting the same
object on the balance again and again, you always
get the same answer. That doesnt mean its perfectly precise. Its precision is no better than about
0.1 g.
Method #3: Repeated Measurements and the Standard Deviation
The most widely accepted method for measuring error bars is called the standard deviation. Heres how
the method works, using the sofa example again.

Appendix 2: Basic Error Analysis

(1) Take the average of the measurements.


average = 203.1 cm
(2) Find the difference, or deviation, of each measurement from the average.
0.3 cm
0.0

0.2
0.1

0.2
0.1

0.0
0.3

0.0
0.3

(3) Take the square of each deviation.


0.09 cm2
0.00

0.04
0.01

0.04
0.01

0.00
0.09

0.00
0.09

Probability of deviations
You can see that although 0.2 cm is a good figure
for the typical size of the deviations of the measurements of the length of the sofa from the average, some of the deviations are bigger and some are
smaller. Experience has shown that the following
probability estimates tend to hold true for how frequently deviations of various sizes occur:
< 1 standard deviation about 2 times out of 3
1-2 standard deviations about 1 time out of 4

(4) Average together all the squared deviations.


average = 0.04 cm2

2-3 standard deviations about 1 time out of 20


3-4 standard deviations about 1 in 500

(5) Take the square root. This is the standard deviation.


standard deviation = 0.2 cm

4-5 standard deviations about 1 in 16,000


> 5 standard deviations about 1 in 1,700,000

If were using the symbol x for the length of the


couch, then the result for the length of the couch
would be stated as x = 203.1 0.2 cm, or x = 203.1
cm and x = 0.2 cm. Since the Greek letter sigma
() is used as a symbol for the standard deviation, a
standard deviation is often referred to as a sigma.
Step (3) may seem somewhat mysterious. Why not
just skip it? Well, if you just went straight from
step (2) to step (4), taking a plain old average of
the deviations, you would find that the average is
zero! The positive and negative deviations always
cancel out exactly. Of course, you could just take
absolute values instead of squaring the deviations.
The main advantage of doing it the way Ive outlined
above are that it is a standard method, so people will
know how you got the answer. (Another advantage
is that the standard deviation as Ive described it
has certain nice mathematical properties.)

The probability of various sizes of deviations, shown


graphically. Areas under the bell curve correspond to
probabilities. For example, the probability that the measurement will deviate from the truth by less than one standard deviation (1) is about 34 2 = 68%, or about 2
out of 3. (J. Kemp, P. Strandmark, Wikipedia.)

In the following material, Ill use the term standard deviation as a synonym for error bar, but
that does not imply that you must always use the
standard deviation method rather than the guessing
method or the 2/3 rule.

Example: How significant?


In 1999, astronomers Webb et al. claimed to have
found evidence that the strength of electrical forces in
the ancient universe, soon after the big bang, was slightly
weaker than it is today. If correct, this would be the first
example ever discovered in which the laws of physics
changed over time. The difference was very small, 5.7
1.0 parts per million, but still highly statistically significant. Dividing, we get (5.7 0)/1.0 = 5.7 for the number of standard deviations by which their measurement
was different from the expected result of zero. Looking
at the table above, we see that if the true value really
was zero, the chances of this happening would be less
than one in a million. In general, five standard deviations (five sigma) is considered the gold standard for
statistical significance.

There is a utility on the classs web page for calculating standard deviations.

However, there is a twist to this story that shows how


statistics always have to be taken with a grain of salt.

A common mistake when using the standard deviation technique is to take too few measurements.
For instance, someone might take only two measurements of the length of the sofa, and get 203.4 cm
and 203.4 cm. They would then infer a standard deviation of zero, which would be unrealistically small
because the two measurements happened to come
out the same.

163

In 2004, Chand et al. redid the measurement by a


more precise technique, and found that the change was
0.6 0.6 parts per million. This is only one standard
deviation away from the expected value of 0, which
should be interpreted as being statistically consistent
with zero. If you measure something, and you think
you know what the result is supposed to be theoretically, then one standard deviation is the amount you
typically expect to be off by thats why its called
the standard deviation. Moreover, the Chand result
is wildly statistically inconsistent with the Webb result
(see the example on page 167), which means that one
experiment or the other is a mistake. Most likely Webb
at al. underestimated their random errors, or perhaps
there were systematic errors in their experiment that
they didnt realize were there.

