| Week of |
Lab |
Description |
| Aug 29 |
None |
First week of classes. |
| Sep 5 |
None |
|
| Sep 12 |
E-1 |
Electrostatics: This lab
first investigates types
of charges and the forces between them by experimenting with everyday
objects. Then you use an electroscope to understand how electrons move
in conductors, and how other nearby charged objects influences this
charge motion. |
| Sep 19 |
EC-2 |
Electric fields: Here you
experimentally map the
relation between electric fields and electric potential using a sheet
of graphite paper. This leads to an intuitive understanding of many
electrostatic configurations. |
| Sep 26 |
Makeup |
Exam week. Possible make-up for missed labs. |
| Oct 3 |
EC-3 |
Resistor and capacitor circuits :
In this lab you
explore resistor and capacitor circuits, and use computer to record
voltage signals from a propagating pulse in an RC model of a cell
membrane. |
| Oct 10 |
E-4 |
Magnetic fields and forces :
In this lab you
investigate the force on a moving charged particle (a current) by a
constant magnetic field. You use this to make a measurement of the
charge-to-mass ration (e/m) of an individual electron. |
| Oct 17 |
EC-5 |
Magnetic induction: Here you
investigate Lenz' law
and the Faraday effect. Both of these arise from the generation of an
electromotive force (or equivalently, an electrostatic potential) by a
time-varying magnetic flux. |
| Oct 24 |
None |
Exam week. Possible make-up of missed labs.
|
| Oct 31 |
EC-6 |
Cathode Ray Oscilloscope and DC
Amplifiers: This
lab focuses on the basic operation of a cathode ray oscilloscope, which
is used to observe the voltage vs. time behavior of electrical signals.
|
| Nov 7 |
E-7 |
AC Circuits: In this lab you
explore the voltage and phase relations in series and parallel
AC circuits. |
| Nov 14 |
SC-1 |
Waves on strings: Here you
investigate the propagation of transverse standing
waves on strings. |
| Nov 21 |
None |
Exam/Thanksgiving week. Possible make-up of missed labs. |
| Nov 28 |
LC-2 |
Mirrors and Lenses: Here you
investigate image
formation, primarily with lenses. Using refraction, lenses bend light
rays to reconstruct an image which is located at a different position
from the object
and is of a different size. |
| Dec 5 |
LC-1
|
Diffraction and interference:
You will use diffraction and interference to directly demonstrate the
wave nature of light.
|