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Physics Fair experiments. Light and water, ping-pong-ball, polarization, liquid nitrogen, disgusting, and tornado.
The Physics of Everyday Stuff, by Sam Hokin
Explains gun recoil, skidmark forensics, shotput, icebergs, high wire electrical transmissions and figure skater spins.
The Wonders of Physics
Physics science projects to do at home and videos of traveling physics show.
WFU Online Demonstration Index
Bed of nails, tablecloth pulling, monkey hunter, rotating person, electromagnetic launcher, plus others.
Physics 2000
Explains CAT scans, X-rays, lasers, em waves, periodic table, and quantum atom
Little Shop of Physics
Colorado State University's hands-on science outreach program.
Fermilabyrinth: Entrance Code crackers, law and order, ghost bustin', and warp speed.
Contemporary Physics Education Project (CPEP)
Non-profit organization of teachers, educators, and physicists located around the world.
International Solar-Terrestrial Physics (ISTP)
Information on thde sun-earth connection.
Datadisc Physics Experiments. Newton's law of cooling, radiation absorption by aluminium foil, & others.
Physics World. Teaching resources for physics. RealPlayer video downloads. Excellent videos, but the language is in Chinese.
Oulu Space Physics Textbook
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The first group in the world to produce and study a strongly-interacting, degenerate Fermi gas of atoms
by Duke University Physics Lab
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We are the first group in the world to produce and study a
strongly-interacting, degenerate Fermi gas of atoms [Science, in press]. A
cigar-shaped cloud of fermionic 6Li atoms is confined and
rapidly cooled to degeneracy in our CO2 laser trap, using a
magnetic field to induce strong interactions. Upon abruptly turning off
the trap, the gas exhibits a spectacular anisotropic expansion, rapidly
moving in the transverse direction while remaining nearly stationary along
the cigar axis. By contrast, an ordinary noninteracting gas expands evenly
in all directions, quickly assuming a spherical shape. For the conditions
of the experiments, the anisotropic expansion may be a signature of
superfluidity. However, anisotropic expansion may also arise from
collisional hydrodynamics under appropriate conditions. A striking
observation is that the energy released by the gas and the initial cloud
dimensions correspond to those of a zero-temperature noninteracting gas,
while the anisotropy is characteristic of a strongly-interacting system.
Since interacting fermions are the building blocks of all matter, these
studies impact the development of new nonperturbative theoretical methods
in fields of research ranging from condensed matter to nuclear and
particle physics.

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The interaction strength is controlled using a magnetic field. At 910
G, the gas is very strongly interacting. The figure on the left shows
absorption images of the expanding, strongly-interacting gas as a function
of time t after release from the trap for t=0.1 ms to t=2.0 ms. As can be
seen from the figure, very little motion occurs along the direction that
was initially the long axis of the cigar-shaped cloud [AVI
(6.3 MB), Animated
GIF (565 kB)]. Most of the energy is released in the transverse
dimensions of the cigar, causing the cloud to assume an elliptical shape.
In the absence of interactions, the gas would expand with the same speed
in all directions, assuming a spherical shape a short time after release.
By adjusting the magnetic field to 530 G, the interaction strength can be
adjusted to be nearly zero. In that case the gas expands ballistically,
assuming a spherical shape as expected.
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The production of a strongly-interacting, degnerate Fermi gas was
accomplished using the all-optical cooling and trapping methods developed
by our group. Beginning in 1997, our group pioneered the development of an
ultrastable optical trap for atoms which was first demonstrated in 1999
[see Cooling
and Trapping]. This trap was used in 2001 [see Cooling
and Trapping] to achieve the first all-optical production of a
degenerate Fermi gas, which enabled the the present experiments.
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