Follow us
Search

GENERAL PHYSICS II

Academic Year 2020/2021 - 3° Year
Teaching Staff Credit Value: 12
Taught classes: 70 hours
Exercise: 24 hours
Term / Semester: 1° and 2°

Learning Objectives

  • Module I

    The purpose of the course is to provide basic qualitative and quantitative knowledge on the topics of classical electromagnetism included in the "Detailed Course Contents" section, as well as the ability to know how to apply the Scientific Method to solving real and concrete problems.

    In particular, and with reference to the so-called Dublin Descriptors, the course aims to provide the following knowledge and skills.

    Knowledge and understanding abilities

    Knowledge of the main phenomenological aspects related to electromagnetism, to the structure of matter, and to the interaction between electromagnetic radiation and matter, understanding of their physical implications and their mathematical description.

    Applying knowledge and understanding ability

    Ability to recognize the main physical laws that govern an electromagnetic phenomenon, and to apply them to solve problems and exercises at different levels of complexity and therefore of approximation, with the use of appropriate mathematical tools.

    Ability of making judgements

    Evaluation of the order of magnitude of the variables that describe an electromagnetic phenomenon. Evaluation of the relevance of a physical law (axiom, principle of conservation, universal law, theorem, law in global/integral or local/differential form and its generality, properties of materials, etc.). Ability to be able to evaluate the Physical Model and the corresponding Mathematical Model that best apply to the description of a physical process and therefore to the solution of quantitative problems.

    Communication skills

    Ability to present scientific concepts belonging to Physics but also, and more generally, information, ideas, problems and solutions with properties and inambiguity of language, at different levels and to different, both specialists and non-specialists, audiences.

    Learning skills

    Ability to learn the scientific concepts of Physics, necessary to undertake subsequent studies with a high degree of autonomy.

  • Electromagnetism

    The course aims at providing the student with a somewhat detailed understanding of the electromagnetic field, its interaction with matter, as well as physical and geometrical optics.

    Knowledge and understanding:

    Knowledge of the basic phenomenology of electromagnetism and (very basic) structure of matter, as well as the interaction between (electromagnetic) radiation and matter. Understanding of their physical implications and their mathematical description.

    Applying knowledge and understanding:

    bility to identify the main physical laws underlying an electromagnetic phenomenon, and to apply them to solve problems and exercises at a various level of complexity and approximation (both physical and numerical), using both analytical and numerical techniques, as appropriate.

    Making judgements:

    Estimating the order of magnitude of the main variables intervening in electromagnetism. Assessing the level of importance of a physical law (axiom, conservation law, universal law, theorem, global/integral vs local/differential version of a given law, and its degree of generality, properties of the materials, etc)

    Communication skills:

    Ability to describe scientific concepts with property of language, at various levels.

    Learning skills:

    Application of concepts and mathematical-theoretical techniques to physics.


Course Structure

  • Module I

    Prerequisites

    According to the Curriculum Regulations, the course of Fisica Generale I, including passing the exam, is propaedeutic to that of Fisica Generale II. Furthermore, it is extremely useful that pupils have knowledge of the topics of the courses of Algebra and Analisi Matematica I and II, such as: algebra, geometry, trigonometry, analytic geometry, differential and integral calculus.

    Attendance to lectures

    Although it is not mandatory, attendance to classroom lectures is strongly recommended.

    Didactic activity

    Didactic activity consists of classroom lectures and exercises. Exercises can be both assignments of the teacher for the homework or driven by the teacher - or by tutors, if available - in the classroom.

    N.B.: in the event that the contingent situation relating to the COVID-19 pandemic requires it, lectures may also take place electronically on the Microsoft Teams platform (see the student guide prepared by the University).

    Didactic material

    A collection of exercises, many of which were assigned during the written exam sessions, is available on the web page of the course in the Studium portal (http://studium.unict.it), inside the section called Documenti.

