INTRODUCTION TO THE PHYSICS OF MATTER (UNIT 1)
cod. 1004038

Academic year 2016/17
3° year of course - First semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Fisica della materia (FIS/03)
Field
Microfisico e della struttura della materia
Type of training activity
Characterising
52 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in - - -

Integrated course unit module: INTRODUCTION TO THE PHYSICS OF MATTER

Learning objectives

To develop the skill of solving simple problems in semiclassical physics, in the first part of the course, and quantum phyisics, in the second part, applied to nuclei, elementary particles and atoms. Tutorials and homeworks, individually corrected and graded, favour the development of learning skills, communication abilities and judgement.

Prerequisites

The student must know classical physics, with problem solving competence. He/she is strongly edvised to attend in parallel the course Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (or to have attended a similar course), and to have working experience in the basic mathematical methods of physics. There are no formal prerequisites.

Course unit content

Nuclei
Elementary particles
Atoms

Full programme

1 Introduction, Nuclei, phenomenology.

2 Four experiments: Rutherford scattering, the proton, Chadwick and the neutron, Hofstadter and the nuclear dimensions.

3. Binding energy, the drop model, the Yukawa mechanism.

4. α,β,γ decays, transmutation, introduction to the nuclide chart, NMR, the Mössbauer effect.

5. Fermi gas model, Fermi distribution, identical particles and Pauli principle, vector model for the addition of angular momenta.

6. Shell model, even-even, odd-odd, even-odd and odd-even nuclei.

7. Fusion, fission, chain reaction, nuclear bomb, nuclear reactors.

8. Nuclide chart, II part, and the stability valley, thenucleosynthesis.

9. Particles: leptons, hadrons (mesons and barions. The positron, the pion and the muon.

10. An example of angular momentum: Pauli matrices, eigenstates and eigenvalues, commutation rules.

11. Dirac equation, Dirac see and antimatter.

12. QED, weak interactions, Fermi, Glashow, Weinberg and Salam, W±, Z0.

13. QCD and the standard model.

14. Astroparticles (Seminar by Massimo Pietroni)

15. Final chronology and μSR.

16. Franck-Hertz experiment, non relativistic hydrogen, hydrogenoid atoms, Stern-Gerlach and Zeeman xperiments.

1st paper.

17. Relativistic hydrogen, spin, spin-orbit coupling and fine structure, hyperfine structure.

18. Helium, screening and variational method.

19. Helium: spin, exchange, ortho and para helium, noble gas atoms, Alcaline atoms, quantum defect.

20. Atoms from Boron to Neon, Hund's rules.

21. Many electrons: self consistent field, Hartree, Hartree-Fock and Density Functionals.

22. Optical selection rules, non relativistic "second quantization", optical spectroscopy.

23. X ray spectroscopy, Auger and photoelectron spectroscopies.

24. Cold atoms (Seminar by Sandro Wimberger)

25. Summary

II paper.

Bibliography

Alonso Finn Fundamental Physics, Quantum Physics, Addison Wesley, 1968 (Ch. 7,8,9,3,4)

Eisberg Resnick Quantum Physics, John Wiley, 1985 (Ch. 15,16,17,8,9,10)

Teaching methods

Lectures and tutorials, mostly run through weekly homeworks.

Assessment methods and criteria

The homeworks are individually corrected and lead to grades whose average weights 1/3 of the final marks. The other 2/3 come from written papers. Oral exams may be used to amend for insufficent scores in papers.

Other information

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