Module 1
Module 1
Oas, Albay
BSEd – 3B
CONCEPCION R. DELGADO
Instructor
1
Module 1-Modern Physics
Most of our everyday experiences and observations have to do with objects that move much
less than the speed of light. Newtonian mechanics was formulated to describe the motion of
such objects, and its formalism is quite successful in describing a wide range of phenomena
that occur at low speeds. If fails, however, when applied to particles having speeds
approaching that of light.
The existence of a universal speed limit has far - reaching consequences. It means
that the usual concepts of force, momentum, and energy no longer apply for rapidly moving
objects. A less obvious consequence is that observers moving at different speeds will
measure different time intervals and displacements between the same two events. Relating
the measurements made by different observers is the subject of relativity
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Module 1-Modern Physics
Table of Contents
Preface 2
Pre-Test 4
Lesson 1 – Density and Specific Gravity
Objective and Discussion of the Topic 6
Task 1.1.1 8
Task 1.1.2 10
Lesson 2 – Pressure
Objectives 11
Discussion of the Topic 11
Task 1.2 14
Lesson 3 – Atmospheric Pressure
Objectives and Discussion of the Topic 15
Task 1.3 17
Post-Test 17
References 18
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Module 1-Modern Physics
MULTIPLE CHOICE: Choose the letter of the correct answer.
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Module 1-Modern Physics
LESSON 1
Theory of Relativity
Objectives
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Module 1-Modern Physics
observed from these frames obey Newton’s first law, the law of inertia. For the situation
described in the previous paragraph, the laboratory coordinate system and the
coordinate system of the moving car are both inertial frames of reference.
Consequently, if the laws of mechanics are found to be true in the laboratory, then the
person in the car must also observe the same laws.
The motion of the ball obeys the law of gravity and Newton’s laws of motion. It can
be concluded that There is no preferred frame of reference for describing the
laws of mechanics.
It’s natural to ask whether the concept of Galilean relativity in mechanics also
applies to experiments in electricity, magnetism, optics, and other areas. Experiments
indicate that the answer is no. Further, if we assume the laws of electricity ,and
magnetism are the same in all inertial frames, a paradox concerning the speed of light
immediately arises. According to electromagnetic theory, the speed of light always has
the fixed value of 2.997 924 58 x 108 m/s in free space.
According to Galilean relativity, however, the speed of the pulse relative to the
stationary observer S outside the boxcar in Figure should be c + v. Hence, Galilean
relativity is inconsistent with Maxwell’s well-tested theory of electromagnetism.
Electromagnetic theory predicts that light waves must propagate through free
space with a speed equal to the speed of light. The theory doesn’t require the presence
of a medium for wave propagation, however. This is in contrast to other types of waves,
such as water or sound waves, that do require a medium to support the disturbances.
In the nineteenth century, physicists thought that electromagnetic waves also required
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Module 1-Modern Physics
a medium to propagate. They proposed that such a medium existed and gave it the
name luminiferous ether. The ether was assumed to be present everywhere, even
in empty space, and light waves were viewed as ether oscillations. Further, the ether
would have to be a massless but rigid medium with no effect on the motion of planets
or other objects. These concepts are indeed strange. In addition, it was found that the
troublesome laws of electricity and magnetism would take on their simplest forms in a
special frame of reference at rest with respect to the ether. This frame was called the
absolute frame. The laws of electricity and magnetism would be valid in this absolute
frame, but they would have to be modified in any reference frame moving with respect
to the absolute frame.
In 1905, Albert Einstein proposed a theory that explained the result of the
Michelson-Morley experiment and completely altered our notions of space and time.
He based his special theory of relativity on two postulates:
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Module 1-Modern Physics
1. The principle of relativity:
All laws of physics are the same in all inertial reference frames.
Einstein was not convinced that a light beam would appear as if it is at rest if one
travels along beside it. Instead, he concluded that light could be measured by an observer
as if it is moving away from him at approximately 3 x 108 m/s ( 300 000 km/s)
Contrary to the belief that mass is constant wherever it is taken and whether it is
moving or at rest, Einstein considers that the mass of a moving body is not constant. This
is explained by Newton’s law of acceleration where, according to Einstein, the mass of an
object increases when work is done to increase the 1velocity of an object. This is shown
in the equation
𝑚0
mrel = 2
√1− 𝑣2
𝑐
where mrel is the relativistic mass, v is the speed, mo is the mass of the body when at
rest, or its mass, and c is the speed of light.
Example:
An electron is travelling at half the speed of light. Compute the relativistic mass of the
electron if its rest mass is 9.11 x 10-31 kg.
Given
𝑚0
mrel = 2
√1− 𝑣2
𝑐
9.11 𝑥 10−31 9.11 𝑥 10−31
mrel = = 1
1 2 √1−
√1− (2𝑐) 4
𝑐2
= 1.15 ( 9.11 𝑥 10−31 )
= 1.05 x 10-30 kg
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Module 1-Modern Physics
Task 1.1.1
1. True or False. If you were traveling in a spaceship at a speed of c/2 relative to Earth and
you fired a laser beam in the direction of the spaceship’s motion, the light from the laser
would travel at a speed of 3c/2 relative to Earth.
2. Choose the option from each pair that makes the following statement correct.
According to an observer at rest, moving clocks run more [(a) slowly; (b) quickly] than
Stationary clocks and moving rods [(c) longer; (d) shorter] than stationary rods.
3. An object in motion has a mass of 12 kg and travels in the air with a velocity of 0.82c.
What would be its rest mass?
4. A particle with a rest mass of 1.26 x 10-24 kg travels with a velocity of 0.65c. What is its
relativistic mass?
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Module 1-Modern Physics
LESSON 2
Equivalence of Mass and Energy
Objectives
The remarkable equivalence between matter and energy is given in one of the most
famous equations:
E=mc2
In this equation, E stands for energy, m stands for mass, and c, the constant that relates the
two, is the speed of light (3 × 108 meters per second). Note that mass is a measure of the
quantity of matter, so the significance of this equation is that matter can be converted into
energy and energy can be converted into matter. The equation shows that mass and energy
are not the same.
When we convert matter into energy, we consider how much mass the matter has.
Note that matter does not have to travel at the speed of light (or the speed of light squared)
for this conversion to occur. The factor of c2 is just the number that Einstein showed must be
used to relate mass and energy.
Notice that this formula does not tell us how to convert mass into energy. The formulas
merely tell us what the equivalent values are if we succeed in making the conversion. When
Einstein first derived his formula in 1905, no one had the faintest idea of how to convert mass
into energy in any practical way. Einstein himself tried to discourage speculation that the large-
scale conversion of atomic mass into energy would be feasible in the near future. Today, as a
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Module 1-Modern Physics
result of developments in nuclear physics, we regularly convert mass into energy in power
plants, nuclear weapons, and high-energy physics experiments in particle accelerators.
Because the speed of light squared (c2) is a very large quantity, the conversion of even
a small amount of mass results in a very large amount of energy. For example, the complete
conversion of 1 gram of matter (about 1/28 ounce, or approximately 1 paperclip) would
produce as much energy as the burning of 15,000 barrels of oil.
Scientists soon realized that the conversion of mass into energy is the source of the
Sun’s heat and light. With Einstein’s equation of E = mc2, we can calculate that the amount of
energy radiated by the Sun could be produced by the complete conversion of about 4 million
tons of matter into energy inside the Sun each second. Destroying 4 million tons per second
sounds like a lot when compared to earthly things, but bear in mind that the Sun is a very big
reservoir of matter. In fact, we will see that the Sun contains more than enough mass to destroy
such huge amounts of matter and still continue shining at its present rate for billions of years.
The constant term mc2 is independent of the speed of the object, is called the rest energy of
the object, ER:
The term 𝛾mc2 in Equation depends on the object’s speed and is the sum of the kinetic and
rest energies. We define 𝛾mc2 to be the total energy E, so
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Module 1-Modern Physics
c2 = 9 X 1016 m2/s2. The equation ER = mc2, as Einstein first suggested, indirectly implies
that the mass of a particle may be completely convertible to energy and that pure energy —
for example, electromagnetic energy — may be converted to particles having mass. That is
indeed the case, as has been shown in the laboratory many times in interactions involving
matter and antimatter.
On a larger scale, nuclear power plants produce energy by the fission of uranium,
which involves the conversion of a small amount of the mass of the uranium into energy. The
Sun, too, converts mass into energy and continually loses mass in pouring out a tremendous
amount of electromagnetic energy in all directions. It’s extremely interesting that although we
have been talking about the interconversion of mass and energy for particles, the expression
E = mc2 is universal and applies to all objects, processes, and systems: a hot object has
slightly more mass and is slightly more difficult to accelerate than an identical cold object
because it has more thermal energy, and a stretched spring has more elastic potential energy
and more mass than an identical unstretched spring. A key point, however, is that these
changes in mass are often far too small to measure. Our best bet for measuring mass changes
is in nuclear transformations, where a measurable fraction of the mass is converted into
energy.
