Prof Anderson is excellent. On why more people etc ... You will discover that 99.9% of people have no interest in physics or math. It's just the way it is
I have been interested in circuits from a very young age, probably introduced to my first electrical circuit around age 3. They became one of my favorite pastimes ,I think that I always knew that someday they would become part of my professional life.
Just ran into this channel by autoplaying while I fall asleep at night and ended up waking up in the middle of a lecture. I very much enjoy the way you teach. I am not sure if many others feel the same way or not but in my opinion you convey the information/material incredibly well! I am out of school and no specific need to watch these videos but still find myself picking one when bored. Hope you read this or at least are told so you know you are doing a good job.
I don’t know a single thing about physics, this is the first video of this channel I’m seeing, and yet some how, even though this is super far into the modules, this professors explanations are so good that I can still make full sense of what he’s talking about. What an amazingly gifted person
Prof. Anderson thank you very very much. You make me don't lose focus on your intention to teach and to transfer all contents that you wish to give. I watching your open course one by one. I am going to continue on. thank you again.
I am starting an electrical project on my boat. Having limited knowledge of electricity and having purchased a multimeter to measure various electrical factors I searched for RUclipss on the subject. I am so glad I found this series. I know it is 7 years old but mostly, if not all, still relevant. More that what I thought I would need to know but WOW electricity is no longer a (complete) mystery. Great way to present. Very good teaching.
Hello sir. I'm Rakesh from India . I really appreciate your work Sir. I really liked your lectures .Thank you so much Sir . Ur lectures were there when I had hard times clearing my entrance exam for med . I would like you to know that I solved few questions in exam (All thanks to you sir) and I'm in med school now . THANK YOU SIR . ILL REMEMBER U TILL I DIE.
Hi Dr Matt I am a physics teacher in Namibia. I am so delighted to have come across your lectures. My learners are equally grateful. You really make physics learning so easy and meaningful. Thank you so much for your lectures.
SuperKwame, Excellent, way to stay energized! This was definitely one of my goals, to reach out beyond the walls of college to everyone out there that wants to learn physics. Keep it up! Cheers, Dr. A
Hello Professor, I love your examples and applications: real-life situations , it makes me more appreciative how exciting Physics really is. I just wish that it is a mandatory subject to all high school students here in the USA.
Atlanta, GA (Georgia State University). My E&M final is tomorrow and I'm freaking out, but your lecture videos are very helpful! Thank you for posting.
Nah, he is just flipped the video, his students also sees the high quality video in real time in class while he is writing on the glass normally on the other side.
When teaching, it is difficult with the solution to the students, but the teachers are very persistent and the teachers understand the teacher very well when they are really good in the exercises. Asked him it would be better for me to just watch this tutorial
At about 30:55 the reference to a "Station that pumps the water back up to the top of the waterfall" as analogous to charging a battery rather aptly describes the "pumped storage" operation at Castaic Power Plant, where the turbines can be reversed to pump water back to the upper reservoir at the top at night (when electricity is but pennies on the dollar) to produce power the next day and sell it at full price. They only have to pay the state for the water the first time they use it, and the price of excess power on the grid at night used to reposition the same bought-and-payed-for water is MUCH cheaper than paying the state for brand new water.
An amazing session!! I'm so thankful to you for enhancing my interest in Physics! Please keep uploading more ✌️ Cheers, Miss A. (Inspired but still learning from you) Also, Stay safe Professor.
Ananya Gaur, Will do. Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
Funny that I watched this in December 2022 and thought it was just uploaded because of the world cup messi joke (or "joke"). Then I realised it was uploaded 8 years ago. That's the thing about circuits I guess... always current. Couldn't resist. Arghh, I'll get my coat... time to go ohm.
Very helpful video series. Thank you. Why did you plug in the "weight" of the car (2,000kg) rather than its "mass". By definitiln, the "weight" of 2000kg (typical car) already had the gravity acceleration figured into it. Unless your car actually weighed closer to 20,000kg due to the earth's gravity, then the mass would be around 2,000kg as you suggested. Am I missing something?
