Syllabus for PHY251
LABORATORY REQUIREMENTS
SCHEDULE
Laboratories will begin on January 24, 2005 and run through
PREPARATION FOR THE LAB SESSIONS
You will find it very helpful to prepare well, i.e. read and study the
materials for the laboratories before you come to class. Being prepared
before you come to your lab session will enable you to finish on time, enjoy
the lab more and help you get a higher grade. During the first 10 minutes of
every lab period (except for the first lab of the semester) a closed book quiz
will be given aimed at testing your readiness to perform that day's experiment
and your understanding of the previous experiment. There will be more
information about quizzes from your lab instructor during the first lab.
Please arrive on time or you will miss the quiz and the credit. All the
materials to be graded (your lab report including data sheets, graphs, answers
to questions, etc.) must be completed during your lab period and handed in to
the instructor before you leave the lab.
The lab report consists of a cover sheet with your name, your student number and section number. This cover sheet should also contain a short description of the purpose of this experiment and a conclusion based upon your observations and measurements. Both of these parts should be in your own words, do not just copy the manual.
GRADES
Laboratory reports will be graded by your instructor on a 20 point scale and
will be handed back at the beginning of the next lab. The points will be
distributed roughly as follows: quiz (4 pts), introduction or purpose (1 pt),
acquisition of data (including accuracy) (4 pts), graphs and calculations (4
pts), answers to questions (4 pts), and conclusion (3 pts). (The first
lab will only be worth 10 points.) Explain how you identified and tried to
solve problems in the experiments, if there were any. If you see that your data
was incorrect or your predictions of results were incorrect, explain as well as
you can, what is wrong. Please write clearly and neatly in full sentences.
Avoid wordiness and excessive detail.
Your grade will be based on the total number of points during the semester. Since the instructors for the various sections do not necessarily grade identically, the scores for a given instructor's sections will be considered as a group for grading purposes. Each of the groups will receive approximately the same average grade in the course, so that there is no advantage to having one instructor rather than another. Within the group, the grades will be assigned strictly in order of points achieved. The grade will be assigned by a curve, not a "straight scale". In the past, the average for the course was about 2.6. Please obtain from your instructor and save your graded lab reports and quizzes. You will need all of these if, at the end of the semester, you think your score wasn't correctly calculated.
MISSING LABS/MAKE-UP LABS
Because personally participating in each laboratory is the essential part of
this course, you must be present for each session. Should you find yourself in
a position where you must miss a session, you should make every attempt to
make-up labs missed for valid, documentable reasons. Make these arrangements
with your instructor. Please write an explanatory note with suitable
documentation. No make-ups are allowed without an explanatory note.
If you miss a lab without a valid reason, it will be counted as zero.
Arrangements for a possible make-up should be initiated before the missed lab,
if possible, but in any case no later than 24 hours after the missed lab.
Please make the arrangements for alternate attendance during the preceding week
if the reason for absence is a pre-scheduled event, such as a field trips or
religious holidays. Make-ups will involve approved special
attendance in a lab earlier or later in the week, if an open space is
available. However, experience has shown that grades of students
who miss EVEN ONE LAB are lower than those who attend and complete all
labs. You can reach your instructor by e-mail or by office hour.
Your instructor is in charge of all aspects of laboratory procedures. Please confer with your instructor if you have a problem, since he or she can ordinarily solve most problems.
The laboratory coordinator for this course is Professor Norman Birge. His office hours are 3:00-4:00 PM, Monday & Tuesday in room 4224 BPS. If you cannot make these office hours and would like to make an appointment, send an e-mail to Professor Birge at birge@pa.msu.edu. Please include a phone number and a copy of your academic schedule so he can get back to you and set up a mutually convenient time.
Communications regarding the day-to-day operations of your section should be directed to your instructor, NOT the lab coordinator. (ie: a missed lab, attending another section, etc.)
Computers will be used in all the physics undergraduate labs and they are controlled by a central server. It is your responsibility to close all applications and log-out of your computer account when you leave the laboratory.
There are five software tools you will use in the physics labs:
I. Microsoft Excel
This is a spreadsheet program which you use to record/store your data. An empty
spreadsheet is available at the start of each lab. The program allows you to do
ALL calculations on your data. This tool removes all repetitive calculations
from the lab, so you can concentrate on graphing and interpreting your data.
However, the spreadsheet does not do ALL the calculations for you. In order to
start the calculations you must perform at least one of them by hand. After you
enter the correct formula into the spreadsheet for that particular quantity,
the program will do all the other calculations for you.
II. Kaleidagraph
This tool is a general plotting program. It takes its input from columns of
data and allows you to either plot a histogram of the contents of one column
and/or graph any column versus any other column. Although some of these things
are possible in Excel, Kaleidagraph has a very user-friendly interface for
adjusting axes/labels/text/bins etc. in any of the graphs. The input for the
graphs is copied and pasted from the Excel spreadsheet. Once you are satisfied
with your graph (binning is correct, labels are clear, axes are labeled and
have units!!), you should save the graph to your user space on the server or on
a floppy disk. It can then be printed separately or copied and pasted into your
final lab report.
III. Microsoft Word
Word is used as the standard word processor for the lab. In the beginning, it
should be used for writing your introduction and conclusion. Toward the end of
the semester it is expected that you submit your completed report in Word. This
will allow you to include the relevant parts of your spreadsheets, graphs,
introduction, and conclusion.
IV. Video Point
This software allows you to collect coordinate data by clicking on locations of
interest on video images with a mouse. You are able to study two-dimensional
motions by locating, displaying, and analyzing coordinate data obtained from
sequences of digitized video frames.
V. Graphing Calculator
This is a tool very similar to a graphics calculator, but much more flexible.
It allows you to graph functions in a very convenient way and even print them
out.
· Save your files in assigned user space and do this regularly.
· Save your files using your last names and experiment number.
· If you want a copy of your work, bring in your own floppy disk and save your documents to the floppy. This may help you in the following weeks. If something happens to your work during the lab and it is destroyed, you will have to do the lab again. ....SAVE YOUR DATA OFTEN!!! There are no student data back-ups and all student data is deleted after the laboratory period ends.
· All the necessary computer software and
spreadsheets will be on the computer when you start, so you should not have to
search for items. You must purchase a new laboratory manual from any of the
local bookstores. Do not use old versions of the laboratory manual as there
have been significant changes to the material.
· No food or drinks of any kind are allowed
in the laboratories....there are NO exceptions.
· Your lab report should be
self-contained. That means that anybody who reads it should be able to figure
out what you did, why you did it, and what results you obtained. Your
Introduction or Purpose does not need to be very long, but do not just
copy what is written in the Lab Manual.
· Whenever your lab report includes a table of data from Excel,
write down enough information so the reader knows where the data came from. If
some of the columns include the results of a calculation performed within
Excel, write down the formula next to the spreadsheet, including the values of
any fixed parameters used in the formula. Also include a sample calculation
showing what Excel did for one line of the spreadsheet.
· Whenever your lab report includes
a graph, write down what you learned from the graph, or any conclusions you
made from looking at the graph.
· The overall Conclusion of the Lab
Report gives you a chance to summarize what you learned in the lab. If the
results didn't come out as you expected, suggest why not. (Don't just attribute
it to "human error"!)
Last update: January 23, 2005