Table of Contents


Labs for PHYS 141/142/143

Goals

For the introductory physics laboratories here at the University of Chicago, we have adopted a set of learning objectives. By the end of this course, you should be able to do the following:

* These goals were first outlined by the Physics Education Research Lab at Cornell University for labs at all levels, but especially for introductory labs. You can read more about the philosophy behind these learning goals  here.)

Put succinctly, the goal is to understand how we know, not what we know.

Each lab you work on this year will relate back to one or more of these course objectives and will help you develop and apply the tools of experimental physics. The aim is to teach critical thinking through experimentation, and for you to see how the concepts of lecture are applied (and limited by) specific physical situations.

Student Code Of Conduct

The PDF linked here presents the departments expectations of you in terms of your behavior in the lab and ethical considerations when it comes to presenting your work. Please download and read it. Your TA will go over it on the first day in lab.

Not meeting these expectations can have consequences for both your grade in the course and possibly your standing as a student at the University of Chicago.

Student Code Of Conduct

Overview


Your first in-person meeting will occur during Week 3

Links to experiments will go live at the start of the quarter.

Grading

The description of how your reports will be graded can be found here.

Lab schedule (Autumn Quarter)


Your first in-person lab meeting will occur during Week 3. You should receive information about your lab room and TA assignment during Week 2.

You have an important preparatory assignment (Introduction to Experimental Physics) to complete before the end of Week 2. When you are finished, upload your assignment to Canvas by Friday, October 6 at 5:30 pm CDT to receive credit.

Links to experiments will go live at the start of the quarter.

Week Days PHYS 141 Experiment
1 Sep 29 - Oct 3 NO LAB
2 Oct 6 - Oct 10 Introduction to Experimental Physics (No In-Person Meeting)
3 Oct 13 - Oct 17 Precision Measurements I
4 Oct 20 - Oct 24 Precision Measurements II
5 Oct 27 - Oct 31 Cratering I
6 Nov 3 - Nov 7 Cratering II
7 Nov 10 - Nov 14 Energy Conservation in Real Systems
8 Nov 17 - Nov 21 Moments of Inertia
- Nov 24 - Nov 28 NO LAB / Thanksgiving break
9 Dec 1 - Dec 5 NO LAB

Lab schedule (Winter Quarter)

Links to experiments will go live at the start of the quarter.

Week Days PHYS 142 Experiment
1 Jan 6 - Jan 10 NO LAB
2 Jan 13 - Jan 17 NO LAB
3 Jan 20 - Jan 24 Coulomb's Law I
4 Jan 27 - Jan 31 Coulomb's Law II
5 Feb 3 - Feb 7 Electrical Measurements
6 Feb 10 - Feb 14 Oscilloscopes and AC measurements, Capacitance
7 Feb 17 - Feb 21 Induction and Faraday's Law
8 Feb 24 - Feb 28 e/m of the electron
9 Mar 3 - Mar 7 NO LAB

Lab schedule (Spring Quarter)

Week Days PHYS 143 Experiment
1 Mar 24 - Mar 28 NO LAB
2 Mar 31 - Apr 4 NO LAB
3 Apr 7 - Apr 11 Wave Motion & Sound
4 Apr 14 - Apr 18 Interference
5 Apr 21 - Apr 25 Diffraction
6 Apr 28 - May 2 Geometrical Optics
7 May 5 - May 9 Polarization
8 May 12 - May 16 Thin Film Interference
9 May 19 - May 23

Lab group assignment


When you registered for the course, you were placed into a 2 hour and 50 minute lab section by the Registrar.

It is essential that you are in an appropriate lab section by Friday of Week 2. Contact Tiffany Kurns (tkurns@uchicago.edu) with all lab section scheduling requests.

What to do if you are sick or miss lab


If you miss a lab (due to sickness or emergency), please contact both your lab TA and Tiffany Kurns (tkurns@uchicago.edu) as soon as possible. Tiffany will work with you to find a different lab section to attend later in the week (if one is available and you are able).

If you are unable to attend an alternate section during the same week as your absence, you will need to contact the instructor for the course.

Feedback


The instructional laboratory staff is always interested in feedback. Let us know if you find typos or mistakes, or let us know if you have comments about what you like or don't like about the lab experience.

Please use our Online Feedback Form to leave anonymous (or non-anonymous) comments.