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Bütün Fizik Formülleri

1. This document covers topics in classical mechanics, electromagnetism, optics, and wave phenomena. It provides equations and definitions for concepts like kinematics, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics, Maxwell's equations, properties of light, lenses, interference, and diffraction. 2. Key classical mechanics topics include equations of motion from Lagrangians and Hamiltonians, as well as concepts like action, momentum, and torque. Electromagnetism equations include Gauss's law, Biot-Savart law, and boundary conditions. Optics addresses thin lenses, interference, diffraction, and properties of polarized light. 3. A wide range of physics principles, definitions, and equations are presented in a condensed format without extensive explanations or context

Uploaded by

mhasan13
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
437 views

Bütün Fizik Formülleri

1. This document covers topics in classical mechanics, electromagnetism, optics, and wave phenomena. It provides equations and definitions for concepts like kinematics, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics, Maxwell's equations, properties of light, lenses, interference, and diffraction. 2. Key classical mechanics topics include equations of motion from Lagrangians and Hamiltonians, as well as concepts like action, momentum, and torque. Electromagnetism equations include Gauss's law, Biot-Savart law, and boundary conditions. Optics addresses thin lenses, interference, diffraction, and properties of polarized light. 3. A wide range of physics principles, definitions, and equations are presented in a condensed format without extensive explanations or context

Uploaded by

mhasan13
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1.

Classical Mechanics - 20%


v
2
= v
2
0
+ 2a(x x
0
) v in terms of x in uniform acceleration
L = L(q, q, t) = T U Lagrangian
d
dt
_
L
q
_
=
L
q
EL eqs of motion
S =
_
t
1
t
0
L(q(t), q(t), t)dt Action, minimize this integral
p =
L
q
generalized/conjugate momentum
F =
L
q
generalized force
H = p q L = T + U Hamiltonian
q =
H
p
p =
H
q
H eqs of motion
p + gy +
1
2
v
2
= constant Bernoullis eq
F
coriolis
= 2m r Coriolis force
F
centrifugal
= m ( r) Centrifugal force
= r F torque
L = r p angular momentum
I =

i
m
i
r
2
i
=
_
r
2
dm =
_
r
2
dV moment of inertia
=
_
mgr
I
=
_
g

frequency of pendulum

2
=
4
2
GMs
a
3
Keplers third law
where a is dist from center to aphelion
I = I
cm
+ md
2
parallel axis theorem
_
cos sin
sin cos
_
2D rotation matrix
=
m
1
m
2
m
1
+m
2
reduced mass
U
e
(r) = U(r) +

2
2r
2
2 body eective potential (1D)
=
_
k
m
frequency of harmonic oscillator
v = r v in terms of omega and r (in vectors)
F
b
=
f
V g bouyant force
f
beat
= |f
1
f
2
| beats per second for 2 superposed waves
No energy conserved in inelastic collision?
c
s
=
_


mono
= 5/3
dia
= 7/5 speed of sound
P = B = p/(V/V ) denition of bulk modulus
f =
cs

frequency of sound
c
s
=
_
kT
m
per particle
= 343 m/s for air speed of sound of ideal gas (and for air)
c
s
=
_
gh +
(atm)

speed of sound in water


A
1
v
1
= A
2
v
2
pipe ow (non-viscous)
v =
_
T

speed of waves on a string


1
R =
Dv

=
Dv

Reynolds number
where D=char length, v=char speed
=dynamic viscosity, = kinematic viscosity
R < 1 laminar, R > 1 turbulent
dP
dz
= g hydrostatic equilibrium
p/p
0
= /
0
= e
z/H
H =
p
0
g
0
= 8.55 km pressure vs height
M
dv
dt
=

F
ext
+ v
rel
dM
dt
rocket equation
v
2
=
2GM
R
escape velocity
F = A
dv
dy
viscous force

n
=
2L
n
n = 1, 2, 3 . . . standing waves in open tube (xed string)

n
=
4L
n
n = 1, 3, 5 . . . standing waves in closed tube (one end xed
string)
P = IV = Fv power denitions
L
total
= L
global
+ L
intrinsic
total angular momentum of a system
stable non-circular orbits exist only in simple har-
monic and inverse-square-force potentials
Bertrands theorem
=
_
w
2
0

t
2
4m
2
frequency of underdamped SHO
Moments of inertia:
I
z
=
mr
2
2
solid disc or cylinder
I =
2mr
2
5
solid sphere
I =
2mr
2
3
hollow sphere
I
center
=
mL
2
12
rod about center
I
center
=
mL
2
3
rod about end
kepler orbits?
normal modes?
2. E&M - 18%
= permittivity = permeability
=
0
(1 +
e
) electric susceptibility
=
0
(1 +
m
) magnetic susceptibility
=
0

