Simple demonstrations can illustrate profound concepts in physics, Nobel-prize winning physicist Edward M. Purcell--who called the overhead projector "the greatest invention since chalk"--told a small crowd in the Science Center yesterday.
Using a tennis racquet, a cardboard box and an overhead projector, Purcell, Gade University Professor Emeritus, demonstrated that light is transmitted in waves rather than particles, and other basic theories of physics.
Purcell also showed how a rocket launches and what the gas argon would like like from the viewpoint of a molecule using polaroid transparencies and an overhead projector.
"I have never seen anything change a teaching situation as drastically and abruptly as the overhead projector," Purcell said to the group of teachers in the last three presentations in the Professional Training Series sponsored by the Harvard-Danforth Center for Teaching and Learning.
"You have to teach physics to understand it," Purcell said. "Teaching has been a central part of my intellectual life as a scientist," he said, adding that he thought it was a myth that research scientists are poor teachers.
Read more in News
In ProgressRecommended Articles
-
Physicist Edward Purcell DiesGage University Professor Emeritus Edward M. Purcell died Friday in his Cambridge home. He was 84. The cause of death
-
The Moviegoer and the MultiflexThe room is dark, except for the figures dancing on the small screen, setting up, running and hitting over and
-
Physics Professor Bainbridge DiesKenneth T. Bainbridge, a distinguished physics professor who taught at Harvard for more than four decades, died Sunday in Lexington.
-
Edward PurcellJournalists last month suddenly dragged a rather unwilling physicist out of secluded Lyman Laboratory into the public's view. Self-effacing Edward
-
Purcell's Nobel Prize Winning Work May Aid Advance of Atomic TheoryEdward M. Purcell, professor of Physics, told Swedish scientists and newsmen yesterday that his newly developed methods for measuring the
-
Professorship in Physics Goes to Edward PurcellThe Physics Department announced the appointment of Edward M. Purcell as a full professor of Physics yesterday. Purcell has been