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Showing 91 to 105 of 1,123 results Save | Export
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Wang, Fei – Physics Teacher, 2022
The ideal gas law, "PV = nRT," is one of the simplest physical laws in nature that is introduced to students as early as in high school and first year in college. In this equation, "P" stands for pressure, "V" is the volume, "n" is the amount expressed in mole, "T" is the temperature in Kelvin…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Principles, Fuels, Graphs
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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
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Page, Brian R. – Physics Teacher, 2021
The Wright brothers, Wilbur and Orville, are often depicted as lone geniuses, secretly assembling the first successful powered aircraft far from civilization at Kitty Hawk on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. There is a germ of truth in the popular story, but only a germ. The brothers succeeded while so many other experimenters failed not because…
Descriptors: Physics, Air Transportation, Experiments, Engineering
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Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2021
A common procedure when conducting physics experiments is to repeat a measurement several times to calculate the mean and standard deviation. That might be the only instruction we give to students as a means to minimize random errors. However, that technique does not guarantee that the answer will be correct. It might give the same wrong answer…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, Computation, Error of Measurement
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D'Anna, Michele; Corridoni, Tommaso – Physics Teacher, 2020
In a traditional teaching approach, a physics course begins with mechanics, and generally the braking effect due to magnetic interactions is not mentioned among the various types of friction presented (static, sliding, rolling) because students will discover magnetism only in later chapters. In our didactic experience this traditional choice is…
Descriptors: Physics, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics)
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Kaps, A.; Starmach, F. – Physics Teacher, 2020
Smartphones and their internal sensors offer new options for an experimental access to teach physics at secondary schools and universities. Especially in the field of mechanics, a number of smartphone-based experiments are known illustrating, e.g., linear and pendulum motions as well as rotational motions using the internal MEMS accelerometer and…
Descriptors: Physics, Handheld Devices, Measurement Equipment, Mechanics (Physics)
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Ekkens, Tom – Physics Teacher, 2022
In many introductory physics classes, diffraction of light is introduced first, then more advanced diffraction topics such as x-ray diffraction, Bragg's law, and crystallography are covered. Since using x-rays raises safety concerns and atomic spacing in a crystal is not easy to change, microwaves with macroscopic crystals have been used to study…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Physics, Science Education, Introductory Courses
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Manos, Harry – Physics Teacher, 2019
Thomas Young (1773-1829) is best known in the physics community for his double-slit experiment demonstrating the wave property of light and for his work on the tensile properties of solids (Young's modulus). His reputation as a physicist was built almost entirely upon a short, three-year period (1801-1803) of intense work as an instructor in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
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Wannous, Jarier; Horvath, Peter – Physics Teacher, 2023
Measuring permeability in a high school physics course has long been a hard task. However, with the advent of using smartphones in the classroom, it is not only possible but even easily done. This paper offers detailed instructions on how to measure permeability using a smartphone's magnetometer, starting with experimentally discovering the…
Descriptors: Magnets, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Physics
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Salar, Riza – Physics Teacher, 2021
This study aims to showcase an experiment for introductory physics students that quantitatively describes the relationship between gas pressure, volume, and temperature. For this purpose, an Arduino Uno Microcontroller and BMP180 pressure sensor are used. The BMP180 can also measure temperature, so another temperature sensor is not needed.…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Science Experiments, Measurement Equipment
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Kok, Karol; Boczianowski, Franz – Physics Teacher, 2021
Science labs should promote reasoning that resembles the work that scientists do. However, this is often not the case. We present a lab in which students strive to find out which of two models best describes a physics experiment. The quantification of measurement uncertainties--another topic that is often neglected in high school…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Science Laboratories, Science Experiments, Physics
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Vogt, Patrik; Kasper, Lutz; Radler, Matthias – Physics Teacher, 2021
Various experiments on vibrating gas columns and on frequency measurements with glasses and pipes have been presented in recent years in the "iPhysicsLabs" column. The determination of the sound velocity in different gases by measuring the sound running time has also already been proposed in an earlier paper. This article now adds…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices
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Williams, Hollis – Physics Teacher, 2021
The physical problem of a body of water in a tank that drains through a hole in the base is a classical problem that has been studied since at least the time of Torricelli. To fixate this in a student's mind, one could ask them to visualize a bathtub that is being drained through the plughole or a bottle being drained through a tap. This problem…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Experiments, Secondary School Science
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Kaps, Andreas; Splith, Tobias; Stallmach, Frank – Physics Teacher, 2021
Implementing smartphones with their internal sensors into physics experiments represents a modern, attractive, and authentic approach to improve students' conceptual understanding of physics. In such experiments, smartphones often serve as objects with physical properties and as digital measurement devices to record, display, and analyze…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Technology Uses in Education, Science Experiments
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Taylor, Richard – Physics Teacher, 2021
Science and engineering students in the second semester of a calculus-based physics sequence typically study and measure the on-axis magnetic field for a multiple, circular turn coil. There are four benefits to this approach: 1) an analytical solution is easily obtained, 2) the coil is easily constructed using tightly wound, high-gauge wire where…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Engineering Education, Physics, Magnets
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