Precision of an average
We decided that the standard deviation of our measurements of the length of the couch was 0.2 cm,
i.e., the precision of each individual measurement
was about 0.2 cm. But I told you that the average,
203.1 cm, was more precise than any individual measurement. How precise is the average? The answer
is that the standard deviation of the average equals
standard deviation of one measurement

number of measurements

(An example on page 166 gives the reasoning that


leads to the square root.) That means that you can
theoretically measure anything to any desired precision, simply by averaging together enough measurements. In reality, no matter how small you make
your random error, you cant get rid of systematic errors by averaging, so after a while it becomes pointless to take any more measurements.

164

Lab

Appendix 2: Basic Error Analysis

165

Appendix 3: Propagation of Errors


Propagation of the error from a
single variable
In the previous appendix we looked at techniques
for estimating the random errors of raw data, but
now we need to know how to evaluate the effects of
those random errors on a final result calculated from
the raw data. For instance, suppose you are given a
cube made of some unknown material, and you are
asked to determine its density. Density is defined
as = m/v ( is the Greek letter rho), and the
volume of a cube with edges of length b is v = b3 , so
the formula
= m/b3

nificant errors in the density. The following more


general method can be applied in such cases:
(1) Change one of the raw measurements, say m, by
one standard deviation, and see by how much the
final result, , changes. Use the symbol Qm for the
absolute value of that change.
m = 1.658 g
m = 1.661 g

gave
gives

= 2.690 g/cm3
= 2.695 g/cm3

Qm = change in = 0.005 g/cm3


(2) Repeat step (1) for the other raw measurements.
b = 0.851 cm
b = 0.852 cm

gave
gives

= 2.690 g/cm3
= 2.681 g/cm3

Qb = change in = 0.009 g/cm3


will give you the density if you measure the cubes
mass and the length of its sides. Suppose you mea(3) The error bars on are given by the formula
sure the mass very accurately as m = 1.6580.003 g,
q
but you know b = 0.850.06 cm with only two digits
Q2m + Q2b
,

of precision. Your best value for is 1.658 g/(0.85 cm)3 =


2.7 g/cm3 .
yielding = 0.01 g/cm3 . Intuitively, the idea here
How can you figure out how precise this value for
is that if our result could be off by an amount Qm
is? Weve already made sure not to keep more than
because of an error in m, and by Qb because of b,
twosignificant figures for , since the less accurate
then if the two errors were in the same direction, we
piece of raw data had only two significant figures.
might by off by roughly |Qm | + |Qb |. However, its
We expect the last significant figure to be somewhat
equally likely that the two errors would be in oppouncertain, but we dont yet know how uncertain. A
site directions,
and at least partially cancel. The exp
simple method for this type of situation is simply to
pression Q2m + Q2b gives an answer thats smaller
change the raw data by one sigma, recalculate the
than Qm + Qb , representing the fact that the cancelresult, and see how much of a change occurred. In
lation might happen.
this example, we add 0.06 cm to b for comparison.
The final result is = 2.69 0.01 g/cm3 .
b = 0.85 cm gave = 2.7 g/cm3
Example: An average
b = 0.91 cm gives = 2.0 g/cm3
On page 164 I claimed that averaging a bunch of meaThe resulting change in the density was 0.7 g/cm3 ,
so that is our estimate for how much it could have
been off by:
= 2.7 0.7 g/cm3

Propagation of the error from several variables


What about the more general case in which no one
piece of raw data is clearly the main source of error?
For instance, suppose we get a more accurate measurement of the edge of the cube, b = 0.851 0.001
cm. In percentage terms, the accuracies of m and
b are roughly comparable, so both can cause sig-

