Main Page
Welcome to the Georgia Tech Wiki for Intro Physics. This resources was created so that students can contribute and curate content to help those with limited or no access to a textbook. When reading this website, please correct any errors you may come across. If you read something that isn't clear, please consider revising it!
Looking to make a contribution?
- Pick a specific topic from intro physics
- Add that topic, as a link to a new page, under the appropriate category listed below by editing this page.
- Copy and paste the default Template into your new page and start editing.
Please remember that this is not a textbook and you are not limited to expressing your ideas with only text and equations. Whenever possible embed: pictures, videos, diagrams, simulations, computational models (e.g. Glowscript), and whatever content you think makes learning physics easier for other students.
Source Material
All of the content added to this resource must be in the public domain or similar free resource. If you are unsure about a source, contact the original author for permission. That said, there is a surprisingly large amount of introductory physics content scattered across the web. Here is an incomplete list of intro physics resources (please update as needed).
- A physics resource written by experts for an expert audience Physics Portal
- A wiki book on modern physics Modern Physics Wiki
- The MIT open courseware for intro physics MITOCW Wiki
- An online concept map of intro physics HyperPhysics
- Interactive physics simulations PhET
- OpenStax algebra based intro physics textbook College Physics
- The Open Source Physics project is a collection of online physics resources OSP
- A resource guide compiled by the AAPT for educators ComPADRE
Organizing Categories
These are the broad, overarching categories, that we cover in two semester of introductory physics. You can add subcategories or make a new category as needed. A single topic should direct readers to a page in one of these catagories.
Interactions
Notable Scientists
- Albert Einstein
- Ernest Rutherford
- Joseph Henry
- Michael Faraday
- James Maxwell
- Robert Hooke
- Marie Curie
- Carl Friedrich Gauss
- Nikola Tesla
- Andre Marie Ampere
- Sir Isaac Newton
- J. Robert Oppenheimer
- Oliver Heaviside
- Rosalind Franklin
- Erwin Schrödinger
- Enrico Fermi
- Robert J. Van de Graaff
- Charles de Coulomb
- Hans Christian Ørsted
Contact Interactions
Momentum
- Vectors
- Kinematics
- Predicting Change in one dimension
- Predicting Change in multiple dimensions
- Momentum Principle
- Curving Motion
- Multi-particle Analysis of Momentum
Angular Momentum
Energy
Simple Circuits
Maxwell's Equations
Sound
Resources
- Commonly used wiki commands Wiki Cheatsheet
- A guide to representing equations in math mode Wiki Math Mode
- A page to keep track of all the physics Constants
- An overview of VPython