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C10 already did this, this year.. Check if useful to describe for 10…?
Head GSIs will train GSIs
Students like this one
Make sure the stuff is there if your section is early in the day.
Test it yourself and make sure you can see lines so you can help your students better.
Warping of Spacetime: A 2D analogy using stretchy black fabric and balls/weights. No worksheets exist in the EBRB for this one, but feel free to make one! We might do this one in Ay 300 later in the semester.
Celestial sphere, phases of the moon, seasons, orbits: Styrofoam balls, a lamp or flashlight, people getting up and moving around. Many worksheets go with these kinds of demos and can be found on the Demos page of the EBRB or on the Celestial Sphere, Gravity and Orbits, and Earth/Moon/Sun System pages of the EBRB.
Retrograde motion (Discuss pitfalls)
Day & night on Earth (circle up around a lamp and groups of 3)
Lunar phases (balls on a sticks around a lamp and groups of 3)
Seasons (circle up around a lamp)
Lunar rotation and orbit (i.e. tidal locking) (one person orbits another with the Moon's arms outstretched)
Parallax with your finger (very simple, “close one eye then the other” kind of thing)
Doppler shift of sound (whirling a buzzer on a string)
Class H-R diagram (too long to do in Ay 300)
Stating in words, stating in math, drawing, and acting out Kepler's and/or Newton's Laws (can be done with a worksheet, or just have students take notes as each group presents their law) (too long to do in Ay 300)
Donut/bagel on a string (though I'm sure profs will do it in class)
Jumping on a chair with balls being thrown (though I'm sure profs will do it in class)
(Rayleigh) Scattering of Light: Fill a fish tank with water and a couple drops of milk and shine a flashlight through it to show scattering of blue light and transmission of red light. On the EBRB
Light Blackbodies Spectral Lines and the Doppler Effect page there's a worksheet called “Emission, Absorption, Scattering, and Nebulae” and one called “Scattering Demo.”
Planetary Nebulae (and Limb Brightening and Optical Depth): use a Hoberman sphere covered in Christmas lights to show how spherical radiating clouds can appear ring-like. On the EBRB's
Stellar Evolution page, there's a worksheet called 'Limb Brightening: “Hoberman Planetary Nebula” Demo.'