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American Journal of Physics

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
The mission of the American Journal of Physics (AJP) is to publish articles on the educational and cultural aspects of physics that are useful, interesting, and accessible to a diverse audience of physics students, educators, and researchers who are generally reading outside their specialties to broaden their understanding of physics and to expand and enhance their pedagogical toolkits at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde feb. 1940 / hasta dic. 2023 AIP Publishing

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0002-9505

ISSN electrónico

1943-2909

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Memories of a mid-20th century electrical measurements laboratory and its instrumentation

Thomas B. GreensladeORCID

<jats:p>There was a time when undergraduate physics majors took a junior-level course in Electricity and Magnetism, accompanied by a semester of laboratory work, learning to make precision electrical measurements. This laboratory experience is long gone, replaced by coursework in digital and analog electronics. Even the latter has been downplayed in favor of a course in the use of digital computers to solve problems in physics. In this article, I will discuss the course that I took as an undergraduate at Amherst College in the late 1950s and then taught as a young faculty member at Kenyon College in the late sixties. I was a participant in the demise of the E&amp;M laboratory and the rise of the ensuing vacuum tube and digital electronics course. I will concentrate on the precision apparatus, which is presently living out its life in the dusty back shelves of apparatus closets. This may help new faculty members to answer the perennial question: It is attractive, but what is it and how was it used?</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 510

Using rotation matrices to calculate the locations of sunrise and sunset, the hours of daylight, observed path of the Sun, and its elevation angle for any latitude

Margaret Stautberg GreenwoodORCID

<jats:p>During the course of one year, I photographed 95 sunrises along the east bank of the Columbia River from my home on the west bank in Richland, WA (46.3° N latitude). I then calculated the seasonal phenomena listed in the title with the intention of explaining the variation of the photographed sunrises. The calculations use a simplified model of the Sun-Earth system and employ rotation matrices to predict the path of the Sun, as observed at any location in the northern hemisphere, throughout the year. These predictions are in good agreement with those listed by NOAA and also with the photographic data. The analysis presented here provides a novel way to calculate and understand the seasonal variations of visible sunlight.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 519

Analysis of ill-conditioned cases of a mass moving on a sphere with friction

Terry W. McDaniel

<jats:p>Previous work treated the problem of a mass sliding over a rough spherical surface in broad generality, providing both analytic and numerical solutions. This paper examines special cases of 2D motion along a surface meridian when the initial speed is precisely chosen so that the sliding mass nearly stops before speeding up and subsequently leaving the surface. Carrying the solution for these critical cases into the time domain via both an analytical method and numerical integration adds richness that might otherwise be missed. The numerical method raises practical mathematical issues that must be handled carefully to obtain accurate results. Although conceptually simple, this classical mechanics problem is an excellent vehicle for students to gain proficiency with mathematical analysis tools and further their appreciation for how applied mathematics can bring new insight into situations where intuition may fall short.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 527

Oblique collision of a soft rubber disk with a rigid surface

Rod CrossORCID

<jats:p>An oblique collision of an object with a rigid surface involves an initial sliding phase that persists throughout the collision at glancing angles of incidence but which involves a subsequent grip phase at higher angles of incidence. The grip phase itself terminates towards the end of the collision if the contact region starts to slide backwards. Experimental evidence of the three separate stages of the collision process is presented using a high speed video camera to film the impact of a rubber disk on a rigid horizontal surface. A simplified model of the process is presented, providing analytical solutions that are at least qualitatively consistent with the experimental observations.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 532

Analytical calculation of plasmonic resonances in metal nanoparticles: A simple guide

Marco LocarnoORCID; Daan BrinksORCID

<jats:p>Localized surface plasmons (LSPs) in metal particles are used in medical, chemical, physical, and biological sensing applications. In this paper, we revisit the classical description of LSPs. We use the Drude model and the Quasi-Static approximation to describe the plasmon resonances in terms of the material and the size of the particles embedded in a dielectric host. We then incorporate the Clausius–Mossotti relation to include shape effects in the classical description. Finally, we incorporate surface damping and retardation effects to arrive at a unified, classical description providing an intuitive and realistic model of plasmonic resonances in metal particles.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 538

Wigner rotation and Euler angle parametrization

<jats:p>Analogous to the famous Euler angle parametrization in three-dimensional Euclidean space, a reflection-free Lorentz transformation in (2 + 1)-dimensional Minkowski space can be decomposed into three simple parts. Applying this decomposition to the Wigner rotation problem, we are able to show that the related mathematics becomes much simpler and the physical meanings more comprehensible and enlightening.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 547

Simple realization of the polytropic process with a finite-sized reservoir

Yu-Han Ma

<jats:p>In most thermodynamics textbooks, polytropic processes are introduced by defining the process equation rather than explaining their physical origin. In this paper, we propose a simple model to realize a polytropic process for an ideal gas. The ideal gas is compressed or expanded quasi-statically while in thermal contact with a finite reservoir with constant heat capacity, and the entire system is thermally isolated from the outside environment. We propose an experimental implementation of our model with realistic parameters.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 555

Comment on “Thermodynamics of Benford's first digit law” [Am. J. Phys. 87, 787–790 (2019)]

Xi-Jun Ren

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 559

The game of life as a species model

David A. Faux; Peter Bassom

<jats:p>Conway's classic game of life is a two-dimensional cellular automaton in which each cell is alive or dead and evolves according to simple rules that depend solely on the number of live cells in its immediate neighborhood. The emergence of complex multi-cellular objects provides a fascinating vehicle for exploration. A variant of the classic game of life is presented, the generalized semi-classical game of life, in which each cell contains a qubit that evolves by repeated application of birth, death, and survival operators. Species are characterized by just two parameters: a preferred neighborhood liveness representing the tendency to herd and a resilience parameter representing species' vulnerability to environmental changes. This generalized model provides the opportunity to model the fortune of species and to compare to available data. The model is shown to mimic environmental catastrophes and is illustrated by the model's prediction of a return to the pre-hunting level of the global whale population by 2140. A student-designed predator–prey model is shown to qualitatively describe the fate of strongly- and weakly coupled predator–prey systems (snowshoe hare/lynx and rabbit/fox, respectively) and sudden and slow predatory impact (dodo and diprotodon, respectively).</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 561

In this issue: August 2023

Claire A. Marrache-KikuchiORCID; Raina Olsen; Beth ParksORCID; B. Cameron ReedORCID; Donald SalisburyORCID; Todd Springer

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 573-574