166

Lab

surements reduces the error bars by the square root of


the number of measurements. We can now see that
this is a special case of propagation of errors.
For example, suppose Alice measures the circumference c of a guinea pigs waist to be 10 cm, Using the
guess method, she estimates that her error bars are
about 1 cm (worse than the normal normal 1 mm
error bars for a tape measure, because the guinea pig
was squirming). Bob then measures the same thing,
and gets 12 cm. The average is computed as
c =

A+B
2

where A is Alices measurement, and B is Bobs, giving


11 cm. If Alice had been off by one standard deviation (1 cm), it would have changed the average by 0.5

Appendix 3: Propagation of Errors

cm, so we have QA = 0.5 cm, and likewise


QB = 0.5
p
cm. Combining these, we find c = QA2 + QB2 = 0.7

cm, which is simply (1.0 cm)/ 2. The final result is


c = (11.0 0.7) cm. (This violates the usual rule for
significant figures, which is that the final result should
have no more sig figs than the least precise piece of
data that went into the calculation. Thats okay, because the sig fig rules are just a quick and dirty way
of doing propagation of errors. Weve done real propagation of errors in this example, and it turns out that the
error is in the first decimal place, so the 0 in that place
is entitled to hold its head high as a real sig fig, albeit a
relatively imprecise one with an uncertainty of 7.)
Example: The difference between two measurements
In the example on page 163, we saw that two groups
of scientists measured the same thing, and the results
were W = 5.7 1.0 for Webb et al. and C = 0.6 0.6
for Chand et al. Its of interest to know whether the
difference between their two results is small enough to
be explained by random errors, or so big that it couldnt
possibly have happened by chance, indicating that someone messed up. The figure shows each groups results,
with error bars, on the number line. We see that the two
sets of error bars dont overlap with one another, but error bars are not absolute limits, so its perfectly possible
to have non-overlapping error bars by chance, but the
gap between the error bars is very large compared to
the error bars themselves, so it looks implausible that
the results could be statistically consistent with one another. Ive tried to suggest this visually with the shading
underneath the data-points.

To get a sharper statistical test, we can calculate the


difference d between the two results,
d =W C

which is 5.1. Since the operation is simply the subtraction of the two numbers, an error in either input just
causes an error in the output that is of the same size.
Therefore
pwe have QW = 1.0 and QC = 0.6, resulting
2
in d = QW
+ QC2 = 1.2. We find that the difference
between the two results is d = 5.1 1.2, which differs
from zero by 5.1/1.2 4 standard deviations. Looking
at the table on page 163, we see that the chances that
d would be this big by chance are extremely small, less
than about one in ten thousand. We can conclude to a
high level of statistical confidence that the two groups
measurements are inconsistent with one another, and
that one group is simply wrong.

167

Appendix 4: Graphing
Review of Graphing
Many of your analyses will involve making graphs.
A graph can be an efficient way of presenting data
visually, assuming you include all the information
needed by the reader to interpret it. That means
labeling the axes and indicating the units in parentheses, as in the example. A title is also helpful.
Make sure that distances along the axes correctly
represent the differences in the quantity being plotted. In the example, it would not have been correct
to space the points evenly in the horizontal direction,
because they were not actually measured at equally
spaced points in time.

Type in your x values in the first column, and


your y values in the second column. For scientific notation, do, e.g., 5.2e-7 to represent
5.2 107 .

Select those two columns using the mouse.

From the Insert menu, do Chart.

When it offers you various styles of graphs to


choose from, choose the icon that shows a scatter plot, with dots on it (XY Chart).

Adjust the scales so the actual data on the plot


is as big as possible, eliminating wasted space.
To do this, right-click anywhere on the axis,
choose the Scale tab, uncheck Automatic, and
put in the lower and upper limits you want.

Fitting a Straight Line to a Graph


by Hand
Often in this course you will end up graphing some
data points, fitting a straight line through them with
a ruler, and extracting the slope.

Graphing on a Computer
Making graphs by hand in your lab notebook is fine,
but in some cases you may find it saves you time to
do graphs on a computer. For computer graphing,
I recommend OpenOffice, which is free, open-source
software. Its installed on the computers in rooms
416 and 418. Because OpenOffice is free, you can
download it and put it on your own computer at
home without paying money. If you already know
Excel, its very similar you almost cant tell its
a different program.
Heres a brief rundown on using OpenOffice:
On Windows, go to the Start menu and choose
Programs, OpenOffice.org, and Calc. On Linux,
do Applications, Office, OpenOffice.org, Spreadsheet.

