Mobile Phone Physics Laboratory

Abstract

Changes in the university funding drives the development of the education towards larger student groups as an attempt to cut costs. This makes it more and more difficult to give all students enough time for practical laboratory exercises. In an attempt to increase the the part of practical work in the basic physics course for the first year students at the Faculty of Business ICT and Chemical Engineering we have introduced mobile phone laboratories.

Mobile phones have a large number of sensors to measure changes in the orientation of the device, acceleration, light conditions, sound levels etc. These sensors can also be used to read and used for measuring physical phenomena. During the first year class in Engineering physics we have tried to do open ended experiments to get a hands on experience of experimental design and data analysis at the same time as the students gets familiar with the actual physical phenomena.

The tasks for the students were formed in such a way that they should be ale to do the experiments with their own phones and material that they could find at home. To perform the experiments the students worked in groups of about five persons. They got about two week time to design and do the experiment. Instead of a traditional written report they should return a video of the experiment and theoretical calculation predicting the result.

In this paper we report the results from this teaching experiment done with both Information Technology students from our international class and domestic Chemical Engineering students.

Proceedings of the 12th International CDIO Conference, Turku, Finland, June 12-16 2016

Authors
Patric Granholm
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113_Paper_PDF.pdf (30.67 KB)
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Pages
6
Reference Text
Proceedings of the 12th International CDIO Conference, Turku, Finland, June 12-16 2016
Year
2016