Descriptor
Spectroscopy | 13 |
College Science | 12 |
Physics | 11 |
Science Education | 11 |
Higher Education | 10 |
Optics | 9 |
Laboratory Experiments | 8 |
Sound Spectrographs | 7 |
Instructional Materials | 6 |
Science Activities | 5 |
Science Equipment | 4 |
More ▼ |
Source
American Journal of Physics | 13 |
Author
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 5 |
Reports - Descriptive | 2 |
Reports - Research | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 3 |
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating

Stevenson, James R.; Bartlett, Roger J. – American Journal of Physics, 1972
Descriptors: College Science, Course Descriptions, Instruction, Laboratory Experiments

Oelfke, William C. – American Journal of Physics, 1975
Presents a simple method of analysis in which the student can integrate, point by point, any interferogram to obtain its Fourier transform. The manual technique requires no special equipment and is based on relationships that most undergraduate physics students can derive from the Fourier integral equations. (Author/MLH)
Descriptors: Calculus, College Science, Higher Education, Instructional Materials

George, S.; Voelker, M. – American Journal of Physics, 1978
Describes a simple method, the Edser-Butler methods, for calibrating the Fabry-Pevot fringes seen in the focal plane of a spectrograph. (GA)
Descriptors: College Science, Experiments, Higher Education, Instruction

Eaton, Bruce G., Ed. – American Journal of Physics, 1976
Includes five brief articles on: solar-heating demonstration equipment, mercury or sodium vapor lamp spectroscopy, an apparatus for simulating variable stars, a voltage-to-frequency converter, and an introductory absorption experiment for low-energy beta particles. (MLH)
Descriptors: College Science, Electronics, Higher Education, Instructional Materials

Fillmore, James A.; And Others – American Journal of Physics, 1978
A computer program which simulates an interstellar gas and dust cloud has been used to study Kirchhoff's laws of spectral analysis in introductory astronomy courses. The model parameters can be varied to stimulate various effects observed in actual clouds. Students are given exercises to use the program in a manner similar to a lab experiment.…
Descriptors: Astronomy, College Science, Courses, Higher Education

Becchetti, F. D.; Ying, J. S. – American Journal of Physics, 1981
Advanced undergraduate experiments utilizing a commercially available, thin spontaneous fission source are described, including studies of the energy and mass distribution of the fission fragments and their energy and angular correlation. The experiments provide a useful introduction to fission, nuclear mass equations, heavy-ion physics, and…
Descriptors: College Science, Energy, Higher Education, Measurement Equipment

Eaton, Bruce G., Ed. – American Journal of Physics, 1975
Descriptors: Calculus, Construction (Process), Electricity, Laboratory Equipment

Driver, H. S. T. – American Journal of Physics, 1978
Describes an experiment for the measurement of the reflectances of dielectric surface. The experiment is analyzed in terms of the Stokes parameters and the Mueller calculus, and Malus law is derived. The experiment also provides an introduction to the properties of real linear polarizers. (Author/GA)
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Laboratory Experiments

Berkey, Donald Keith – American Journal of Physics, 1972
Descriptors: College Science, Computer Programs, Instructional Materials, Laboratory Equipment

White, H. W.; Graves, R. J. – American Journal of Physics, 1982
An advanced undergraduate laboratory experiment in inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy is described. Tunnel junctions were fabricated, the tunneling spectra of several molecules absorbed on the surface of aluminum oxide measured, and mode assignments made for several of the prominent peaks in spectra using results obtained from optical…
Descriptors: College Science, Electric Circuits, Electronics, Higher Education

Edge, R. D. – American Journal of Physics, 1979
Artists use red, yellow, and blue as primary colors, whereas physicists use red, green, and blue. Explains the reason using the spectra of mixtures of red, green, blue, and yellow tempera obtained with a Carey spectrophotometer. (GA)
Descriptors: College Science, Color, Higher Education, Instructional Materials

Anderson, Walter F., Jr. – American Journal of Physics, 1974
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Laboratory Experiments

Taylor, N.; And Others – American Journal of Physics, 1981
Electronic energy levels in noble gas atoms may be determined with a simple teaching apparatus incorporating a resonance potentials tube in which the electron beam intensity is held constant. The resulting spectra are little inferior to those obtained by more elaborate electron-impact methods and complement optical emission spectra. (Author/SK)
Descriptors: Atomic Structure, College Science, Energy, Higher Education