ap physics b thread!

<p>^^ Aaah Shut Up -.-'</p>

<p>Just started studying...will commence my all-nighter.</p>

<p>Yay! Berkshire, doesn't it feel great to be pull an all-nighter.</p>

<p>I'm up with you guys :)</p>

<p>I just noticed, I made a horrible grammar mistake in my post above. haha my brain's going nuts after a dozen of red bulls.
I'm not exactly ready for the exam, I think. Or maybe it's because I'm tired and my brain isn't functioning as it should be.</p>

<p>haha, that was pretty bad. i didn't even notice though. i dont feel ready at all, but i got a 4 on the last practice test i took. i think its just an intense curve</p>

<p>Haha, it's ok...same here. I just finished optics...just electrostatics/modern physics crap left :o</p>

<p>Do you know if there's a lot of modern physics??? I can't memorize the time dilation/whatever bs...:S</p>

<p>if you have 5 steps, just read that for modern</p>

<p>its seriously way better than pr's, and it's worth learning</p>

<p>Ah..too bad then, I only got PR...
No red bulls for me though. I'm just gonna skip first 2 classes in the morning and hope my teachers don't notice...haha....</p>

<p>Could you list out the equations we need to know for modern physics?</p>

<p>e=hf
Kmax=hf-(work function)
f0=(work function)/h
E[emitted photon]=deltaE
lamba=(hc)/(Ej-Ei)
lambda=h/p
E=mc^2</p>

<p>you need to know nuclear decay and about electron volts too.</p>

<p>I figured it out today in about half an hour. i wish i could somehow give you the 5 steps book though. it saved me days of time i spent trying to learn it from the pr.</p>

<p>Woah thanks a lot! Hmm...just 10 more hours to the test...................</p>

<p>This should be helpful...I just realized I need to know this:</p>

<pre><code>* isothermal process (at constant temperature, maintained with heat added or removed from a heat source or sink)
* isobaric process (at constant pressure)
* isometric / isochoric process (at constant volume)
* adiabatic process (no heat is added or removed from the working fluid)
o isentropic process, reversible adiabatic process (no heat is added or removed from the working fluid - and the entropy is constant)
* isenthalpic process (the enthalpy is constant)
</code></pre>

<p>Good luck to you guys!
Taking the physics exam next year. =&lt;/p>

<p>i think im off to sleep. good luck to you guys.</p>

<p>i'll be up at 7. im sooooo happy this is an afternoon exam lol</p>

<p>rawr.
5hours ish!</p>

<p>gosh...i would be happy if i got a 4...ouchh.....nearly everybody in my physics class told me they gave up on it and stopped studying for it, but i haven't gave up yet!! fortunately for me.....2 more hours until the exam....ahhhh!!!
how much do u think colleges care about the AP physics exam?</p>

<p>Good Luck everyone! (although I'll probably be the last person to write the exam on this forum - pacific time)</p>

<p>No you won't!</p>

<p>I think you guys are underestimating the curve; 90% of the people taking it at my school don't know thermo, fluid, nuclear, or induction. Good luck to everyone and I hope this year's test is easy.</p>

<p>MC: easier than I expected
FR: RAPE for question 3 and the last one (which I ran out of time doing because I screwed up on the 1st one and went back)</p>