HEAT EXPERIMENT#2
Start and end each session with a visible thinking learning task - what I used to think and what I think now - to help implement the Five Formative Assessment Strategies to improve student learning.
Why we focus on 'understanding the principles' rather than on 'learning the facts'
If your teaching/learning focuses on an understanding of the principles, you don't need to remember the facts - just look them up. No matter how many facts you remember, there is no guarantee that you will ever understand the principles that underly them.
All that you need to understand about the current scientific view about
heat is….
“The beauty of a living thing is not the atoms that go into it, but the way those atoms are put together” 1)
Everything in the universe is made up of matter and energy.
In summary, put energy into a system and it heats up, take energy away and it cools.
Video: Veritasium - States of Matter (4min)
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The five important concepts about heat & temperature
More detailed information about the following videos can be found in the Teacher Workshops section of this WIKI:
Conduction experiment
Place a metal spoon and a plastic spoon into your container. The handles should be inside, and tops outside.
Fix a plastic bead to the top (outside part) of each spoon with a dab of butter
Your teacher will pour some hot water into the container
What is your hypothesis?
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Video 1 - Eureka - Conduction (2min)
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Radiation experiment:
When any type of light is absorbed by an object, that object will be heated. The infrared light from an electric heater feels hot for two reasons: 3)
Use an infra-red light source to heat up an object
Use a mobile phone or infra-red camera to view a TVV remote control unit when pressing buttons
View an ice-block in infrared.
because surfaces seem black to infrared (IR) light, IR light is absorbed by objects.
because the infrared light (IR) is extremely bright light (although we do not see it).
A thermographic camera (also called an infrared camera or thermal imaging camera) is a device that forms an image using infrared radiation compared with a standard webcam/camera, which forms an image using visible light.
Figure 1. Thermographic Images - Show how a ball heats up after being bounced - Source: Caltech
You may think these infrared images of a boy holding a ball look unusual, but this is the way snakes normally see things!
Video 2. Eureka - Radiation & waves (4min)
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Convection Experiment
Place a clear container onto some paper cups
Place red food dye in centre, blue food dye at each end
Place a cup of hot water under the centre (below red food dye)
What is you hypothesis?
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If warm air rises, why is it always colder at the tops of mountains? Does hot air
really go up (bouyancy)?
Video 3. Eureka - Convection (5min)
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Video: GCE Physics - Heat Transfer by Convection (4min)
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Video: Convection - Science Demonstration (3min)
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Video - Fire, Heat, Light & Hot Air Rising (1.5min)
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A QUESTION - Does 'heat rise' and/or 'does hot air rise'?
'Does hot air rise (due to heat)' or does 'cold air fall (due to gravity)'?
When you have two theories to explain the same thing, what can you do
To test a theory, design an experiment where each theory predicts a different outcome.
In the space station, there is plenty of air but almost no gravity.
If hot air rises, then it should also 'rise' in zero gravity. Does it?
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High above our planet in the realm of satellites and space stations, the familiar rules of Earth do not apply. The midday sky is as black as night. There is no up and no down. Dropped objects do not fall, and hot air does not rise.
4). In the absence of gravity, there is no buoyant force so no movement is possible physically but however hot air will start exchanging heat with the cooler air by means of conduction and radiation if they are in contact with each other and only by pure radiation if they are not in contact. ( no convection can takes place because of the absence of gravity)
5)
BEFORE END OF SESSION (allow 10 minutes)
Learning Tasks That Elicit Evidence of Learning 6)
At the end of this session, write down new answers to the same two questions you answered earlier:
Are 'heat' and 'temperature' just different ways of saying the same thing?
How does heat move from one object to another?
Have you changed your mind about any of the answers you gave at the beginning of the session?
References