Rio Americano High School Physics
Show & Tell Demonstrations

Presented by Dean Baird

at Meetings of the Northern California/Nevada Section of The American Association of Physics Teachers



"Science Standards Alert," April 1997
WILL YOUR STUDENTS PASS THIS TEST?
1. The internal motion of atoms within matter is kinetic energy, which we observe as
I. Heat.
II. Sound.
III. Internal Energy.
A. I
B. II
C. III
D. I & II
E. II & III
F. I, II, & III

2. (True or False) Radio waves have kinetic energy.

3. Electric current is
A. the rate at which electric charge flows.
B. a flow of energy due to the motion of electrons.
C. whatever you want it to be, based on your own personal feelings and experiences.
D. whatever the Standards Committee in your district says it is.

"CORRECT" ANSWERS:
1. D
2. True
3. B

This is my interpretation of of the Draft Physical Science Content Standards being developed by WestEd. I've listed the specific standard below.

K-12 Concept 3A
Any moving object has kinetic energy. The internal motion of atoms within matter is also kinetic energy, which we observe as heat or sound. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy per molecule in matter. All forms of radiation (e.g., light, radio waves) have kinetic energy. Electric current is a flow of energy due to the motion of electrons.


"The Laser Beam Viewing Tank," November 1996
Construction Instructions.

Suggested Demonstrations
Fill the tank to a 5" depth of water. Stir in a small small sprinkle of a few flakes of powdered milk. Be conservative on that powdered milk; you'll tend to add too much. You need enough to scatter the laser beam but not so much that the beam is diffused before getting across the tank.


1. See the Light
Shoot the beam through the tank and marvel at the visible beam.


2. Refraction
Aim the laser beam downward toward the air-to-water boundary at a convenient oblique angle of incidence. The laser angle and the beam (in the water) don't match!


3. Total Internal Reflection
Aim the laser upward toward the water-to-air boundary. Marvel at the splendid TIR.


4. "Optical Fiber"
Vary the angle of incidence in the demonstration above. The kids really dig this one.


5. Gradual Refraction
Drop a layer of sugar cubes in the tank and let them dissolve. Do not stir. Send the beam through the tank and observe gradual refraction due to the index gradient.


6. Diffraction
Tape a diffraction grating to the side of the tank. Shoot the beam through the grating and marvel at the three or five beams that emerge in the water.

7. Whatever else you can think of...


"Physics is a Mind-Expanding Subject (Illusion)," April 1996
This is a lecture hall version of a demonstration from The Exploratorium's Science Snackbook. This large audience version was presented to me by fellow SCAMPI mentor Dennis Hudson. A printed or drawn spiral pattern is attached to an electric screwdriver and spun like a propeller in front of the instructor's face. The instructor allows the pattern to spin for 20 seconds or so, then abruptly moves it away and stands stone-faced before the class. The audience will see the instructor's head expanding or contracting depending on how you spun the pattern. Expanding is better. Very Dramatic! Don't try to "enhance" the effect by making a funny face (it won't work). And don't move. The motionless stone face is all you will need.


"The Photoacoustic Effect," November 1995
Again, a demonstration with SCAMPI origins. You need a photographic flash unit (or camera with a flash unit). Listen to the sound of the flash when it goes off. Not much sound there. Now hold it against a dark (preferably black) fabric and listen to the flash. Wow! Try it against something white and shiny. Hmm. You may not believe the results or the explanation. The explanation is that black, coarse surfaces absorb more radiant energy than light, shiny ones do. As a result, dark materials undergo a rapid increase in temperature and a correspondingly sudden thermal expansion. It is the rapid expansion that causes the relatively loud sound.


"The Paper Magnet," April 1994
Orient a piece of 8.5"x11" paper horizontally (landscape). Now divide it into four equal horizontal lanes (this can be done by folding it in half twice). If the top lane is #1 and the bottom is #4, then write N's and S's in the lanes as follows. In lane 1, put an N and an S at opposite ends. Leave lane 2 blank. In lane 3, put an N, S, N, S (the first N is at the left end, the final S is at the right end, the center S and N close to each other in the middle. In lane 4, it's N, S, N, S, N, S, N, S. Now fold it in half and half again (the long way) so that lane 1 and lane 2 are on the outside (showing). You can rip it in half so that you have two monopoles showing. But if you hold one half so that a "monopole" is showing and refold it, an N and S appear. Your audience will feign amazement. Explain that you can cut the magnet as many times as you want, but you'll never get a monopole. Rip the paper magnet your holding in half and flip the halves over, revealing two N-S paper magnets. This always seems to get a reaction as if you did something truly magic!

By the way, Ann Hanks of American River College reports that the magnetizers manufactured by Electro Technical Products (and sold by the big supply houses) are wired backwards. The hole into which you're instructed to place the north pole of your magnet will magnetize south and vice versa. When she called to report this to the manufacturer, they responded that this is done so that customers' newly induced magnets will have north poles that attract the north ends of compass needles. When their devices were wired correctly, they say, customers complained that their north poles attracted the south end of compass needles. This is, of course, what they should do. Ann suggested we might contact ETP to share our professional opinions with them. Their phone number is (312) 561-2349 and their FAX is (312) 561-3130. Their snailmail is 4642 North Ravenwood; Chicago, IL 60640-4592.


"Aristotle's Statement of Newton's First Law," November 1993
This was presented as a multiple choice question. The audience was allowed to guess who (Aristotle, Galileo, Newton, or Andria Erzberger) said: "It is impossible to say why a body that has been set in motion in a vacuum should ever come to rest; why, indeed, should it come to rest at one place rather than at another. As a consequence, it will either necessarily stay at rest or, if in motion, will move indefinitely unless some obstacle comes into collision with it." Believe it! Or read Physics, Book IV, Chapter XI for yourself. Aristotle was actually arguing against the possibility of a vacuum in this context, not eloquently characterizing the nature of inertia. Nevertheless, it brings to mind Alfred North Whitehead's assessment that, "Everything of importance has been said before by someone who did not discover it."


"The Newtonian Shot: A Dart Gun Demonstration," April 1993
Start with two toy dart guns (the REAL ones with hard-stem darts, not those floppy "safety" darts). Tape a marble-sized lead weight to a suction cup on one of the darts. Now load the two guns: one with a regular suction cup dart, the other with the weighted dart. From a significant height, aim both guns toward the ground and fire them simultaneously. It's best if you poll students before carrying out the demonstration. The surprising results should catalyze a healthy discussion on Newton's second law.


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Copyright 1999 by Dean Baird. All rights reserved