General Information

PHYS 103: Physics of Music Laboratory

Fall 2011

Textbook: Physics 103 Laboratory Manual
Fall 2011 edition

Dr. O.W. Greenberg

Office: Physics Room 4108
Phone: 301 405 6014
e-mail: owgreen@umd.edu

Yee Cheung

Robyn Dunstan

Joe Tylka

Office: Physics 3103B Office: Physics 3103B Office: to be decided
Phone: 53213 Phone: to be decided Phone: to be decided
elims@umd.edu rdunstan@umd.edu jtylka@umd.edu

Section 0101: Th 11:00-12:50 (Yee Cheung)
Section 0201: Th 1:00-2:50 (Joe Tylka)
Section 0301: Th 3:30-5:20 (Yee Cheung)
Section 0401: F 10:00-11:50 (Robyn Dunstan)
Section 0501: F 12:00-1:50 (Yee Cheung)
Section 0601: F 2:00-3:50 (Robyn Dunstan)
Section 0701: W 3:00-4:50 (Yee Cheung)
Section 0801: W 1:00-2:50 (Yee Cheung)

PHYSICS 103: PHYSICS OF MUSIC LABORATORY is a one credit-hour course that must be taken concurrently with PHYSICS 102: PHYSICS OF MUSIC to receive CORE credit, and may not be taken for credit by physics majors. The lab meets for two hours weekly, giving students hands-on in-depth experience with some of the topics covered in the Physics of Music lecture class.

This is a participatory activity; it is mandatory that you attend all labs. It is also important that you prepare for your lab period by reading over the lab instruction sheet and doing the pre-lab questions. Pre-lab questions serve both as a review of important ideas and preparation for lab activities. If you do not do the pre-lab questions before you come to lab, points will be subtracted from your grade. If you do not understand the questions or have difficulty completing the assignment, you may ask questions. Reports are completed in lab, left at the end of the lab period for grading, and will be returned to the student during the next lab meeting, so that writing (and grading) long and detailed lab reports is avoided.

YOU MUST BRING YOUR LAB MANUAL TO ALL LAB SESSIONS. You will tear pages out of your manual to make your lab report, so you must buy a new lab manual.

If you miss a lab, the reason for your absence must be submitted to the instructor in writing. If your absence is due to one of the University approved acceptable excuses (as given in the University Undergraduate Catalog) you will be permitted to make up the missed lab. The preferred way to make up the missed lab is to attend one of the lab sessions during the same week. You may also make up the missed lab in one of the lab sessions during the MAKE-UP week at the end of the semester. If you must make up more than one lab, you may attend any lab MAKE-UP session during the MAKE-UP week. Please see the Physics 103 Schedule for details.

Grading will be based on total point accumulation for the eleven labs, each having 40 points. A histogram of total scores will be made, and letter grades assigned approximately as follows:

Top 20%......................A
Next 40%.....................B
Next 30%.....................C
Bottom 10%..............D or F

To qualify for an A, you must distinguish yourself among your peers. It is mandatory to do all labs. Missing one labwill lower your grade at least one letter grade; missing two or more will result in a grade of F. If neither of these situations applies, no D or F grades will be given.

Preparation for Lab #1:

For the first laboratory you should:

(1) obtain your lab manual,
(2) read the Introduction and Lab Experiment #1, and come prepared to ask questions if you do not understand the material, and
(3) answer the pre-lab questions on the first page of the lab data sheet for Lab #1 (page 7 in the manual) before coming to lab.

Honors Code

The Student Honor Council respectfully requests that faculty members place the following passage in their course syllabi in order to inform students of the consequences of academic dishonesty:

"The University of Maryland, College Park has a nationally recognized Code of Academic Integrity, administered by the Student Honor Council. This Code sets standards for academic integrity at Maryland for all undergraduate and graduate students. As a student you are responsible for upholding these standards for this course. It is very important for you to be aware of the consequences of cheating, fabrication, facilitation, and plagiarism. For more information on the Code of Academic Integrity or the Student Honor Council, please visit http://www.studenthonorcouncil.umd.edu/whatis.html