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  • Welcome to Spring 2025!
  • Demo Highlight: Convection With High & Low Candles
  • Demonstration Highlight: Inertial Reference Frame
  • Demo Highlight: Ring and Disc on Inclined Plane
  • Demonstrations
  • New Resource: Directory of Simulations
  • New Resource: Demonstration Video Channel
  • Visit the UMD COVID-19 Dashboard
  • Physics is Phun: Flight

Welcome to 2025! We at the Lecture Demonstration Facility are looking forward to working with you in the spring semester.

We appreciate as much advance notice of demonstrations as you can give; but at a minimum, please remember to order your demonstrations before the order cutoff deadline: 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. As always, we’ll meet with you before your class to go over the demos and make sure everything is ready to be used effectively and safely.

Here's to a great semester!

The behaviour of gases as they're heated and cooled can be confusing, but is really important to understanding a lot of things in daily life, from the weather outside to heating a house to designing power plants... or simply to how candles burn. Demonstration I2-45: High & Low Candles in a Cylinder gives us an example of this.

 I2-45: Two small candles burn inside a clear plastic cylinder. One sits at table height, the other is elevated on a slim metal pedestal.

Read more on the Physics LecDem Blog!

 

 

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.

In recent years, the classic term “moment of inertia” has started to be largely retired in favor of the more descriptive “rotational inertia;” likely a good choice, as “moment” has long since ceased to have any non-time-related usage in everyday English. But call it what you will, it can be a challenging concept for beginning students to wrap their heads around.

Demonstration D2-01: Ring and Disc on Inclined Plane is a useful illustration for clarifying this concept. Two objects of similar mass and radius, a metal ring and a solid wooden disc, are placed on an inclined plane with no initial velocity. As they are accelerated by gravity, the disc quickly outpaces the ring. You can invite students to make a prediction ahead of time about their behaviour, presenting it as a race between the two objects, and invite them to discuss the results afterwards.

A wooden disc and a metal ring sit on a table next to a wooden ramp

Read more on our blog!

 

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

 

The next Physics is Phun is coming down the runway!

Join us Friday, March 7th, and Saturday, March 8th, at 7:00 PM for Physics is Phun: The Physics of Flight! as we explore the physics of aerodynamics.

Please register using this form.

Physics is Phun Physics of Flight 2025

LecDemBlog (maintopa)

Today we’re featuring an interesting experiment that explores the classic question of springtime: Why Is The Sky Blue?

 Demonstration M7-31: Tyndall’s Experiment uses a chemical reaction to simulate light scattering through Earth’s atmosphere, but in a tiny container. Solutions of sodium thiosulfate and hydrogen chloride are dissolved in water, then mixed together in a glass tank in front of a light source. These chemicals react and form new particles. The resulting particles form a colloid, a liquid with particles suspended throughout, giving it optical properties that let it simulate our much thinner atmosphere on a smaller scale. Over the course of several minutes, as more and more particles form, we see more and more light scattered out the sides of the tank, while less and less passes straight through. As it goes through this transition, the light coming out the end changes from nearly white, to orange, to red, perhaps finally vanishing entirely.

 Demo M7-31: a light source and a glass tank for chemical mixing

 In the atmosphere, light scatters off of molecules and other tiny particles in the air. The angle at which light scatters depends on the wavelength of the light; shorter wavelengths scatter farther than longer ones. Visible light consists of a spectrum of various wavelengths, with blue light having shorter wavelengths and red light having longer wavelengths. This means that blue light scatters more than red.

Linear visible spectrum, with wavelengths in nanometers - public domain image from David Eccles of Victoria University of Wellington https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Linear_visible_spectrum.svg

This property in the atmosphere was written about by physicists John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh, and is commonly called Rayleigh Scattering as a result; but the experiment to observe similar effects in a liquid was developed by physicist John Tyndall, hence the name of the demonstration. John Tyndall was well known in his time for his interest in education, and gave public lectures with demonstrations, much like we do today! He also carried out important research on the effect of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, what we now know as the greenhouse effect.

 Rayleigh scattering in the atmosphere: public domain image credited to Rnbc https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SDIM0241b.jpg

As the Earth turns, the angle we see the sun at changes. Early and late in the day, we’re seeing the sun through the atmosphere at a different angle, and looking through more atmosphere as a result. So at those times we mainly see red light; the shorter blue wavelengths have been scattered away. At midday, with the sun shining directly down on us, we see more blue!

 A fascinating bit of physics, and also very beautiful.