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Engineering Physics
Department of Physics & Engineering Physics, College of Arts and Science

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Results 1 - 10 of 17 Courses

Engineering Physics >

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE COURSES
E P 155.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Electric and Magnetic Circuits I
2(3L-1.5P)
Prerequisite(s): G E 124 and MATH 110 (taken).

Topics include Coulomb's law, sources of dc potential, resistance, conductance, Ohm's law, power and energy, ammeters, voltmeters, voltage dividers, ohmmeter, Kirchhoff's laws, series and parallel circuits, circuit analysis techniques, Wheatstone bridge, electrostatic fields, dielectric materials, capacitance, series and parallel arrangement of capacitors, transients in R-C circuits.

E P 225.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Waves, Fields and Optics
2(3L-1.5P)
Prerequisite(s): PHYS 111 or 121 or both G E 125 and E P 155; MATH 223 or 225 or 276; Math 224 or 226 or 238 (may be taken concurrently).

Offers an introduction to mechanical and electromagnetic wave phenomena including derivation of wave equations and wave velocities, energy and momentum carried by waves, wave reflection in terms of impedance mismatch, standing waves, and radiation of electromagnetic waves. This is followed by geometrical and physical optics.

E P 228.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Computer Tools for Engineering Physics
2(3L-4P)
Prerequisite(s): CMPT 116; G E 120; MATH 238 (or MATH 224 or 226 which may be taken as a corequisite).

The emphasis of this class is to investigate the practical engineering and scientific applications of mathematical techniques that were introduced previously in other classes. This goal is realized through the design and development of software systems to solve problems related to: electric circuit analysis; numerical differentiation, integration and interpolation of real world measurements; modelling of physical systems and Fourier decomposition. In the laboratory portion of this class the students write their own software to solve problems that are introduced in the formal lectures.

E P 271.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Heat, Kinetic Theory and Thermodynamics
2(3L-1.5P)
Prerequisite(s): MATH 238 (or corequisite MATH 224 or 226); PHYS 251.

Calorimetry, thermal expansion, heat transfer and the empirical gas laws. Kinetic theory of gases: specific heats, Boltzmann distribution. Mean free path and transport phenomena. Zeroth, first and second laws of thermodynamics. Entropy and heat engines.

E P 311.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Electronics 1
1(3L-4P)
Prerequisite(s): E P 228 or MATH 264 or MATH 266; PHYS 229 (or 227).
Corequisite(s): MATH 338.

Introduces analogue electronics. The course covers network analysis, AC circuits, the physics and operation of semiconductors, junction diodes, transistors, the design of amplifier circuits, small signal analysis, and operational amplifiers (op-amps).

E P 317.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Applied Physics of Materials
2(3L)
Prerequisite(s): PHYS 371 and 381.

Introduction to atomic structure, bonding, types of solids, crystalline states, and types of crystals. Solid solutions. Mechanical properties strain and thermal expansion. Thermal fluctuations, noise and thermally activated processes. Heat capacity of solids. Electrical conductivity of pure metals and solid solutions. Temperature dependence. Hall effect. Energy band structure in solids. Semiconductors. Classical and Fermi-Dirac statistics. Conduction in metals. Contact potential. Seeback effect, thermocouple. Thermionic emission and vacuum tube devices. Phonons. Debye heat capacity and heat conductivity. Extrinsic, p- and n- semiconductors. Conductivity and temperature dependence. Optical absorption. Luminescence. Shottky diode. Ohmic contract and thermoelectric effect.

E P 320.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Discrete Linear Systems and Applied Information Theory
2(3L-3P)
Prerequisite(s): PHYS 229 (or 227); MATH 224 or 226 or 238.

An introduction to discrete linear systems and applied information theory with strong emphasis on both analytic and computer based solutions to practical physical problems in systems engineering and data analysis. In the laboratory portion of this class the students write their own software to solve problems that are introduced in the formal lectures. These problems include: discrete solutions to LCR circuits; discrete filtering of measurements collected in real experiments; the frequency responses of any linear system; and amplitude modulation of signals.

E P 321.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Electronics II
2(3L-4P)
Prerequisite(s): E P 311.

Introduces digital electronics and completes some analogure electronic topics not covered in E P 311. Analogue topics include transducers, feedback systems, modulators, frequency converters, amplifier configurations and design. The majority of the course covers digital electronics, including logic operation and implementation (AND, OR, NOT), binary numbers, Boolean algebra, memory elements, ROM, RAM, logic circuits (adders, counter, etc.), A/D and D/A converters, and simple microprocessors. Circuit design principles are emphasised and a major design project is undertaken.

E P 324.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Mechanics IV
1(3L)
Prerequisite(s): G E 226 or PHYS 223.
Corequisite(s): MATH 338.

Covers three-dimensional rigid body dynamics and introduces fluid mechanics concepts such as the control-volume approach, the continuity equation, derivation of Bernoulli's equation, and conservation of momentum and energy in a fluid system.

E P 413.3
Registration Info — 2004-2005 Regular Session» Instrumentation and Design
1(3L)
Prerequisite(s): E P 321.
Corequisite(s): E P 414.

A course in electronic instrumentation and in design of measuring equipment. Emphasis is placed on digital techniques for the measurement of physical parameters.


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