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Billingsley, Brianna R.; Christenson, Cory W. – Physics Teacher, 2022
A popular introductory physics laboratory experiment is one focusing on Snell's law. This is straightforward to complete with lasers and prisms, but here we present an alternative version that guides the students through some of the major historical developments, recreating and analyzing significant experiments. The discovery of Snell's law has a…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments, Scientific Principles
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Sengul, Ozden – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2020
This paper describes an alternative approach to teaching and learning practices in an undergraduate physics laboratory. The instructor plans and implements the 5E instructional model into the laboratory instruction. The article includes an example of the 5E lesson for the laboratory component of a physics course, which has separate lecture and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Physics, 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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Wardani, Tiara B.; Winarno, Nanang – Journal of Science Learning, 2017
The aim of this study was to determine the effect of inquiry-based laboratory activities on the students' understanding of the nature of science (NOS) in learning lights and optics topic. The method used in this research is quasi experiment. Sampling technique using random sampling to class and the samples were taken from grade 8 in one of junior…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Light, Optics
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Branca, Mario – Physics Teacher, 2010
A mirage can occur when a continuous variation in the refractive index of the air causes light rays to follow a curved path. As a result, the image we see is displaced from the location of the object. If the image appears higher in the air than the object, it is called a "superior" mirage, while if it appears lower it is called an "inferior"…
Descriptors: Optics, Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
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Kipnis, Nahum – Science & Education, 2011
This paper analyses the real origin and nature of scientific errors against claims of science critics, by examining a number of examples from the history of electricity and optics. This analysis leads to a conclusion that errors are a natural and unavoidable part of scientific process. If made available to students, through their science teachers,…
Descriptors: Optics, Science Teachers, Science Education, Energy
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Zorba, Serkan; Farah, Constantine; Pant, Ravi – European Journal of Physics, 2010
An advanced undergraduate laboratory experiment is outlined which uses a dye laser to map out the chromatic dispersion curve of a polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) optical fibre. Seven different wavelengths across the visible spectrum are employed using five different dyes. The light pulse is split into two pulses, one to a nearby photodetector and…
Descriptors: Lasers, Laboratory Experiments, Science Instruction, College Science
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Gluck, Paul; Perkalskis, Benjamin – Physics Teacher, 2009
Optical elements manipulate light waves. They may be used to focus the light or to change the phase, the polarization, the direction, or the intensity of light. Many of these functions are often demonstrated with microwaves, since the devices normally available in teaching laboratories produce wavelengths in the centimeter range and are therefore…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Acoustics
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Hinaus, Brad; Veum, Mick – Physics Teacher, 2009
One of the great, engaging aspects of physics is its application to everyday technology. The compact disc player is an example of one such technology that applies fundamental principles from optics in order to efficiently store and quickly retrieve information. We have created a lab in which students use simple optical components to assemble a…
Descriptors: Optics, Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
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Narayanamurthy, C. S. – European Journal of Physics, 2009
Fringes formed in a Michelson interferometer never localize in any plane, in the detector plane and in the localization plane. Instead, the fringes are assumed to localize at infinity. Except for some explanation in "Principles of Optics" by Born and Wolf (1964 (New York: Macmillan)), the fringe localization phenomena of Michelson's interferometer…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Graduate Study, Undergraduate Study
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Kraftmakher, Yaakov – European Journal of Physics, 2009
When data with and without an optically active sample are acquired simultaneously while one manually rotates the analyser, the graph of the first signal versus the second one is an ellipse whose shape shows the phase shift between the two signals; this shift is twice the optical rotation. There is no need to measure the rotation of the analyser or…
Descriptors: Optics, Science Instruction, Motion, Scientific Principles
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Molesini, Giuseppe; Vannoni, Maurizio – European Journal of Physics, 2008
The observation of peculiar light patterns produced by reflection from a water surface perturbed by falling droplets is reported. The phenomenon is analysed in some detail, with a simplified model of a surface wave packet. A simple experiment reproducing the phenomenon in the laboratory is presented, also showing evidence of pattern distortions…
Descriptors: College Science, Undergraduate Study, Science Instruction, Physics