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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



Scientists use microscope to view magnetism at atomic level

by Andrea Gibson of Ohio University


ATHENS, Ohio – Scientists and engineers build the transistors that run televisions, radios and similar electronic devices based on the moving electric charges of electrons. But the electron also has another key property: a magnetic "spin" that scientists believe could be exploited to develop faster, smaller and more efficient devices.

The first step is to determine the magnetic properties of materials that could be used to create futuristic nanoscale devices, a task that has escaped scientists until now. But research published online November 6 in the journal Physical Review Letters by a team of Ohio University physicists details a technique for measuring magnetism at the atomic scale using a scanning tunneling microscope.

Physicists Arthur Smith and Haiqiang Yang employed the high-powered microscope to explore the magnetic properties of a new crystalline compound comprised of manganese and nitrogen, which has potential use in future electronic or magnetic devices.

"It's the best technique we have for measuring magnetic structure at the atomic scale," said Smith, whose project is funded by the National Science Foundation.

In a device that employs both electronics and "spintronics," a thin layer of magnetic material would be added to conventional electronics to improve performance. Possible applications include a spintronics LED for computer screens, more powerful hard drives and the quantum computer, which could make it possible to perform certain types of complex calculations which would be virtually impossible using conventional computers, said Smith, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy.

"These devices are so rare, so far in the future, that people have only begun to think about what to use them for," he said.

One obstacle scientists face is making the scientific process behind such experimental devices work at room temperature. Current devices work at cold temperatures, typically at or below minus 320 degrees Fahrenheit.

Smith and Yang, a postdoctoral researcher at Ohio University, have been studying the properties of the crystalline compound of manganese and nitrogen for two years, as it has the potential to function at room temperature, Yang said. In the recent experiment, the scientists coated the tip of a needle with magnetized atoms. Then, using it in their microscope like the needle of a record player to "read" the recorded information of a tiny surface area, they observed the magnetic poles of some rows of atoms pointing in one direction, and the poles of other rows of atoms pointing in the opposite direction. On non-magnetic surfaces, the atoms do not have oriented magnetic poles.

Other scientists have had little success using other techniques – which are too indirect or lack the necessary sensitivity -- to image magnetic spin at the atomic level. This suggests that the spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscope holds promise for research in this area, Smith said.

"Our paper provides new evidence that this technique works and that it's a very important technique for nanotechnology," he said.

Nanomagnetism is a growing area of nanotechnology, Smith said, and scientists in the field expect to begin building nanoscale magnetic structures in the next two years. Now that the physicists have been able to measure spin at the nanoscale, Yang added, they also hope to use the scanning tunneling microscope to modify the surface of magnetic compounds.

Collaborators on the paper are Margarita Prikhodko and Walter Lambrecht of Case Western Reserve University.

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