41 research outputs found
A controlled study of virtual reality in first-year magnetostatics
Stereoscopic virtual reality (VR) has experienced a resurgence due to
flagship products such as the Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and smartphone-based VR
solutions like Google Cardboard. This is causing the question to resurface: how
can stereoscopic VR be useful in instruction, if at all, and what are the
pedagogical best practices for its use? To address this, and to continue our
work in this sphere, we performed a study of 289 introductory physics students
who were sorted into three different treatment types: stereoscopic virtual
reality, WebGL simulation, and static 2D images, each designed to provide
information about magnetic fields and forces. Students were assessed using
preliminary items designed to focus on heavily-3D systems. We report on
assessment reliability, and on student performance. Overall, we find that
students who used VR did not significantly outperform students using other
treatment types. There were significant differences between sexes, as other
studies have noted. Dependence on students' self-reported 3D videogame play was
observed, in keeping with previous studies, but this dependence was not
restricted to the VR treatment.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the 2019 Physics Education Research
Conferenc
Potential Vorticity Evolution of a Protoplanetary Disk with An Embedded Protoplanet
We present two-dimensional inviscid hydrodynamic simulations of a
protoplanetary disk with an embedded planet, emphasizing the evolution of
potential vorticity (the ratio of vorticity to density) and its dependence on
numerical resolutions. By analyzing the structure of spiral shocks made by the
planet, we show that progressive changes of the potential vorticity caused by
spiral shocks ultimately lead to the excitation of a secondary instability. We
also demonstrate that very high numerical resolution is required to both follow
the potential vorticity changes and identify the location where the secondary
instability is first excited. Low-resolution results are shown to give the
wrong location. We establish the robustness of a secondary instability and its
impact on the torque onto the planet. After the saturation of the instability,
the disk shows large-scale non-axisymmetry, causing the torque on the planet to
oscillate with large amplitude. The impact of the oscillating torque on the
protoplanet's migration remains to be investigated.Comment: 17 pages total with 9 figures (Fig.4,5,9 are in .jpg), accepted to
Ap