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Ha, Hyejin; Jang, Taehun; Sohn, Sang Ho; Kim, Junghwa – Physics Teacher, 2022
A solenoid is a coil wound many times on a cylinder of length greater than its diameter. Solenoids are mainly used as electromagnets, because a magnetic field is formed when current flows through a solenoid. The solenoid described in secondary school and university textbooks is a single-layered solenoid. Further, textbooks and papers focusing on…
Descriptors: Magnets, Secondary School Science, College Science, Textbooks
Kaps, A.; Stallmach, F. – Physics Teacher, 2022
In physics lessons at secondary school and experimental physics courses at universities, the magnetic field inside a current-carrying solenoid is considered quantitatively. The corresponding equations and theories are supported by measuring the magnetic flux density inside the solenoid with a Hall probe. It has already been shown that smartphones…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Secondary School Science, College Science
Winkler, Eleanor Anne; Graham, Paul; Unterman, Nathan A.; Grey, Benjamin; Miller, Jacob M.; Miller, Max J.; Sears, Allen J.; Bernat, Alex; Frank, Shoshana; Simon, Joshua; Eliaser, Shira K.; Blackmore, Tom; Copeland, Emmanuelle; Senser, Marybeth; Seiden, Henry; Valsamis, Anthony; Adams, Mark – Physics Teacher, 2022
With support from QuarkNet, high school students investigated the effect of overburden on muon flux by collecting data from Fermilab's Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search (MINOS) tunnel. Muon flux varied due to a change in overburden created by a 103-meter deep access shaft. A profile of muon flux as a function of distance from the access…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Physics, Science Activities
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2021
About 30 years ago I taught a series of summer enrichment programs for high school physics teachers, using funding from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes. I deliberately chose teachers from smaller cities and towns who were unlikely to have contact with other physics teachers. One of my more interesting teachers came from a rural area in a far…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Secondary School Science
Nieh, Hwa-Ming; Chen, Huai-Yi – Physics Teacher, 2023
The Arduino microcontroller is currently one of the favorite tools of makers, and many teachers have used it in teaching or experiments. In addition, light-emitting diode (LED) smart lighting is the worldwide trend in lighting. There are many teaching demonstrations or applications of color addition using LEDs. Furthermore, the Internet of Things…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Light, Color, Heat
Doval, Alejandro; de la Fuente, Raul – Physics Teacher, 2023
In this paper, we discuss a demonstration we have been performing for years with students from different levels, from physics students from our university to high school students in some talks aimed at encouraging them to study science. It provides visualization of Brewster's angle in an ingenious way using a "loaded" liquid crystal…
Descriptors: Physics, College Science, Secondary School Science, College Students
Wilson, Marcus T. – Physics Teacher, 2021
Many high school and first-year university courses include discussion of the magnetic effect of currents. Frequently discussed textbook examples include long, straight wires, circular current loops, and solenoids, partly because these examples are tractable mathematically. The solenoid naturally leads to discussion on magnetic materials since it…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Science Education, Magnets, Secondary School Science
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
Dallal, Tamar A.; Miller, Jacob M.; Michelle Matten,; Schur, Ezra; Sears, Allen J.; Carr, Clarissa; Rosenberg, Jacob; Unterman, Nathan A.; Valsamis, Anthony; Adams, Mark – Physics Teacher, 2022
During the August 21, 2017, solar eclipse, high school students measured secondary cosmic ray flux using QuarkNet detectors. These students conducted experiments examining cosmic ray flux, shower, speed of muons, and muon lifetime using QuarkNet cosmic ray muon detectors (CRMDs). These detectors measure muon flux of momenta greater than ~2 GeV, a…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Measurement Equipment, Secondary School Science, High School Students
Vidal, Xabier Cid; Manzano, Ramon Cid; Lema, Isaac Valiña – Physics Teacher, 2022
In this work, we present an experimental approximation to the study of the phenomenon of radioactivity in secondary schools, taking as an analogy the process of release of carbon dioxide in a carbonated beverage. In this way, we intend to facilitate the approach to the mathematical formalism and to the graphical description of this phenomenon, as…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Radiation, Secondary School Science
Cid-Vidal, Xabier; Cid, Ramon; Cliff, Harry Victor – Physics Teacher, 2021
This article presents some simple calculations related to the Future Circular Collider (FCC), which is being studied at CERN as a potential future replacement for the world's largest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The aim of this article is to bring particle physics into secondary school classrooms using the physics of the…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts
Dieguez, Gisselle; Karpenkopf, Jonathan; Labrador, Aaron; Gimenez, Ludmila; Guerra, Julian; Fulton, Jack; Walecki, Wojciech J. – Physics Teacher, 2021
Although ripple tanks have been used in the past to perform wave simulations for electromagnetic and acoustic phenomena, especially before the advent of computers, they are still often used to demonstrate wave propagation in high school and college physics classrooms. Usually ripple tanks have a rectangular shape. The wave propagating through the…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Equipment, Science Experiments
Hull, Michael M.; Nakayama, Shizuka; Tosa, Sachiko – Physics Teacher, 2023
Newton's laws are a ubiquitous topic in introductory physics instruction. One common problem involves asking what will happen if you stick your finger into a cup of water sitting on a scale. A way to solve the problem would be to first recognize that the water exerts a buoyant force upward on the finger, which students can recognize as being the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Principles, Concept Formation
Hernández, Irene Tovar; Vaquero, José Manuel – Physics Teacher, 2023
Old physics textbooks give us a great opportunity to learn about the history of science and rediscover different methods to teach physics to our students. There are many disused and forgotten experiments in them, but these can still be very useful to affirm and understand physics. This is the case of an instrument used in the 19th century to…
Descriptors: Science Education, Physics, Science History, Scientific Concepts
Tham, Claire; Yeo, Robin; Natarajan, Visshal; Zhang, Tianqin; Chen, Jer-Ming; Krishnaswamy, Lakshminarasimhan; Tan, Da Yang – Physics Teacher, 2022
In this article, we demonstrate the use of a simple pendulum to explore the concepts of kinematics and dynamics. A simple homemade pendulum and a phone-based accelerometer are used to determine, at various points in time, the acceleration of a moving train. The dynamical and kinematics data from the homemade pendulum and the accelerator can then…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Science Instruction, Computation, Secondary School Science