12 April 2002 - time: 2
hours
Instructor: Jess H. Brewer
ANSWER: All but the second circuit from the left. The rightmost circuit will exhibit simple exponential decay of the current if it is overdamped.
Definitions: | = dielectric constant. | ||
= magnetic susceptibility. | |||
ANSWER: If or then the circuit is in resonance and any input power , no matter how small, will drive the circuit to destruction. A power-dissipating resistance is essential to avoid this.
In the Figure, the symbols just represent ``continuation'' of a line that is too long to fit onto the page. Here they mean that the left part of the circuit is much longer than shown above: the circuit is 8 m long horizontally.
A grating is uniformly illuminated with infrared light of wavelength m incident normal to the plane of the grating, producing the interference pattern shown on a distant screen.
A partially shorted capacitor is constructed from two parallel circular plates of area m2 separated by a distance cm with a fine resistive wire ( ) connecting the centre of one plate with the centre of the other. This device is placed in the circuit shown, with all other elements located far away. All other wires in the circuit have negligible resistance, except for the external resistor . The battery produces a potential of V. The capacitor is initially uncharged. At t=0 the switch S is closed and current starts to flow.
ANSWER: The points of connection of the thin wire can be moved away from the centres of the plates to anywhere else on the same conductor without affecting the circuit behaviour (understanding topological equivalence is essential to circuit design), so what we have is a capacitor in parallel with a resistor on that leg of the circuit, as shown. Once the capacitor is fully charged, it ``acts like an open circuit'' and so at all the current flows through both resistors in series, for an equivalent resistance of and therefore a current of or .