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Showing 1 to 15 of 39 results Save | Export
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Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2020
If a ball rolls at constant speed on a horizontal surface about a horizontal axis then the angular velocity is easily measured. If the ball is projected with additional spin about the vertical axis, then the rotation axis is tilted and it is more difficult to measure the rotation speed. A few examples are presented to show how the separate topspin…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction
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Ivanov, Dragia; Nikolov, Stefan – Physics Education, 2020
In this paper we consider the well-known experiment with the 'heavy' newspaper that breaks a stick that it is laid on. Using several appropriate control experiments we show that the currently invoked explanation using atmospheric pressure cannot be correct. We perform a theoretical analysis and propose a new explanation based on the rotational…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Physics, Motion
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Wong, Kin Son; Wong, Hang – Physics Teacher, 2022
The law of conservation of momentum is a fundamental law of nature. It states that the momentum of an isolated system is conserved. In high school or introductory-level physics courses, for simplicity, teachers and textbooks always use collisions in one dimension as the examples to introduce the concept of conservation of momentum. To solve simple…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Kinetics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
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Davidovic, Milena D.; Markovic-Topalovic, Tatjana; Sliško, Josip; Božic, Mirjana – Physics Teacher, 2020
In the same chapter of his book "Opera Geometrica," Torricelli published two discoveries: 1) initial velocity of a jet from a container increases with the square root of the depth of the hole; 2) he drew the pattern of jets from three openings at the wall of a container filled with water to constant level "H" and determined the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation
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Rubin, Scott – Physics Teacher, 2019
The stereotypical situation of a snowball picking up both mass and speed as it rolls without slipping down a hill provides an opportunity to explore the general form of both translational and rotational versions of Newton's second law through multivariable differential equations. With a few reasonable assumptions, it can be shown that the snowball…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
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Ben-Abu, Yuval; Wolfson, Ira; Yizhaq, Hezi – Physics Education, 2018
We suggest an activity for measuring the speed of a bicycle going in circular motion by measuring the bicycle's lean angle. In this activity students will be able to feel the strength that is being activated on their bodies while they are moving in circular motion. They will also understand that it is impossible to ride in a circle without the…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
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Rizcallah, Joseph A. – Physics Education, 2017
In many introductory-level physics textbooks, the derivation of the formula for the speed of transverse waves in a string is either omitted altogether or presented under physically overly idealized assumptions about the shape of the considered wave pulse and the related velocity and acceleration distributions. In this paper, we derive the named…
Descriptors: Physics, Mathematical Formulas, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles
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Shuler, Robert L., Jr. – Physics Education, 2016
The forgotten history of de Broglie waves as themselves artifacts of a Lorentz transform, not physical lengths and frequencies to be transformed, causes confusion for students and others. In this paper the de Broglie wavelength is derived and dependence of de Broglie frequency on velocity explained in terms of Einstein synchronized reference frame…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Motion, Measurement Techniques
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Dean, Kevin; Mathew, Jyothi – European Journal of Physics Education, 2016
A theoretical analysis is presented, showing the derivations of seven different linearization equations for the conical pendulum period "T", as a function of radial and angular parameters. Experimental data obtained over a large range of fixed conical pendulum lengths (0.435 m-2.130 m) are plotted with the theoretical lines and…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Motion, Science Experiments, Physics
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Sanny, Jeff; Smith, David – Physics Teacher, 2015
An important concept that is presented in the discussion of Newton's law of universal gravitation is that the gravitational effect external to a spherically symmetric mass distribution is the same as if all of the mass of the distribution were concentrated at the center. By integrating over ring elements of a spherical shell, we show that the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Physics
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Troy, Tia; Reiner, Megan; Haugen, Andrew J.; Moore, Nathan T. – Physics Education, 2017
The work describes an analogy-based small oscillations analysis of a standard static equilibrium lab problem. In addition to force analysis, a potential energy function for the system is developed, and by drawing out mathematical similarities to the simple harmonic oscillator, we are able to describe (and experimentally verify) the period of small…
Descriptors: Conservation (Concept), Energy, Motion, Physics
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Arnone, Stefano; Moauro, Francesco; Siccardi, Matteo – Physics Education, 2017
The year 2014 marked the four-hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary of Galileo's birth, making it the perfect occasion to present and illustrate a GeoGebra applet which reproduces some of Galileo's celebrated experiments on the uniformly accelerated motion, as reported on in "Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Relating to Two New…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Experiments, Motion
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Bokor, Nándor – Physics Education, 2015
The famous motto of the Lucky Luke comics series and its accompanying drawing are analyzed from a physicist's viewpoint. They provide useful pedagogical tools to discuss such aspects of relativity as causality, the equivalence principle, gravitational blue shift, and the tachyonic antitelephone. [This article was first published in Hungarian in…
Descriptors: Physics, Teaching Methods, Concept Teaching, Scientific Concepts
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Hsu, Tung – Physics Teacher, 2014
A vehicle starts from rest at constant acceleration, then cruises at constant speed for a time. Next, it decelerates at a constant rate.… This and similar statements are common in elementary physics courses. Students are asked to graph the motion of the vehicle or find the velocity, acceleration, and distance traveled by the vehicle from a given…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Motion, Physics, Science Experiments
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Lauginie, Pierre – Science & Education, 2013
We discuss how light acquired a velocity through history, from the ancient Greeks to the early modern era. Combining abstract debates, models of light, practical needs, planned research and chance, this history illustrates several key points that should be brought out in science education.
Descriptors: Motion, Light, Physics, Science Instruction
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