Accelerating in the kitchen with Physics I
Stumbling upon him, I asked him about his latest experiment.
He was measuring the rates of acceleration as he changed the slope of the board.
18th Century Virginia Musings
Stumbling upon him, I asked him about his latest experiment.
He was measuring the rates of acceleration as he changed the slope of the board.
One of her last labs for Human Physiology was quite complex sounding, The Bicarbonate Buffer…which deep dives into acids and bases within the body.
I think it’s so important for everyone to take a good human physiology course, to understand their own health, talk to doctors, and understand current events.
Surrounded by all the lab equipment bubbling and oozing, I again felt a bit like Inga as I took photos and listened to my son’s explanation of the process.
Using litmus paper, my son learned how to use them to test for acids and bases with different types of common household items.
While my tenth grade son immersed himself in impressive labs for his Chemistry I studies,
I wondered if one of us should pose as Igor or Inga to assist?
Feeling a bit like Inga in Dr. Frankenstein’s lab, I photographed my son’s latest bubbling complexities entailing beakers, wires, and a battery.
While some of the labs sound quite complicated, this lab began in a familiar way with a twist for deeper study of salt water, boiled and frozen.
A dissecting microscope would also be great, like a giant magnifying glass, to more closely examine the flowers. Instead, we used a pocket magnifying glass
Employing creative dramatics, the three of us held hands, forming a human closed circuit, then one of us dropped hands to form a human open circuit.