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Showing 1 to 15 of 133 results Save | Export
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Farney, Michael Noble – Physics Teacher, 2022
Physics teachers are sometimes asked to teach an astronomy course for non-majors. One can't make that class dance and sing without the starry night, but on a brightly lit campus viewing deep sky objects may seem impossible. Hence instructors often opt for planetarium shows. However: 1) Planetariums aren't the real thing. 2) People living in large…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Astronomy, Recreational Facilities
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Sunil Dehipawala; Todd Holden; Tak Cheung – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2024
Hurricane and galaxy tidal effect are routine teaching topics in community college first year science courses, but there is a knowledge gap without a quantitative discussion of the physics of non-inertia frame. A survey of YouTube videos posted by Education Centers and professors showed that the hand-waving conceptual explanation is the most…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Engineering Education, College Freshmen, Astronomy
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Ollé, H.; Kovács, T. – Physics Education, 2022
Data from the Kepler satellite were analysed using the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes database. With the participation of 53 students, we determined the parameters of the HAT-P-7b (Kepler-2) exoplanet system (transit duration, planet-to-star radius ratio, orbital period, semi-major axis and star mass). We used approaches that are easy to…
Descriptors: Photography, Databases, Physics, Science Instruction
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Coqueiro Rodrigues, Rojans; Cardozo Dias, Penha Maria – Physics Teacher, 2022
In high school, and also in introductory physics courses in higher levels of schooling, the law of universal gravitation of planets is introduced by postulating Johannes Kepler's three laws, and later Isaac Newton's law of the inverse of the square of the distance to the Sun. The justification of the laws is only achieved in advanced courses in…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Astronomy, Motion, Physics
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Proven-Adzri, E.; Ansah-Narh, T.; Aworka, R.; Fosuhene, S. K.; Sottie, S. O.; Gyasi, G. – Physics Education, 2022
The planet Mercury transited the face of the Sun in a rare spectacle on 11 November 2019. It was an awe-inspiring moment for 300 students from Kwabenya Community High School and Ghana Atomic Energy Commission Basic School in Ghana to see this wonder of the cosmos. Celestron Power Seeker 60 mm diameter telescopes were used to project the Sun's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physics, Science Instruction, High School Students
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Kucukozer, Huseyin; Yurumezoglu, Kemal; Kucukozer, H. Asuman; Isildak, R. Suat – Physics Education, 2020
In this study, the tilt of the Earth's axis was measured during a lunar eclipse using a telescope based on the angle between the lunar orbit and ecliptic planes being considered as approximately zero. The presented method not only offers a practical and reliable way of measuring the axial tilt of the Earth during a lunar eclipse but also helps in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Astronomy
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Caerols, Hugo; Asenjo, Felipe A. – Physics Teacher, 2020
From ancient times, the different features of planets and moons have created a huge interest. Aristarchus was one of the first to study the relative relations among Earth, Moon, and Sun. This interest has remained until today, and therefore it is always relevant to make this knowledge more appealing to the younger generations. Nowadays, smartphone…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Astronomy, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices
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Kersting, Magdalena; Toellner, Richard; Blair, David; Burman, Ron – Physics Education, 2020
In recent years, general relativity (GR) and gravitational-wave astronomy have emerged both as active fields of research and as popular topics in physics classrooms. Teachers can choose from an increasing number of modern instructional models to introduce students to relativistic ideas. However, the true potential of an instructional model can…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Astronomy, Scientific Concepts
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Pili, Unofre B.; Violanda, Renante R. – Physics Education, 2020
The oscillating atmospheric CO[subscript 2] concentrations at Mauna Loa, on the island of Hawaii, Hawaii, United States of America, are Fourier transformed in order to extract the period of oscillations. Also well-known as the Keeling curve, CO[subscript 2] concentrations (in time series) at Mauna Loa oscillate in direct association with seasonal…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Physics, Science Instruction, Astronomy
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Goldman, Jesse; McNichols, Andrew; Pipes, Robert – Physics Teacher, 2020
In this paper, we describe a study of cosmic ray muon rates and energies at various elevations on Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii. The study was originally conceived as an extension to the upper-division modern physics laboratory at the University of Hawaii at Hilo and used the TeachSpin Muon Physics apparatus (abbreviated TSMP below) from that…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Physics, Science Instruction, Energy
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Blanco, Philip – Physics Teacher, 2020
In the April 2018 issue of "TPT," Joseph Amato presented an analysis of intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) trajectories as applied to recent test launches from North Korea. Using properties of their elliptical paths, he derived relationships between launch velocity, elevation angle, and maximum range. However, this approach cannot…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Computer Simulation
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Archer, Avery; Sederberg, David; Kondapaneni, Guna; Sands, Philip – Physics Teacher, 2020
The Search for Exoplanets is an interactive computer simulation, the product of a collaboration between the Departments of Physics and Astronomy and Computer Science at Purdue University. Our goal was to create a computer simulation that would introduce students to scientific principles, research methodology, and analysis of data with which…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Educational Technology, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Makous, John L.; Bandura, Kevin – Physics Teacher, 2021
Models are at the heart of any physics discipline, and in recent decades physics education has shifted heavily toward teaching students how to think using models. Involving students in an investigation of a real phenomenon through measurements and the applications of models is an ideal learning experience for a physics student and is the aim of…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Models
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Su, Jun; Wang, Weiguo; Wang, Sihui – Physics Education, 2019
In a spiral galaxy, the stars move in a circular motion around the galactic center, and the relation between velocity and the orbital radius is referred to as the rotation curve. Previous astronomical observation data indicate that the rotation curve is flat at the periphery of the galaxy, which completely dissatisfies Keplerian decline. Assuming…
Descriptors: Visualization, Scientific Concepts, Astronomy, Motion
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Gangui, Alejandro; Lastra, Cecilia; Karaseur, Fernando – Physics Teacher, 2018
The observation that the shadows of objects change during the course of the day and also for a fixed time during a year led curious minds to realize that the Sun could be used as a timekeeper. However, the daily motion of the Sun has some subtleties, for example, with regards to the precise time at which it crosses the meridian near noon. When the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Astronomy, Motion
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