Diffraction grating demo (12 min) - a 7A/120 combo demo. The purpose is to visualize how diffraction/spectrometers work
How a spectrometer works (5 min) - spectrometer in 120 lab is a black box. Now we can look into the box to see what goes on
More of a general diffraction demo: width of a human hair (4 min)
Volunteer to supply and hold hair in front of laser pointer
See the ensuing diffraction pattern. Can anyone explain what we're seeing?
Volunteer to measure the diffraction pattern (what should we measure?)
Human hair ~50 microns with factor of ~2 variance
Pass out diffraction gratings to class (4 min)
These can be borrowed from the Physics demo room (72 Le Conte - in the basement). C10 also has a bunch in the storage room cabinet on the 1st floor (used for arclamp demo).
What else can we look at with the diffraction gratings?
Meta Discussion of this Demo (5 min)
Demos are great to illustrate phenomena, especially ones that aren't easy to understand. Diffraction is often explained on the board using waves and interference.. seeing it can help build physical intuition of it. (For programming, algorithms can be explained with demos. Or connecting things learned in class to real life (e.g.
DNS lookup with dig)).
As a class on the board: Thinking about the demo we just did and previous demos you have done, what makes a good demo and a bad demo:
What makes a good demo? (with e.g.'s connecting it back to the diffraction demo)
Illustrating difficult physical concept(s) (e.g. diffraction is not intuitive)
Interactive: students can participate (e.g. getting them to help with the demo - they feel they made it happen)
A springboard to new topics (e.g. can think about extending this to other applications)
Straightforward: minimal risk of failure (e.g. mostly straightforward except lasers can fail, backup?)
Demo actually illustrates concept in question (e.g. this one is straightforward because very little that is analogy)
When demos go wrong:
Demos can and sometimes do FAIL! (e.g. backups, explain what they should see, test your demo!)
Sometimes, especially in astronomy, they can confuse students more than help them or oversimplify a concept. Both overly complex and overly simplified demos can be confusing! (e.g. this demo attempts to treat diffraction at the same level as the course)
Materials may be missing or broken, so CHECK IN ADVANCE! (e.g. go check on diffraction gratings a week in advance, test lasers)
Collect diffraction gratings from class
This is in particular relevant to the lab-based courses (Ay120, Python class) where most of the GSI interaction is in the form of office hours or emails to answer questions on assignments. These are also useful in TALC.
Group discussion - you've probably been doing this but making it more explicit: