Some butterflies have bright blue wings without any blue pigments.
Explain briefly how this is possible. 1
(b)
To which of the laws represented by Maxwell's Equations
did Maxwell himself actually make a direct contribution,
and what was his contribution? 2
(c)
If
and
are respectively
the permittivity and the permeability of free space,
what is the value (including units) of the quantity
and what does it represent? 3
(d)
In an LCR circuit driven by an AC voltage,
the real current through the resistor is zero
at any instant when [encircle all correct answers] 4
i.
the charge on the capacitor is zero.
ii.
the charge on the capacitor is largest.
iii.
the voltage across the inductor is zero.
iv.
the voltage across the inductor is largest.
(e)
In a hydrogen atom, the electrostatic force between
the proton and electron is
times greater
than the gravitational force.
If we can adjust the distance between the two particles,
at what separation will the electrostatic and gravitational
forces between them be equal in magnitude?
Explain.5
(f)
A capacitor is made from two metal plates
of area A separated by a distance d.
The gap is filled with two dielectric slabs
of equal thickness but with different
dielectric constants
and .
Calculate the capacitance in terms of
the parameters given. 6
(g)
Suppose you have a superconducting coil,
a capacitor and a 1000
resistor.
First you charge up the capacitor and put it
in series with the coil; this circuit oscillates
at a frequency of
kHz.
Next you charge up the same capacitor
and discharge it through the resistor.
(No coil in the circuit this time.)
It takes 0.1 s for the charge on the capacitor
to drop to 1/e of its original value.
What was the inductance of the coil?7
(h)
Encircle any of the following circuits which are ``simple''
(can be reduced to an equivalent series
R and/or C and/or L and/or
circuit).
The wires in the leftmost circuit are along the edges
of a 3-dimensional cube.
Assume that all similar circuit elements are identical. 8
2.
TWO-STATE SYSTEM [12 marks]
A simple organism has only two possible microstates:
``asleep'' with zero energy or ``awake''
with energy
eV.
It is in thermal equilibrium with its environment.
(a)
[3 marks]
At what temperature is the organism 1/e times as likely
to be awake as to be asleep? (
) 9
(b)
[3 marks]
At what temperature does it have an equal probability
of being asleep or awake? 10 In the space below, sketch
(c)
[3 marks]
The probability of being awake
as a function of
for a fixed ``waking'' microstate energy
. 11
(d)
[3 marks]
The probability of being awake
as a function of the ``waking'' microstate energy
for a given . 12
(Include axis labels and vertical scales on your sketches.)
3.
CYLINDER OF CHARGE [12 marks]
A long solid insulating cylinder of radius R
is uniformly charged with a positive charge density
[charge per unit volume].
A small hole is drilled straight through the cylinder
at right angles to its axis, as shown.
Assume that the hole is very far from the ends of the cylinder.
(a)
[6 marks]
Show that the electric field in the hole is
proportional to the distance from the cylinder axis. 13
(b)
[6 marks]
Show that a negatively charged particle
dropped straight into the hole
will execute simple harmonic motion
as long as it doesn't hit the sides of the hole. 14
4.
SOLENOID DESIGN [12 marks]
You are given a certain volumeV of copper
from which to make wire with a square cross section.
The wire you make is then used to wind a
one-layer solenoid as shown.
(Ignore the practical necessity for insulation between the wires
and pretend that they can be wound so that the distance between
turns is exactly the width of the wire.)
Your goal is to generate the highest possible magnetic field
at the centre of the solenoid.
(a)
[6 marks]
For wire of a given cross section and
for a given currentI in the wire,
should you make the inside diameter
of the solenoid large or small?
Explain. 15
(b)
[6 marks]
For a given inside diameter and
for a given voltage
applied to the solenoid,
should you make the wire long and thin
or short and thick? Explain. 16
5.
FALLING BAR [12 marks]
A horizontal bar of mass m is free to slide without friction
down the vertical rails of a conducting frame, as shown.
The combined resistance of the bar and the frame
is negligible compared to R, the resistance placed in series
with this circuit.
What is the terminal speed of the bar
as it falls under the influence of gravity
(at the surface of the Earth)
through a uniform horizontal magnetic field
directed perpendicular to the plane of the frame?
(Give your answer in terms of m, B, ,
R, g
and other fundamental constants.) 17
6.
3-SLIT GRATING [12 marks]
Most gratings have a very large number of ``slits'' -
but picture one that has only three 25 m wide slits,
uniformly spaced 100 m apart (center to center).
This grating is uniformly illuminated with
greenish blue light of wavelength
nm
incident normal to the plane of the grating,
producing an interference pattern on a screen 1 m away,
oriented parallel to the plane of the grating.
(a)
[4 marks] Make a detailed sketch of the resulting interference pattern
(intensity as a function of position on the screen).
You may plot the intensity in arbitrary units, but please
include units and dimensions on the position axis.
Show at least the range from the central maximum out to
the first diffraction minimum on each side. 18
(b)
[4 marks]
Ignoring diffraction due to the finite width of the individual slits,
sketch the phasor diagram for the position in the
interference pattern where the intensity first drops
to one ninth (1/9) of its value at the central maximum. 19
(c)
[4 marks]
Suppose that light of a slightly different colour
(wavelength
)
shines on the grating in the same way at the same time.
What is the smallest wavelength difference
that can just barely be resolved at the first principal maximum? 20