    Learning verification

    The final exam consists of a written test followed by an oral exam. The written test, lasting 2 hours, consists of the resolution, justified and clearly commented, (A) of 2 problems related to Module 1 of the course and (B) of 2 problems related to Module 2 of the course. In the case of partial tests, a maximum time of 1 hour is granted to each part (A or B). Students can take any partial test (A or B) in any session compatible with the status of their enrollment (current, outside the prescribed time, etc.). For the resolution of each problem is assigned a score between 0/30 and 7.5/ 30 in relation (1) to the completeness of the description of the Physical and Mathematical Models used for the solution, (2) to the correctness of the mathematical treatment and, of course, (3) to the correctness of the result, both from a numerical and a dimensional point of view.

    During the tests it is possible to use any support deemed useful (e.g. books, notes, forms, calculators, etc.) except exercise books (i.e. exercise books with relative solutions) and communication devices (mobile phones, tablets, computers).

    Students who obtain a score of less than 15/30 in the written test (7.5 / 30, in the case of partial test) are advised against taking the oral test and are not allowed to take an oral test later than the next written test. However, being discouraged is not equivalent to a formal ban on taking the oral exam, provided that this happens before the next written test.

    The overall oral exam consists in the treatment of at least 3 distinct topics of the program, the first of which is chosen by the student. During the oral examination it may be necessary to demonstrate the theorems and important results included in the program with numerical evaluations of the order of magnitude of the physical quantities that are involved in a given phenomenon.

    N.B.: in the event that the contingent situation relating to the COVID-19 pandemic requires it, the final exam will take place electronically on the Microsoft Teams platform (see the student guide - in Italian - prepared by the University). The preliminary tests, intermediate or complete, will technically take place in the following way:

    • A few days before the day set for the test, the students who have been booked will be informed (through Smart_Edu and/or Studium and/or the web page of the faculty) about the Team code that will be used to manage the session.
    • On the day and time set for the test, the students who have been booked must access the Team.
    • The roll call will then be made and, one by one, those present will have to turn on the camera and microphone, say their name and surname and show a valid ID in front of the camera.
    • After that, the text of the preliminary test will be distributed as a "timed" Activity on Teams.
    • From that moment, the students will have 1 hour for partial tests and 2 hours for the complete tests and 15 minutes for the scanning/photography of their test and subsequent uploading to Teams.
    • During the entire time of the test, cameras and microphones must remain on.

    The oral exam will take place technically in the following way:

    • A few days before the day set for the oral exam session, the students who have booked will be informed (through Smart_Edu and/or Studium and/or the web page of the faculty) about the Team code that will be used to manage the session.
    • On the day and time set for the oral exam session, the students who intend to take the test will have to access the Team.
    • The students present will be examined, one by one, and at the beginning of the oral exam they will have to turn on the camera and microphone, say their name and surname show a valid ID in front of the camera.
    • During the oral exam, the cameras and microphones of all the other students present must remain off.
    • At the end of each oral exam, the final evaluation of the exam will be communicated.

    During the oral exam, the camera must be positioned so that it can also frame the sheets which the student can use to complement/justify what he or she says. Alternatively, the student can use other digital "freehand" writing devices (tablets, graphics tablets, touch and/or interactive displays, etc.) whose screen can be shared through Teams.

    Dates of the exams

    Check the following web page:

    Examples of asked questions and exercises

    Usually, the oral exam begins with the presentation of a topic chosen by the candidate. After that, the exam continues with questions like: "tell me about" ... one of the topics of the program. Some examples are the following:

    • "Gauss law"
    • "energy of the electrostatic field"
    • "electrostatic field in dielectrics"
    • "equation of continuiity of the electric charge; in static as well as dynamic conditions"
    • "equations of magnetostatics"
    • "charge and discharge of an RC circuit; the displacement current"
    • "Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction"
    • etc.

    During the oral examination it may be necessary to demonstrate theorems and important results included in the program with numerical evaluations of the order of magnitude of the physical quantities involved in a given phenomenon.
    A collection of exercises, many of which were assigned during the written exam sessions, is available on the course page on the Studium portal (http://studium.unict.it), in the Documents section.

