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Sánchez, María Jesús; Gil, Julia; Manuel Vaquero, José – Physics Teacher, 2022
The camera obscura is a well-known optical device in the form of a closed box with a hole in one of its walls through which light rays pass, forming an inverted image of the external objects on the opposite wall, as can be seen in Fig. 1(a). Despite the simplicity of its basic design, they have been widely used by scientists and artists. In…
Descriptors: Optics, Light, Photography, Design
Matsutani, Akihiro – Physics Teacher, 2022
We demonstrated that an optimally designed pinhole camera can be used as an astronomical tool to observe the libration and apparent diameter change of the Moon at night. The libration and apparent diameter change of the Moon were observed using a handmade pinhole camera with a diameter of 0.65 mm and a focal length of 400 mm. It was found that the…
Descriptors: Photography, Light, Optics, Astronomy
Balta, Nuri – Physics Teacher, 2022
In introductory texts, some "special" rays are selected to draw the image produced by lenses and mirrors. After teaching special rays, students usually ask how to draw an arbitrary ray. One method for drawing an arbitrary ray is the "tilted principal axis." As an example, the tracing of an arbitrary ray in diverging lens is…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Optics, Visual Aids
Torcal-Milla, Francisco Jose – Physics Education, 2022
Diffraction refers to a kind of optical phenomena which occurs when light approaches an element (object or aperture) whose features are in the range of the illuminating wavelength (small apertures, sharp edges). It can be explained by means of the undulatory nature of light or also geometrically by using simple ray optics. Diffraction phenomena…
Descriptors: Light, Optics, Experiments, Class Activities
DiLisi, Gregory A. – Physics Teacher, 2022
On April 14, 1912, the British passenger liner R.M.S. "Titanic" struck an iceberg. The ship sank in a fraction of the time designers had estimated following a worst case scenario. The purpose of this article is to examine the atmospheric refractive phenomena that might have played a significant role in obscuring the iceberg from…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Introductory Courses, Physics, Oceanography
Inbanathan, S. S. R.; Moorthy, K.; S., Ashok Kumar – Physics Teacher, 2021
The falling temperature of the photosphere with height is responsible for the effect known as limb darkening. The Sun is not equally bright all over the disc. When we observe the Sun towards the limbs, it appears to get darker. Light from the photosphere travels through an absorptive medium. Therefore, one can see only so far into the photosphere.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Light
Souza, P. V. S.; Rodrigues, D. P.; da Silva, L.; Huguenin, J. A. O.; Balthazar, W. F. – Physics Education, 2021
Although it originates from the ancient Greeks, optics still arouses a lot of scientific interest, mainly due to the technological innovation associated with it. One of its most interesting applications is related to optical metrology and the characterization of materials through optical techniques. While some of these processes can be explained…
Descriptors: Optics, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Experiments
Ackerson, Bruce J. – Physics Teacher, 2020
Sometimes it takes little to keep this physicist happy on an airplane. A window seat, where the plane's shadow is visible or has disappeared into the distance, provides the opportunity to observe a variety of phenomena associated with sunlight that is reflected, refracted or scattered back towards the Sun. The term "backscattering" is…
Descriptors: Scientists, Observation, Scientific Concepts, Light
Chen, Yu; Kim, Hee Ra; Ahn, Yu Jin; Kim, Jung Bog – Physics Teacher, 2022
The laser pointer has been widely used to demonstrate some simple optics phenomena, like reflection, refraction, total reflection, and diffraction. However, the rays of laser light cannot be seen in the air because the scattered light is too weak. Many physics teachers use milk or smoke to visualize rays of laser light in physics labs, but it is…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Physics, Optics, Light
Ma, Shih-Hsin; Wu, Jun-Yi; Chiang, Chun-Ming – Physics Teacher, 2022
This paper proposes a simple method to design experiments for drawing the light paths at a lens to find its effective focal length and principal planes. In the designed experiments, long-exposure photography was used to record the light scattered using a moving sheet of paper, thus revealing the light path. According to the proposed experimental…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Light, Photography
Williamson, J. Charles – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
In the vicinity of a critical point, the impact of a substance's chemical identity is superseded by universal critical behavior for a number of physical properties, such as visible light scattering. In this classroom demonstration, students observe a single-phase critical mixture of partially miscible isobutyric acid + water (IAW) as the…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction, Chemistry, Light
Ko, Hyeyoon; Kim, Minwook; Wi, Youngjae; Rim, Minwoo; Lim, Seok-In; Koo, Jahyeon; Kang, Dong-Gue; Jeong, Kwang-Un – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Using polymerizable cholesteric liquid crystal (CLC) paints, we prepare circularly polarized freestanding films that enable students to acquire a basic understanding of circular polarization and molecular chirality. The polymerized helical structures of CLC films can exhibit brilliant structural colors by selective reflection of visible light…
Descriptors: Optics, Color, Light, Science Instruction
Chattopadhyay, Tanay – Science Activities: Projects and Curriculum Ideas in STEM Classrooms, 2022
In this article, simple models of optical computing circuits (1 x 4 demultiplexer (DEMUX), 4 x 1 multiplexer (MUX), Boolean logic, and half-adder (HA)) are shown with mechanically controlled plane mirrors. Photographs of the proposed computational circuits are also shown. It is very useful for the school student to understand optical logic and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Optics, Computation, Science Activities
Pathare, Shirish R.; Latad, Bhagyashri G.; Lahane, Rohan D.; Huli, Saurabhee S. – Physics Teacher, 2021
Students are often introduced to optics in their middle school years. The initial topics that are introduced through their lessons are laws of reflection and refraction of light. In the law of reflection, students do not often question why the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection and why a light ray should follow this specific…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Optics, Middle School Students
Sirola, Christopher – Physics Teacher, 2019
One of the most consequential inventions of modern times is the telescope. Almost immediately upon turning it to the skies, Galileo made discoveries that altered our perceptions of our place in the cosmos forever: features on the Moon, the rotation of the Sun, the composition of the Milky Way, the phases of Venus, and the four large moons of…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Astronomy, Light