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  • Welcome to Spring 2024!
  • Demonstration Highlight: Inertial Reference Frame
  • Demonstrations
  • How many demonstrations?
  • New Resource: Directory of Simulations
  • New Resource: Demonstration Video Channel
  • Visit the UMD COVID-19 Dashboard

Welcome to the spring 2024 semester at UMD Physics! We’re looking forward to an exciting semester working with you!

If you have any questions about finding the right demonstrations or other resources for your class, access to the order form, or anything else we can help with, be sure to call or email.

Please remember to order your demonstrations before the cutoff deadline for the order form system: For morning classes, before 1PM the previous working day; for afternoon classes, before 4AM the day of the class. Where possible, we appreciate having the orders at least one full working day ahead, to ensure plenty of time to make sure everything is ready for you. Some demonstrations may require more notice if they use particularly complex apparatus or materials that require special handling.

It's going to be a busy spring! Our first Physics is Phun show of the year is coming up in February, more shows coming in March, and in April we will help host both Maryland Day and the the Conference for Undergraduate Underrepresented Minorities in Physics. Watch our homepage for details to come!

 

Welcome back! Today we’re taking a look at a popular demonstration related to the concept of relativity.

 When we observe and measure motion, we are inevitably making the measurement against some frame of reference. An inertial reference frame is the technical term for a frame of reference in which an object is observed to have no outside forces acting on it, so that it is moving freely in space. Sometimes we have to go to great lengths to determine what such a frame of reference might be – and in the case of Demonstration P1-02, it is literally a metal frame!

 Demonstration P1-02: The Inertial Reference Frame, a large aluminum framework with a mounted winch to lift it.

Read more about this exciting demonstration and how it can be used in class in our latest blog post.

We’re often asked how many demonstrations we have in the collection. That’s a more complex question than it might at first seem.

At last count, we have just over 1,500 demonstrations published to the website – that is, that’s how many demonstration pages exist in the collection. But some pages describe a single setup than can be used in several different ways. Take a look at K2-61: Thomson’s Coil, for example. This single page actually describes four different, related demonstrations that can be performed with this device. They don’t require very different equipment to be delivered, just slight changes in preparation, though, and they’re usually all relevant at approximately the same point in a syllabus, so it’s simpler to list them all in one place. Conversely, there are many demonstrations that use the Optical Board – browse through section L and you will see many of them! Since ray optics is divided into several sections in the demonstrations catalog, each of the configurations of the Optical Board is listed separately, to make it easier to find the one you need; and if you’re only doing one demonstration with it, we can configure it for you in advance to save you time in class.

On the other hand, consider M1-12 and H2-22. These are both listings for Interference Transparencies, a popular way to illustrate the interaction of wavefronts. Here, we made the unusual decision to list the same demonstration twice in two different sections, since otherwise someone planning a course on sound might not think to look for relevant demonstrations in the optics section, and vice-versa. These occasional cross-references make it easier to find the demonstrations you need for your class.

And even aside from the demonstration listings as they stand, we’re often called on to combine equipment in unique ways to demonstrate something new! If it’s a combination that’s likely to be repeated or that proves useful to others, it will be added to the website, but we’re generally open to creatively reinterpreting demonstrations to fit a new class context.

Every year we add more demonstrations to the collection; and occasionally a demonstration is retired, if it no longer meets an instructional need or has been superseded by others. So defining just how many demonstrations we have might not be the right question to ask. Ask, rather, what can we demonstrate for you today?

In support of most classes moving to an online model this year, the Lecture-Demonstration staff are doing our part to help connect you to resources you need for teaching remotely. As one part of this project, we have begun compiling a Directory of Simulations from around the internet, organized by general area of physics. Find it under the Tools and Resources menu above, or click the image below.

Sample subsection titles: Electricity & Magnetism Simulations, Mathematics Simulations, Optics Simulations, Oscillations & Waves Simulations, Quantum Simulations, Thermodynamics & Statistical Mechanics Simulations

There are a tremendous number of simulations out there, that folks have been creating for years. We’re testing them out, choosing ones that we can confirm currently work (always a question as internet technology marches on) and that seem useful for our department’s classes. As of this posting, we have just over fifty simulations collected. Our initial focus has been on physics that is hard to demonstrate in the classroom, or experiments that are difficult to present as static pictures or live video.

This project is ongoing! As we continue to explore we will be adding more subjects and more demonstrations per subject. We also invite recommendations! If you have a favourite simulation, let us know (email lecdemhelp at physics.umd.edu) so we can check it out and add it to the directory.

We’ll have more new projects posted soon; watch the site for news!

demovideospreviewmatrix1

In our ongoing work to support remote teaching, we are pleased to announce a new resource. Over the summer of 2020, a Teaching Innovation Grant helped to create our new Demonstration Videos. These can be used for remote, hybrid, and in-person classes to present demonstrations in conjunction with class engagement questions.

The videos have their own YouTube channel, linked both here and on the Tools & Resources Menu above; check them out today!

 

Science is all about data, and our current pandemic is no different. 

Be sure to check the UMD COVID-19 Dashboard for the latest campus data and links to reopening plans and  proper safety procedures.

Keep Terps Safe - UMD COVID Public Dashboard

 

LecDemBlog (maintopa)

 The Physics Lecture Demonstration Facility at the University of Maryland Proudly Presents

PHYSICS IS PHUN

the 2013-2014 Demonstration Program Series

 Front 1
 Front 3
Front 2
 Click Here for More Photos From Physics is Phun
Since its inception in 1982, The University of Maryland Physics Department has presented a yearly series of free public lecture-demonstration programs affectionately known as PHYSICS IS PHUN.

 

Welcome to the 32nd year of PHYSICS IS PHUN, hosted by the staff of the Physics Lecture Demonstrations Facility with the assistance of numerous invaluable volunteers. These shows aim to educate and entertain the public through the use of both interactive and faculty-led demonstrations.

For evening shows, hands-on demonstrations are set-up for visitors to use, with volunteer supervision, 30 minutes before each program begins.

 

The two days of World in Motion, the April Physics is Phun programs, drew over 400 people from all over the Washington, DC metro area to the University of Maryland. 

 

The program included two evening presentations, and one afternoon family program with an exciting presentation of demonstrations and a series of hands-on activities. The events included volunteer presenters from area high schools, community colleges, and undergraduates and graduates from the Department of Physics at Maryland.

 

The evening program presented by the outstanding UMD physics instructor, Dave Buehrle, made some noise with the Rocket

Trike, Vacuum Launcher, and Pencil through Plywood demonstrations. The Vacuum Launcher received extra loud applause on Friday night as a ping pong ball shot through an empty soda can. 

 

Audience members took home the remains of the ball and can as souvenirs from the program (see picture).   Another exciting part of the program was matching physics demonstrations with the events at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, which provided examples of how the laws of motion are studied and used by coaches and athletes.

 The afternoon program focused on Newton’s Laws.  After a 20 minute presentation of entertaining physics demonstrations, guests were given a passport to Newton’s World, which they took with them to each of the 7 hands-on activities stationed inside and outside of the building (see pictures).  After completing each activity, visitors checked off which of Newton’s Laws applied to the activity on their passports.  Once the passports were complete, guests received a reward and walked away from the event as experts on Newton’s Laws!  As one guest stated, “Physics really is fun!  See you again soon.”


 

Please check back to this page for updates and look for our emails regarding upcoming events.