This document provides a consolidation of exercises for a General Physics 1 course, organized by topic:
Part 1 summarizes motion in one dimension and lists example problems 28-29 on page 50.
Part 2 covers motion in two dimensions and lists various examples and problems from pages 79-93.
Part 3 outlines the laws of motion and lists corresponding examples from pages 110-118 and problems from pages 121-123.
Parts 4-6 similarly list examples and problems for the topics of energy and conservation of energy, linear momentum and collisions, and rotation of a rigid object, citing page numbers from the textbook Physics for Scientists and Engineers by Serway and Jewett.
This document provides a consolidation of exercises for a General Physics 1 course, organized by topic:
Part 1 summarizes motion in one dimension and lists example problems 28-29 on page 50.
Part 2 covers motion in two dimensions and lists various examples and problems from pages 79-93.
Part 3 outlines the laws of motion and lists corresponding examples from pages 110-118 and problems from pages 121-123.
Parts 4-6 similarly list examples and problems for the topics of energy and conservation of energy, linear momentum and collisions, and rotation of a rigid object, citing page numbers from the textbook Physics for Scientists and Engineers by Serway and Jewett.
This document provides a consolidation of exercises for a General Physics 1 course, organized by topic:
Part 1 summarizes motion in one dimension and lists example problems 28-29 on page 50.
Part 2 covers motion in two dimensions and lists various examples and problems from pages 79-93.
Part 3 outlines the laws of motion and lists corresponding examples from pages 110-118 and problems from pages 121-123.
Parts 4-6 similarly list examples and problems for the topics of energy and conservation of energy, linear momentum and collisions, and rotation of a rigid object, citing page numbers from the textbook Physics for Scientists and Engineers by Serway and Jewett.
◼ Examples 4.4 (on page 79), 4.5 (on page 80), 4.8 (on page 87). ◼ Problems 3 (on page 89), 10, 11, 13 (on page 90) 30, 31, 38 (on page 92), 43, 49 (on page 93).
Part 3: The Laws of Motion
◼ Examples 5.7 (on page 110), 5.9 (on page 112), 5.10 (on page 113), 5.11 (on page 117), 5.13 (on page 118). ◼ Problems 5, 7, 18, 17, 18 (on page 121), 23, 25 (on page 122), 31, 34, 36 (on page 123).
Part 4: Energy of a System and Conservation of Energy
◼ Examples 8.2 (on page 187), 8.5 (on page 194), 8.8 (on page 198). ◼ Problems 26 (on page 207), 35 (on page 208).
Part 5: Linear Momentum and Collisions
◼ Theory of Elastic Collisions (on pages 221 and 222) and Collisions in Two Dimensions (on pages 227 and 228). ◼ Examples 9.1 (on page 214), 9.7 (on page 226), 9.9 (on page 229) ◼ Problems 38, 41, 45 (on page 247).
Part 6: Rotation of a Rigid Object about a Fixed Axis
◼ Theory of Angular Position, Velocity and Acceleration (on page 250), Angular and Translational Quantities (on pages 254 and 255), Torque (on pages 259 – 260) and Table 10.2 (on page 261) (only for revision, no theoretical questions for the exam). ◼ Example 10.6 (on page 262) ◼ Problems 9, 12 (on page 279), 16 (on page 280), References All of the Examples and Problems are taken from the main book: Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, 10th Edition, by Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett. Link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1S8oOhkUmyxMtuXovS_5RpP9WWyScOK_0/view? usp=sharing
The 9th edition of the book: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1dyUOTyp1tLh-
YjwEgs36XCl78ZygTiWY/view?usp=sharing with the corresponding Solution Manual: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1w4LxvLPPC5RogveSDBUuvb03cfFuq753/view?usp =sharing
I hope you get what you deserve and Good luck with the exam!