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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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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

A magnet falling inside a conducting pipe: Dependence of the drag force on the magnet orientation

Chang Hyeon LeeORCID; Byung-Yoon ParkORCID

<jats:p>We develop a simple model to investigate the orientation-dependence of the drag force acting on a magnet falling inside a vertical conducting pipe. We approximate the magnet by a point magnet and the pipe by a two-dimensional cylindrical surface. Independent of the magnet's orientation, the drag force is proportional to its velocity: F→d=−kv→. We show that the coefficient k→ of the horizontally oriented magnet is about 2/3 of the coefficient k↑ for the vertically oriented magnet. If the magnetic moment makes an angle θ with the vertical direction, the drag coefficient k can be expressed as k=k↑ cos2θ+k→ sin2θ. When the magnet falls with a non-vertical orientation, a local charge distribution is induced in the pipe, which plays a role as important as that of the time-varying magnetic field due to the falling magnet in generating the eddy currents. The model's predictions are compared with experimental results.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 440

Beyond the ABCDs: A better matrix method for geometric optics by using homogeneous coordinates

Theodore A. Corcovilos

<jats:p>Geometric optics is often described as tracing the paths of non-diffracting rays through an optical system. In the paraxial limit, ray traces can be calculated using ray transfer matrices (colloquially, ABCD matrices), which are 2 × 2 matrices acting on the height and slope of the rays. A known limitation of ray transfer matrices is that they only work for optical elements that are centered and normal to the optical axis. In this article, we provide an improved 3 × 3 matrix method for calculating paraxial ray traces of optical systems that is applicable to how these systems are actually arranged on the optical table: lenses and mirrors in any orientation or position (e.g., in laboratory coordinates), with the optical path zig-zagging along the table. Using projective duality, we also show how to directly image points through an optical system using a point transfer matrix calculated from the system's ray transfer matrix. We demonstrate the usefulness of these methods with several examples and discuss future directions to expand the applications of this technique.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 449

Endless fun in high dimensions—A quantum card game

Lea KopfORCID; Markus HiekkamäkiORCID; Shashi PrabhakarORCID; Robert FicklerORCID

<jats:p>Quantum technologies enable new ways to distribute and process information. The enormous progress over the recent decades has led to an urgent need for new educational programs to train professionals to work in this field. Here, we present a card game that teaches students the building blocks of quantum computing through strategic gameplay. Participants start from the lowest quantum state and play cards that change their state and/or their opponents' state, aiming to build an algorithm that achieves the highest possible quantum state. Players can utilize several different strategies that rely on quantum features such as randomness, superposition, interference, and entanglement. Our game expands on the existing Q|Cards⟩ game, originally developed using traditional qubits (with 2-level states), by including an option to play with qutrits (with 3-level states), and by developing cooperative and single player modes in addition to the existing competitive mode. The presented game contributes to the ongoing efforts on gamifying quantum physics education with a particular focus on the counter-intuitive features that make quantum computing powerful.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 458

Free expansion of a Gaussian wavepacket using operator manipulations

Alessandro M. Orjuela; J. K. Freericks

<jats:p>The free expansion of a Gaussian wavepacket is a problem commonly discussed in undergraduate quantum classes by directly solving the time-dependent Schrödinger equation as a differential equation. In this work, we provide an alternative way to calculate the free expansion by recognizing that the Gaussian wavepacket can be thought of as the ground state of a harmonic oscillator with its frequency adjusted to give the initial width of the Gaussian, and the time evolution, given by the free-particle Hamiltonian, being the same as the application of a time-dependent squeezing operator to the harmonic oscillator ground state. Operator manipulations alone (including the Hadamard lemma and the exponential disentangling identity) then allow us to directly solve the problem. As quantum instruction evolves to include more quantum information science applications, reworking this well-known problem using a squeezing formalism will help students develop intuition for how squeezed states are used in quantum sensing.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 463

Cost-effective measurement of magnetostriction in nanoscale thin films through an optical cantilever displacement method

David L. Tran; Paymon Shirazi; Mohanchandra K. Panduranga; Gregory P. Carman

<jats:p>A cost-effective method for the quantitative characterization of the magnetostrictive effect in thin films is presented. In this method, a sample's magnetostriction is extrapolated from the tip displacement of a thin-film magnetostrictive cantilever. The tip displacement is measured by monitoring the position of a reflected laser beam using two differentially coupled photodiode positioning sensors. In contrast with alternative optical deflection-angle devices designed for educational purposes, the detection limit of our setup resolves submicron-level displacements from nanoscale thin films. The efficacy of the system is demonstrated through measurements using amorphous 200-nm thick Terfenol-D/Si (100) bimorph cantilevers. In these measurements, magnetostriction values of 106 ± 3.5 ppm at ±4300 Oe applied field were attained, where the voltage noise floor was ±0.05 V (a cantilever displacement uncertainty of ±70 nm). In-plane (IP) and out-of-plane (OOP) magnetization curves and crystallographic x-ray diffraction (XRD) were performed to determine the magnetic behavior and confirm the amorphous nature of the films, respectively. The experimental methods and material characterization systems demonstrated here enhance the understanding of complex magnetic phenomena and introduce common measurement techniques to better equip students with the skills for insightful analysis of fundamental magnetic physics.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 470

Simulating gravitational motion, gas dynamics, and structure in the cosmos

J. W. Powell; L. Caudill; O. Young

<jats:p>We provide introductory explanations and illustrations of the N-body hydrodynamics code Charm N-body GrAvity solver (ChaNGa). ChaNGa simulates the gravitational motion and gas dynamics of matter in space with the goal of modeling galactic and/or cosmological structure and evolution. We discuss the algorithm for leapfrog integration and smoothed particle hydrodynamics and computer science concepts used by the program, including the binary data structure for the particle positions. Our presentation borrows from the doctoral dissertation of J. Stadel, U. Washington, 2001. Problems are provided in order to use ChaNGa to learn or solidify some cosmological concepts.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 478

BOOK REVIEW

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 486

Erratum: “A compact disc under skimming light rays” [Am. J. Phys. 86(3), 169 (2018)]

R. De LucaORCID; M. Di MauroORCID; O. Fiore; A. NaddeoORCID

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 487

In this issue: July 2023

Joseph C. AmatoORCID; Mario BelloniORCID; Harvey GouldORCID; Claire A. Marrache-KikuchiORCID; Beth ParksORCID; B. Cameron ReedORCID; Donald SalisburyORCID; Jan TobochnikORCID

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 493

Resource Letter MP-4: The Manhattan Project and related nuclear research

B. Cameron Reed

<jats:p>This fourth Resource Letter on the Manhattan Project comprises over 140 new sources to complement the 390 listed in the first three on this topic. Books, review papers, and journal articles are cited for the categories of general works; specific topics within the Manhattan Project; technical and historical works; biographies and autobiographies; international wartime programs, allied intelligence, and the use of the bombs; postwar developments; and educational materials. A separate section lists videos and websites.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 495