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Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2022
The standard model of particle physics is the most successful theory describing the behavior of matter and energy in the subatomic realm. However, success doesn't mean it is perfect, and a recent measurement of the mass of a particle called the W boson is puzzling, as it disagrees with theoretical predictions and earlier precise measurements. If…
Descriptors: Physics, Models, Nuclear Energy, Measurement
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Reed, B. Cameron – Physics Teacher, 2020
For several years, I taught a general education course on the Manhattan Project for students majoring in the arts and humanities who needed a physical science credit as a condition of their graduation requirements. As might be imagined, the challenge in teaching this course was to find a balance between quantitative and qualitative content. A…
Descriptors: Graphs, Science Instruction, Physics, Weapons
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DiLisi, Gregory A.; Hirsch, Allison; Murray, Meredith; Rarick, Richard – Physics Teacher, 2018
A little-known type of nuclear reactor called the "molten salt reactor" (MSR), in which nuclear fuel is dissolved in a liquid carrier salt, was proposed in the 1940s and developed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the 1960s. Recently, the MSR has generated renewed interest as a remedy for the drawbacks associated with conventional…
Descriptors: Nuclear Energy, Technology, Physics, Science Instruction
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Bevelacqua, J. J. – Physics Teacher, 2012
The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident is a topic of current media and public interest. It provides a means to motivate students to understand the fission process and the barriers that have been designed to prevent the release of fission products to the environment following a major nuclear power reactor accident. The Fukushima Daiichi accident…
Descriptors: Accidents, Facilities, Nuclear Energy, Radiation
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Bartlett, A. A. – Physics Teacher, 2011
The nuclear disaster that was triggered by the Japanese earthquake and the following tsunami of March 11, 2011, continues to be the subject of a great deal of news coverage. The tsunami caused severe damage to the nuclear power reactors at Fukushima Daiichi, and this led to the escape of unknown quantities of radioactive material from the damaged…
Descriptors: Physics, Nuclear Energy, Natural Disasters, Foreign Countries
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Constan, Zach – Physics Teacher, 2010
Nuclei are "small": if an atom was the size of a football field, the nucleus would be an apple sitting on the 50-yd line. At the same time, nuclei are "dense": the Earth, compressed to nuclear density, could fit inside four Sears Towers. The subatomic level is strange and exotic. For that reason, it's not hard to get young minds excited about…
Descriptors: Outreach Programs, Nuclear Energy, Science Education, Laboratories
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David R. Lapp – Physics Teacher, 2008
The recent international story about the death of the former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko has more than just a few wondering about radiation poisoning and the sinister sounding polonium-210. I was preparing to begin a nuclear radiation unit the Monday after Thanksgiving 2006. As it turned out, Litvinenko died Thanksgiving Day after a short and…
Descriptors: Poisoning, Radiation, Relevance (Education), World Problems