stu said:
SFCityBear said:
I had a good experience overall with Physics 4, which I took in 1960-61, I believe. I liked 4A which was Mechanics, always a strong suit of mine.
In my time we were on quarters. 4A was still mechanics but emphasized particles rather than rigid bodies and included special relativity.
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Physics 4B, Electricity and Magnetism, was a different matter.
My 4B was also E&M but all theory, no circuits. It used the special relativity from 4A to explain magnetism, that was an eye-opener to me.
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I had a lot of experience with electronics as a kid, growing up in the era transitioning from vacuum tubes to transistors. I was always taking radios apart to find out how they worked, and constructing circuits of all kinds.
You're in good company with Richard Feynman.
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Professor Anderson went on to have a very successful career as a physicist.
I had Nobel laureate Owen Chamberlain for 4C. Lower division teaching didn't seem to be his strong point. But I had other excellent classes taught be renowned academics, especially Chem 104 by Neil Bartlett.
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Physics 4C, which was Optics, was much more interesting.
My 4C was waves and oscillations in general, no classical optics. I didn't get all of the connections until a few years later working with analog computers (!). But 4C set me up to eventually understand things like refractive index, electrical impedance, and mechanical impedance are all the same. And I got my practical optics later in life.
My 4D was quantum physics, culminating with Schrodinger's Equation. I didn't really get that at the time.
My 4E was statistical physics, which was my first experience with thermodynamics which made sense.
I was lucky to have most (4 A,B,C, and E) books in their final hardcover form and the other (4D) at least in paperback.
The labs sucked. Big time. Vacuum tube Heathkit equipment. But I did learn a few things by building my own transistor Heathkit 10 W stereo receiver and rebuilding a 956 cc Renault motor in my dorm room.
Thanks a lot for the detailed reply.
My 4A was all mechanics, and no particles or relativity that I can remember. It was very similar to the lower division mechanics class I had when I later switched out of L&S to the College of Engineering. The fact that the Physics Department had introduced particles into your 4A class might have been part of the trend to introduce more advanced and theoretical subject matter earlier in both college and high school. I had about a year and half of calculus in high school (there was no other school in SF that taught calculus). I was able to pass Math 3A and 3B at Cal by taking their final exam, allowing me to take Math 4A as a freshman), whereas today, I think calculus is taught in most high schools.
My 4B, like yours, was all theory, no circuits. In my 4C, I think we did have some waves and oscillations, along with the optics, but the lab experiments were all optics, as I remember.
That is much too flattering a comparison with Richard Feynman, of whom I had not heard, but the similarity ends with repairing radios. He was a giant in physics. I will read more about him. Thanks.
My childhood inventions were goofy. I made a breadboard working model of a sewing machine in the 2nd grade, but years later, I realized it was just a piece of artwork, and wasn't a sewing machine at all. I was able to connect our phone line to my radio, making it an early version of the speaker phone. My mother was always worried about my experiments, so she called the phone company to ask if I might be doing some harm by fooling with the wires. They asked, "Where do you live? We need to come over right away to see what is going on." My mother hung up on them, and directed me to disconnect the wires immediately.
We used to have raccoons raid our garbage cans at night. I had a little Brownie camera with a flash, so I rigged up a switch on the can, which would trip the second the top was removed, and trigger the camera. I got a great photo of a raccoon's tail, and body all the way into the can.
I built a Knightkit Ocean Hopper short wave radio, and I still have scars from the soldering iron. 3 tubes and plug in coils. I was able to hear Radio Ceylon, half way around the world. I invented several radio antennas. As years went by, I did build lots of Heathkits, mostly short wave radios, transmitters and test equipment, and one of the first color TVs. That one took 40 hours. I was in LA then, working for Douglas Aircraft, and I bet some engineers at work $5 each that it would work when I first turned it on. I invited them over for the NFL Championship, Packers and NY Giants. The TV worked great until the end of the 1st quarter, when the screen went green, different shades of green. The Packers' uniforms went from green and yellow, to two shades of green. The engineers paid all the bets to me anyway. Heathkit later said one diode was undersized and sent me a new one. I built lots of Dynaco stereo equipment, and I still listen to my Dynaco Stereo 70 amp and two Dynaco preamps. The Stereo 70 is now bringing up to $1400 on EBay. Not bad for a $35 kit. I like vacuum tubes. At the very least, they can keep the hamshack warm on cold winter nights.
Owen Chamberlain. Wow. i had forgotten about him. For Atomic Physics 121 (I hope that is right) I had Luis Alvarez, another Nobel Laureate. That was where I encountered quantum physics, and I read Niels Bohr's book, or tried to. Alvarez was a good teacher, and the textbook was good. Alvarez actually went to Poly high school in SF, about two blocks from our apartment. Poly was mostly known for its shop classes. They even had a renowned electronics lab in the 1950s.
I remember the physics labs. Not so good. I took a semester off at Cal and got a job working at the standards lab at General Dynamics. My job was to calibrate instruments and write down the procedure used. They had Hewlett Packard gear, and Tektronix oscilloscopes. Far better than the Heathkit scopes in the Cal physics lab. I remember your story about rebuilding the Renault engine. Very impressive, getting that done in a dorm room.
SFCityBear