Patrick L, kilograms is a measure of mass, not weight. Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
Question: 45:40 "There is this general drift on the charge in the direction of the current." I was under the impression that electrons move in the opposite direction of the current. Could someone please explain this?
The thing I'm wondering about the direction of the current is that if it's true that electrons flow to the positive side then doesn't that affect where you would put a resistor? Wouldn't you want to put it between the negative terminal and what you were trying to reduce the current to? Like if you had an LED light in the circuit wouldn't you want the resistor inbetween the negative terminal and the LED light instead of inbetween the positive terminal and LED Light, since the flow is coming out of the negative terminal and you want to slow it before it reaches the LED light? Or, does it not actually matter which side you put the resistor on?
Hello Professor Matt Anderson, my name is Fernando, I am a Retired Portuguese Engineer, aged 79, and I want to thank you very, very, very much for the way you use in your MARVELLOUS LESSONS, because you, REALLY TEACH, and we, REALLY LEARN, through REALLY SIMPLE WAY. I am interested to advise friends of mine to "assist" to those same lessons, BUT they do not understand English, and with SOME (not all ...) of the lessons, it has not been possible (at least, I could not configure my computer - in the case, a Mac) - to have Translation to Portuguese; could you be kind enough, Professor, to please inform me how to achieve to have that translation in ALL your Lessons? My Regards and Thank you, again, Fernando
The danger is not the clothes dryer as much as it is the house wiring. Each circuit is wired with wire of a certain thickness. Each thickness can safely allow a maximum current to flow without heating up and possibly igniting. The thicker the wire the greater the current it can safely conduct. To save money, most household circuits are 15A to 20A. That is enough for lights and small appliances. Large devices like your clothes dryer actually operate at double the voltage and have 30A circuit breakers in each line. If you are not familiar with household wiring, it works like this. The power company delivers electricity through two thick wires. Each wire has a potential of 110V to 120V relative to the ground. The electricity comes in passes through the circuit breakers to your devices then returns via a neutral wire which is connected to ground. A connection from either wire to ground delivers 110V to 120V, but if you make a connection between the two wires, each at 110V to 120V you will get double the voltage, 220V to 240V. Since power is voltage times current, doubling the voltage halves the current. Each of those two lines has its own circuit breaker, typically 30 amps each. If you look in your circuit breaker panel, you will see one or more sets of breakers that are two switches locked together, so flipping one of them flips both of them. One will be connected to your clothes dryer and the other to your air conditioner. Wires are color coded. Black (death) or red (danger) are the hot wires where the electricity is coming into the circuit, and white (benign) for the neutral wire carrying it back to ground. There is also a special safety wire which is green (ground) which is there as a back up in case something goes wrong. It is typically connected to the outsides of metal appliances to keep you from being electrocuted. One word of warning, you should never touch any bare wire whether it is black, white, or green, because it is possible to be electrocuted by any of them if something is broken in the circuit.
DarkMatterSquirrels, Credit where credit is due. Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
richard detsch, I have to imagine that new engines and starters are much more efficient these days, so I'm not sure. But the current is still substantial, just not for very long. Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
15:42 So the dude can actually write and draw BACKWARDS better than I can do it forward but then draws the shittiest Car I have seen since kindergarden XD But jokes aside, I love these videos. I'm an electrician and I plan on going back to school next year and these videos definetely help me prepate for it
Robert Wynne, I was using Knight. But I have also used Giancoli. Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
Protons and electrons can not only be moved by copper-wire but also by glassfibre-wire with pieces glass in it. This goes somehow quicker, the circuit of the protons and electrons wil be in a spiral-move. And it is cheaper in fabricate. I like your lessons, dr. Anderson a C to A most be possible at your lesson-subject. Thanks and kind regards. Remarks are like(d).
