• Best of luck to the class of 2024 for their HSC exams. You got this!
    Let us know your thoughts on the HSC exams here
  • YOU can help the next generation of students in the community!
    Share your trial papers and notes on our Notes & Resources page
MedVision ad

Search results

  1. willC

    question on spin on nucleons

    Yes, as far as I can tell spin isn't actually an observable property, it's a description of how it's angular momentum behaves mathematically. The whole concept of a point mass being able to spin is absurd-it has no axis on which it can rotate! Hence why its called "intrinsic spin" 1/2 spin...
  2. willC

    Maths 2 unit marks

    Ahh, very clever. Thanks ;)
  3. willC

    Maths 2 unit marks

    So we dont do the 2 unit exam....but those 2 units are still counted, right? So what kind of mark do we get for them?
  4. willC

    Cloud Chamber Set up?

    It also lets us see some of the properties of the different radiation types: Alpha rays produce thick, short trails-suggesting they are large with little penetrating ability. Beta produces very thin long trails-small, highly penetrating particles. As for gamma, you cant really detect...
  5. willC

    JJ Thompson Experiment

    No worries! I enjoyed it. Thanks for the hints, too, Forbidden... Yes...Beatles rock.
  6. willC

    Cloud Chamber Set up?

    Aim too of course, and interpretation of results
  7. willC

    polystyrene

    Yes! I'm pretty sure ive seen a question like that before somewhere...Foamed polystyrene is a good heat insulator as it has lots of air pockets in the bubbly bits i think....
  8. willC

    JJ Thompson Experiment

    Ok, hope this helps... There are two physical steps to Thompson's experiment, the rest is purely mathematical THE EXPERIMENTAL STEPS Step 1: Place an electric and a magnetic field on a cathode ray tube so that their force on the electrons in the cathode ray balance each other. When the...
  9. willC

    NOTES on Standard Model - Quarks, Leptons etc

    For a very complete explanation (i mean, you have to skip over heaps cause its too basic) theres always particleadventure.org. Theres a wonderful poster there too...
  10. willC

    Astronaut re entry

    This is an interesting question, I always remeber the answer by imagining the force exerted on a parachuter when they open the chute (the parachute, of course, is used to decelerate). So easy to get wrong tho...its the opposite of what you'd think..
  11. willC

    motors q

    Polarity, in this sense, is simply the direction in which the electrons are flowing, i.e. which end of the coil we call positive and which we call negative
  12. willC

    e Day!!!!

    2nd July is e Day!!!! Not quite as good as pi day, but still a whole lot of mathing fun! What will you do in memory of e that day?
  13. willC

    How do you do your shelling?

    So how do you do your volumes by shelling? My teacher and some of the textbooks im using say to do it by finding the circumference of the shell as the width of its sides tends to 0, then using this, the length and the height of the shell to calculate the volume etc...but the Cambridge text uses...
  14. willC

    Graphmatica

    xFunctions is good too, and free http://math.hws.edu/xFunctions/
  15. willC

    Just Wondering

    I just think they're are really good revision...and i really dont want to lock myself into 4 unit just yet, just incase...
  16. willC

    whiteboards

    I really wish i had one.....i use them at school whenever i study. It makes maths so much easier!
Top