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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Winkler, Eleanor Anne; Graham, Paul; Unterman, Nathan A.; Grey, Benjamin; Miller, Jacob M.; Miller, Max J.; Sears, Allen J.; Bernat, Alex; Frank, Shoshana; Simon, Joshua; Eliaser, Shira K.; Blackmore, Tom; Copeland, Emmanuelle; Senser, Marybeth; Seiden, Henry; Valsamis, Anthony; Adams, Mark – Physics Teacher, 2022
With support from QuarkNet, high school students investigated the effect of overburden on muon flux by collecting data from Fermilab's Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search (MINOS) tunnel. Muon flux varied due to a change in overburden created by a 103-meter deep access shaft. A profile of muon flux as a function of distance from the access…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Physics, Science Activities
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Dallal, Tamar A.; Miller, Jacob M.; Michelle Matten,; Schur, Ezra; Sears, Allen J.; Carr, Clarissa; Rosenberg, Jacob; Unterman, Nathan A.; Valsamis, Anthony; Adams, Mark – Physics Teacher, 2022
During the August 21, 2017, solar eclipse, high school students measured secondary cosmic ray flux using QuarkNet detectors. These students conducted experiments examining cosmic ray flux, shower, speed of muons, and muon lifetime using QuarkNet cosmic ray muon detectors (CRMDs). These detectors measure muon flux of momenta greater than ~2 GeV, a…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Measurement Equipment, Secondary School Science, High School Students
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Goldman, Jesse; McNichols, Andrew; Pipes, Robert – Physics Teacher, 2020
In this paper, we describe a study of cosmic ray muon rates and energies at various elevations on Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii. The study was originally conceived as an extension to the upper-division modern physics laboratory at the University of Hawaii at Hilo and used the TeachSpin Muon Physics apparatus (abbreviated TSMP below) from that…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Physics, Science Instruction, Energy
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Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2019
All physics is fascinating, but some stories are more exciting than others. A story that involves some of the most precise measurements ever made and a tantalizing discrepancy might be one of the most interesting. Throw in a 3200-mile journey, a heavily laden truck covered by a tarpaulin, closed-down highways with police escorts, and hushed…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Magnets
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White, A. E. – Physics Education, 2022
This paper presents the design and reports on the use of a simple and inexpensive cloud chamber kit that is compatible with active learning, experiential learning, and project-based learning strategies. The kit was developed for use in a first-year undergraduate nuclear science seminar class at a university in the US. Diffusion cloud chambers are…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Undergraduate Study, College Science, Nuclear Physics
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Esposito, Salvatore – Physics Education, 2018
We describe a hands-on accurate demonstrator for cosmic rays realized by six high school students. The main aim is to show the relevance and the functioning of the principal parts of a cosmic ray telescope (muon detector), with the help of two large sized wooden artefacts. The first one points out how cosmic rays can be tracked in a muon…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Secondary School Science, High School Students, Hands on Science
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Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2021
The history of particle physics can be considered nothing less than a huge triumph for science. Over the course of a little more than a century of effort, our understanding of the world of atomic and subatomic physics went from a vague understanding of atoms, to one that is much more detailed. Early in this hundred-year-long period, we learned…
Descriptors: Physics, Science History, Laboratory Equipment, Science Laboratories
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Karbowiak, Michal; Wibig, Tadeusz; Alvarez-Castillo, David; Beznosko, Dmitriy; Duffy, Alan R.; Góra, Dariusz; Homola, Piotr; Kasztelan, Marcin; Niedzwiecki, Michal – Physics Education, 2020
The Cosmic-Ray Extremely Distributed Observatory (CREDO) is the project to search and study ultra high-energy cosmic ray particles from deep space producing simultaneous extensive air showers over the entire exposed surface of the Earth. The concept of the CREDO infrastructure assumes absorbing all kinds of cosmic ray data from any apparatus all…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Radiation, Science Activities, Energy
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Gourlay, H. – Physics Education, 2017
This paper describes a small-scale piece of research using concept mapping to elicit A level students' understandings of particle physics. Fifty-nine year 12 (16- and 17 year-old) students from two London schools participated. The exercise took place during school physics lessons. Students were instructed how to make a concept map and were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Secondary School Science, Knowledge Level
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Kvita, Jirí; Cermáková, Berenika; Matulová, Natálie; Poštulka, Jan; Staník, Daniel – Physics Education, 2019
We present several applications of the particle camera MX-10 in different radiation environments, leading to strikingly different observed patterns and consequently particle composition as well as recorded dose. We describe the measurements of the radiation background, cosmic muons direction analysis and the detection of alpha particles in a…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Radiation, Scientific Concepts
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Singh, P.; Hedgeland, H. – Physics Education, 2015
We use apparatus based on two Geiger-Müller tubes, a simple electronic circuit and a Raspberry Pi computer to illustrate relativistic time dilation affecting cosmic-ray muons travelling through the atmosphere to the Earth's surface. The experiment we describe lends itself to both classroom demonstration to accompany the topic of special relativity…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Physics, Laboratory Equipment
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Aiola, Salvatore; La Rocca, Paola; Riggi, Francesco; Riggi, Simone – European Journal of Physics, 2012
An experimental setup, based on a plastic scintillator with an embedded wavelength shifter fibre and photosensors at the two ends, has been used to detect cosmic muons in undergraduate laboratory activities. Time and amplitude information from the two photosensors were measured using the time-over-threshold technique. The distribution of the…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Energy, Undergraduate Students, Higher Education
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Aiola, Salvatore; La Rocca, Paola; Riggi, Francesco; Riggi, Simone – European Journal of Physics, 2012
A set of three small scintillation detectors was employed to measure correlated events due to the passage of cosmic muons originating from extensive air showers. The coincidence rate between (any) two detectors was extracted as a function of their relative distance. The difference between the arrival times in three non-aligned detectors was used…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Scientific Concepts, Physics
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Huggins, Elisha – Physics Teacher, 2011
This is the third of four articles on teaching special relativity in the first week of an introductory physics course. With Einstein's second postulate that the speed of light is the same to all observers, we could use the light pulse clock to introduce time dilation. But we had difficulty introducing the Lorentz contraction until we saw the movie…
Descriptors: Physics
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Sibbernsen, Kendra – Astronomy Education Review, 2010
Cosmic rays are high-energy particles from outer space that continually strike the Earth's atmosphere and produce cascades of secondary particles, which reach the surface of the Earth, mainly in the form of muons. These particles can be detected with scintillator detectors, Geiger counters, cloud chambers, and also can be recorded with commonly…
Descriptors: Photography, Astronomy, Radiation, Physics
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