Mohammad, Foaming glass cleaner and a squeegee. (Has to be foaming.) Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
At 30:51😭😭😭very thanks for good explanation sir . When I am studying on this volts, current and resistance, I am always 😕 confused about this topic. And I don't know that how to ask question.. to my lecturer...😭😭🥺🥺. But now I just got the answer from you sir thank you. Sir pls tell me your address
I love your stuff, but you used the term 'Reluctance' when describing the effects of resistance. I think that may have been a bad choice of terms in this case, as 'Reluctance' is a quantity that is used, I believe, in magnetic terms. It might have been better to use the term 'opposition' to current flow in the case of resistance. (I apologize if this has been discussed before. My life is getting shorter by the second, and I don't always read previous comments.) With that said, I did get what you were trying to explain, and by watching your earlier videos, I'm not only trying to refresh what I have learned a long time ago, but also to learn it from a newer perspective. You do great stuff. don't stop.
Sir I'm pavan Kumar from I'm from poor back ground but I'm preparing to ies. I'm an electrical student can u plz upload electrical ies class sir u r classes r simply to understand
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Use coupon code for India: FANDERSON2020INDIA Monthly subscription for 400 INR! Cheers, Dr. A
Hi. in 48:17 th minute of video resistivity of gold was given as 1,72*10^-8 and at the 52:53th minutes of video same value given as copper resistivity . I think it is accidental
A circuit requires at least one element? If you just connect a wire to the negative and positive that's not a circuit? That would be considered a short circuit?
Electricians wish that the statement you made at about 2:10 was true. It would make their lives a lot easier and make about 90% of the NEC code unnecessary. You say the potential (voltage) at any place along a wire is the same. However, that is only true for an ideal wire that has no resistance. Such a metal wire does not exist and is very close only in superconductors. I think a disclaimer is needed. You can say that in the lab you are measuring the same potential at every point along a wire. That is because your meter cannot measure the very small change. However, when you deal with longer wire and/or higher voltage, you will be able to measure that difference. But for now we are going to ignore the very small difference. That will pave the way to differentiate those that will ignore that difference and before teachers and those that will become electrical engineers. (Not putting down teachers, I was one).
Matt Smith, Not writing backwards (I'm not that talented). The board is called Learning Glass. You can check it out at www.learning.glass Cheers, Dr. A
Units like ampere , that is based on a real person like here Ampere, are eighter written [A] or [ ampere] for the obvious reason to be able to tell the difference between the person and the unit.
Phasor Systems, Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics! You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education Cheers, Dr. A
I like it. I haven't done the experiment, but I'm betting if you do it slowly enough, you can do it. Not sure about the apparatus, though. That will take some thinking. Cheers, Dr. A
agree.. i think its impossible too. P = energy/unit time = mgh/t.. we cant provide this amount of energy in 1 second we need 10 hours then its not gonna work i guess
Is it me or is it really odd that not more people are interested and fascinated by circuits? I think these lessons are amazing, thank you!
+Marcus Yang-Nilsson I agree, circuits are wicked cool. Thanks for the comments.
Cheers, Dr. A
I have spent months studying circuits and found a fantastic website at Gregs Electro Blog (google it if you are interested)
Prof Anderson is excellent. On why more people etc ... You will discover that 99.9% of people have no interest in physics or math. It's just the way it is
Yes it seems the class response is sort of like you wouldexpectfrom a " box of rocks"!
I have been interested in circuits from a very young age, probably introduced to my first electrical circuit around age 3. They became one of my favorite pastimes ,I think that I always knew that someday they would become part of my professional life.
Lots of love from Ethiopia 🇪🇹. Thanks Dr A.
I am 35 and i finally have an understanding of this subject. God bless this nobleman!
Just ran into this channel by autoplaying while I fall asleep at night and ended up waking up in the middle of a lecture. I very much enjoy the way you teach. I am not sure if many others feel the same way or not but in my opinion you convey the information/material incredibly well! I am out of school and no specific need to watch these videos but still find myself picking one when bored. Hope you read this or at least are told so you know you are doing a good job.
Such a pleasure to learn all that. Things look so simple when told in the right way. Thanks a bunch.
I don’t know a single thing about physics, this is the first video of this channel I’m seeing, and yet some how, even though this is super far into the modules, this professors explanations are so good that I can still make full sense of what he’s talking about. What an amazingly gifted person
Prof. Anderson thank you very very much. You make me don't lose focus on your intention to teach and to transfer all contents that you wish to give. I watching your open course one by one. I am going to continue on. thank you again.
