Instructor: | Jim Crumley |
Office: | 107 Peter Engel Science Center |
Email: | jcrumley@csbsju.edu |
Phone: | 363–3183 |
Office Hour: | 1:50 pm MWF (or by appointment or just stop by) |
Lecture: | 12:40-1:35 |
Room: | 167 Peter Engel Science Center |
Textbook: | Introduction to Electrodynamics by David J. Griffiths, (Fourth Edition) |
Web Site: | http://www.physics.csbsju.edu/~jcrumley/341/ |
The physical understanding of electricity and magnetism is much more recent than the understanding of classical mechanics. Some electric and magnetic phenomena have been observed since ancient times, though little progress was made in understanding them until the eighteenth century. Much of the modern world depends on electromagnetism, the foundation of which has been understood since Maxwell’s time. Even though this foundation is well established, electromagnetism is still the basis of much physics research today.
From the standpoint of your physics education, this is also an important class. This class will be even more mathematically intensive than Physical Mechanics, largely due to the intrinsically three-dimensional nature of the magnetic field and force. This leads to the necessity to use vector calculus more than we have before.
In a sense, this course consists of a retelling of the physics that you learned in Physics 200. You now have a stronger mathematical background, as well as a stronger understanding of classical mechanics, so we can go back over the material in more detail and cover topics that were not within your reach before.
Homework will be assigned for this class and will most often be due weekly. Make sure that you take the homework seriously since working through these problems is where much of the learning in this class will take place. Note that solutions to the problems in this textbook are available at a variety of places online. Do not use those solutions. Using them is academic misconduct.
Plagiarism will not be tolerated in any part of this course — on tests, on homework, or on lab work. Cases of plagiarism will be dealt with following the schools’ Academic Misconduct policy.
If you need special accommodations for class, please let me know in advance.
Quizzes will be given in class frequently. Most will be very short problems which will just be graded on whether or not a serious attempt was made to complete the problem. Other quizzes will be like homework problems and will be graded normally. I will also be assigning problems for the students to present to the class.
You can bring a single-sided (double-sided for the final), 8.5 x 11 inch sized cheat sheet to each test that has relevant formulas and constants on it. No worked out problems or examples allowed on the equations sheet. Tests will consist of several problems.
The grades in this class will be based on 6 scores: quiz/class problems, homework score, 3 test scores, and the final exam score. Quizzes/class problems and the homework will be worth 15 % each. The tests will be 14% each and the final will be worth 28 %.
In this class, we will cover at least the first seven chapters of the textbook. If time permits we will also
cover some of chapter 8, 9, and 12. A tentative test schedule is shown below:
Test 1 | February 12 | |
Test 2 | March 19 | |
Test 3 | April 20 | |
Final Exam | May 10 | 8:00–10:00 am |