View allAll Photos Tagged physics
To support the sterling efforts of Lincsranger I am posting this picture of the inside of the Physics classroom. Lincsranger has a group of demolition shots and the outside view for this one is No 3 in the Castle Hills Demolition Set. For external views please see Science Block in my Photostream.
Associate Professor of Physics James Kelly physics lab works with atomic discharge tubes and spectroscopes on April 28, 2016.
Typically, my room was 5 to 10 degrees warmer than my roommates'. But I calculated a method to reduce the extreme heating of the afternoon sun, which led to an investigation on how to look out the window without opening it.
Knox College physics professor Charles Schulz, transferring liquid nitrogen and liquid helium into a Mössbauer spectrometer, for research on antiferromagnetism - studying the spin of electrons at very low temperatures. More about physics at Knox: www.knox.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/physics
STAR TREKKERS – Students and teachers from Sault Area High School and Whitefish Township School enjoy a virtual sky in Lake Superior State University's Benjamin Long Planetarium on May 4. LSSU hosted more 1,500 students from across the Eastern Upper Peninsula for the second of four "Mind Trekkers" science shows. AT&T Michigan awarded Michigan Technological University a $20,000 Innovation Grant to sponsor the hands-on science program across northern Michigan in early May. Traverse City hosted one on May 3; Bay College, Escanaba, and Bay College West, Iron Mountain, will host shows on May 5 and 6. LSSU opened its labs, including its Robotics Lab, its Aquatic Research Laboratory and the adjoining Cloverland Electric Hydro-Electric Plant. More than 100 LSSU students, faculty and staff provided demonstrations and support services for the event. The Michigan Campus Compact and the Michigan College Access Network gave $12,000 to transport EUP school kids to LSSU for the program. Read more about the Mind Trekker initiative here. (LSSU/John Shibley)
iss069e056172 (Aug. 11, 2023) --- NASA astronaut and Expedition 69 Flight Engineer Stephen Bowen works on physics research inside the Destiny laboratory module's Microgravity Science Glovebox. The SUBSA-μgGA investigation seeks to create a superior graphene aerogel, a synthetic material with high porosity and low density, in microgravity benefitting both Earth and space industries such as power storage, environmental protection, and chemical sensing.
Knox College students work to link digital camera sensor with a Millikan oil drop apparatus (a famous physics experiment to measure the charge of the electron). The project is part of the physics course "Introduction to Research." Photo by Peter Bailley.
www.sgphysicstuition.com is specialized class for Physics Tuition for Hwa Chong Institution IP Physics.
Students in Dr David Reeder's Introduction to Physics class tested their learning about Newton's Laws of Motion and Gravity with a lab experiment involving cars, weights and slope in the Cutler Science Building, October 5, 2021. Photography by Glenn Minshall.
The atomic force microscope at Rutgers-Camden has a powerful scanning stylus that creates a topographic map and can determine a property’s adhesion and measure its electrical potential. When researchers are working with particularly intricate materials, the tunable laser system reduces the chance that whatever they are trying to process isn’t damaged.