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- Succeed in Physical
Science--Online Course
- These online lessons and quizzes are geared to students or adults who just
want to learn more about the sciences. There are seven lessons/topics for
chemistry and seven for physics. Also included are biography links.
This is part of the "School for Champions," a free school on the
web, which offers lessons in many areas.
- General Chemistry
Online
- Offers self-guided tutorials, quizzes, a database of chemical compounds,
answers and hints for over 400 frequently asked questions, and a toolbox
with tables and calculators. From the Department of Chemistry at Frostburg
State University.
- The Catalyst
- This site is mainly for high school chemistry teachers, but it has a lot
to offer students, too. There are links to recommended web resources
and high school chemistry web sites, and a question and answer section.
- Chemistry Tutor
- From the site description: "No bells and whistles here, just straight
talk about chemistry, everything chemistry! If you left your chemistry
textbook in your locker at school, this is the place you'll want to look.
This site offers a basic introduction to chemistry, chemical equations and
reactions, and chemistry calculators as well as safety rules to follow when
you are in the laboratory. There are several great links, WebElements and
periodic table information on the Web, too." This is a ThinkQuest
entry, produced by high school students.
- Chemistry
Resources
- Just as the title states, this site provides links to chemistry sources on
the web. The links are arranged in a table, by topic.
- Chemystery
- From the site description: "Everything a high school student needs to
know about chemistry is at this site in a fun, imaginative, comprehensive
presentation that catches the eye. Find a periodic table that looks and acts
differently than any you've seen before. Research atoms, molecules, organic
chemistry, equilibriums, acids and bases, nuclear reactions and more. This
excellent site claims to be a virtual text book and that's not an empty
promise. Even if you don't like chemistry, check out this site." This
is a ThinkQuest entry, authored by high school students.
- The Periodic Table of Elements
- Clicking on an element provides extensive information. From Los Alamos
National Lab.
- The Periodic Table of Elements
for K-12
- Each element is linked to a list of basic information and a diagram of
atomic structure. You can list elements by name, atomic number, chemical
symbol, date of discovery, and more. This site was created by an eighth
grader for a science project, and it's now an ongoing project.
- The Periodic Table of
Comic Books
- Science silliness, with a link to Mark Winter's Web
Elements
page for technical information.
Physics
- American Institute of Physics Science
Report
- A large number of science reports are presented here. What forces act on a
passed football, the search for artificial blood, why glass breaks, how
fireflies produce light, and how fireworks get their brilliant colors are a
few of the topics covered. You can browse by title, category, or edition,
then view the script or listen to the report.
- Particle
Physics Education Sites
- From the basics of theory to a Java applet that allows you to experiment
with neutrino mass matrices. This site has something for those of us
who never knew just what 'particle physics' is, to those who are advanced
students. From the 'Particle Adventure' home page.
- PhysLINK
- Many reference links, answers to frequently asked questions (or you
can submit your own), a directory of college and university physics
departments, and book & software reviews are just some of the features
of this site.
- Physics Online
- Resources for high school physics include links, resource packages,
curriculum guides, frequently asked questions, and a balsa wood bridge
building contest.
- PhysicsWeb
- Web links to physics resources around the world are arranged by education,
media, institutions, companies, museums & exhibits, computing, and misc.
(even humor in physics).
- Eric
Weisstein's Treasure Trove of Physics
- Type in your search terms or view the index by subject--thermodynamics,
astrophysics, electromagnetism, fluid mechanics--to name a few. Includes
over 2600 entries.
- How Things Work
- If a gadget or invention involves physics, chances are it's explained
here.
- The Atoms Family
- From the Miami Museum of Science. Each article gives a recommended
grade level. Articles are grouped by monster: for example, the Phantom of
the Opera will introduce middle and high school students to phases of
matter.
- The
Slinky Home Page
- Features physics experiments with Slinkies, and more than you ever wanted
to know about this toy.
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