Matt, you’re an exceptional tutor....thank you so much!
I am starting an electrical project on my boat. Having limited knowledge of electricity and having purchased a multimeter to measure various electrical factors I searched for RUclipss on the subject. I am so glad I found this series. I know it is 7 years old but mostly, if not all, still relevant. More that what I thought I would need to know but WOW electricity is no longer a (complete) mystery. Great way to present. Very good teaching.
Hello sir. I'm Rakesh from India . I really appreciate your work Sir. I really liked your lectures .Thank you so much Sir . Ur lectures were there when I had hard times clearing my entrance exam for med . I would like you to know that I solved few questions in exam (All thanks to you sir) and I'm in med school now . THANK YOU SIR . ILL REMEMBER U TILL I DIE.
I recently hooked to your video by magnetic induction, and I found myself lucky to watch your videos
I'm demonstrating in EM labs next month despite never having studied it, you are saving my life right now
Good to hear. Still a lifeguard at heart.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Hi Dr Matt
I am a physics teacher in Namibia. I am so delighted to have come across your lectures. My learners are equally grateful. You really make physics learning so easy and meaningful. Thank you so much for your lectures.
mthobi,
Thanks for the comment, and please reach out to me through
my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
Matt Thanks you for your great tutorial, I'm 54yrs and I have drawn to your class.
SuperKwame,
Excellent, way to stay energized! This was definitely one of my goals, to reach out beyond the walls of college to everyone out there that wants to learn physics. Keep it up!
Cheers,
Dr. A
Amazing video with huge concept of circuit. Thank you sir
Glad you liked it.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Hello Professor, I love your examples and applications: real-life situations , it makes me more appreciative how exciting Physics really is. I just wish that it is a mandatory subject to all high school students here in the USA.
Wonderful lecturer that makes physics fun and understandable !!!
Thanks for the comments. Glad to be of help.
I'm at San Diego State University in California. Where are you?
Cheers,
Dr. A
Atlanta, GA (Georgia State University). My E&M final is tomorrow and I'm freaking out, but your lecture videos are very helpful! Thank you for posting.
I'm at Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil and feeling nostalgic about my eletric circuit classes at University of São Paulo
=)
Columbia in nyc
Gunn High School! your videos are SUPER helpful :) thank you
Matt Anderson Hong Kong !
Amazing! Nice Presentation Professor, i really like that Board!
Thanks (I kind of like it too). Check out our company: www.learning.glass
Cheers,
Dr. A
Phenomenal. Thanks, Professor Anderson.
Too kind. Thanks and have a great day.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Seems like a real cool teacher.
Well don't no but he is somewhere very good in explaining and is married and has 3 children.
Cool, perhaps he is hot, especially in explaining.
Great video, thank you very much. You are a great teacher one can desire as student.
Thank you very much for these videos, You are a great teacher! Please keep up the good work!
Thanks for the feedback. Glad you're enjoying them.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Hi Muna,
You are welcome. And I'm at San Diego State University.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Hi Matt
Amazing teaching. We all need more teachers like this...
These lessons are extremely helpful. Thank you.
Dr A I love the clear board, having spent so many years looking at the back of professor's heads. If you have to write backwards I am impressed
Nah, he is just flipped the video, his students also sees the high quality video in real time in class while he is writing on the glass normally on the other side.
Привет с пары Ивановой в Политехе!
sir, i am the big fan of you. YOUR class!
Just love it.
Your teaching style is so nice.
Sir take love from Bangladesh.
Excellent lectures! I'm a mathematician who never learned this stuff. I put it on 2x speed and it' s perfect!
enjoying this series. Thank you!
Glad you enjoy it!
Cheers,
Dr. A
When teaching, it is difficult with the solution to the students, but the teachers are very persistent and the teachers understand the teacher very well when they are really good in the exercises. Asked him it would be better for me to just watch this tutorial
Math BBN,
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
Thats a sophisticated ass mullet
The mullet is making a comeback! Finally.
