For this project, you will develop your own homework question, and write the model answer. You will be practicing an important skill: how to pose a tractable quantitative question that leads to interesting insights. You have freedom to choose a topic that you find especially interesting/intriguing. Within this topic, look for questions where a quantitative result can give insight. Think broadly about topics: many topics that you encounter outside of the physics classroom are full of interesting physics. Please talk with the instructor about your topic ideas.
This is a multi-step, multi-week project with many opportunities to get feedback from the instructor. The main steps are:
A good question will lead you into “the unknown” (an area of knowledge that is new to you). Your model answer will show how coarse-grained modeling of the system, followed by quantitative reasoning/calculations, can shed light on the unknown. For guidance on style and difficulty, look at examples of rich-context questions that are set by the instructor during the course.
The final version of your question should be posed in a way that is accessible to a well prepared PH315 student. The final version of your model answer should be written in a style similar to a physics textbook. Explain each step so that a PH315 student can clearly understand how you constructed your solution.
The model answer should follow the mathematical communication guidelines, and the long-answer format, described in Writing answers to HW questions.
If you are typing your submission, be familiar with the 9 rules of Typography in Physics Guide to Professional Typography in Physics.