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| Rafert, J. B. | 1 |
| Risley, John S. | 1 |
| Seligmann, P. F. | 1 |
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Peer reviewedCrandall, A. Jared; Stoner, Ronald – Physics Teacher, 1982
Describes apparatus and method used to allow rapid and repeated measurement of acceleration of a ball rolling down an inclined plane. Acceleration measurements can be performed in an hour with the apparatus interfaced to a Commodore PET microcomputer. A copy of the BASIC program is available from the authors. (Author/JN)
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), College Science, Computer Oriented Programs, Higher Education
Peer reviewedRisley, John S. – Physics Teacher, 1984
Reviews courseware (Apple II) providing laboratory simulations in atomic physics. Although material is not user-friendly and requires some background, the animations are good representations of electron mass, Thompson e/m, Millikan oil-drop, and mass spectrometer. Recommended for classroom demonstration purposes at high school or introductory…
Descriptors: Atomic Theory, College Science, Computer Programs, Computer Simulation
Peer reviewedRafert, J. B.; Nicklin, R. C. – Physics Teacher, 1984
A PET microcomputer is used as an accurate and programmable timer to support data acquisition from velocity experiments covering falling, rolling, and sliding objects, and human velocity, acceleration, and power measurements. The inexpensive instrumentation is simple and easy to use and compares favorably with conventional, more expensive…
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), College Science, Computer Oriented Programs, High Schools
Peer reviewedTinker, Robert F. – Physics Teacher, 1981
Discusses the use of microcomputers as a universal instrument to replace more expensive instrumentation in many traditional labs. Describes the availability of microcomputers as inexpensive educational tools which can be used successfully in labs with minimal requirements on the computer. (SK)
Descriptors: College Science, Computer Oriented Programs, Computers, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSpencer, C. D.; Seligmann, P. F. – Physics Teacher, 1992
Describes a first-year laboratory course designed to fulfill laboratory objectives of reinforcing lecture material, teaching experimental methodology, developing hands-on skills, and imparting a sense of error. The course's six segments examine: digital electronics with students building a photogate timer; error analysis; linear accelerated…
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), Computer Assisted Instruction, High Schools, Higher Education
Peer reviewedJenkins, Randy A. – Physics Teacher, 1993
Presents an experiment that measures the acceleration and velocity of a model rocket. Lift-off information is transmitted to a computer that creates a graph of the velocity. Discusses the analysis of the computer-generated data and differences between calculated and experimental velocity and acceleration of several rocket types. (MDH)
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), Computation, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Uses in Education


