Electronics
PHY440 - Spring 2010
Department of Physics & Astronomy
Michigan State University
The aim of this course is to give students a practical introduction to modern electronic circuits. It consists of two weekly lectures where the theory and principles of electronics circuits will be discussed, and a three hour lab where students will get some hands-on experience with electronic circuits and a variety of instrumentation such as oscilloscopes, pulsers, power supplies and digital multimeters. The topics covered in the course will start with simple DC circuits and end in computer design of programmable logic devices (PLD's). In between we will study AC circuits, filters, diodes, bipolar transistors, FET's, operational amplifiers and a variety of digital circuits. Where possible we will make use of computer programs such as LabView and software from the Xilinx corporation to program field-programmable gate arrays (FPGA's).
Instructors
Weekly schedule
The schedule of lectures and labs is at
http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/2010spring/PHY440/schedule.html.
Textbooks
Required text:
A. J. Diefenderfer and B. E. Holton, Principles of Electronic Instrumentation, Third Ed., Thomson Brooks/Cole, 1994, ISBN-10: 0030747090, ISBN-13: 9780030747090.
Suggested Reference:
P. Horowitz and W. Hill: The Art of Electronics, Second Ed., Cambridge University Press, 1995, ISBN-10: 0521370957, ISBN-13: 978-0521370950.
This book is an excellent reference and students planning to continue with electronics in future years should consider acquiring it.
Homeworks and Quizzes
There will be weekly homework assignments, due at the beginning of class on Fridays. Quizzes will be given during lecture; there will be roughly thirteen quizzes throughout the semester. Calculators are required for the quizzes, therefore please bring a calculator to each lecture.
Angel, Discussion Forum
A discussion forum has been set up for each homework set in the
Angel system.
Angel also has your current score for homeworks, quizzes, and labs.
Laboratory Procedure and Notbook
The laboratory part of the course consists of a series of experiments that students will perform working alone. Students will be provided with a lab notebook into which all relevant information associated with an experiment will be recorded. The laboratory exercises will be performed during the 3 hour lab period, the data entered into the notebook will be left with the TA for grading. No formal write up will be required but students are cautioned to enter all relevant data and explanations clearly and succinctly so that the TA can easily follow the work done. No erasures or page removal is allowed. If an error is made it should be neatly crossed out and the corrected data re-entered. In general there are no make-up labs (rare exceptions can be made with advance notice).
More laboratory procedure tips.
An example lab report (incomplete and with some parts removed, but hopefully you get the idea) is here:
Page 1,
Page 2,
Page 3,
Page 4,
Page 5.
Several questions in the lab instructions ask you to compare your predicted value with your measured value. This comparison is to test whether the two values agree within their uncertainties.
Here is information on uncertainties.
Grades
Your Total Score will be determined by the scores on the homework assignments, quizzes, and laboratory notebook. The Total Score is weighted as follows: 20%-Homework, 30%-Quizzes, 50%-Laboratory. Grade assignments at the end of the term will be taken from the table below. (It may be shifted slightly in your favor.)
Total Score % and Grade |
Minimum % |
Grade |
80 |
4.0 |
75 |
3.5 |
70 |
3.0 |
65 |
2.5 |
60 |
2.0 |
55 |
1.5 |
40 |
1.0 |
<40 |
0.0 |
Your quiz and homework scores will also be available on angel.
MSU statement on academic integrity.
This page is available at http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/2010spring/PHY440.
Last updated February 1, 2010