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American Journal of Physics

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
The mission of the American Journal of Physics (AJP) is to publish articles on the educational and cultural aspects of physics that are useful, interesting, and accessible to a diverse audience of physics students, educators, and researchers who are generally reading outside their specialties to broaden their understanding of physics and to expand and enhance their pedagogical toolkits at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde feb. 1940 / hasta dic. 2023 AIP Publishing

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0002-9505

ISSN electrónico

1943-2909

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Thermal infrared astronomy for the introductory laboratory

Clifford W. Padgett; William H. Baird; J. Spencer Coile; Wayne M. Johnson; Erin N. Groneck; Robert A. Rose

<jats:p> We show that infrared telescopes can be constructed at low cost using consumer-grade thermal infrared imagers and commercially available germanium lenses. Using these telescopes in the laboratory, introductory astronomy students can image nearby celestial objects to observe properties that are not seen in the visible region, in particular, variations in temperature across the surface. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 122-131

Low-cost quadrature optical interferometer

Tanner M. Melody; Krishna H. Patel; Peter K. Nguyen; Christopher L. Smallwood

<jats:p> We report on the construction and characterization of a low-cost Mach–Zehnder optical interferometer in which quadrature signal detection is achieved by means of polarization control. The device incorporates a generic green laser pointer, home-built photodetectors, 3D-printed optical mounts, a circular polarizer extracted from a pair of 3D movie glasses, and a python-enabled microcontroller for analog-to-digital data acquisition. Components fit inside of a [Formula: see text] space and can be assembled on a budget of less than US$500. The device has the potential to make quadrature interferometry accessible and affordable for instructors, students, and enthusiasts alike. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 132-141

Picometer measurements of strain coefficients by quadrature interferometry and lock-in amplification

Alec Nilson; Kurt Wick

<jats:p> Modulated strain displacements were measured with a quadrature Michelson–Morley interferometer employing polarization optics and two lock-in amplifiers to filter noise and thermal drift. The advantages of the technique, its limitations, and estimates on the accuracy are discussed, including an algorithm to correct for non-ideal components and non-linear effects. Instructions for the construction and setup of the quadrature interferometer are provided. To test the interferometer, the dynamic converse piezoelectric effect was used, and by modulating the electric field across the sample, the [Formula: see text] strain coefficient for x-cut quartz was determined to be [Formula: see text], which is within 1.5 standard deviations of the accepted standard. The measurements had a standard deviation of 4.1 pm, resulting in standard errors as low as 5 fm/V after fitting. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 142-152

Still learning about space dimensionality: From the description of hydrogen atom by a generalized wave equation for dimensions D ≥ 3

Francisco Caruso; Vitor Oguri; Felipe Silveira

<jats:p> A hydrogen atom is supposed to be described by a generalization of the Schrödinger equation, in which the Hamiltonian depends on an iterated Laplacian and a Coulomb-like potential [Formula: see text]. Starting from previously obtained solutions for this equation using the [Formula: see text] expansion method, it is shown that new light can be shed on the problem of understanding the dimensionality of the world as proposed by Paul Ehrenfest. A surprising new result is obtained. Indeed, for the first time, we can understand that not only the sign of the energy but also the value of the ground state energy of hydrogen atoms is related to the threefold nature of space. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 153-158

BOOK REVIEWS

Peter W. Milonni

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 159-160

In this issue: June 2023

Joseph C. Amato; John Essick; Harvey Gould; Claire A. Marrache-Kikuchi; Raina Olsen; Beth ParksORCID; Donald Salisbury; Jan Tobochnik

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 413

The computer revolution in physics education? It's here!

Edward F. Redish

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 415

Sarah Frances Whiting, pioneer of laboratory instruction in astronomy

Joanna Behrman

<jats:p>Sarah Frances Whiting developed innovative and influential laboratory work in her introductory astronomy classes at Wellesley College in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Whiting was strongly influenced by Edward Pickering and the early physics laboratory education at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This article explores the early development of laboratory work in astronomy education at Wellesley and Whiting's underlying philosophy of education. By laboratory work, Whiting meant day-time work, including work with astronomical photographs and spectroscopy. Her pedagogy was encapsulated in her phrase “to sharpen the pencil sharpens the mind,” which referenced the importance of a student's familiarity with tools as well as the role of drawing in astronomical work. Whiting further modeled her instruction after the work being conducted at the Harvard College Observatory in order to prepare her students for potential future employment as astronomers.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 417

Optimal trajectories for symmetric turns

Stephen KaczkowskiORCID

<jats:p>The problem of determining minimal time trajectories in a plane constrained by an upper bound on the magnitude of the acceleration vector is reexamined. In the previous work [Am. J. Phys. 49(7), 685–688 (1981)], a stationary solution of a functional, applied over curves in two-dimensional velocity space, was used to find explicit expressions for what was claimed to be a minimum turn time trajectory. In this paper, this work is furthered by a formal demonstration that the turn time associated with this trajectory is indeed lower than that corresponding to any other smooth trajectory. Supporting evidence for this claim is provided by numerical procedures, which are developed to allow comparisons between the turn times of competing trajectories across a range of parameter values of the turn width, the initial speed, and the magnitude of the acceleration vector.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 425

Investigating the magnetic field outside small accelerator magnet analogs via experiment, simulation, and theory

Kelley D. SullivanORCID; Antara SenORCID; M. C. SullivanORCID

<jats:p>Particle accelerators use powerful and complex magnetic fields to turn, shape, and eventually collide beams of near-light-speed particles, yet the fundamental magnetic principles behind the accelerator magnets can be understood by undergraduate students. In this paper, we use small-scale accelerator magnet analogs in a multi-faceted, low-cost exploration of the magnetic field exterior to accelerator magnets. These fields are best understood using the multipole expansion of the field. If we assume that the magnetic field is created by ideal magnetic dipoles, we can derive a theoretical model that shows that each accelerator magnet configuration is dominated by a single multipole moment and obeys B∝1/rl+2, where l is the multipole order (with l=1,2,3, and 4 for the dipole, quadrupole, octopole, and hexadecapole moments, respectively). Using commercially available NdFeB magnets and the magnetic field sensor inside a smartphone, we experimentally verify the power-law dependence of the accelerator magnet configurations. Finally, we use the open-source Python library Magpylib to simulate the magnetic field of the permanent magnet configurations, showing good agreement among theory, experiment, and simulation.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: General Physics and Astronomy.

Pp. 432