    Course structure

    1. Introduction - Reference textbook: Feynman
    2. Electrostatics - Reference textbook: Feynman
    3. Electrostatic field in the matter - Reference textbook: Feynman
    4. Magnetostatics - Reference textbook: Feynman
    5. Electrical conduction - Reference textbooks: Feynman, Mazzoldi
    6. Variable magnetic fields - Reference textbooks: Feynman, Mazzoldi
  • Electromagnetism

    Frontal lectures.

    Should the circumstances require online or blended teaching, appropriate modifications to what is hereby stated may be introduced, in order to achieve the main objectives of the course.


Detailed Course Content

  • Module I

    Introduction. Fundamental units of the International System. Features of a force. Forces and fields. Symmetry in physics and the vector concept. The electric forces. Electric and magnetic fields. Characteristics of vector fields. The laws of electromagnetism; anticipation of Maxwell's equations and their qualitative analysis. Differential calculus of vector fields (gradient, divergence, rotor, Laplacian). Integral calculus of vectors. Line integrals and circulation concept. Surface integrals and flow concept. Gauss and Stokes theorems. Fields with zero rotor and fields with zero divergence.

    Electrostatics. Coulomb's law and the superposition principle of the electric field. The electric potential and its relationship with the electric field. The flow of E. The law of Gauss and the divergence of E. Electric field of a charged sphere. Field lines and equipotential surfaces. Equilibrium in an electrostatic field. Equilibrium in the presence of conductors. Stability of atoms. The electric field of a linear charge. Electric field of a charged sheet and of two plates with opposite charges. Electric field of a charged sphere and a spherical shell. Correctness of dependence 1/r2. The fields of a conductor and the fields within a conductor's cavity. Equations for the electrostatic potential. The electric dipole. The potential of the dipole as a gradient. The dipolar and multipolar approximation of an arbitrary charge distribution. Electric forces in molecular biology: DNA structure and replication. Fields due to charged conductors. Image method. Electric fields in the vicinity of a conducting plane and a conducting sphere. The capacitor. Capacitors in series and in parallel. Dependence of the field from the curvature of a conductor: "tip effect". Methods for determining the electrostatic field. Two-dimensional fields and complex variable functions. Notable examples of electric fields: oscillations in plasmas and colloidal particles in an electrolyte. Electrostatic field of a grid. Electrostatic energy of the charges. Energy of a uniformly charged sphere. The energy of a capacitor and the forces on charged conductors. Energy in the electrostatic field. Energy of a point charge.

    Electrostatic field in the matter. The dielectric constant. The polarization vector P. The polarization charges. The equations of electrostatics in the presence of dielectrics. Fields and forces in the presence of dielectrics. Molecular dipoles. Electronic polarization. Polar molecules and polarization by orientation.

    Magnetostatics. The magnetic field and the Lorentz force on a moving charge. The cyclotron. The electric current and the conservation of the charge. The magnetic force on a current. The magnetic field of stationary currents, Ampère's law. The magnetic field of a rectilinear wire and a solenoid. Atomic currents. The Earth's magnetic field and the alternation of its sign. Northern lights. The vector potential and the choice of its boundary conditions (magnetostatic gauge). The vector potential due to known currents. Potential vector of a straight wire and a solenoid. Magnetic field of a small coil; magnetic dipole. Law of Biot and Savart. The forces on a current loop and the energy of a magnetic dipole. Mechanical and electrical energy. The energy of constant currents. Comparison between the magnetic field and the vector potential.

    Electrical conduction. Ohm's law of electrical conduction. Power and Joule effect. Resistors in series and in parallel. Electromotive force (f.e.m.). Charge and discharge a capacitor through a resistor. Displacement current and its evaluation. Maxwell generalization of Ampère's law and effect of time-dependent electric fields. Kirchhoff's laws for electricity networks.

    Variable magnetic fields. The physics of electromagnetic induction and the Faraday law. The alternating current generator. Scheme of operation of a power plant and entropic effects of the production of electricity through transformation from other forms of energy. Mutual inductance and self-induction. Inductance and magnetic energy. Complex numbers and harmonic motion. Forced oscillator with damping in mechanics and its analogy in electromagnetism. The RLC circuit in series. Electrical resonance and complex impedance. Series and parallel impedances. Resonances in nature.

