33 research outputs found

    The path and the multi-teaching issues in the coupled pendulum and mass-spring experiments

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    The main task of an introductory laboratory course is to foster students' manual, conceptual and statistical ability to investigate physical phenomena. Needing very simple apparatus, pendulum experiments are an ideal starting point in our first-year laboratory course because they are rich in both physical content and data processing. These experiments allow many variations, e.g. pendulum bobs can have different shapes, threads can be tied to a hook at their edge or pass through their centre of mass, they can be hanged as simple or bifilar pendulums. In these many variations, they emphasize the difference between theory and practice in the passage from an idealized scheme to a real experimental asset, which becomes evident, for example, when the pendulum bob cannot be considered an idealized point mass. Moreover, they require careful observation of details such as the type of thread used and its rigidity or the bob initial slant, which leads to different behaviors. Their mathematical models require a wide range of fundamental topics in experimental data analysis: arithmetic and weighted mean, standard deviation, central limit theorem application, data distribution, and the significant difference between theory and practice. Setting the mass-spring experiment immediately after the pendulum highlights the question of resonance, revises the gap between theory and practice in another context, and provides another occasion to practice further techniques in data analysis

    A note in memory of Constance Charlotte Dilworth Occhialini

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    A short biography of Constance Dilworth and a selected bibliography is given. Her scientific production is analysed in connection to cosmic rays physics and space physics

    Giuseppe Occhialini: his training years (1907-1934)

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    Occhialini's training in physics is analysed. Three main physicists contributed: his father Augusto Occhialini and, indirectly, Battelli; Bruno Rossi and the other physicists of the Arcetri school; Patrick Blackett and the groups of the Cavendish. His engagement in the researches on cosmic rays led him to the great discoveries of the pair production and of the cosmic rays showers made with Blackett
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