168

Lab

Appendix 4: Graphing

In this example, panel (a) shows the data, with error


bars on each data point. Panel (b) shows a best
fit, drawn by eye with a ruler. The slope of this
best fit line is 100 cm/s. Note that the slope should
be extracted from the line itself, not from two data
points. The line is more reliable than any pair of
individual data points.
In panel (c), a worst believable fit line has been
drawn, which is as different in slope as possible from
the best fit, while still pretty much staying consistent the data (going through or close to most of the
error bars). Its slope is 60 cm/s. We can therefore
estimate that the precision of our slope is +40 cm/s.
There is a tendency when drawing a worst believable fit line to draw instead an unbelievably crazy
fit line, as in panel (d). The line in panel (d), with
a very small slope, is just not believable compared
to the data it is several standard deviations away
from most of the data points.

To do this in OpenOffice 3,1 go to the Insert menu


and choose and choose Trend Lines.2 This will cause
the line to be drawn on your graph. To display the
equation of the line, double-click on the graph so
that its surrounded by a gray border; then rightclick on the line, and do Insert Regression Curve
Equation. By default your equation will only have
the slope and y-intercept shown with a few sig figs;
if you need more precision, double-click on the graph
so its outlined in gray, right-click on the equation,
do Object Properties, Numbers, Scientific, and add
more zeroes after the decimal place under Format
code.
How accurate is your slope? A method for getting
error bars on the slope is to artificially change one
of your data points to reflect your estimate of how
much it could have been off, and then redo the fit
and find the new slope. The change in the slope
tells you the error in the slope that results from the
error in this data-point. You can then repeat this
for the other points and proceed as in appendix 3.
In some cases, such as the absolute zero lab and the
photoelectric effect lab, its very hard to tell how
accurate your raw data are a priori ; in these labs,
you can use the typical amount of deviation of the
points from the line as an estimate of their accuracy.

Fitting a Straight Line to a Graph


on a Computer
Its also possible to fit a straight line to a graph using
computer software such as OpenOffice. E.g., lab 45
(the hydrogen atom) is a high-precision lab, and its
not possible to get a sufficiently accurate result by
hand.

1 In older versions, the procedure is slightly different:


double-click on one of your data points. A dialog box will
come up. Select the Statistics tab, and under Regression
curves, select the icon showing a line being fit to some data.
2 Trend line is scientifically illiterate terminology that
originates from Microsoft Office, which OpenOffice slavishly
copies. If you dont want to come off as an ignoramus, call it
a fit or line of best fit.

169

Appendix 5: Finding Power Laws from Data


For many people, it is hard to imagine how scientists
originally came up with all the equations that can
now be found in textbooks. This appendix explains
one method for finding equations to describe data
from an experiment.

Linear and nonlinear relationships


When two variables x and y are related by an equation of the form
y = cx

where c is a constant (does not depend on x or y),


we say that a linear relationship exists between x
and y. As an example, a harp has many strings of
different lengths which are all of the same thickness
and made of the same material. If the mass of a
string is m and its length is L, then the equation
m = cL
will hold, where c is the mass per unit length, with
units of kg/m. Many quantities in the physical world
are instead related in a nonlinear fashion, i.e., the
relationship does not fit the above definition of linearity. For instance, the mass of a steel ball bearing
is related to its diameter by an equation of the form

Its fairly easy to figure out whats going on just


by staring at the numbers a little. Every time you
increase the height of the animal by a factor of 10, its
food consumption goes up by a factor of 100. This
implies that f must be proportional to the square of
h, or, displaying the proportionality constant k = 3
explicitly,
f = 3h2

Use of logarithms
Now we have found c = 3 and p = 2 by inspection,
but that would be much more difficult to do if these
werent all round numbers. A more generally applicable method to use when you suspect a power-law
relationship is to take logarithms of both variables.
It doesnt matter at all what base you use, as long as
you use the same base for both variables. Since the
data above were increasing by powers of 10, well use
logarithms to the base 10, but personally I usually
just use natural logs for this kind of thing.
shrew
rat
capybara

log10 h
0
1
2

log10 f
0.48
2.48
4.48

where c is the mass per unit volume, or density, of


steel. Doubling the diameter does not double the
mass, it increases it by a factor of eight.