Cheers,
Dr. A
At about 30:55 the reference to a "Station that pumps the water back up to the top of the waterfall" as analogous to charging a battery rather aptly describes the "pumped storage" operation at Castaic Power Plant, where the turbines can be reversed to pump water back to the upper reservoir at the top at night (when electricity is but pennies on the dollar) to produce power the next day and sell it at full price. They only have to pay the state for the water the first time they use it, and the price of excess power on the grid at night used to reposition the same bought-and-payed-for water is MUCH cheaper than paying the state for brand new water.
Sir you are awsm TQ for your lectures.😊😊
From India🇮🇳🇮🇳
Amazing video! Keep up the good work! :))
I love how he says cheers after every video
An amazing session!! I'm so thankful to you for enhancing my interest in Physics! Please keep uploading more ✌️
Cheers,
Miss A.
(Inspired but still learning from you)
Also, Stay safe Professor.
Ananya Gaur,
Will do.
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
🤯 awesome lecture!
Inspired 💯
Very beautiful sweet sir Tq so much ji
Funny that I watched this in December 2022 and thought it was just uploaded because of the world cup messi joke (or "joke").
Then I realised it was uploaded 8 years ago.
That's the thing about circuits I guess... always current.
Couldn't resist.
Arghh, I'll get my coat... time to go ohm.
These videos are very good! Thank you.
Thanks, glad you're finding them useful.
Cheers,
Dr. A
This lectueris very nice...thank you Dr. Anderson
Very helpful video series. Thank you. Why did you plug in the "weight" of the car (2,000kg) rather than its "mass". By definitiln, the "weight" of 2000kg (typical car) already had the gravity acceleration figured into it. Unless your car actually weighed closer to 20,000kg due to the earth's gravity, then the mass would be around 2,000kg as you suggested. Am I missing something?
Patrick L,
kilograms is a measure of mass, not weight.
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
thanks you professor Matt Anderson
ott somchai,
You're very welcome. Glad you're enjoying the videos.
You might also like my new site: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
Cheers to how quite the class is when his teaching
*Quiet
Question: 45:40 "There is this general drift on the charge in the direction of the current." I was under the impression that electrons move in the opposite direction of the current. Could someone please explain this?
i think the positive charge drifts in the direction of I
great lecture
Thank you.
It was helpful, easy to digest.
Good teached
The thing I'm wondering about the direction of the current is that if it's true that electrons flow to the positive side then doesn't that affect where you would put a resistor? Wouldn't you want to put it between the negative terminal and what you were trying to reduce the current to? Like if you had an LED light in the circuit wouldn't you want the resistor inbetween the negative terminal and the LED light instead of inbetween the positive terminal and LED Light, since the flow is coming out of the negative terminal and you want to slow it before it reaches the LED light? Or, does it not actually matter which side you put the resistor on?
Hello Professor Matt Anderson, my name is Fernando, I am a Retired Portuguese Engineer, aged 79, and I want to thank you very, very, very much for the way you use in your MARVELLOUS LESSONS, because you, REALLY TEACH, and we, REALLY LEARN, through REALLY SIMPLE WAY.
I am interested to advise friends of mine to "assist" to those same lessons, BUT they do not understand English, and with SOME (not all ...) of the lessons, it has not been possible (at least, I could not configure my computer - in the case, a Mac) - to have Translation to Portuguese; could you be kind enough, Professor, to please inform me how to achieve to have that translation in ALL your Lessons?
My Regards and Thank you, again,
Fernando
The danger is not the clothes dryer as much as it is the house wiring. Each circuit is wired with wire of a certain thickness. Each thickness can safely allow a maximum current to flow without heating up and possibly igniting. The thicker the wire the greater the current it can safely conduct. To save money, most household circuits are 15A to 20A. That is enough for lights and small appliances. Large devices like your clothes dryer actually operate at double the voltage and have 30A circuit breakers in each line.
If you are not familiar with household wiring, it works like this. The power company delivers electricity through two thick wires. Each wire has a potential of 110V to 120V relative to the ground. The electricity comes in passes through the circuit breakers to your devices then returns via a neutral wire which is connected to ground. A connection from either wire to ground delivers 110V to 120V, but if you make a connection between the two wires, each at 110V to 120V you will get double the voltage, 220V to 240V. Since power is voltage times current, doubling the voltage halves the current. Each of those two lines has its own circuit breaker, typically 30 amps each.
