Author:
Bonanno A,Bozzo G,Camarca M,Sapia P
Abstract
In this article we describe an experimental learning path about electromagnetic induction
which uses an Atwood machine where one of the two hanging bodies is a cylindrical magnet
falling through a plexiglass guide, surrounded either by a coil or by a copper pipe. The first
configuration (magnet falling across a coil) allows students to quantitatively study the
Faraday–Neumann–Lenz law, while the second configuration (falling through a copper
pipe) permits learners to investigate the complex phenomena of induction by
quantifying the amount of electric power dissipated through the pipe as a result of
Foucault eddy currents, when the magnet travels through the pipe. The magnet’s fall
acceleration can be set by adjusting the counterweight of the Atwood machine so
that both the kinematic quantities associated with it and the electromotive force
induced within the coil are continuously and quantitatively monitored (respectively,
by a common personal computer (PC) equipped with a webcam and by freely
available software that makes it possible to use the audio card to convert the PC
into an oscilloscope). Measurements carried out when the various experimental
parameters are changed provide a useful framework for a thorough understanding and
clarification of the conceptual nodes related to electromagnetic induction. The proposed
learning path is under evaluation in various high schools participating in the
project ‘Lauree Scientifiche’ promoted by the Italian Department of Education.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,Education
Cited by
7 articles.
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