Example:
1. How much energy is contained in a particle that has a mass of m=1μg?
2. Two grams of helium are completely converted into energy and used to power
a 100kg man. If all of this energy is converted into kinetic energy of the man, how fast will
he move?
Solution:
The energy from the two grams of helium:
1
E = mc2 KE = mv2
2
1
= 2g ( 3 x 108 m/s)2 1.8 x1014 = 100 v2
2
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Module 1-Modern Physics
Task 1.2
1. An electron moves with a speed v =0.850c. Find its total energy and kinetic energy in
mega electron volts (MeV) and compare the latter to the classical kinetic energy
(106 eV =1 MeV).
2. Calculate the total energy and the kinetic energy in MeV of a proton traveling at 0.600c.
(The rest energy of a proton is approximately 938 MeV.)
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Module 1-Modern Physics
LESSON 3
Relativistic Momentum
Objectives
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Module 1-Modern Physics
Note that we use u for velocity here to distinguish it
from relative velocity v between observers. Only one
observer is being considered here. With p defined in
this way, total momentum ptot is conserved whenever
the net external force is zero, just as in classical
physics. Again, we see that the relativistic quantity
becomes virtually the same as the classical at low
velocities. That is, relativistic
momentum γmu becomes the classical mu at low
velocities, because γ is very nearly equal to 1 at low
velocities. Relativistic momentum approaches infinity as the
velocity of an object approaches the speed of light.
Relativistic momentum has the same intuitive feel as classical momentum. It is greatest
for large masses moving at high velocities, but, because of the factor γ, relativistic momentum
approaches infinity as u approaches c. This is another indication that an object with mass
cannot reach the speed of light. If it did, its momentum would become infinite, an unreasonable
value.
The conservation of momentum is guaranteed in all inertial frames when relativistic
momentum is established. Relativistic momentum, like classical momentum, is conserved
whenever the net external force on a system is zero. Several experiments have confirmed
this.
In Relativistic Energy, the relationship of relativistic momentum to energy is
explored. That subject will produce our first inkling that objects without mass may also have
momentum.
Example 1:
What is the momentum of an electron traveling at a speed 0.985c? The rest mass of the
electron is 9.11 × 10−31 kg.
Given:
m = 9.11 × 10−31 kg
v = 0.985c
Solution
𝑚𝑢 (9.11 × 10−31 kg)(0.985)(3.00 x 108 𝑚/𝑠)
p=𝛾mu= 2
= 2
= 1.56 x 10−21 kg∙ 𝑚/𝑠
√1− 𝑢2 √1− (0.985)
2
𝑐 𝑐
Example 2
Task 1.3
1. Find the momentum of a helium nucleus having a mass of 6.68 × 10 −27 kg that
is moving at 0.200c.
2. What is the momentum of an electron traveling at 0.980c?
3. (a) Find the momentum of a 1.00 × 10 9 kg asteroid heading towards the Earth
at 30.0 km/s. (b) Find the ratio of this momentum to the classical momentum.
1 𝑣2
(Hint: Use the approximation that γ=1+( ) ( 2 ) at low velocities.)
2 𝑐
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Module 1-Modern Physics
4. What is the velocity of an electron that has a momentum of 3.04 × 10 −21 kg ·
m/s? Note that you must calculate the velocity to at least four digits to see the
difference from c.
5. (a) Calculate γ for a proton that has a momentum of 1.00 kg · m/s. (b) What is
its speed? Such protons form a rare component of cosmic radiation with
uncertain origins.
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Module 1-Modern Physics
III. References:
• Kirkpatrick &Wheeler. Physics: A World View. USA. Saunders College
Publishing
• Raymond Serway. College Physics.Cengage
• https://books.google.com.ph/books?id=uTM8AAAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&
source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
• https://phys.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Modern_Physics/Book%3A_Spiral_Mod
ern_Physics_(D'Alessandris)/2%3A_The_Special_Theory_of_Relativity__Dyna
mics/2.1%3A_Relativistic_Momentum%2C_Force_and_Energy
CONCEPCION R. DELGADO
Instructor
17
Module 1-Modern Physics