PMU199Y

Syllabus

Course Details

Fall Semester Topics

  1. Scale and powers of ten Atomic structure: nuclei and electrons. Subatomic structure: SLAC and the discovery of nuclear constituents (quarks and gluons). Why the colour force is needed to hold nuclei together. Colourless mesons and baryons.
  2. The Standard Model of particle physics How to tell which subatomic particle is which: the role of mass and spin. Quarks and leptons. Bosons (force-carriers) and fermions (matter). Electromagnetic, weak nuclear, strong nuclear, and gravitational forces. The Higgs boson and the origin of mass. Antiparticles. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
  3. From Newton to Einstein Newton's laws of universal gravitation and of how objects move. Kepler's Laws of planetary motion. How astronomers detect extrasolar planets. Einstein's Special Relativity. Constancy of the speed of light in all frames of reference. Time Dilation and the Twin Paradox. The speed of light as a limiting speed for massive objects.
  4. Einstein, Maxwell, and the speed of light Maxwell's unification of Electricity with Magnetism. The electromagnetic spectrum: radio waves, microwaves, infrared light, visible light, ultraviolet light, X-rays and gamma rays. Photons and the relationship between energy and frequency. Einstein's General Relativity. Spacetime as geometry. The Equivalence Principle: gravity vs. acceleration. How GPS works.
  5. Black Holes How astrophysical black holes form when really large stars run out of gas. How astronomers ‘see' black holes with telescopes by looking at radiation from orbiting material. Horizons and Singularities. The Event Horizon: the place of no return for infalling objects. The Singularity at the centre of a black hole, and its physical meaning.
  6. Hawking Radiation Stephen Hawking's insight about quantum weirdness as applied to black holes. Virtual particle-antiparticle pairs and the event horizon. Black hole thermodynamics. Black hole entropy and the Black Hole Information Paradox. Why Einstein's theory of gravity breaks down at the singularity.
  7. Quantum Weirdness Blackbody Radiation and the Ultraviolet Catastrophe. Photons as quantized (indivisible) lumps of energy. Photoelectric Effect and Einstein's Nobel-winning explanation for it. Particle-like nature of quanta.
  8. [Fall Oral Presentations by students on a variety of topics.]
  9. Wavelike Nature of Quanta De Broglie's bold formula for the wavelength of a quantum. Davisson-Germer experiment. Young's two-slit experiment. Atomic and molecular spectra. Wavefunctions and probability. The idea of a quantum field.
  10. [Fall Test (first hour)]. Clash of the 20th Century Titans Running of gauge couplings: how electromagnetism gets stronger at higher energy while the strong nuclear force gets weaker. Incompatibility between QM and GR. Why gravity breaks down at high energy: quantum scattering probabilities grow with energy, and become nonsensical (>100%!) at or above the Planck scale.
  11. Unification and String Theory Open and closed strings, and their smooth interactions. Particle theory as the low-energy limit of string theory. How string theory automatically includes spin one gauge bosons alongside spin two gravitons.
  12. Superstrings and Superstring Duality, Part 1 Extra dimensions of space. Kaluza-Klein modes, string winding modes, and T-duality.

Winter/Spring Semester Topics

  1. Superstring Duality, Part 2 D-branes. The five superstring theories and M theory.
  2. Symmetry and Symmetry Breaking The concept of supersymmetry in the context of string theory. How supersymmetry integrates force messengers and matter into one framework. Gauge symmetry. Coulomb, Higgs and confined phases. Symmetry breaking, and applications to the origins of our Universe.
  3. Cosmology: a brief history of our universe Hubble's Law. Epochs: Planck scale, inflation, baryogenesis, electroweak symmetry breaking, colour confinement, nucleosynthesis, matter domination, photon transparency, star formation.
  4. Cosmology: weighing the universe Energy budget of universe and how it is measured. Experiments: COBE, WMAP, Type Ia SNe, LSS, gravitational lensing. Theories about the origin of our universe. Inflation and competitors.
  5. Bob Park's Seven Warning Signs of Bogus Science Scientific bullsh!t and how to smell it.
  6. Carl Sagan's Baloney Detection Kit The worrying growth of pseudoscience and how you can immunize yourself against it. Common examples of physics BS - like PowerBalance bracelets - and explanations of why.
  7. Scientific Scandals - real and manufactured e.g.: the Jan Hendrik Schoen affair, Andrew Wakefield and the invented vaccine-autism scare, the ClimateGate story, and a few other juicy examples.
  8. [Spring Oral presentations by students on a variety of topics.]
  9. Nuclear Power What is radiation? How does nuclear power work? How dangerous is nuclear waste?
  10. [Spring Test (first hour)] Bad physics in the movies (for fun).
  11. Nuclear accidents What happened in the Fukushima disaster? Different types of nuclear reactor designs (e.g. CANDU).
  12. Energy mix and ecological sustainability Fossil fuels, green energy such as wind and solar. How do they work? What mix of types of power stations produces Ontario's energy? Energy policy. Global warming.

Grading

Academic Integrity

Academic integrity is fundamental to learning and scholarship at the University of Toronto. Participating honestly, respectfully, responsibly, and fairly in this academic community ensures that the U of T degree that you earn will be valued as a true indication of your individual academic achievement, and will continue to receive the respect and recognition it deserves.

Familiarize yourself with the University of Toronto's Code of Behaviour on Academic Matters. It is the rule book for academic behaviour at the U of T, and you are expected to know the rules. Potential offences include, but are not limited to:

In papers and assignments:

On tests and exams:

Misrepresentation:

To remind you of these expectations, and help you avoid accidental offences, I will ask you to include a signed Academic Integrity Checklist with every assignment. If you do not include the statement, your work will not be graded.

The University of Toronto treats cases of academic misconduct very seriously. All suspected cases of academic dishonesty will be investigated following the procedures outlined in the Code. The consequences for academic misconduct can be severe, including a failure in the course and a notation on your transcript. If you have any questions about what is or is not permitted in this course, please do not hesitate to contact me. If you have questions about appropriate research and citation methods, seek out additional information from me, or from other available campus resources like the U of T Writing Website. If you are experiencing personal challenges that are having an impact on your academic work, please speak to me or seek the advice of your college registrar.

Plagiarism detection software

Normally, students will be required to submit their course essays to Turnitin.com for a review of textual similarity and detection of possible plagiarism. In doing so, students will allow their essays to be included as source documents in the Turnitin.com reference database, where they will be used solely for the purpose of detecting plagiarism. The terms that apply to the University's use of the Turnitin.com service are described on the Turnitin.com web site.

If you do not wish to submit your work in this way, you will need to provide alternative documentation to prove that your work is your own. I require electronic and hard copies of two drafts of each essay in earlier stages of development as well as the final product.

Accessibility Services

Students with diverse learning styles and needs are welcome in this course. In particular, if you have a disability/health consideration that may require accommodations, please feel free to approach me and/or Accessibility Services at (416) 978 8060; accessibility.utoronto.ca.