"Physics Clearance"
Fundamentals of Physics Pile Driver/Resonance Tube
Study Wavelengths and Energy All With One Device
Expand 1 Items
Racing Rings
With the magnet is on the outside, it's easy to see the science behind these eddy tubes.
Expand 1 Items
Kerr Effect
Understand the Kerr effect like you never have before!
Expand 1 Items
Atoms & Chemical Bonding Curriculum Learning Module
A Great Classroom Solution
Expand 1 Items
Visual Scientifics Classroom Starter Set
This Starter Set is an effective and economical addition to any physics or physical science classroom.
Expand 2 Items
Forces & Motion Curriculum Learning Module
A Great Classroom Solution.
Expand 1 Items
Complete Ripple Tank Apparatus
This ripple tank is transparent, acrylic plastic and supported in a sturdy plastic frame.
Expand 1 Items
Oprobe, 100 MHz, 4 kV - 3400 Series, 1.2 m, ELD, CAL TEST ELECTRONICS SE
A medium bandwidth, high voltage 100x passive voltage probe with a 100 MΩ input impedance.
Expand 1 Items
Photoconductivity
This apparatus is used to study the current Vs voltage characteristics of CdS photo-resistor at constant irradiance and to measure the photo-current.
Expand 1 Items
CENCO® Acoustic Resonance Apparatus
Bring your physics equipment into the 21st century with the new and improved CENCO physics acoustic resonance apparatus.
Expand 1 Items
K’NEX Education Intro to Simple Machines: Wheels/Axles & Inclined Planes
Investigate and experiment with 7 functioning Wheel & Axle and Inclined Plane models designed to demonstrate science and technology concepts.
Students can determine, through investigation, if the machine multiplies the force it applies to the resistance (load), if the machine changes the direction of the force they apply, and more.
Expand 1 Items
NeuLog Hand Dynamometer Logger Sensor, EISCO SCIENTIFIC LLC
Squeeze and Study
Expand 1 Items
Estes Standard Rocket Engines
Get your model rockets in the air with these popular rocket engines.
Expand 9 Items
CPEP History and Fate of the Universe Charts
This colorful, graphically rich chart illustrates and summarizes what is now known about the history and fate of the universe.
Developed by scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) in collaboration with the Contemporary Physics Education Project (CPEP) and George Smoot, Nobel prize winner for 2006, the chart is crammed with information covering a broad range of cosmological topics.
The centerpiece is an evolutionary timeline that takes viewers from 10-44 seconds, when the universe was much smaller than a proton, to the current era, about 14 billion years later, when the visible universe contains 4 x 1011 billion galaxies.
Side panels provide short discussions on the birth, inflation and expansion of the universe, the cosmic microwave background and redshifts of distant supernovas.




