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Kutzner, Mickey D.; Plantak, Mateja – Physics Teacher, 2014
The ability of our society to make informed energy-usage decisions in the future depends partly on current science and engineering students retaining a deep understanding of the thermodynamics of heat engines. Teacher imaginations and equipment budgets can both be taxed in the effort to engage students in hands-on heat engine activities. The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Thermodynamics, Science Experiments, College Science
Mungan, Carl E. – Physics Teacher, 2014
A Genecon is an inexpensive hand-cranked dc electric generator. You can use it to charge a one-farad supercapacitor. If you stop cranking the handle, the capacitor will discharge, sending a current into the Genecon and thereby causing the handle to start turning as an electric motor. How does the current direction compare before and after you stop…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Physics, Motion, Mechanics (Physics)
Zavrel, Erik; Sharpsteen, Eric – Physics Teacher, 2016
The importance of understanding and internalizing the scientific method can hardly be exaggerated. Unfortunately, it is all too common for high school--and even university--students to graduate with only a partial or oversimplified understanding of what the scientific method is and how to actually employ it. Help in remedying this situation may…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Methodology, Science Process Skills
Shaku, Asif; Kraft, Jakob – Physics Teacher, 2016
Undergraduate physics laboratories seldom have experiments that measure the Coriolis acceleration. This has traditionally been the case owing to the inherent complexities of making such measurements. Articles on the experimental determination of the Coriolis acceleration are few and far between in the physics literature. However, because modern…
Descriptors: Measurement, Measurement Techniques, Handheld Devices, Motion
Janssen, Paul; Janssens, Ewald – Physics Teacher, 2015
To familiarize first-year students with the important ingredients of a physics experiment, we offer them a project close to their daily life: measuring the effect of air resistance on a bicycle. Experiments are done with a bicycle freewheeling on a downhill slope. The data are compared with equations of motions corresponding to different models…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, College Freshmen, Motion
Allen, Bradley; Liu, Tongtian – Physics Teacher, 2015
Calculating the effective resistance of an electrical network is a common problem in introductory physics courses. Such calculations are typically restricted to two-dimensional networks, though even such networks can become increasingly complex, leading to several studies on their properties. Furthermore, several authors have used advanced…
Descriptors: Electronics, Physics, Computation, Introductory Courses
Carvalho, P. Simeão; Briosa, E.; Rodrigues, M.; Pereira, C.; Ataíde, M. – Physics Teacher, 2013
It is well known that sound waves in air are longitudinal waves. Although teachers use analogies such as compressing horizontal springs to demonstrate what longitudinal waves look like, students still present some difficulty in understanding that (1) sound waves correspond to oscillations of air particles, and (2) there is no "air flow"…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Motion, Physics, Science Experiments
Rossi, M.; Gratton, L. M.; Oss, S. – Physics Teacher, 2013
We discuss how compressed images created by modern digital cameras can lead to even severe problems in the quantitative analysis of experiments based on such images. Difficulties result from the nonlinear treatment of lighting intensity values stored in compressed files. To overcome such troubles, one has to adopt noncompressed, native formats, as…
Descriptors: Photography, Visual Aids, Physics, Laboratory Experiments
Rohr, Jim; Lopez, Veronica; Rohr, Tyler – Physics Teacher, 2014
While observing the bounce heights of various kinds of sports balls dropped from different heights onto a variety of surfaces, we thought of the following question: Could measurements of drop and bounce heights of balls of different diameters, but of the same material, falling from different heights, but on the same surface, be expressed by a…
Descriptors: Reflection, Mathematical Formulas, Class Activities, Science Experiments
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
Corridoni, Tommaso; D'Anna, Michele; Fuchs, Hans – Physics Teacher, 2014
The damped oscillator is discussed in every high school textbook or introductory physics course, and a large number of papers are devoted to it in physics didactics journals. Papers typically focus on kinematic and dynamic aspects and less often on energy. Among the latter, some are devoted to the peculiar decreasing behavior of energy…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, Science Experiments, Energy
Cross, Rod; Lindsey, Crawford – Physics Teacher, 2014
The effect of the aerodynamic drag force on an object in flight is well known and has been described in this and other journals many times. At speeds less than about 1 m/s, the drag force on a sphere is proportional to the speed and is given by Stokes' law. At higher speeds, the drag force is proportional to the velocity squared and is…
Descriptors: Physics, Measurement Techniques, Measurement, Motion
Ribeiro, Jair Lúcio Prados – Physics Teacher, 2015
Human eye optics is a common high school physics topic and students usually show a great interest during our presentation of this theme. In this article, we present an easy way to estimate a diverging lens' optical power from a simple experiment involving myopia eyeglasses and a smartphone flashlight.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Optics, High School Students
Chiaverina, Chris – Physics Teacher, 2013
Each May a Slovenian science extravaganza called Znanstival (Sciencetival, www.sciencetival.si) fills the streets and other public venues with the excitement of science. Organized by the staff of Hisa eksperimentov (House of Experiments or simply HE, www.he.si), a jewel of a science museum located in the Slovenian capital of Ljubljana, the annual…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, Science Education, Outreach Programs
Erickson, Michael; Ochoa, Romulo; Ochoa, Cris – Physics Teacher, 2013
In 2010, the Wiimote was upgraded with three-axis gyroscopes that can measure rotational velocities up to 2000 deg/s. The improved remote is referred to as the Wii MotionPlus. We present experiments that use the gyroscope's capabilities and compare data acquired in lab settings with those obtained in playground environments. Van Hook et al.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Concepts, Motion