PHYSICS
PAPER – I
1. (a) Mechanics of
Particles:
Laws of motion;
conservation of energy and momentum, applications to rotating frames, centripetal
and Coriolis accelerations; Motion under a central force; Conservation of
angular momentum, Kepler’s laws; Fields and potentials; Gravitational field and
potential due to spherical bodies, Gauss and Poisson equations, gravitational
self-energy; Two-body problem; Reduced mass; Rutherford scattering; Centre of
mass and
laboratory reference frames.
(b) Mechanics of Rigid
Bodies:
System of particles;
Centre of mass, angular momentum, equations of motion; Conservation theorems
for energy, momentum and angular momentum; Elastic and inelastic collisions;
Rigid body; Degrees of freedom, Euler’s theorem, angular velocity, angular
momentum, moments of inertia, theorems of parallel and perpendicular axes,
equation of motion for rotation; Molecular rotations (as rigid bodies); Di and
tri-atomic molecules; Precessional motion; top, gyroscope.
(c) Mechanics of
Continuous Media:
Elasticity, Hooke’s law
and elastic constants of isotropic solids and their inter-relation; Streamline
(Laminar) flow, viscosity, Poiseuille’s equation, Bernoulli’s equation, Stokes’
law and applications.
(d) Special Relativity:
Michelson-Morley
experiment and its implications; Lorentz transformations-length contraction,
time dilation, addition of relativistic velocities, aberration and Doppler
effect, mass-energy relation, simple applications to a decay process; Four
dimensional momentum vector; Covariance of equations of physics.
2. Waves and Optics:
(a) Waves:
Simple harmonic motion,
damped oscillation, forced oscillation and resonance; Beats; Stationary waves
in a string; Pulses and wave packets; Phase and group velocities; Reflection
and Refraction from Huygens’ principle.
(b) Geometrical Optics:
Laws of reflection and
refraction from Fermat’s principle; Matrix method in paraxial optics-thin lens
formula, nodal planes, system of two thin lenses, chromatic and spherical
aberrations.
(c) Interference:
Interference of
light-Young’s experiment, Newton ’s
rings, interference by thin films, Michelson interferometer; Multiple beam
interference and Fabry-Perot interferometer.
(d) Diffraction:
Fraunhofer
diffraction-single slit, double slit, diffraction grating, resolving power;
Diffraction by a circular aperture and the Airy pattern; Fresnel diffraction:
half-period zones and zone plates, circular aperture.
(e) Polarization and
Modern Optics:
Production and detection
of linearly and circularly polarized light; Double refraction, quarter wave
plate; Optical activity; Principles of fibre optics, attenuation; Pulse
dispersion in step index and parabolic index fibres; Material dispersion,
single mode fibres; Lasers-Einstein A and B coefficients; Ruby and He-Ne
lasers; Characteristics of laser light-spatial and temporal coherence; Focusing
of laser beams; Three-level scheme for laser operation; Holography and simple
applications.
3. Electricity and
Magnetism:
(a) Electrostatics and
Magnetostatics:
Laplace and Poisson
equations in electrostatics and their applications; Energy of a system of
charges, multipole expansion of scalar potential; Method of images and its
applications; Potential and field due to a dipole, force and torque on a dipole
in an external field; Dielectrics, polarization; Solutions to boundary-value
problemsconducting
and dielectric spheres
in a uniform electric field; Magnetic shell, uniformly magnetized sphere; Ferromagnetic
materials, hysteresis, energy loss.
(b) Current Electricity:
Kirchhoff’s laws and
their applications; Biot-Savart law, Ampere’s law, Faraday’s law, Lenz’ law;
Self-and mutual-inductances; Mean and r m s values in AC circuits; DC and AC
circuits with R, L and C components; Series and parallel resonances; Quality
factor; Principle of transformer.
4. Electromagnetic Waves
and Blackbody Radiation:
Displacement current and
Maxwell’s equations; Wave equations in vacuum, Poynting theorem; Vector and scalar
potentials; Electromagnetic field tensor, covariance of Maxwell’s equations;
Wave equations in isotropic dielectrics, reflection and refraction at the
boundary of two dielectrics; Fresnel’s relations; Total internal reflection;
Normal and anomalous dispersion; Rayleigh scattering; Blackbody radiation and
Planck’s radiation
law, StefanBoltzmann
law, Wien’s displacement law and Rayleigh-Jeans’ law.
5. Thermal and
Statistical Physics:
(a) Thermodynamics:
Laws of thermodynamics,
reversible and irreversible processes, entropy; Isothermal, adiabatic,
isobaric, isochoric processes and entropy changes; Otto and Diesel engines,
Gibbs’ phase rule and chemical potential; van der Waals equation of state of a
real gas, critical constants; Maxwell-Boltzman distribution of molecular velocities,
transport phenomena, equipartition and virial theorems; Dulong-Petit, Einstein,
and Debye’s theories of specific heat of solids; Maxwell relations and
applications; Clausius- Clapeyron equation; Adiabatic demagnetisation,
Joule-Kelvin effect and liquefaction of gases.
(b) Statistical Physics:
Macro and micro states,
statistical distributions, Maxwell-Boltzmann, Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac distributions,
applications to specific heat of gases and blackbody radiation; Concept of
negative temperatures.
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