This is a big improvement, because differences are


so much simpler to work mentally with than ratios.
The difference between each successive value of h
is 1, while f increases by 2 units each time. The
fact that the logs of the f 0 s increase twice as quickly
is the same as saying that f is proportional to the
square of h.

Power laws

Log-log plots

m = cd3

Even better, the logarithms can be interpreted visually using a graph, as shown on the next page. The
slope of this type of log-log graph gives the power
p. Although it is also possible to extract the prowhich is known as a power law. In the case of a
portionality constant, c, from such a graph, the prolinear relationship, p = 1. Consider the (made-up)
portionality constant is usually much less interesting
experimental data shown in the table.
than p. For instance, we would suspect that if p = 2
h=height of rodent f =food eaten per for rodents, then it might also equal 2 for frogs or
ants. Also, p would be the same regardless of what
at the shoulder day (g)
units we used to measure the variables. The con(cm)
stant c, however, would be different if we used difshrew
1
3
ferent units, and would also probably be different for
rat
10
300
other types of animals.
capybara 100
30,000
Both examples above are of the general mathematical form
y = cxp
,

170

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Appendix 5: Finding Power Laws from Data

171

Appendix 6: Using the Photogate


The photogate
The photogate is a U-shaped thing about 10 cm
across, with an invisible infrared beam going across
the gap of the U, like the infrared beam of a TV remote control. When something blocks the beam, an
electrical signal is sent through a wire to the computer. We will use the photogate by sending moving
objects through it. The computer tells you for how
long the photogate was blocked, allowing you to calculate the speed of the object as it passed through.
Plug the photogate into the DG1 plug on the interface box.

If there is no button for collecting data, its because


the interface box wasnt turned on when you booted
up. Reboot.

Using the data


Often you may find that the software rounds off too
severely. For instance, when youre in the mode for
measuring how long the photogate was blocked, you
want more than the three decimal places it offers by
default in the Delta-T column. To fix this, doubleclick on the title of the Delta-T column, and select
a greater number of significant figures.

Using the software


On Linux
Plug the LabPros DC power supply into the wall
socket. Plug the photogate into CH1 on the LabPro.
Plug the LabPros USB cable into the USB port on
the back of the computer.
Log in to the computer using the username and password given on the sign on the monitor. Double-click
on the logger pro icon.
On Windows
Follow the above directions for Linux, with the following changes: (1) The USB port is on the front
of the computer. (2) Log in using your normal FC
login information. (3) Run Logger Pro 3 (not 2) by
double-clicking on the icon on the desktop.
The next step depends on what mode you are using
the software in.

Using the software in different modes


For various labs, there will be three different modes
in which well use the software. From the File menu,
do Open, and locate the file you need:
Mode for measuring how long the photogate
was blocked: Probes & Sensors > Photogate
> One Gate Timer
Mode for measuring the time between two interruptions of the photogate: ...
Mode for measuring the period of a pendulum:
Probes & Sensors > Photogate > Pendulum

172

Lab

Appendix 6: Using the Photogate

173

Appendix 7: Using a Multimeter


The most convenient instrument for measuring currents and voltage differences is called a digital multimeter (DMM), or simply a multimeter. Digital
means that it shows the thing being measured on a
calculator-style LCD display. Multimeter means
that it can measure current, voltage, or resistance,
depending on how you have it set up. Since we have
many different types of multimeters, these instructions only cover the standard rules and methods that
apply to all such meters. You may need to check with
your instructor regarding a few of the particulars for
the meter you have available.

Blowing a fuse is not a big deal.


