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Ng, Chiu-king – Physics Teacher, 2022
In this paper, we utilize the readily known theory of the ideal transformer to furnish a self-contained qualitative explanation on the AC-powered Thomson jumping ring (TJR) experiment.
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts
Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2021
The theory of the Big Bang is accepted nearly universally among the scientific community. However, there is a small cadre of individuals who dispute this consensus and they point to a handful of datums that don't fit into the picture. One such datum is the existence of a star with an age reported to be older than the cosmos itself. This star is…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Instruction, Science History, Theories
Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2020
Two well-regarded measurements for the expansion rate of the universe disagree, leaving cosmologists very puzzled. It may be that something large has been overlooked in our theory of the Big Bang. This discrepancy is called the Hubble tension and it has led to a very interesting conversation within the cosmology community.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Measurement Techniques, Astronomy
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2018
Some of you may remember the 1979 television series "Connections" that was written and narrated by James Burke, a British science writer. Burke's technique was to choose a number of seemingly unrelated ideas and show how they led to developments in science and technology. This is an enjoyable business, even if some of the connections…
Descriptors: Science History, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Energy
Ivanov, Dragia Trifonov; Nikolov, Stefan Nikolaev – Physics Teacher, 2016
The rainbow is a beautiful optical phenomenon that has fascinated humankind since antiquity. It is caused by a huge number of water droplets in the atmosphere illuminated by the Sun. Many noted physicists have contributed to the explanation of the rainbow. The wave theory of the rainbow was developed by George Airy, and modern descriptions are…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Education, Optics, Scientific Concepts
Mabin, Mason; Becker, Maria; Batelaan, Herman – Physics Teacher, 2016
The concept of curved space is not readily observable in everyday life. The educational movie "Sphereland" attempts to illuminate the idea. The main character, a hexagon, has to go to great lengths to prove that her world is in fact curved. We present an experiment that demonstrates a new way to determine if a two-dimensional surface,…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Energy, Magnets
Caballero, Marcos D.; Burk, John B.; Aiken, John M.; Thoms, Brian D.; Douglas, Scott S.; Scanlon, Erin M.; Schatz, Michael F. – Physics Teacher, 2014
Numerical computation (the use of a computer to solve, simulate, or visualize a physical problem) has fundamentally changed the way scientific research is done. Systems that are too difficult to solve in closed form are probed using computation. Experiments that are impossible to perform in the laboratory are studied numerically. Consequently, in…
Descriptors: Computation, Sciences, Engineering, Theories
Barnett, R. Michael – Physics Teacher, 2013
After half a century of waiting, the drama was intense. Physicists slept overnight outside the auditorium to get seats for the seminar at the CERN lab in Geneva, Switzerland. Ten thousand miles away on the other side of the planet, at the world's most prestigious international particle physics conference, hundreds of physicists from every corner…
Descriptors: Physics, Seminars, Scientific Concepts, Theories
Huggins, Elisha – Physics Teacher, 2013
This is the fourth paper in a series of four. The first paper in the series, "Vacuum Energy and Inflation: 1. A Liter of Vacuum Energy" [EJ1024183] discusses an example of vacuum energy. Vacuum energy is explained as an energy with a negative pressure whose energy density remains constant in an expanding space. Paper 2, "Vacuum…
Descriptors: Physics, Energy, Scientific Concepts, Equations (Mathematics)
Lincoln, Don; Nord, Brian – Physics Teacher, 2014
As is true of a far more famous story, it all began a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. It even involved a binary star system. A small star, called a white dwarf, had become a burned out husk of its former self and it turned to gorging on hydrogen and helium from its bloated red giant neighbor. The transferred gas reignited the fires of…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Astronomy
Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2012
This summer, perhaps while you were lounging around the pool in the blistering heat, the blogosphere was buzzing about data taken at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. The buzz reached a crescendo in the first week of July when both Fermilab and CERN announced the results of their searches for the Higgs boson. Hard data confronted a theory nearly…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Research, Theories, Data
Hobson, Art – Physics Teacher, 2011
In order to explain certain features of radioactive beta decay, Wolfgang Pauli suggested in 1930 that the nucleus emitted, in addition to a beta particle, another particle of an entirely new type. The hypothesized particle, dubbed the neutrino, would not be discovered experimentally for another 25 years. It's not easy to detect neutrinos, because…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Molecular Structure, Scientific Principles
Hecht, Eugene – Physics Teacher, 2011
Though central to any pedagogical development of physics, the concept of mass is still not well understood. Properly defining mass has proven to be far more daunting than contemporary textbooks would have us believe. And yet today the origin of mass is one of the most aggressively pursued areas of research in all of physics. Much of the excitement…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Research
Blais, Brian S. – Physics Teacher, 2011
It is often challenging, especially at the beginning of a course, to find good examples where students can actively explore and grapple with the methods of science. We want them to learn the connection between observation, theory, prediction, evidence, and falsification, but to really accomplish this we need platforms for which the students are…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Observation, Theories
Hoellwarth, Chance; Moelter, Matthew J. – Physics Teacher, 2011
The scientific method is arguably the most reliable way to understand the physical world, yet this aspect of science is rarely addressed in introductory science courses. Students typically learn about the theory in its final, refined form, and seldom experience the experiment-to-theory cycle that goes into producing the theory. One exception to…
Descriptors: Theories, Scientific Methodology, Science Experiments, Heat