r
dielectric constant/relative permittivity
n =
_

0
=
c
vp
=

r
index of refraction
c =
1

0
speed of light
v =
1

v in terms of EM stu
Typical values:
2
>
0
almost always, with
e
> 0 permittivity
<
0
,
m
< 0 diamagnetics
eld dies
>
0
,
m
> 0 paramagnetics
>>
0
,
m
>> 0 ferromagnetics
_
( A)d =
_
A da divergence theorem
_
(A) da =
_
A dl curl theorem
Maxwell Eqs:
E =
1

0
Gausss Law
E =
B
t
Faradays Law
B = 0 No monopoles
B =
0
J +
0

0
E
t
Amperes Law
D =
free
Gausss Law in matter
H = J
free
+
D
t
Amperes Law in matter
D =
0
E +P denition of electric displacement D
H =
1

0
BM denition of auxiliary eld H
In linear media:
P =
0

e
E polarization eld
D = E displacement eld
M =
m
H magnetization eld
H =
1

B auxiliary eld
V = N
d
dt
Induced voltage from Faradays Law
F =
1
4
0
q
1
q
2
r
2
Coulombs Law
dB =

0
4
IdL r
r
2
Biot-Savart Law
B =

0
I
2
r
2
(r
2
+z
2
)
3/2
Magnetic eld on axis of a circle of current
B =

0
I
2R
Magnetic eld from innite straight wire
dF = I d B Force on a wire from a magnetic eld
Boundary conditions:
E

above
E

below
=
1

0
BCs for E
E

above
= E

below
D

above
D

below
=
f
BCs for D
3
D

above
D

below
= P

above
P

below
B

above
= B

below
BCs for B
B

above
B

below
=
0
(K n)
H

above
H

below
= (M

above
M

below
) BCs for H
H

above
H

below
= K
f
n
Q = CV U =
1
2
CV
2
Capacitance and energy
C =
A
d
Parallel plate capacitor
V = V
b
V
a
= L
dI
dt
U =
1
2
LI
2
Inductance and energy
= LI inductance
L =
N
2
A
l
Inductance of a solenoid
Z = R Z =
1
iC
Z = iL impedance for resistor, capacitor, inductor
=
qB
m
Cyclotron frequency
charged particle passes through a medium faster
than v = c/n and emits blue light in nuclear re-
actors
Cherenkov radiation
P =
q
2
a
2
6
0
c
3
Larmor formula for radiated power
=
E
J
resistivity
R =
L
A
resistance, L = length, A = area
J = E conductivity
10
4
m/s electron drift velocity
J =
I
A
= E = nev
drift
equation for drift velocity
E

= 0 outsiede,

E reversed upon reection reection o a conductor
E

0
p
0

2
4
(
sin
r
)

E eld of oscillating electric dipole


B

0
p
0

2
4
(
sin
r
)

B eld of oscillating electric dipole


E

0
m
0

2
4c
(
sin
r
)

E eld of oscillating magnetic dipole


B

0
m
0

2
4c
(
sin
r
)

B eld of oscillating magnetic dipole


p = qd electric dipole moment
m = IA magnetic dipole moment
=
0
V
n
surface charge on conductor vs V
Z
load
= Z

source
impedance matching

b
= P n bound surface charge

b
= P bound volume charge
K
b
= M n bound surface current
J
b
= M bound volume current
used to measure exponent in Coulomb law placed
a charge inside a hollow charged sphere measured
how far it moved (not much)
Cavendish-Maxwell experiment
4
= B torque on a dipole
U = B dipole potential energy
B =

0

2z
3
magnetic dipole eld
L =

0
N
2
h
2
ln
b
a
inductance of a toroid
E =
1
4
0
p
x
3
electric dipole eld (approx)
E =
1
4
0
p
(x
2
+(d/2)
2
)
3/2
electric dipole eld (exact)
current ows in metal in perp B eld, charge accu-
mulates on one side, magnetic force balances new
E eld, determines sign of charge carriers
Hall eect
S =
1

