PHY 300
Waves and Optics
Spring 2008

 

Office hours during final week: T,W,Th,F 2-3pm

Final exam:  May 19, 8:00am, P130

practice questions

 
Important message regarding requirements for the LABS:

There have been eight regular labs, plus one bonus lab.  In order to pass you have to complete AT LEAST SEVEN LABS out of these eight+one labs.  Please be aware that if you hand in seven labs only, you will receive ZERO points for the eight lab  [see text below]. I.e. it is in your own interest to hand in eight labs altogether.

 
Meeting Time and Place: Instructor:

Lecture:

MWF 10:40-11:35 P130  
Lab-1:    W 12:50-2:50  A124  
Lab-2: W 3:50-5:50 A124  
Prof. Dominik Schnebledschneble A-106 Office hours: W 2:30-4:00  
Huan Dong (TA) hudong D-126 Office hours: F 2:00-3:30  
Giovanni Milione (TA)giomilione P-121 Office hours: F 3:00-5:00  
     
Topics:   Free oscillations, driven oscillations and resonance, normal modes for coupled oscillators and continuous media, traveling waves; Maxwell's equations and wave equation for light, polarization, reflection and refraction, coherence and interference, diffraction, ray optics, Gaussian beams.
Textbooks::  
Vibrations and Waves, by A.P. French (Norton)
Modern Optics, by G.R. Fowles (Dover)
You are NOT required to buy the optics book by Hecht for the course.
Grading:   HW 20%, Midterm Exam 20%, Final Exam 30%, Laboratory work 30% (minimum 9 labs, see below)
     
 
 
Schedule and assignments
(subject to change, check web page http://ultracold.physics.sunysb.edu/PHY300/ regularly)
 
Wk   Lecture   Lab* Homework*
1 Jan 28 Free oscillations Jan 30  Feb 1
 
read writeup on error propagation French ch.1: #1,2,5,6,8; ch.2:#1,2,3,4 SOLUTIONS
2 Feb 4 Feb 6 Driven oscillations Feb 8 (1) Resonance French, ch. 3: #1,2;  ch. 4: #3,5,10 SOLUTIONS
3 Feb 11 Normal modes Feb 13  Feb 15 (2) Coupled oscillators French ch. 5: #2,4,8,9  SOLUTIONS
4 Feb 18 Continuous systems Feb 20 Feb 22  [CLASSES CANCELLED] (3) Speed of sound  
5 Feb 25 Feb 27 Feb 29 (4) Transmission line French,ch. 6: #1,2,6,11;  ch.7: #1,2,4,5 SOLUTIONS
6 Mar 3 Traveling waves Mar 5 Mar 7 makeup lab practice midterm exam & solutions
7 Mar 10Wave properties of light Mar 12  Midterm exam (10:40-11:35) Mar 14 no lab  
9 Mar 17 Spring recess Mar 19 Spring Recess Mar 21 Spring recess no lab Fowles ch1:#7, ch.2: #3,4,5,8,12 SOLUTIONS
10 Mar 24 Polarization Mar 26 Jones formalism Mar 28 Coherence and interference (5) Polarization  
11 Mar 31 Apr 2 Apr 4  Reflection and Refraction (6) Michelson interferometer Fowles, ch3: #2,7; ch.2#: 16,17,19,20 SOLUTIONS
12 Apr 7 Apr 9 Multiple-beam interference Apr 11 (7) Fabry-Perot interferometer  
13 Apr 14 Apr 16 Apr 18 Tour of Optics Lab S-114 at 4pm Fowles, ch4: 1,3,5,7 SOLUTIONS
14 Apr 21 Passover Apr 23 Diffraction Apr 25 [extra makeup labs (for labs 5,6,7)] Fowles, ch5: 4,8,9,12,14 SOLUTIONS
15 Apr 28 Apr 30 May 2 (8) Diffraction  
16 May 5 Ray optics May 7 May 9 makeup lab / (9) Optical instruments Fowles, ch10: 4,5 SOLUTIONS

 

17 May 12 last day of classes May 14 May 16  no lab practice questions for final exam
18 May 19 Final Exam(8:00-10:30)        

 

*Regulations for lab and homework

HOMEWORK: The homework will be collected in class on Friday following the week in which it is assigned, and it will be graded.  You may work together on solving the problems, but cannot hand in the same solutions. We have a small class, and will be on the watch for this kind of problem. Solutions will be posted after the homework is collected. Therefore, late papers will NOT be accepted.

LAB RULES: You will be required to perform the experiments described in the laboratory manuals (download above). Before you begin these you must present a writeup as you enter the lab. Nobody can perform an experiment without presenting the writeup FIRST. Your writeup should describe the physical ideas you plan to explore, the way you will go about exploring them, and your anticipated results. It need not be more than a page or two, but it is not length-limited either. Write it into your lab notebook and have the lab TA sign it. This writeup will not be graded but the TA's approval and signature are required BEFORE you can start on the experiment.

After you have completed your measurements, recorded in your lab books immediately following the writeup you have prepared before, you have to analyze your results and compare with the expectations in your writeup. The full lab report must be submitted to Prof. Schneble's mailbox before the Physics Department office closes at 4:30 PM on the Monday following Wednesday's lab. That is, you have not much time to complete it, so you need to be well-prepared beforehand. The lab report will be graded on a scale from 0 to 10. Your grade does NOT depend on whether you got agreement of your results with the expectation, but only upon how well you perform your work.
The report that you submit must be your own work. Submission of (partially) identical or overly similar lab reports counts as cheating and results in zero points for the lab for all parties involved.

You have to complete AT LEAST eight of the nine labs scheduled for this semester. If you miss a lab you can make up for this on one of the two scheduled make-up dates. If you have one lab missing at the end of the semester this will be graded as zero score. If you have more than one lab missing you will  FAIL the course no matter how well you perform in the other parts of this course.


DISABILITY SUPPORT SERVICES (DSS): If you have a physical, psychological, medical, or learning disability that may impact your course work, please contact Disability Support Services (631) 632-6748 or http://studentaffairs.stonybrook.edu/dss/.  They will determine with you what accommodations are necessary and appropriate.  All information and documentation is confidential. ----------- Students who require assistance during emergency evacuation are encouraged to discuss their needs with their professors and Disability Support Services.  For procedures and information go to the following website:  http://www.stonybrook.edu/ehs/fire/disabilities/asp.

ACADEMIC INTEGRITY: Each student must pursue his or her academic goals honestly and be personally accountable for all submitted work. Representing another person's work as your own is always wrong. Faculty are required to report any suspected instance of academic dishonesty to the Academic Judiciary.  For more comprehensive information on academic integrity, including categories of academic dishonesty, please refer to the academic judiciary website at http://www.stonybrook.edu/uaa/academicjudiciary/

CRITICAL INCIDENT MANAGEMENT: Stony Brook University expects students to respect the rights, privileges, and property of other people. Faculty are required to report to the Office of Judicial Affairs any disruptive behavior that interrupts their ability to teach, compromises the safety of the learning environment, and/or inhibits students' ability to learn.

1/23/2008