If you hook up your multimeter incorrectly, it is possible to blow a fuse inside. This is especially likely to
happen if you set up the meter to measure current
(meaning it has a small internal resistance) but hook
it up in parallel with a resistor, creating a large voltage difference across it. Blowing a fuse is not a big
problem, but it can be frustrating if you dont realize whats happened. If your meter suddenly stops
working, you should check the fuse.

Measuring current
When using a meter to measure current, the meter
must be in series with the circuit, so that every electron going by is forced to go through the meter and
contribute to a current in the meter. Many multimeters have more than one scale for measuring a given
thing. For instance, a meter may have a milliamp
scale and an amp scale. One is used for measuring
small currents and the other for large currents. You
may not be sure in advance what scale is appropriate, but thats not big problem once everything
is hooked up, you can try different scales and see
whats appropriate. Use the switch or buttons on the
front to select one of the current scales. The connections to the meter should be made at the common
socket (COM) and at the socket labeled A for
Amperes.

Measuring voltage
For a voltage measurement, use the switch or buttons on the front to select one of the voltage scales.
(If you forget, and hook up the meter while the
switch is still on a current scale, you may blow a
fuse.) You always measure voltage differences with
a meter. One wire connects the meter to one point
in the circuit, and the other connects the meter to
another point in a circuit. The meter measures the
difference in voltage between those two points. For
example, to measure the voltage across a resistor,
you must put the meter in parallel with the resistor. The connections to the meter should be made
at the common socket (COM) and at the socket
labeled V for Volts.

174

Lab

Appendix 7: Using a Multimeter

175

Appendix 8: High Voltage Safety Checklist


Name:
Never work with high voltages by yourself.
Do not leave HV wires exposed - make sure
there is insulation.
Turn the high-voltage supply off while working
on the circuit.
When the voltage is on, avoid using both hands
at once to touch the apparatus. Keep one hand in
your pocket while using the other to touch the apparatus. That way, it is unlikely that you will get a
shock across your chest.
It is possible for an electric current to cause
your hand to clench involuntarily. If you observe this
happening to your partner, do not try to pry their
hand away, because you could become incapacitated
as well simply turn off the switch or pull the plug
out of the wall.

176

Lab

Appendix 8: High Voltage Safety Checklist

177

Appendix 9: Laser Safety Checklist


Name:
Before beginning a lab using lasers, make sure you
understand these points, initial them, and show your
safety checklist to your instructor. If you dont understand something, ask your instructor for clarification.
The laser can damage your eyesight permanently if the beam goes in your eye.
When youre not using the laser, turn it off or
put something in front of it.
Keep it below eye level and keep the beam horizontal. Dont bend or squat so that your eye is near
the level of the beam.
Keep the beam confined to your own lab bench.
Whenever possible, orient your setup so that the
beam is going toward the wall. If the beam is going
to go off of your lab bench, use a backpack or a box
to block the beam.
Dont let the beam hit shiny surfaces such as
faucets, because unpredictable reflections can result.

178

Lab

Appendix 9: Laser Safety Checklist

179

Appendix 10: The Open Publication License


Copyright (c) 1999-2001 B. Crowell and V. Roundy.
All rights reserved.

sections of that work are not derived from the OC,


and can be reasonably considered independent and
separate works in themselves, then this License, and
These materials are open-content licensed under the
its terms, do not apply to those sections when you
OPL 1.0 license. A copy of the license is given below,
distribute them as separate works. But when you
and the original is available at http://opencontent.org.
distribute the same sections as part of a whole which
LICENSE
is a work based on the OC, the distribution of the
whole must be on the terms of this License, whose
Terms and Conditions for Copying, Distributing, and
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Modifying
whole, and thus to each and every part regardless
Items other than copying, distributing, and modiof who wrote it. Exceptions are made to this refying the Content with which this license was disquirement to release modified works free of charge
tributed (such as using, etc.) are outside the scope
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law where applicable.
1. You may copy and distribute exact replicas of the
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You may at your option charge a fee for the media
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of the OC for use offline, you may at your option
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180

Lab

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LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING
ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE

Appendix 10: The Open Publication License

USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE OC, EVEN IF


SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN
ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

181

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