0
(E B) Poynting vector
gauges?
EM eld transformations ?
cross product identities?
3. Optics and Wave Phenomena - 9%
v
phase
=

k
v
group
=
d
dk
Phase velocity versus group velocity
group velocity information travels at...
=
0
1v
obs
/cn
1vsource/cn
Doppler shift (for sound waves in a medium)
Top signs moving towards each other
1
o
+
1
i
=
1
f
Thin lens formula
sin =
l
f
1.22

d
Rayleigh Criterion (aperture)
f =
R
2
1
f
= (n 1)
_
1
R
1
+
1
R
2
_
Focal length of mirror and lens
I
0
cos
2
( ) Intensity of polarized light through polarizer
y
m
= m
D
d
double slit interference, position of maxima
d sin = m m = 0, 1, 2, . . . same equation in terms of
wsin = m m = 1, 2, . . . single slit diraction, position of minima
I

= 4I
0
cos
2
(
d sin

) I

for 2 slit interference


I

= I
max
(
sin

)
2
I

for 1 slit diraction


where =
a

sin
product of the above 2 slit interference and diraction
reected wave same phase wave at boundary with n
1
> n
2
reected wave 180 phase shift wave at boundary with n
1
< n
2
=
v

wavelength
object side image side
tan
B
=
n
2
n
1
Brewsters angle
5

B
measured from vertical to incident ray
component perp to surface is eliminated
2d sin = n condition for constructive interference for Bragg
diraction
d is distance between lattices
is angle from horizontal
m

=
ey

ob
=
f
ob
fey
magnication for telescope

n
=

n
wavelength in material
reference wave interferes with wave reected o
object, stores phase and amplitude info
hologram
path di = 2d +
1
2

n
for each phase shift thin lms interference
sin =

d
diraction, angle to edge of central max
minimize blur = d + d
screen
using above eqn pinhole camera sharpness
4. Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics - 10%
e =
W
Q
input
denition of eciency
1 T
c
/T
h
eciency of Carnot cycle
U = S = 0 Carnot cycle
adiabat steeper than isotherm on PV plot
rectangle on US plot
Z =

s
e
Es/kT
P(s) = e
Es/kT
/Z Boltzmann distribution
U, N, and V entropy is a function of...
S = k
B
ln Approximate denition of entropy
S = k
B

s
p
s
ln(p
s
) Exact denition of entropy
S = Nk ln
V
f
V
i
change in entropy when U and N are xed
Q =
_
TdS relation between entropy and heat
1
2
kT per quad dof Equipartition theorem

max
T 3 10
3
m K Wiens Law (for a blackbody)
j = T
4
power per unit area radiated by blackbody
= 5.67 10
8
Stefan-Boltzmann constant
n
i
=
g
i
e
(
i
)/kT
+1
Fermi-Dirac stat, number fermions in state i
n
i
=
g
i
e
(
i
)/kT
1
Bose-Einstein stat, number bosons in state i
g degeneracy, energy,
chem potential
U
N
PV = NkT ideal gas law
k = 1.381 10
23
J/K Boltzmanns constant
3 dofs for monatomic ideal gas
6
3 at > 10K dofs for cold diatomic ideal gas
5 at > 100K dofs for diatomic ideal gas
7 at > 1000K dofs for hot diatomic ideal gas
v
max
=
_
2kT
m
v
max
for an ideal gas
v =
_
8kT
m
v for an ideal gas
v
rms
=
_
3kT
m
v
rms
for an ideal gas
U
thermal
= N f
1
2
kT total thermal energy of ideal gas
U = Q + W
on sys
1st law of thermo
dW
on sys
= PdV work in quasistatic compression
Q = 0 adiabatic
T = const isothermal
W = NkT ln
V
i
V
f
work in isothermal compression of ideal gas
V T
f
2
= const V
f+2
f
P = const relations for adiabatic compression
t
1/2
=
ln 2
k
half life
where k = decay rate
number of indep events in some time Poisson distribution

N uncertainty of N-count P distribution


=
_
< (x x)
2
> standard deviation
aka RMS deviation from mean

2
variance
C =
heat needed
degree temp increase
heat capacity
c = C/m specic heat
C
V
= (
U
T
)
V
=
Nfk
2
heat capacity at constant volume
C
P
= (
U
T
)
P
+ P(
V
T
)
P
= C
V
+ Nk heat capacity at constant pressure
A =
P
w
scattering cross section
where P is probability and w is width
L = LT linear expansion
energy of highest QM state at T = absolute zero Fermi energy
Q
t
= kA
T
x
Fouriers law (heat conduction)
5. Quantum Mechanics - 12%
Time-Independent Perturbation Theory
E
1
n
=
0
n
|H

|
0
n
rst order correction to energy
|
1
n
=

m=n

0
m
|H|
0
n

E
0
n
E
0
m
|
0
m
rst order correction to wavefn
E
2
n
=

m=n
|
0
m
|H|
0
n
|
2
E
0
n
E
0
m
second order correction to energy
degeneracies?
7
i

t
= H (t) = e
iHt/
(0) time dependent SE
H = E (t) = e
iEt/
(0) time independent SE

