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PHYSICS
HIGHLIGHTS
Physics offers pupils fascinating courses at school, leading
to stimulating careers in technology, environmental development,
healthcare and medicine
. the opportunities are boundless.
From the vastness of astronomy, astrophysics and the universe
to the intricacies of sub-atomic particle Physics, pupils
are entering an exciting area where an enormous source of
knowledge still remains untapped.
Pictures:
The rocket is used to demonstrate Newton's Third Law: "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." When you walk you push on the ground and it then pushes back on you: that's what makes you move.
Skateboards and a piece of rope are used to demonstrate Newton's third Law. When one person on a skateboard pulls the rope which is held by a second person on a skateboard, both of them move towards the middle, even though only one person is actually trying to pull on the rope.
COURSE INFORMATION
Form II Physics: After completing an integrated science
course in Form I, pupils specialise in physics, studying diverse
subjects such as heat, light, sound and force fields.
Intermediate II Physics: Forms III and IV now study
this course instead of Standard Grade. Introducing the topics
of mechanics, heat, electricity, electronics, waves, optics
and radioactivity, the course also involves practical laboratory
skills.
Higher Level: Comprises 3 units in Mechanics and Properties
of Matter, Electricity and Electronics, Radiation and Matter.
Awareness of interaction between theory and practice develops
objectivity and an investigative attitude.
A Level Physics: this course is taken in the year following
on from Higher Grade with Edexcel exams being sat in January
and June of Form VI. Bridging the different methodologies
of school and university, this course comprises practical
tests and 6 units: Mechanics and Radioactivity, Electricity
and Thermal Physics, Particle Physics, Waves and Our Universe,
Forces and Fields, and a synoptic section.
Other Courses: The Physics Department also offers
"stand-alone" courses in Astrophysics, Medical Physics
and Electrical Engineering.
Visit to Ninewells Hospital as part of Medical Physics unit
Sir James Dewar
Dollar Academy's most famous former pupil is Sir James Dewar,
the inventor of the vacuum flask. After graduating from Edinburgh
University, Dewar worked to liquefy and then to solidify hydrogen,
and by 1899 was able to cool solids to minus 260 Centigrade.
He was one of the first to predict that electrical resistance
would disappear at Zero Kelvins (-273.15 Centigrade).
Dewar's earliest vacuum flask was made of
glass but not silvered. The vacuum was produced by gas absorption
of charcoal made from coconut husk. The flask was not available
commercially until 1904 when two German glass blowers formed
the company Thermo GmbH. Little did Dewar realise that his
scientific invention would soon be found in virtually every
home.
In 1889, Dewar, along with Sir Frederick Abel, invented Cordite,
an explosive that was to prove vital in the First World War.
Sir James Dewar died in 1923.
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