Course Outcomes: By the end of the course students shall be able to
CO1: describe and apply electrostatic forces laws in vector form, superposition of forces, calculate electric fields, electric flux, apply Gauss’ law for symmetric charge distributions to calculate electric field.
CO2: understand and calculate potentials, potential energies for basic charge distributions, , electric potential from electric field and vice-versa, dipoles, work and potential energy, capacitance, charge and energy stored in a capacitor, effect of dielectrics on electric field, charge and energy stored in a capacitor.
CO3: understand, describe and solve simple problems on electric current, electrical resistance and Ohm’s law, capacitor, basics of resistor networks, RC circuit.
CO4: understand and apply concepts in magnetism, magnetic fields, determine forces due to magnetic field on moving charges and current carrying wires, , magnetic dipoles, torque, use Biot-Savart and Ampere’s determine magnetic field due to simple current distributions, solenoids.
CO5: apply Faraday’s laws for induced emf, induced electric field, describe laws in induction in integral form, mutual and self-induction, inductors and LRC ac-circuits, resonance and tuning; understand basics of displacement current and Maxwell’s equation.
Evaluation Pattern: As in the rules for Assessment Procedure (R.14)
Skills and Employability: The entire contents of this course, tutorials and assignments lays conceptual/theoretical foundation for application of laws of physics to problems of scientific interest and builds skills required for a career as an educator/academician in schools, colleges, universities and coaching centres, as a professional researcher in government/industrial research organizations, and as a communicator of science in general.