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Herrick, Richard S.; Mills, Kenneth V.; Nestor, Lisa P. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2008
An experiment in chemical kinetics as part of our Discovery Chemistry curriculum is described. Discovery Chemistry is a pedagogical philosophy that makes the laboratory the key center of learning for students in their first two years of undergraduate instruction. Questions are posed in the pre-laboratory discussion and assessed using pooled…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science
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Eichler, Jack F. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
A guided-inquiry exercise conducted in both the lecture and laboratory components of a college introductory chemistry course for non-science majors is described. The exercise gave students the opportunity to independently determine the relationship between the temperature of water in an aluminum soda can and the intensity of implosion upon placing…
Descriptors: Integrated Activities, Student Interests, Chemistry, Lecture Method
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Pfennig, Brian W.; Roberts, Richard T. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2006
An attempt is made to provide chemistry teachers with a chemical demonstration of a clock reaction for the winter holiday season that changes in color from green to red to green again which is used as didactic tool to introduce students to many of the basic principles of kinetics. The reaction involves the oxidation of iodide ion with persulfate…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Chemistry, Color, Science Instruction
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Clement, Gerard – American Journal of Physics, 1980
The motivation and interpretation of the Fizeau experiment are reviewed, and its status as a test of special relativity is discussed. It is shown, with the aid of a simplified, purely mechanical model of the propagation of light in matter, that the experiment actually cannot discriminate between Galilean and relativistic kinematics. (Author/SK)
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Kinetic Molecular Theory, Kinetics
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Van Hook, Stephen; Huziak-Clark, Tracy – Science and Children, 2007
Maria lifts up a book from the table. Dietre eats cereal for breakfast. Akisha winds up a toy robot. Jacob puts batteries in a flashlight. These seemingly dissimilar events demonstrate various ways children experience energy daily. The authors have used these lessons successfully for several years and have been continually impressed with the…
Descriptors: Toys, Science Activities, Class Activities, Energy
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Peliti, L. – European Journal of Physics, 2007
A refinement of an argument due to Maxwell for the equipartition of translational kinetic energy in a mixture of ideal gases with different masses is proposed. The argument is elementary, yet it may work as an illustration of the role of symmetry and independence postulates in kinetic theory. (Contains 1 figure.)
Descriptors: Kinetics, Physics, Energy, Science Instruction
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Weinberg, Richard B.; Muyskens, Mark – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
Clock reactions based upon competing oxidation and reduction reactions of iodine and starch as the most popular type of chemistry example is presented to illustrate the redox phenomena, reaction kinetics, and principles of chemical titration. The examination of the photophysical principles underlying the iodine fluorescence quenching clock…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Chemistry, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction
Kermond, John; Konz, Stephen – Research Quarterly, 1978
Maximum distance in football punt kicking is associated with a maximum force transfer to the ball rather than a maximum force transfer through the ground via the support leg. For maximum distance, tred lightly. (Author)
Descriptors: Athletics, Biomechanics, Football, Force
Noss, Jerome – Journal of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, 1974
Description of photogrammetric analyses which, combined with the current emergence of biomechanics, is utilized to explain and measure photographs of human movement. Oriented towards the use of photogrammetric analysis in physical education research. (JA)
Descriptors: Biomechanics, Kinetics, Motion, Photography
Berline, Steven; Bricker, Clark – J Chem Educ, 1969
Descriptors: Chemical Equilibrium, Chemistry, College Science, Kinetics
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Bavec, Aljosa – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2004
We have developed an "in vitro assay" for following the interaction between the [alpha][subscript i2] subunit and [beta][subscript 1[gamma]2] dimer from sf9 cells. This method is suitable for education purposes because it is easy, reliable, nonexpensive, can be applied for a big class of 20 students, and avoid the commonly used kinetic approach,…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Visualization, Interaction, Kinetics
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Kwan, Eugene E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
A simple framework for evaluating experimental kinetic data to provide support for Specific Acid Catalysis (SAC) and General Acid Catalysis (GAC) is described based on the factors affecting their relative efficiency. Observations reveal that increasing the SAC-to-GAC rate constant ratio reduces the effective pH range for GAC.
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Science Experiments, Science Education, Kinetics
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Wagman, Jeffrey B.; Taylor, Kona R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied, 2004
Controlling a hand-held tool requires that the tool user bring the tool into contact with an environmental surface in a task-appropriate manner. This, in turn, requires applying muscular forces so as to overcome how the object resists being moved about its various axes. Perceived properties of hand-held objects tend to be constrained by inertial…
Descriptors: Equipment, Physics, Visual Perception, Kinetics
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Armstrong, Matt; Comitz, Richard L.; Biaglow, Andrew; Lachance, Russ; Sloop, Joseph – Chemical Engineering Education, 2008
A novel approach to the Chemical Engineering curriculum sequence of courses at West Point enabled our students to experience a much more realistic design process, which more closely replicated a real world scenario. Students conduct the synthesis in the organic chemistry lab, then conduct computer modeling of the reaction with ChemCad and…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories
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Desjardins, Steven G. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2008
In this paper we describe an interdisciplinary course on dynamics that is appropriate for nonscience majors. This course introduces ideas about mathematical modeling using examples based on pendulums, chemical kinetics, and population dynamics. The unique emphasis for a nonmajors course is on chemical reactions as dynamical systems that do more…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Kinetics, Chemistry, Spreadsheets
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