H =

2
2m

2
+ V Hamiltonian
p = i momentum operator
[x, p] = i commutator of x and p

B
|
1
2i
[A, B]| generalized uncertainty principle

p
/2 Heisenberg uncertainty principle
=
h
p
=
2
p
de Broglie Wavelength
E = hc/ energy in terms of wavelength
|1, 1 = triplet states (j = 1)
|1, 0 =
1

2
( + )
|1, 1 =
|0, 0 =
1

2
( ) singlet state (j = 0)
Pauli spin matrices:
_
0 1
1 0
_

x
_
0 i
i 0
_

y
_
1 0
0 1
_

z
[AB, C] = A[B, C] + [A, C]B identity for [AB, C]
P =
_
||
2
dV =
_
P
r
dr how P relates to P
r
l = 0 wavefunctions with spherical symmetry?
in scattering: incoming plane wave not substan-
tially altered by potential
Born approximation
(r
1
, r
2
) = A(
a
(r
1
)
b
(r
2
) +
b
(r
1
)
a
(r
2
)) bosons
sym, do not obey Pauli exclusion
P
boson
T
5/2
(r
1
, r
2
) = A(
a
(r
1
)
b
(r
2
)
b
(r
1
)
a
(r
2
)) fermions
antisym, obey Pauli exclusion
E =
n
2

2
2ma
2
energy levels in square well

n
(x) =
_
2
a
sin(
n
a
x) wavefunctions in square well
p = k p in terms of k

0
=
1

a
3
e
r/a
0
Hydrogen ground state wavefunction
H

= eE
ext
z perturbed H for Stark eect
Might not need:
dQ
dt
=
i

[H, Q] +
Q
t

[L
i
, L
j
] = iL
k

ijk
angular momentum commutators
6. Atomic Physics - 10%
8
Electron quantum numbers
n = 1, 2, 3, . . . principle quantum number, radial wavefn
= 0, 1, . . . , n 1 orbital quantum number, wavefn
L
2
=
2
( + 1)
m

= , + 1, . . . , 1, magnetic quantum number, wavefn


L
z
= m

s = (1/2) electron spin


S
2
| =
2
s(s + 1)|
m
s
= (1/2) z-component of electron spin
S
z
| = m
s
|
j = | s|, . . . , ( + s) = | (1/2)| total ang momentum quantum number
J
2
| =
2
j(j + 1)|
m
j
= j, j + 1, . . . , j 1, j z-component of total angular momentum
m
j
= m

+ m
s
J
z
| = m
j
|
= 1 (= 0) m

= 0, 1 electric dipole transition selection rules


j = 0, 1 m
s
= 0
Wigner=Eckart theorem governs these
energy level splitting when ext B eld applied Zeeman eect
electrical analog of Zeeman eect Stark eect
a
n
=
4
0

2
e
2
Z
n
2
(0.529A

)
_
me


n
2
Z
_
Bohr model radius
E
n
=
Z
2
e
4
8
2
0
h
2
_
1
n
2
_
(13.6 eV)
_
Z
2
n
2


me
_
Bohr model energy
E

= 13.6eV(
1
n
2
i

1
n
2
f
) energy of radiated photon from transition
1

= R(
1
n
2
f

1
n
2
i
) wavelength of radiated photon
R = 1.097 10
7
m
1
Rydberg constant
x ray spectrum from electrons red at atoms:
photon knocks our inner e

, replaced by outer e

Auger transition
continuous spectrum, radiation produced by de-
celeration of a charged particle
Bremsstrahlung
K, L, M, N n
f
= 1, 2, 3, 4 x ray series names
pick L (S,P,D,F,G,H,... for L = 0, 1, 2, . . .) term symbol
where J is between L + S and |L S|
write
spin multiplicity = 2S+1
L
J
= S = (eg/2m
e
)S intrinsic magnetic moment
9
g = 2
e
= 1.76 10
1
1 gyromagnetic ration for an electron
photons hitting metal knocks o electrons, light
shines on emitter, sending electrons to a collector,
making a current, which stops at some negative
voltage (at V=0 some electrons still collected)
Photoelectric eect
dominant process up to 500 KeV
minimum energy needed to free electron from ma-
terial
work function
photon scatters o electron, changes wavelength,
electron ies o
Compton scattering
=
h
mc
(1 cos ) Compton eect equation
is angle between scattered photon and horizon-
tal
conrmed Bohrs quantized model, atoms could
only absorb specic amounts of energy
Franck-Hertz experiment
d
d
= (
kqQ
2mv
2
0
)
2 1
sin
4
(/2)
Rutherford scattering
incident ring, scattered solid angle
shot particles at gold foil, found concentrated
nucleus
= (
q
2
4
0
mc
2
)
2
Thomson scattering
is the cross section (area/solid angle)
photons scattering o electrons
photon destroyed, e
+
e