If you look in your circuit breaker panel, you will see one or more sets of breakers that are two switches locked together, so flipping one of them flips both of them. One will be connected to your clothes dryer and the other to your air conditioner.
Wires are color coded. Black (death) or red (danger) are the hot wires where the electricity is coming into the circuit, and white (benign) for the neutral wire carrying it back to ground. There is also a special safety wire which is green (ground) which is there as a back up in case something goes wrong. It is typically connected to the outsides of metal appliances to keep you from being electrocuted.
One word of warning, you should never touch any bare wire whether it is black, white, or green, because it is possible to be electrocuted by any of them if something is broken in the circuit.
the fact that he gave tesla his due credit. cheers
DarkMatterSquirrels,
Credit where credit is due.
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
New cars have auto start. Do they use 300A to restart every time you ( stop and start ) in (stop and go) traffic 24:10?
richard detsch,
I have to imagine that new engines and starters are much more efficient these days, so I'm not sure. But the current is still substantial, just not for very long.
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
15:42 So the dude can actually write and draw BACKWARDS better than I can do it forward but then draws the shittiest Car I have seen since kindergarden XD
But jokes aside, I love these videos. I'm an electrician and I plan on going back to school next year and these videos definetely help me prepate for it
Mirror image. See:
ruclips.net/video/CWHMtSNKxYA/видео.html
Cheers,
Dr. A
Thanks for all your lectures. Which university do you teache?
So weird, im still in school and studying what people take in universities ....damn tho this video was bery helpful thanks for uploading
You are bery welcome.
Cheers,
Dr. A
yes very true m also in school and studying in class 12
amazing
Dr. Anderson, Which textbook are you following?
Robert Wynne,
I was using Knight. But I have also used Giancoli.
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
Protons and electrons can not only be moved by copper-wire but also by glassfibre-wire with pieces glass in it.
This goes somehow quicker, the circuit of the protons and electrons wil be in a spiral-move. And it is cheaper in fabricate.
I like your lessons, dr. Anderson a C to A most be possible at your lesson-subject. Thanks and kind regards.
Remarks are like(d).
what cleaner have you used to clean the board? Answer please.
Mohammad,
Foaming glass cleaner and a squeegee. (Has to be foaming.)
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
At 30:51😭😭😭very thanks for good explanation sir . When I am studying on this volts, current and resistance, I am always 😕 confused about this topic. And I don't know that how to ask question.. to my lecturer...😭😭🥺🥺.
But now I just got the answer from you sir thank you.
Sir pls tell me your address
I love your stuff, but you used the term 'Reluctance' when describing the effects of resistance. I think that may have been a bad choice of terms in this case, as 'Reluctance' is a quantity that is used, I believe, in magnetic terms. It might have been better to use the term 'opposition' to current flow in the case of resistance. (I apologize if this has been discussed before. My life is getting shorter by the second, and I don't always read previous comments.) With that said, I did get what you were trying to explain, and by watching your earlier videos, I'm not only trying to refresh what I have learned a long time ago, but also to learn it from a newer perspective. You do great stuff. don't stop.
Outstanding, thanks for keeping me honest and chiming in. Really appreciate it.
Cheers,
Dr. A
He's really good at writing backwards. (I hope you know I'm kidding)
LOL Left handed people often have this ability
Forgive my naivety, but how is the backwards writing done
Drew Andrews he records it with him behind the glass like we see, but then he mirrors the footage
Is this video related with chapter 25 from Giancoli's 4th edition book?
+Yahaira Cruz
Yahaira, I'm not sure. In the 7th edition, it correlates to Chapter 19.
Cheers, Dr. A
17:54 Oh, I'm watching buddy. I was wondering how the hell you got 3,000 and just assumed I was wrong lol.
Awesome, thanks for watching and commenting.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Are these lectures Algebra or Calculus based? (university vs. college physics?)
