Support the Physics Department
Your donations go to our department's discretionary fund which we use to support our students. For example, your donations help us to
- run a peer-mentoring program.
- support students to do research with our faculty.
- take students on field trips to the cabin, Baca, and large telescopes like the Green Bank Observatory.
- support student projects associated with senior capstone seminars and papers.
- support department talks and events.
- support awards to graduating students.
- purchase a kinesthetic ball sculpture that livens up our hallway by demonstrating physics principles to all who walk by. (See photos below!)
How to Donate
Make a Financial Donation
- Go to the Online Giving Site.
- Under "Designations" choose "Physics Department Discretionary Fund".
- Complete all the other fields and submit.
Ball Sculpture
Balls roll along the undulating path speeding up and slowing down as they exchange kinetic for potential energy. The effect can be seen with the naked eye. The effect can also be quantitatively analyzed by filming it and then slowing down the frames to measure speed and elevation change showing that 0.5*mv2=mgh.
Balls are launched from a ramp and land on the ruled platform shown below. By measuring the geometry of the ramp, students predict the balls’ projectile motion. Students test their prediction by observing where balls land on the platform.
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Last updated: 02/29/2024