Teacher Demonstration
Use the live model as a shared screen demonstration before students try their own predictions and observations.
Explore Two Magnet Falling In Copper Tube Simulator as an interactive EJS simulation for electricity and magnetism.
Use the live model as a shared screen demonstration before students try their own predictions and observations.
Open the simulation, adjust the controls, and compare what changes on screen before answering the concept-check questions.
What does the oscilloscope trace reveal about the signal's voltage, period, frequency, and waveform?
Treat vertical displacement as voltage and horizontal displacement as time, using the scale settings shown by the model.
Adjust amplitude, frequency, volts-per-division, or time-base controls one at a time so the trace is readable.
Count divisions for amplitude or peak-to-peak voltage and for one complete cycle.
Convert divisions into voltage and time, then use frequency = 1 / period where appropriate.
Use this as a measurement-with-instrument lesson: students should read the oscilloscope trace using scale settings rather than just describe the wave shape.
Ask: What does one vertical division represent? What does one horizontal division represent? How many divisions make one cycle? How would changing the time-base affect the displayed trace?
Have students annotate a trace with amplitude, peak-to-peak voltage, and period before calculating frequency. Emphasise that changing display scale changes the drawing, not necessarily the signal itself.
These questions are generated from the topic and the concept illustrated by the simulation. Use them after students have explored the model.
Correct first attempts build a streak and unlock higher point multipliers on this device.
1. What does the vertical direction on an oscilloscope trace usually represent?
2. What does the time-base control help you measure?
3. How can frequency be found from the trace?
4. What does peak-to-peak voltage measure?
5. Why should only one control be changed at a time?
Unlocks after 3 correct concept-check answers on this page.
1. A trace takes 4 horizontal divisions for one cycle and the time-base is 2 ms per division. What is the period and frequency?
2. A sine trace is 3 divisions above the centre line at its peak with 0.5 V per division. What are the amplitude and peak-to-peak voltage?
3. A student changes the time-base and the trace looks more spread out horizontally. What is the best interpretation?
4. If volts per division is increased while the same signal is displayed, what should usually happen to the trace height?
5. What makes an oscilloscope conclusion expert-level?
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