Table of Contents

TA Notes for Drop Pinch Off Lab

Day 1

The purpose of the Day 1 activity is for students to learn how to operate the camera, take and analyze data, and most importantly how to think through an investigative experiment where you make decisions on what to do next based on looking at your data.

In this context here are some points to keep in mind while working with students in the lab and then evaluating their analysis.

Grading considerations.

Fitting the data.

In the past we have had students plot their data on a log-log plot, then select regions which showed power law behavior, and fit those regions to the functional form of a power law with the exponent being a free parameter. Then they compared the best fit power to the three forms developed from the dimensional analysis to see if any of the agreed.

This process however makes it seem to the students as if they are supposed to find power law exponents in their data which “agree” with one of the “models”. They then interpret the point of doing the experiment as confirming the theory, which as described above is not the point of the lab.

This time we are having the students plot and fit their data as before, but with the exponent of the power law fixed so that the only free parameter is the pre-factor. They should do this three times, using each of the three exponents (0.5, 0.67, & 1.0) for each region of the data that appears to show power law behavior. They then overlay the lines representing these fits with the data, and it becomes pretty obvious visually when one of the exponents is consistent with the data. Although in principle interpreting the fits this way is not really different from what we used to do, the procedure is different enough that it may jar the students out of automatically thinking they are rigorously fitting the data to precise theoretical models.

The plot below shows data I collected for the pinchoff process of water. I took two videos at different frame rates.

A couple things to note about this video.