Scientific demonstration
A scientific demonstration is a procedure carried out for the purposes of demonstrating scientific principles, rather than for hypothesis testing or knowledge gathering (although they may originally have been carried out for these purposes).
Most scientific demonstrations are simple laboratory demonstrations intended to demonstrate physical principles, often in a surprising or entertaining way. They are carried out in schools and universities, and sometimes in public demonstrations in popular science lectures and TV programs aimed at the public. Many scientific demonstrations are chosen for their combination of educational merit and entertainment value, which is often provided by dramatic phenomena such as explosions.
Public scientific demonstrations were a common occurrence in the Age of Enlightenment, and have long been a feature of the British Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, which date back to 1825. In the television era, scientific demonstrations have featured in science-related entertainment shows such as MythBusters and Brainiac: Science Abuse.
Examples
Some famous scientific demonstrations include:
- Archimedes experiments with relationship between mass and volume(density)
- John Philoponus experiments with moving bodies and theory of impetus
- Antikythera mechanism and automaton robots built by ancient Greeks during the Hellenistic era
- Hipparchus invents the astrolabe
- Aryabhatta's theory on rotation of the earth
- Virtuvius work De Architectura
- Alhazen's camera obscura, lamp experiment and lens
- Mozi's camera obscura experiments
- Mean speed theorem by Oxford merton calculators[1]
- Detonating a cloud of flour
- Ramon lull's thinking machine
- Galen's anatomical theories using animal dissection
- Foucault's pendulum
- Galileo Galilei's ball experiments, pendulum and telescope
- Heron's fountain and aeolipile
- Ibn al-Nafis' pulmonary circulation and coronary circulation
- Gyroscopic bicycle wheel
- Nylon rope trick
- Prince Rupert's Drops
- Shooting a candle through a plank
- World's first mechanical clock by Richard of wallingford
- Using a linear motor as a gun
- Using compressed air to drive a water rocket
- Using liquid nitrogen to shatter a rose
- William Harvey's circulatory system
Note: many scientific demonstrations are potentially dangerous, and should not be attempted without considerable laboratory experience and appropriate safety precautions. Many older well-known scientific demonstrations, once mainstays of science education, are now effectively impossible to demonstrate to an audience without breaking health and safety laws. Some older demonstrations, such as allowing the audience to play with liquid mercury, are sufficiently dangerous that they should not be attempted by anyone under any circumstances.
See also
References
- "Political Ensembles. By G. Little. (Pp. 223; illustrated; £17.50.) Oxford University Press: Oxford. 1985. - Religion in Context. By I. M. Lewis. (Pp. 139; illustrated; £6.95 pb.) Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. 1986". Psychological Medicine. 17 (4): 1023–1023. November 1987. doi:10.1017/s0033291700001057. ISSN 0033-2917.