HPS 0410 Einstein for Everyone Fall 2020

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Lectures
Tuesday / Thursday 11:05 am - 11:55 am (John D. Norton)
Lectures will be delivered live through Zoom. Access Zoom through the lecture course page in Canvas.
Lectures will be recorded for later consultation.
(104 Thaw Hall has been assigned as a Zoom room in Flex@Pitt. Since the lectures will be given remotely, this room will not be used. Please access the lectures with your computer through Canvas.)

Recitations
(Register for one.)
Wednesday 11:05 - 11:55 am, WEB based (Harrison Payne)
Wednesday 1:15 - 2:05 pm, WEB based (Harrison Payne)
Thursday 8:55 - 9:45 am, WEB based (Harrison Payne)
Access Zoom through the main (lecture) course page in Canvas.
Instructors
John D. Norton, jdnorton@pitt.edu
 Office hours: Tuesday, Thursday 11:55 am - 12:55 pm immediately after the Zoom lecture. Held in Zoom.
(Normal contacts, likely unavailable in COVID 19 conditions: Room 1109B CL. 412-624-5878)

Harrison Payne, hkp12@pitt.edu
Office hours: Monday, Friday 11:30am - 12:30 pm.
Course website
Course materials will be posted at the course website
http://www.pitt.edu/~jdnorton/teaching/HPS_0410
Click here http://www.pitt.edu/~jdnorton/teaching/HPS_0410
All assignments and tests will be submitted through Canvas.
Topics
Special relativity: The two postulates and their strange consequences: rods and clocks run amuck. The light barrier. Relativity of simultaneity: the confusion of when and where and the puzzles it solves. Spacetime: time as the fourth dimension. Origins of special relativity: how did Einstein do it?. Puzzles and paradoxes. The most famous equation: E=mc2. The philosophical dividend.
General relativity: Straightening out Euclid. Acceleration provides the clue: gravitation is just spacetime bent. General relativity passes the tests. Applications of general relativity: Goedel universes and the like: could we take a journey into the past? Cosmology: the biggest picture possible; a beginning and end for time? Black holes: when the geometry of spacetime collapses.
Quantum theory: The puzzle of black body radiation: light comes in lumps. The Bohr atom: where electrons jump. The perversity of matter in the small: both particle and wave. The uncertainty principle. The failure of determinism. The puzzle of Schrödinger's cat: neither alive nor dead.
General Education Requirement
This course satisfies the "course in philosophical thinking or ethics" requirement among the General Education Requirements in the Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences. (Commencing Fall, 2018.)

Assessment

Short tests
There will be 6 short, open-book tests, roughly one each two weeks. (Schedule) The grade is the best 5 of 6.
35%
Assignments
An assignment is due each week for submission by the start of the recitation. The assignment grade is the best 10 of 13.
35%
Term paper
The term paper is due Monday November 30. A topic preview is due Thursday November 5.
30%
Short Test
The short tests will examine material covered roughly in the preceding two weeks. They will be offered in Canvas in the 24 hours after the lecture on Thursday, according to the schedule. The tests are open book, require short answers (usually a sentence or two) and should only require 15-30 minutes of time to complete.
Policy on Missed Tests and Late Assignments
   No make up tests will be offered. Since the test grade is the best 5 of 6, one missed test is automatically forgiven. It is strongly recommended that this one forgiven test be used only when illness or emergencies preclude participation.
   Assignments are due each week at the start of the recitation. Late assignments are not accepted. Since the assignment grade is the best 10 of 13, three missed assignments are automatically forgiven. It is strongly recommended that these forgiven assignments be used only when illness or emergencies preclude participation.
(An exception is made for students who add the course after the start of term. Assignments due prior to the date on which the class was added may be submitted in the week after the course was added)
   For added flexibility, a universal makeup assignment is offered to all students. The makeup assignment is a second term paper conforming to the term paper guidelines, but only 500 words in length, due at the same time as the term paper, Monday November 30, 11:59pm.
Texts
The primary text for the class is available on this website as the online text Einstein for Everyone.

Supplementary readings are for background interest:
J. Schwartz and M. McGuinness, Einstein for Beginners. New York: Pantheon.
J. P. McEvoy and O. Zarate, Introducing Stephen Hawking. Totem.
J. P. McEvoy, Introducing Quantum Theory. Totem.
Special Needs
If you have a disability for which you are or may be requesting an accommodation, you are encouraged to contact both your instructor and Disability Resources and Services (DRS), 140 William Pitt Union, 412-648-7890, drsrecep@pitt.edu, or 412-228-5347 for P3 ASL users,as early as possible in the term. DRS will verify your disability and determine reasonable accommodations for this course. For more information, see http://www.studentaffairs.pitt.edu/drs/
The Undergraduate Dean of Arts and Sciences has requested instructors to alert all students to University of Pittsburgh Policy 09-10-01, "E-mail Communications Policy."