created, pair production


becomes signicant at 10 MeV
N
sc
= N
inc
n
tar
classical scattering relation
N
sc
(into d) = N
inc
n
tar
d
d
(, )d di scat cross (experiment)
d
d
=
b
sin
|
db
d
| di scat cross (theory)
is cross section area of one target
= A/r
2
denition of solid angle
d = sin dd
gamma ray photons from nuclear transition
x ray photons from electron transition
nucleus interacts with lower shell electron, eject-
ing it, higher shell electron lls hole, x ray when
heavy nucleus, visible when H atom
internal conversion
= 10
10
= 10
18
x ray
= 10
12
= 10
20
gamma ray
orbitals: go diagonal top right to bottom left
10
quantum numbers: row denotes n, col denotes l
number of electrons a shell can hold determined
by m
s
and m
l
s p d f g
1 1st
2 2nd 3rd
3 4th 5th 7th
4 6th 8th 10th 13th
5 9th 11th 14th 17th 21st
Might not need:
anomalous Zeeman eect?
hyperne splitting?
E
nj
=
13.6eV
n
2
[1 +

2
n
2
(
n
j+1/2

3
4
)] energy levels of H w/ ne structure
7. Special Relativity - 6%
=
1

1v
2
/c
2
1 Lorentz factor
1 +
1
2
v
2
c
2
1

1
1
2
v
2
c
2
ct

= (ct x) x

= (x (ct)) Lorentz transformations


L

=
Lproper

length contraction
T

= (T
proper
) time dilation
=
0
_
1v/c
1v/c
doppler shift for light
p = mv relativistic momentum
E =
_
(mc
2
)
2
+ (pc)
2
= mc
2
relativistic energy
black hole if R =
2GM
c
2
Schwarzchild radius
=

0
(1 cos )
general doppler shift
v
AC
=
v
AB
+v
BC
1+(v
AB
v
BC
/c
2
)
velocity addition
C is lab frame
11
8. Laboratory Methods - 6%
f = (

n
i=1
[(x
i
)(
i
f(x
1
, . . . , x
n
))]
2
)
1/2
error propagation
f
f
=
_

(
x
i
x
i
)
2
error propagation if no cross-corellated terms
1 J 6 10
18
eV Joules to eV conversion
(k
B
)(300 K) .02 eV room temp in eV
= 750 380 nm = 400 790 10
12
Hz visible light in m, Hz, eV
E = 2 3 eV
10

6m/s drift velocity of electrons in metal


functions like y = a
x
straight lines on semilog plot
functions like y = x
a
straight lines on log log plot

c
= RC 63% RC time constant
9. Specialized Topics - 9%
QM version of normal modes, vibration in lattice phonon
collection of Fermions, QM ideal gas Fermi gas
3 quarks (such as p, n), hadron baryon
each quark = 1/3 baryon number

e
, e,

, ,

, leptons
e, , each have own number lepton number
lepton and corresp have +1, anti have -1
2 quarks (such as
+
pion, K

kaon), hadron meson


E
bind
/c
2
= (total mass of nucleons)
(mass of nucleus)
binding energy
dened as positive, corresponds to negative po-
tential energy
iron element with highest binding energy per nucleon
2 protons, 2 neutrons particle
n p + e

+
e

decay
p n + e
+
+
e

+
decay
N-doped, P-doped semicond with more electrons, holes
=
0
(1 + T) resistivity as a fn of T
> 0 for conductors
< 0 for semiconductors
quarks, leptons weak force aects
quarks, gluons, hadrons strong force aects
crystal lattice looks the same from every point Bravais lattice
12
can cover entire lattice, contains 1 point primitive unit cell
sum density of each point (1/number shared
blocks)
calculate lattice point density
2 body centered point density
4 face centered point density
proton and neutron, boson deuteron
No weak interactions preserve strangeness?
10. Random
dA
dt
= kA A = A
0
e
kt
sin tan when is small
1.414

2
1.732

3
sin 2 = 2 sin cos trig identities
cos 2 = 2 cos
2
1
13

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