Experiments Using Cell Phones in Physics Classroom Education: The Computer-Aided g Determination
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This paper continues the collection of experiments that describe the use of cell phones as experimental tools in physics classroom education.1–4 We describe a computer-aided determination of the free-fall acceleration g using the acoustical Doppler effect. The Doppler shift is a function of the speed of the source. Since a free-falling objects speed is changing linearly with time, the Doppler shift is also changing with time. It is possible to measure this shift using software that is both easy to use and readily available. Students will use the time-dependency of the Doppler shift to experimentally determine the acceleration due to gravity by using a cell phone as a freely falling object emitting a sound with constant frequency.
[1] E. C. Hammond,et al. Cell Phones in the Classroom , 2007 .
[2] Christian Villa. Bell-Jar Demonstration Using Cell Phones , 2009 .
[3] L. F. S. Coelho,et al. Cellular Phones Helping to Get a Clearer Picture of Kinematics. , 2009 .