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Showing 1 to 15 of 84 results Save | Export
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Navalkar, Vinita; Sawant, Sumedh; Mourya, Shubham – Physics Education, 2021
The concept of black body is of primary importance in studying the energy transfer of thermal electromagnetic radiation at all wavelengths. Several physical bodies like incandescent lamps, electric heaters, stoves, the sun and the other stars, microwave background radiation, etc., are considered to be black bodies as their radiation spectra fits…
Descriptors: Energy, Radiation, Light, Physics
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Santosa, I. E. – Physics Education, 2020
A simple apparatus consisting of a plastic syringe coupled with a U-tube has been constructed. This setup is filled with water to trap air in one arm of the U-tube. A change in the volume of the enclosed air causes a change in its pressure that is indicated by the difference in the water levels. Boyle's law is shown by a linear relation between…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Physics, Science Equipment, Laboratory Equipment
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Ludwig, Nicola; Carpineti, Marina – Physics Education, 2020
Using everyday life examples is proven didactically useful for teaching physics, as it presents effective applications of physical laws. Cooking and food, in particular, serve two useful purposes: on one side, they are able to engage students in the study of physics with familiar examples; on the other side, thanks to the wide range of physical…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Food
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Vollmer, Michael; Möllmann, Klaus-Peter – Physics Education, 2018
There are many physics experiments with long time scales such that they are usually neither shown in the physics class room nor in student labs. However, they can be easily recorded with time-lapse cameras and the respective time-lapse videos allow qualitative and/or quantitative analysis of the underlying physics. Here, we present some examples…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Video Technology, Scientific Principles
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Puantha, Rattanaporn; Khammarew, Wilaiwan; Tong-on, Anusorn; Saphet, Parinya – Physics Education, 2019
The purpose of this study was to develop a modern experimental apparatus using an Arduino with LabVIEW instead of the classical experiment. The wavelength of the sound was determined using the resonance of an air column. The smartphone app was used to generate the desired frequencies. A sound intensity and ultrasonic sensor was used to read the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Laboratory Equipment, Science Laboratories
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Semay, Claude; Lo Bue, Francesco; Mélin, Soizic; Michel, Francis – Physics Education, 2018
In 1849, Hippolyte Fizeau determined the speed of light in a famous experiment. The idea was to measure the time taken for a pulse of light to travel between an intense light source and a mirror about 8 km away. A rotating cogwheel with 720 notches, that could be rotated at a variable speed, was used to chop the light beam and determine the flight…
Descriptors: Physics, Measurement, Scientific Principles, Light
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Broomfield, H.; Hirst, J.; Raven, M.; Joos, M.; Vafeiadis, T.; Chung, T. K.; Harrow, J.; Khoo, D.; Kwok, T.; Li, J.; Mandelstam, H.; Martin-Halls, J.; Perkins, R.; Singh, A.; Southwell, J.; Tsui, A.; Tsui, K.; Townsend, D.; Watson, H. – Physics Education, 2018
The CERN Beamline for Schools Competition gives high school students the opportunity to perform an experiment of their design using the T9 facility. Our team, 'Relatively Special', was fortunate enough to be joint winners of this global event and travel to CERN for a unique adventure. This paper gives an account of our story including the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, High School Students, Secondary School Science, Science Experiments
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Chen, Chi-Tung; Lee, Wen-Tang; Kao, Sung-Kai – Physics Education, 2014
A Cartesian diver can be used to measure the surface tension of a liquid to a certain extent. The surface tension measurement is related to the two critical pressures at which the diver is about to sink and about to emerge. After sinking because of increasing pressure, the diver is repulsed to the centre of the vessel. After the pressure is…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Physics, Science Experiments
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Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2014
In 1974, Professor Eric Laithwaite demonstrated an unusually heavy gyroscope at a Royal Institution lecture in London. The demonstration was televised and can be viewed on YouTube. A recent version of the same experiment, together with partial explanations, attracted two million YouTube views in the first few months. In both cases, the gyroscope…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Motion, Scientific Principles, Science Experiments
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Bancroft, Samuel; Bancroft, Ben; Greenwood, Jake – Physics Education, 2014
An experiment was carried out to investigate the changes in ionizing cosmic radiation as a function of altitude. This was carried out using a Geiger-Müller tube on-board a high altitude balloon, which rose to an altitude of 31 685 m. The gathered data show that the Geiger-Müller tube count readings increased to a maximum at an altitude of about 24…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Radiation, Measurement Techniques
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Dittrich, William A. – Physics Teacher, 2014
The drop towers of yesteryear were used to make lead shot for muskets, as described in "The Physics Teacher" in April 2012. However, modern drop towers are essentially elevators designed so that the cable can "break" on demand, creating an environment with microgravity for a short period of time, currently up to nine seconds at…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Toys, Motion
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Michaelis, Max M. – Physics Education, 2014
After a brief history of the Levitron, the first horizontal axis Levitron is reported. Because it is easy to operate, it lends itself to educational physics experiments and analogies. Precession and nutation are visualized by reflecting the beam from a laser pointer off the "spignet". Precession is fundamental to nuclear magnetic…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Lasers, Magnets, Scientific Principles
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Doran, Patrick; Hawk, William; Siegel, P. B. – Physics Teacher, 2014
Maxwell's discovery of the relation between electricity, magnetism, and light was one of the most important ones in physics. With his added displacement current term, Maxwell showed that the equations of electricity and magnetism produced a radiation solution, electromagnetic (EM) radiation, that traveled with a speed of c=1/v(e0µ0). The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Energy, Magnets
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Galeriu, Calin; Edwards, Scott; Esper, Geoffrey – Physics Teacher, 2014
We cannot hope for a new generation of scientists and engineers if we don't let our young students take ownership of their scientific and engineering explorations, if we don't let them enjoy the hands-on cycle of design and production, and if we don't let them implant their creativity into a technologically friendly environment.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Motion, Hands on Science
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Nunn, John – Physics Education, 2014
A simple inductive gravimeter constructed from a rigid plastic pipe and insulated copper wire is described. When a magnet is dropped through the vertically mounted pipe it induces small alternating voltages. These small signals are fed to the microphone input of a typical computer and sampled at a typical rate of 44.1 kHz using a custom computer…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Laboratory Equipment, Magnets
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