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Describe most of the macroscopic world

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Presentation on theme: "Describe most of the macroscopic world"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Describe most of the macroscopic world
Classical Physics The Foundation of pure & applied (macroscopic) physics & engineering! Newton’s Laws + Boltzmann’s Statistical Mechanics (& Thermodynamics): Describe most of the macroscopic world Classical Mechanics: The Physics of the 17th & 18th centuries. Still useful! High speeds (v ~ c): Special Relativity: 20th century physics! Small size (atomic & smaller): Quantum Mechanics: 20th century physics! Physics 5301!

3 Four Fundamental Forces Of Nature!
Mechanics HOW objects move (behave) under given forces. (Usually) Does not deal with the sources of forces. Answers the question: Given the forces, how do objects move? Forces are classified into 4 types: Four Fundamental Forces Of Nature! Mechanics applies to all four!

4 4 Fundamental Forces of Nature Sources of the forces, in order of decreasing strength
Strong Nuclear Force: Binds nuclei together. Still being researched. Electromagnetic Force: E&M phenomena. Chemical forces. Most everyday forces. Maxwell, Coulomb, Ampere, Faraday, ... Weak Nuclear Force: Nuclear decay. Fermi, Bethe, others. Still being researched. Gravitational Force: Newton (classical mechanics) Einstein (general relativity)

5 4 Fundamental Forces of Nature Sources of the forces, in order of decreasing strength

6 4 Fundamental Forces The “Electro-Weak” Force:
Since ~ the late 1960’s, in some sense the 4 fundamental forces have been reduced to 3! The Electromagnetic Force & the Weak Nuclear Force were combined into one theory. S. Weinberg & A. Salaam: 1972 Nobel Prize in Physics!

7 The Standard Model of Particle Physics
The “Periodic Table for Elementary Particles”! Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) and the Electroweak Theory Protons & Neutrons consist of 3 Quarks each.

8 Standard Model

9 Standard Model

10 Standard Model

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12 Statistical Mechanics: (This course!)
The Rest of Physics! What we’ve mentioned is  all of physics except: Statistical Mechanics: (This course!) Mechanics of systems of huge numbers of particles (>> ~ 1023). Uses Probability & statistics to compute macroscopic properties from microscopic force laws. Applies to BOTH the Classical Mechanics & the Quantum Mechanics world! The major LINK between microscopic & macroscopic physics! Contains Thermodynamics as a sub-theory!


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