All physics explained in 15 minutes (worth remembering)

All physics explained in 15 minutes (worth remembering)

Introduction to Physics

In this section, the speaker introduces the importance of physics in our daily lives and explains that he will cover only the most essential concepts worth knowing.

Five Broad Areas of Physics

  • The five broad areas of physics are classical mechanics, energy and thermodynamics, electromagnetism, relativity, and quantum mechanics.
  • Classical mechanics is probably the most pertinent to your everyday experiences.
  • Two main concepts worthy of remembering in classical mechanics are Newton's second law (F = ma) and the law of universal gravitation.
  • The ideas around energy came about 100 years after Newton. Energy is not a vector like force or momentum. It doesn't have direction but is a number.
  • Energy for most objects consists of kinetic energy plus potential energy.

Newton's Second Law

  • F = ma - Force equals mass times acceleration. This simple equation has huge ramifications as it can be used to predict an object's position in space or determine how much reinforcement you would need to build a bridge.
  • Force is not a material thing; it is a measure of interaction. Your body doesn’t have force; it has mass. Your weight is the force your body exerts on the ground.

Law of Universal Gravitation

  • The law allows us to determine the motion of heavenly bodies like planets orbiting stars or moons orbiting planets.
  • Gravitational attraction diminishes rapidly as objects move apart because it’s proportional to the inverse of distance squared.

Energy

  • Energy for most objects consists of kinetic energy plus potential energy. Kinetic energy is the energy of motion, while potential energy is stored energy.
  • Velocity makes a bigger difference in energy than mass. Going from 80 miles per hour to 60 miles per hour reduces your car’s energy by almost 50%.

Conclusion

  • Physics is essential to our daily lives and understanding its most important concepts can help us make better decisions.

Energy and Thermodynamics

This section covers the concept of energy, potential energy, kinetic energy, thermal energy, and entropy. It also explains the 2nd law of thermodynamics.

Energy

  • Energy is always conserved
  • Potential energy can take many forms

Thermal Energy

  • Thermal energy is a form of energy that results from the movement of molecules in an object
  • Heat is a flow of thermal energy from one object to another

Entropy

  • Entropy is a measure of disorder in a system
  • The 2nd law of thermodynamics states that the entropy of an isolated system can never decrease
  • An orderly energy is more useful than one that is less orderly

Electromagnetism

This section covers the essential concepts embodied in Maxwell's equations and how they relate to electrically charged particles and magnets.

Electric Charges

  • Objects have something called a charge which affects only other charges if it's static
  • If you have a moving charge, it will affect a magnet. And if you have a moving magnet, it will affect a charge

Maxwell's Equations

  • The first equation says that if you have an electrical charge, there will be an electric field emanating from it
  • The second equation is basically the same concept for magnets
  • The third equation says that if you move a magnet, you will create an electrical field

The Theory of Relativity and the Speed of Light

This section discusses Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and how it revolutionized physics. It explains how the speed of light is a constant that does not change in any frame of reference.

Einstein's Postulates

  • Einstein believed that if the speed of light was determined by two constants, mu naught and epsilon naught, then the speed of light is a constant too, and may not change in any frame of reference.
  • The second postulate was the principle of relativity, meaning the laws of physics are the same for all observes who are moving at the same velocity relative to each other.

Implications

  • Time for a person on a train slows down from the perspective of someone standing still due to time dilation.
  • According to general relativity, there would be no way to tell if you were in an accelerating reference frame or standing stationary on earth. Space-time must curve in order for light to take its shortest path between two points.

Three Principles of Quantum Mechanics

This section discusses three principles that are important to remember when studying quantum mechanics.

Max Planck's Equation

  • Energy is quantized and can only occur in distinct quanta. The amount of energy equals frequency times Planck's constant.

Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

  • You cannot know both a particle’s exact position and its exact momentum at the same time. There is inherent uncertainty associated with quantum particles.

Schrodinger's Equation

  • Prior to measurement, quantum systems are in superposed states expressed as probabilities through wave functions.

[CUTOFF_LIMIT]