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Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1985
Explains and illustrates strange events which occur when two pendulums interact through a variety of interconnections. Phenomena addressed include: pendulums coupled by a spring, rod, or string; vertical and rotational oscillations, and synchronous and mirror-image swinging. A resonant-spring pendulum and a Wilberforce pendulum are also discussed.…
Descriptors: College Science, Gravity (Physics), Higher Education, Motion
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1985
Presents a field formula for calculating speed and flight efficiency of soaring birds. By estimating the size of the bank angle and timing the complete circle, the observer can determine the speed and circling radius on a chart provided. Lift coefficients and flight characteristics of several birds are also discussed. (DH)
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Higher Education, Motion
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1986
A retroreflector is a mirror that removes distortion from a light beam. Describes experiments using the retroreflector as well as related phenomena. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Light, Optics
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1985
Discusses forces that shape the behavior of water as a drop meanders down a windowpane. A homemade apparatus for studying meanders is described along with several experiments. Contact angles, molecule attraction, surface area, air tension, and gravity drag forces are some of the topics addressed. (DH)
Descriptors: College Science, Fluid Mechanics, Higher Education, Motion
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1984
Describes experiments in which a ball bearing is used as a tool for the study of light and as a kind of photographic lens. Also shows how results from these experiments contribute to an understanding of the nature of light. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, High Schools, Higher Education, Light
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1984
The tendency of a poured liquid to cling to the outside of a container is known as the "teapot effect." The nature of the teapot effect and experiments investigating this phenomenon are described. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, High Schools, Higher Education, Physics
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1985
Describes experiments using fluidyne engines. These engines (which have liquid pistons), started by external heat sources, are used primarily for pumping water. Examples of various engines built from U-shaped tubes or from coiled tubes in fruit jars are provided. (DH)
Descriptors: College Science, Engines, Fluid Mechanics, Higher Education
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1985
Discusses how the sun's reflection from water offers a means for calculating sloped of waves. Experiments using angles of reflection from a tilted mirror are suggested and explained. A method of counterbalancing dominoes in a stack beyond the edge of a table (using Euler's constant) is also described. (DH)
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Light, Optics
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1984
Discusses the physics behind making ice cream in a hand-cranked ice cream maker. Ingredients in the maker are cooled and hardened by a bath of ice, water, and rock salt. Several experiments to investigate the variables involved in preparing the ice cream (and related desserts) are included. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Food, Higher Education, Physics
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1984
Discusses the acoustics of bells by examining what determines the quality of a bell, the frequency it emits, and the note perceived by the listener. The analysis concentrates on a ship's bell but also considers several handbells. Laboratory bench set up for studying bells and nodal lines of bells are illustrated. (BC)
Descriptors: Acoustics, College Science, High Schools, Higher Education
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1984
Discusses changes in the crystal structure of iron and steel when these materials are heated. Focuses on observations related to an experiment in which a 60-inch length of piano wire (No. 29 steel wire) is heated and then cooled. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Crystallography, High Schools, Higher Education
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1984
Provides background information on and experiments for determining the spectra of streetlights. Procedures for taking photographs of the spectra produced are included as well as discussions of sodium and mercury spectra. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, High Schools, Higher Education, Light
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1982
Spatial filtering, based on diffraction/interference of light waves, is a technique by which unwanted information in a picture ("noise") can be separated from wanted information. A series of experiments is described in which students can create a system that functions as an optical computer to create clearer pictures. (Author/JN)
Descriptors: College Science, High Schools, Higher Education, Light
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1983
A thermal oscillator is a self-sustained, nonlinear oscillating system. One part of the system vibrates continuously because of the transfer of heat. Four such devices, two new and two demonstrated in the 19th century are described. Although each depends on the periodic redistribution of heat, they are all quite different. (Author/JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Fluid Mechanics, Heat, Higher Education
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1983
Three physics experiments are described, minimizing difficulties for amateur experimenters. One experiment demonstrates the Doppler shift of light, converting the phenomenon into sound. The second measures Planck's constant. The third measures the universal gravitational constant, which does the same in Newton's theory of gravitation. (Author/JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Gravity (Physics), Higher Education, Light
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