Bit of a mixture, but most are calculus based.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Sir I'm pavan Kumar from I'm from poor back ground but I'm preparing to ies. I'm an electrical student can u plz upload electrical ies class sir u r classes r simply to understand
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Use coupon code for India: FANDERSON2020INDIA
Monthly subscription for 400 INR!
Cheers,
Dr. A
Cold crank? Guess that makes the original battery the guy living in 1920 getting his car to start during the winter.
Had an old truck that refused to start when cold. Had to short the solenoid to kick the starter into action. Very exciting.
Cheers,
Dr. A
9:45 100mA = 0.1C/s X 36000 seconds = 3600C. You made it seem so much more complex than that.
You're great teacher ,thanks fir your videos
Do u have fb
You are welcome. Keep up with the physics.
Cheers,
Dr. A
18:00 trust us, we're watching at home
This guy reminds me of Richard Feynman
wow. same bro
just the type of stuff i like
19:00: Jack up your car using an AA battery.
Hi. in 48:17 th minute of video resistivity of gold was given as 1,72*10^-8 and at the 52:53th minutes of video same value given as copper resistivity . I think it is accidental
Welcome, I bid you welcome, tonight inside the Electric Circus!
Uncle Joe,
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
A circuit requires at least one element? If you just connect a wire to the negative and positive that's not a circuit? That would be considered a short circuit?
Electricians wish that the statement you made at about 2:10 was true. It would make their lives a lot easier and make about 90% of the NEC code unnecessary. You say the potential (voltage) at any place along a wire is the same. However, that is only true for an ideal wire that has no resistance. Such a metal wire does not exist and is very close only in superconductors.
I think a disclaimer is needed. You can say that in the lab you are measuring the same potential at every point along a wire. That is because your meter cannot measure the very small change. However, when you deal with longer wire and/or higher voltage, you will be able to measure that difference. But for now we are going to ignore the very small difference.
That will pave the way to differentiate those that will ignore that difference and before teachers and those that will become electrical engineers. (Not putting down teachers, I was one).
Great point, thanks for commenting.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Ohms law @34:48
I just wonder if this guy will ever be able to write forwards ever again.
Matt Smith,
Not writing backwards (I'm not that talented). The board is called Learning Glass. You can check it out at www.learning.glass
Cheers,
Dr. A
Sir electric fish current??
Sorry for the question sir?
I just want to know answer from you sir
"i wish it was a little bit more Messi" -Legandary
My grandfather used to say, "Puns are the lowest form of humor, and I'm striving for new lows."
Glad you enjoyed it.
Cheers,
Dr. A
where'd the 9.8 go
Units like ampere , that is based on a real person like here Ampere, are eighter written [A] or [ ampere] for the obvious reason to be able to tell the difference between the person and the unit.
5:45 - he continues to forget to include, "One amp is one coulomb per second _past a given point or plane._"
John,
Thank you! Sometimes I get a little too glib.
Cheers,
Dr. A
AC/DC Rocks!
From the Arctic Circle in Sweden (almost :)!
What kind of textbooks are using your students sir?
awsome :)
thanks you
Matt, you know better than that, it is NOT degrees Kelvin, it is Kelvins. The temperature you wrote is 125 Kelvins.
Wayne,
You are keeping me honest, I love it! Keep 'em coming.
Cheers,
Dr. A
Any Matrix fans ... his name is "Mr. Anderson"!
I thought zen monks meditate using Ohms.
Excellent!
Cheers,
Dr. A
inspired
Can anyone test this out and give feedback? hunt for androidcircuitsolver on google
Phasor Systems,
Thanks for the comment, and keep up with the physics!
You might also like my new website: www.universityphysics.education
Cheers,
Dr. A
?
Or LED?
Cheers,
Dr. A
You can’t raise a car two inches with a double A battery and this is a bet
I like it. I haven't done the experiment, but I'm betting if you do it slowly enough, you can do it. Not sure about the apparatus, though. That will take some thinking.
Cheers,
Dr. A
agree.. i think its impossible too. P = energy/unit time = mgh/t.. we cant provide this amount of energy in 1 second we need 10 hours then its not gonna work i guess