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ISBN 10: 1285737040
ISBN 13: 978-1285737041
Author: Raymond Serway , Chris Vuille
While physics can seem challenging, its true quality is the sheer simplicity of fundamental physical theories–theories and concepts that can enrich your view of the world around you. COLLEGE PHYSICS, Tenth Edition, provides a clear strategy for connecting those theories to a consistent problem-solving approach, carefully reinforcing this methodology throughout the text and connecting it to real-world examples. For students planning to take the MCAT exam, the text includes exclusive test prep and review tools to help you prepare.
College Physics Volume 2 10th Table of contents:
Part 4: Electricity and Magnetism
Ch 15: Electric Forces and Electric Fields
15.1: Properties of Electric Charges
15.2: Insulators and Conductors
15.3: Coulomb’s Law
15.4: The Electric Field
15.5: Electric Field Lines
15.6: Conductors in Electrostatic Equilibrium
15.7: The Millikan Oil-Drop Experiment
15.8: The Van de Graaff Generator
15.9: Electric Flux and Gauss’s Law
Summary
Ch 16: Electrical Energy and Capacitance
16.1: Electric Potential Energy and Electric Potential
16.2: Electric Potential and Potential Energy Due to Point Charges
16.3: Potentials and Charged Conductors
16.4: Equipotential Surfaces
16.5: Applications
16.6: Capacitance
16.7: The Parallel-Plate Capacitor
16.8: Combinations of Capacitors
16.9: Energy Stored in a Charged Capacitor
16.10: Capacitors with Dielectrics
Summary
Ch 17: Current and Resistance
17.1: Electric Current
17.2: A Microscopic View: Current and Drift Speed
17.3: Current and Voltage Measurements in Circuits
17.4: Resistance, Resistivity, and Ohm’s Law
17.5: Temperature Variation of Resistance
17.6: Electrical Energy and Power
17.7: Superconductors
17.8: Electrical Activity in the Heart
Summary
Ch 18: Direct-Current Circuits
18.1: Sources of emf
18.2: Resistors in Series
18.3: Resistors in Parallel
18.4: Kirchhoff’s Rules and Complex DC Circuits
18.5: RC Circuits
18.6: Household Circuits
18.7: Electrical Safety
18.8: Conduction of Electrical Signals by Neurons
Summary
Ch 19: Magnetism
19.1: Magnets
19.2: Earth’s Magnetic Field
19.3: Magnetic Fields
19.4: Magnetic Force on a Current-Carrying Conductor
19.5: Torque on a Current Loop and Electric Motors
19.6: Motion of a Charged Particle in a Magnetic Field
19.7: Magnetic Field of a Long, Straight Wire and Ampere’s Law
19.8: Magnetic Force between Two Parallel Conductors
19.9: Magnetic Fields of Current Loops and Solenoids
19.10: Magnetic Domains
Summary
Ch 20: Induced Voltages and Inductance
20.1: Induced emf and Magnetic Flux
20.2: Faraday’s Law of Induction and Lenz’s Law
20.3: Motional emf
20.4: Generators
20.5: Self-Inductance
20.6: RL Circuits
20.7: Energy Stored in a Magnetic Field
Summary
Ch 21: Alternating-Current Circuits and Electromagnetic Waves
21.1: Resistors in an AC Circuit
21.2: Capacitors in an AC Circuit
21.3: Inductors in an AC Circuit
21.4: The RLC Series Circuit
21.5: Power in an AC Circuit
21.6: Resonance in a Series RLC Circuit
21.7: The Transformer
21.8: Maxwell’s Predictions
21.9: Hertz’s Confirmation of Maxwell’s Predictions
21.10: Production of Electromagnetic Waves by an Antenna
21.11: Properties of Electromagnetic Waves
21.12: The Spectrum of Electromagnetic Waves
21.13: The Doppler Effect for Electromagnetic Waves
Summary
Part 5: Light and Optics
Ch 22: Reflection and Refraction of Light
22.1: The Nature of Light
22.2: Reflection and Refraction
22.3: The Law of Refraction
22.4: Dispersion and Prisms
22.5: The Rainbow
22.6: Huygens’ Principle
22.7: Total Internal Reflection
Summary
Ch 23: Mirrors and Lenses
23.1: Flat Mirrors
23.2: Images Formed by Concave Mirrors
23.3: Convex Mirrors and Sign Conventions
23.4: Images Formed by Refraction
23.5: Atmospheric Refraction
23.6: Thin Lenses
23.7: Lens and Mirror Aberrations
Summary
Ch 24: Wave Optics
24.1: Conditions for Interference
24.2: Young’s Double-Slit Experiment
24.3: Change of Phase Due to Reflection
24.4: Interference in Thin Films
24.5: Using Interference to Read CDs and DVDs
24.6: Diffraction
24.7: Single-Slit Diffraction
24.8: The Diffraction Grating
24.9: Polarization of Light Waves
Summary
Ch 25: Optical Instruments
25.1: The Camera
25.2: The Eye
25.3: The Simple Magnifier
25.4: The Compound Microscope
25.5: The Telescope
25.6: Resolution of Single-Slit and Circular Apertures
25.7: The Michelson Interferometer
Summary
Part 6: Modern Physics
Ch 26: Relativity
26.1: Galilean Relativity
26.2: The Speed of Light
26.3: Einstein’s Principle of Relativity
26.4: Consequences of Special Relativity
26.5: Relativistic Momentum
26.6: Relative Velocity in Special Relativity
26.7: Relativistic Energy and the Equivalence of Mass and Energy
26.8: General Relativity
Summary
Ch 27: Quantum Physics
27.1: Blackbody Radiation and Planck’s Hypothesis
27.2: The Photoelectric Effect and the Particle Theory of Light
27.3: X-Rays
27.4: Diffraction of X-Rays by Crystals
27.5: The Compton Effect
27.6: The Dual Nature of Light and Matter
27.7: The Wave Function
27.8: The Uncertainty Principle
Summary
Ch 28: Atomic Physics
28.1: Early Models of the Atom
28.2: Atomic Spectra
28.3: The Bohr Model
28.4: Quantum Mechanics and the Hydrogen Atom
28.5: The Exclusion Principle and the Periodic Table
28.6: Characteristic X-Rays
28.7: Atomic Transitions and Lasers
Summary
Ch 29: Nuclear Physics
29.1: Some Properties of Nuclei
29.2: Binding Energy
29.3: Radioactivity
29.4: The Decay Processes
29.5: Natural Radioactivity
29.6: Nuclear Reactions
29.7: Medical Applications of Radiation
Summary
Ch 30: Nuclear Energy and Elementary Particles
30.1: Nuclear Fission
30.2: Nuclear Fusion
30.3: Elementary Particles and the Fundamental Forces
30.4: Positrons and Other Antiparticles
30.5: Classification of Particles
30.6: Conservation Laws
30.7: The Eightfold Way
30.8: Quarks and Color
30.9: Electroweak Theory and the Standard Model
30.10: The Cosmic Connection
30.11: Unanswered Questions in Cosmology
30.12: Problems and Perspectives
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