  • Electromagnetism

    Maxwell equations. Their derivation from the laws of electromagnetism. Scalar and vector potentials. Gauge invariance. Lorentz gauge. Coulomb gauge. Helmholtz theorem. Energy and momentum density of the electromagnetic field. Poyinting theorem and its vector. Maxwell tensor. Radiation pressure. Perfectly absorbing and perfectly reflecting surface.

    Waves. D'Alembert equation. Its general integral and initial values problem. Superposition principle for linear PDEs. Derivation of the wave equation for elastic waves in a solid rod and in a tight rope. Longitudinal and transverse waves. Harmonic plane waves. Wave frequency and wave vector. Wave period and wavelength. Dispersion relation. Phase. Fourier series. Linear, elliptic, circular polarization. Wave intensity. Energy propagation in wave phenomena. Three-dimensional waves. Wave front. Wave radius. Spherical waves. Laplacian in polar coordinates. Wave packet. Phase and group velocities. Doppler effect.

    Electromagnetic waves. Hertz experiment. Plane waves. Polarization and helicity of an electromagnetic wave. Huygens-Fresnel principle and Kirchhoff theorem (hints). Reflection and refraction of an electromagnetic wave. Laws of Snell-Descartes. Reminder: refraction of the lines of the electromagnetic field. Fresnel formulas for waves polarized in a perpendicular and in a parallel direction to the incidence plane. Reflected and refracted intensity. Limit angle. Wave guides. Optical fibers. Brewster angle. Polaroids. Malus experiment. Dispersion and absorption. Mechanical analogy. Reminder: elliptic polarization.

    Electromagnetic waves in matter. Drude-Lorentz model. Constitutive relations: phase difference between P and E. Physical meaning of the imaginary part of the dielectric function ε(ω). Qualitative behaviour of ε(ω) within the Drude-Lorentz model. Group velocity in a dispersive mean. Static and high-frequency limits: (dielectric) insulators and metals. Plasmas and their oscillations.

    Interference. Superposition principle. Coherent sources. Optical path. Young double-slit experiment. Fresnel mirrors. Interference among N sources. Thin films. Thin wedge. Newton rings. Michelson interferometre.

    Diffraction. Fresnel and Fraunhofer formulation. Fresnel diffraction by an obstacle. Fraunhofer diffraction by a rectangular slit. Analogy with Fourier transforms. Fraunhofer diffraction by a circular slit. Bessel functions (hint). Resolutive power of an optical system: Rayleigh criterion. Diffraction lattice. Dispersion. Emission and absorption spectra (hints). X-ray diffraction by crystals and quasicrystals (hints).

    Geometrical optics. Eikonal equation and its physical meaning. Ray equation. Optical path. Reflection and refraction laws (again). Lagrange integral invariant. Fermat principle. Laws od Snell and Descartes. Main optical systems: plane and spherical mirrors; prism; spherical and plane dioptre; thin and thick lenses.


Textbook Information

  • Module I

    1. R. P. Feynman, R. B. Leighton e M. Sands, La Fisica di Feynman – Vol. 1 e 2 (Zanichelli, Bologna, 2007);

    2. P. Mazzoldi, M. Nigro e C. Voci, Fisica - Volume II - II Edizione (EdiSES, Napoli, 2008).

  • Electromagnetism

    Textbooks recommended for Modulo 1:

    Textbooks recommended for Modulo 2:

    1. J. D. Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics (J. Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ, 1998).

    2. P. Mazzoldi, M. Nigro, and C. Voci, Fisica. Vol. 2: Elettromagnetismo, Onde, 2 ed. (EdiSES, Napoli, 2007).

    3. L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifsits, Teoria dei campi (Ed. Riuniti – Ed. Mir, Roma – Mosca, 1985); also available in English.

    4. M. Born and E. Wolf, Principles of Optics (Pergamon, Oxford, 1980).

    5. H. D. Young, R. A. Freedman, A. Lewis Ford, Principi di fisica. Vol. 2: Elettromagnetismo e ottica (Pearson, Milano, 2016); also available in English.