1... Another unsharpened one
2 points
A freshly sharpened pencil 6B has a tip in the shape of a cone and the radius of the cone's base is
2... test tubes
2 points
Test tubes of volumes 3 ml and 5 ml are connected by a short thin tube in which we can find a porous thermally non-conductive barrier that allows an equilbirum in pressures to be achieved within the system. Both test tubes in the beginning are filled with oxygen at a pressure of 101,25 kPa and a temperature of 20 ° C. We submerge the first test tube (3 ml) into a container which has a system of water and ice in equilbrium inside it and the other one (5 ml) into a container with steam. What wil the pressure be in the system of the teo test tubes be after achieving mechanical equilibrium? What would the pressure be if it would have been nitrogen and not oxygen that was in the test tubes?(while keeping other conditions the same)/p>
3... Seagull
4 points
Two ships are sailing against each other, the first one with a velocity
4... discharged pudding
4 points
There are a lot of models of hydrogens and many of these have been overcome but we like pudding and so we shall return to the pudding model of hydrogen. The atom is made of a sphere with a radius
5... Another unsharpened one
4 points
By how much shall the temperature of two identical steel balls rise after their collision?They move in the same direction with speeds
P... the true gravitational acceleration
5 points
Faleš wanted to determine the gravitational acceleration from an experiment in Prague(V Holešovickách 2 in the first floor/ground floor). In the experiment he was dropping a round ball from a height of a couple of meters above the Earth. Think about what kind of corrections he had to apply when analysing the data. Then think up your own experiment to determine g and discuss its accuracy.
E... some like it lukewarm
8 points
Measure the relation between the temperature and time in a freshly made cup of tea. Conduct the measurements for a undisturbed cup of tea and a cup of tea stirred by a teaspoon. Finally determine if the time the tea takes to reach a drinkable temperature depends on the stirring.
Instructions for Experimental TasksS... quantum
6 points
- Look into the text to see how the operator of position
src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?\hat%20X">$
and momentum
%20P">
representation (wave function) and calculate their comutator, in other
words
<img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?(\hat%20{X})_x%20\left((\hat%20
{P})_x%20{\psi}%20(x)\right)%20-%20(\hat%20{P})_x%20\left((\hat%20{X})_x%20
{\psi}%20(x)\right)%20">
Tip Find out what happens when you take the derivative
of two functions multiplied together
- The problem of levels of energy for a free quantum particle in other words
for
following form:
<img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?-\frac%20{\hbar%20^2}
{2m}%20\dfrac{\partial^2%20{\psi}%20(x)}{\partial%20x^2}=%20E%20{\psi}%20
(x)\,.">
- Try inputting
(
and find out for what
is
- Is this solution periodic? If yes then with what spatial period
(wavelength)?
- Is the gained wave function the eigenvector of the operator of momentum
(in the
wavelength and momentum (in other words the respective eigenvalue) of the state.
- Try to formally calculate the density of probability oof presence of the
particle in space.naší vlnové funkci podle vzorce uvedeného v textu. Pravděpodobnost, že se
částice vyskytuje v celém prostoru by měla být pro fyzikální hustotu pravděpodobnosti 1,
tj. <img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?\int_\mathbb{R}%20\rho
(x)%20\mathrm{d}%20x=1."> Show that our wave function can't be
density of probability according to the equation from the text was a real
physical density of probability.
**Bonus:** What do you think that the limit of the
uncertainity of a position of a particle is if the wave function it has is close
to ours (In other words it approaches it in all properties but it always has a
normalized probability density and thus is a physical state) Can we (using Heisenberg's relation of uncertainty) determine what is
the lowest possible imprecision while finding the momentum?
Tip Take care when dealing with complex numbers. For
example the square of a complex number is different than that of its magnitude.
- In the second part of the series we derivated the energy levels of an
electron in hydrogen using reduced action. Due to a random happenstance the
solution of the spectrum of the hamiltonian in a coulombic potential of a
proton would lead to thecompletely same energy,in other words
<img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?E_n%20=%20-{\mathrm{Ry}}%20\frac
%20{1}{n^2}">
where Ty = 13,6 eV is an ernergy constant that is known
as the Rydberg constant. An electron which falls from a random energy
level to
and the magnitude of the energy shall be equal to the diference of the energies
of the two states. Which are the states that an electron can fall from so that
the light will be in the visible spectrum? What will the color of the spectral
lines be?
Tip Remember the photoelectric
effect and the relation between the frequency of light and its
wavelength.