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Tyukodi, B.; Sarkozi, Zs.; Neda, Z.; Tunyagi, A.; Gyorke, E. – European Journal of Physics, 2012
Evaporation of a small glass of ethylic alcohol is studied both experimentally and through an elementary thermal physics approach. For a cylindrical beaker and no air flow in the room, a simple quadratic relation is found between the evaporation time and the mass of evaporated liquid. This problem and the obtained results offer excellent…
Descriptors: Physics, Heat, Science Instruction, Science Experiments
Gates, Joshua – Physics Teacher, 2014
Newton's second law is one of the cornerstones of the introductory physics curriculum, but it can still trouble a large number of students well after its introduction, hobbling their ability to apply the concept to problem solving and to related concepts, such as momentum, circular motion, and orbits. While there are several possibilities for…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Scientific Principles, Scientific Concepts, Science Education
Lane, W. Brian – Physics Teacher, 2014
The traditional introductory-level meterstick-balancing lab assumes that students already know what torque is and that they readily identify it as a physical quantity of interest. We propose a modified version of this activity in which students qualitatively and quantitatively measure the amount of force required to keep the meterstick level. The…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Science Education, Educational Practices, Teaching Methods
Nowak, Mariusz Karol – Physics Education, 2014
It is hard to observe relativistic effects in everyday life. However, table experiments using a mechanical transmission line for solitons may be an efficient and simple way to show effects such as Lorentz contraction in a classroom. A kink soliton is a deformation of a lattice of several dozen or more pendulums placed on a wire and connected by a…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Scientific Concepts, Mechanics (Physics), Motion
Helseth, Lars Egil – Physics Education, 2014
I describe a simple and fascinating experiment wherein helium leaks out of a rubber balloon, thereby causing it to descend. An estimate of the volumetric leakage rate is made by measuring its rate of descent.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Scientific Principles, Physics
El Abed, Mohamed – Physics Teacher, 2014
By superimposing two sound waves of the same wavelength, propagating in the opposite direction, we can create an intensity pattern having a characteristic scale equal to half a wavelength: it is the diffraction limit. Recently a group from the Institut Laue-Langevin in Paris has shown that it is possible to go beyond this limit by focusing sound…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Fundamental Concepts, Physics, Scientific Concepts
Eisen, Laura; Marano, Nadia; Glazier, Samantha – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
We describe an activity-based approach for teaching aqueous solubility to introductory chemistry students that provides a more balanced presentation of the roles of energy and entropy in dissolution than is found in most general chemistry textbooks. In the first few activities, students observe that polar substances dissolve in water, whereas…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Science Experiments, Scientific Principles
Prytz, Kjell – Physics Education, 2015
Creative learning is discussed with respect to a specific physics topic. A teaching example, based on an apparatus that demonstrates the standard dynamo model of geomagnetism, is presented. It features many of the basic physics concepts within the syllabus of electromagnetism at high-school and university. To stimulate conceptual learning and to…
Descriptors: Physics, Teaching Methods, Units of Study, Electromechanical Technology
Panzarasa, Guido – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
Thanks to their unique physicochemical properties (e.g., surface plasmon resonance), noble metal nanoparticles are at the cornerstone of nanotechnology. Silver triangular nanoprisms are presented here as an ideal playground to introduce students to nanochemistry concepts such as the formation of shape-controlled nanostructures. Not only a reliable…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Molecular Structure, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Methodology
Langbeheim, Elon – Physics Education, 2015
Research has shown that project-based learning promotes student interest in science and improves understanding of scientific content. Fostering student motivation is particularly important in accelerated science and technology programmes for talented students, which are often demanding and time-consuming. Current texts provide little guidance on…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Junior High School Students, Physics
Krawczyk, Tomasz; Slupska, Roksana; Baj, Stefan – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
This work describes a single-session laboratory experiment devoted to teaching the principles of factorial experimental design. Students undertook the rational optimization of a luminol oxidation reaction, using a two-level experiment that aimed to create a long-lasting bright emission. During the session students used only simple glassware and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments, Science Experiments
Harley, Suzanne M. – American Biology Teacher, 2013
In many labs on photosynthesis, the presence of starch in leaves is used as an indirect indicator of photosynthetic activity. Students do starch tests on leaves from plants that have been kept under a variety of conditions in order to check parameters for photosynthesis. The starch test can also be used to enable students to discover differences…
Descriptors: Botany, Plants (Botany), Science Activities, Science Experiments
Bidabadi, Fatemeh – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a plastic monomer and plasticizer and is a chemical that has one of the highest volume production worldwide, with more than six billion pounds each year. Its primary use is the production of polycarbonate plastics, epoxy resins used to line metal cans in a host of plastic consumer products such as toys, water pipes, drinking…
Descriptors: Hazardous Materials, Plastics, Chemistry, Scientific Principles
Planinsic, Gorazd; Etkina, Eugenia – Physics Teacher, 2012
The influence of bubbles on sound has long attracted the attention of physicists. In his 1920 book Sir William Bragg described sound absorption caused by foam in a glass of beer tapped by a spoon. Frank S. Crawford described and analyzed the change in the pitch of sound in a similar experiment and named the phenomenon the "hot chocolate effect."…
Descriptors: Physics, Acoustics, Science Instruction, Science Experiments
Pestka, Kenneth A., II; Warren, Cori – Physics Teacher, 2012
The study of elastic properties of solids is essential to both physics and engineering. Finding simple, easy-to-visualize examples to demonstrate these concepts is often difficult. In a previous article written by one of us (KAPII), a simple method for determining Youngs modulus using marshmallows was given. In this article we will illustrate…
Descriptors: Plastics, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Principles, Science Instruction

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