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Showing all 14 results Save | Export
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Avraham Merzel; Efraim Yehuda Weissman; Nadav Katz; Igal Galili – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
Teaching quantum physics (QP) to high school (HS) students is gaining momentum, necessitating the exploration of various effective methods. Specifically, the research on quantitative teaching methods is still in its early stages. Understanding the power of Dirac notation (DN) in teaching is crucial for grasping the complexities of QP, as it…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Science Education, Physics
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Widenhorn, Ralf – Physics Teacher, 2016
The Portland Timbers won their first Major League Soccer (MLS) Cup Championship in December 2015. However, if it had not been for a kind double goalpost miss during a penalty shootout a few weeks earlier, the Timbers would never have been in the finals. On Oct. 30th, after what has been called "the greatest penalty kick shootout in MLS…
Descriptors: Team Sports, Computation, Probability, Incidence
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Ismail, Yilmaz – International Journal of Educational Administration and Policy Studies, 2016
This study aims to develop a semiotic declarative knowledge model, which is a positive constructive behavior model that systematically facilitates understanding in order to ensure that learners think accurately and ask the right questions about a topic. The data used to develop the experimental model were obtained using four measurement tools…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Semiotics, Grade 1, Elementary School Science
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Riggs, Peter J. – European Journal of Physics Education, 2013
Students often wrestle unsuccessfully with the task of correctly calculating momentum probability densities and have difficulty in understanding their interpretation. In the case of a particle in an "infinite" potential well, its momentum can take values that are not just those corresponding to the particle's quantised energies but…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Computation, Motion
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Ruckle, L. J.; Belloni, M.; Robinett, R. W. – European Journal of Physics, 2012
The biharmonic oscillator and the asymmetric linear well are two confining power-law-type potentials for which complete bound-state solutions are possible in both classical and quantum mechanics. We examine these problems in detail, beginning with studies of their trajectories in position and momentum space, evaluation of the classical probability…
Descriptors: Probability, Quantum Mechanics, Science Instruction, Physics
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Fernandez, Francisco M. – European Journal of Physics, 2011
We describe a method for the accurate calculation of bound-state and resonance energies for one-dimensional potentials. We calculate the shape resonances for symmetric two-barrier potentials and compare them with those coming from the Siegert approximation, the complex scaling method and the box-stabilization method. A comparison of the…
Descriptors: Computation, Energy, Science Instruction, Physics
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Rapedius, Kevin – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Here, we present complex resonance states (or Siegert states) that describe the tunnelling decay of a trapped quantum particle from an intuitive point of view that naturally leads to the easily applicable Siegert approximation method. This can be used for analytical and numerical calculations of complex resonances of both the linear and nonlinear…
Descriptors: Quantum Mechanics, Equations (Mathematics), Computation, Energy
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Vutha, Amar C. – European Journal of Physics, 2010
The Landau-Zener formula provides the probability of non-adiabatic transitions occurring when two energy levels are swept through an avoided crossing. The formula is derived here in a simple calculation that emphasizes the physics responsible for non-adiabatic population transfer. (Contains 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Probability, Science Instruction, Energy, Mathematical Formulas
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Morio, Jerome; Pastel, Rudy; Le Gland, Francois – European Journal of Physics, 2010
Monte Carlo simulations are a classical tool to analyse physical systems. When unlikely events are to be simulated, the importance sampling technique is often used instead of Monte Carlo. Importance sampling has some drawbacks when the problem dimensionality is high or when the optimal importance sampling density is complex to obtain. In this…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Simulation, Sampling
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Bhattacharyya, Pratip; Chakrabarti, Bikas K. – European Journal of Physics, 2008
We study different ways of determining the mean distance (r[subscript n]) between a reference point and its nth neighbour among random points distributed with uniform density in a D-dimensional Euclidean space. First, we present a heuristic method; though this method provides only a crude mathematical result, it shows a simple way of estimating…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Computation, Probability, Physics
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Duerdoth, Ian – Physics Education, 2009
The subject of uncertainties (sometimes called errors) is traditionally taught (to first-year science undergraduates) towards the end of a course on statistics that defines probability as the limit of many trials, and discusses probability distribution functions and the Gaussian distribution. We show how to introduce students to the concepts of…
Descriptors: Least Squares Statistics, Probability, College Science, Undergraduate Study
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Pierce, Benjamin A.; Honeycutt, Brenda B. – American Biology Teacher, 2007
Probability is an essential tool for understanding heredity and modern genetics, yet many students have difficulty with this topic due to the abstract and quantitative nature of the subject. To facilitate student learning of probability in genetics, we have developed a set of hands-on, cooperative activities that allow students to determine…
Descriptors: Heredity, Learning Activities, Genetics, Statistical Analysis
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Kozliak, Evguenii I. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
Four different approaches to residual entropy (the entropy remaining in crystals comprised of nonsymmetric molecules like CO, N[subscript 2]O, FClO[subscript 3], and H[subscript 2]O as temperatures approach 0 K) are analyzed and a new method of its calculation is developed based on application of the Boltzmann distribution. The inherent connection…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Scientific Concepts, Probability, Undergraduate Students
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Zetie, K. P.; James, J. E. M. – Physics Education, 2002
The concept of risk has entered into physics courses in various guises. It is treated explicitly in the "Advancing Physics" [1] course and implicitly at GCSE through "Ideas and Evidence" discussions. This could easily lead to such ideas as the balance between treatment and risk in radiotherapy and the likelihood of an asteroid strike. In this…
Descriptors: Physics, Risk, Statistics, Probability