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Which line graph, equations and physical processes go together?
Can you suggest a curve to fit some experimental data? Can you work out where the data might have come from?
Explore the power of aeroplanes, spaceships and horses.
A look at the fluid mechanics questions that are raised by the Stonehenge 'bluestones'.
Find out some of the mathematics behind neural networks.
engNRICH is the area of the stemNRICH site devoted to the mathematics underlying the study of engineering
This is the area of the advanced stemNRICH site devoted to the core applied mathematics underlying the sciences.
Work in groups to try to create the best approximations to these physical quantities.
Find out how to model a battery mathematically
chemNRICH is the area of the stemNRICH site devoted to the mathematics underlying the study of chemistry, designed to help develop the mathematics required to get the most from your study. . . .
Look at the calculus behind the simple act of a car going over a step.
How fast would you have to throw a ball upwards so that it would never land?
Many physical constants are only known to a certain accuracy. Explore the numerical error bounds in the mass of water and its constituents.
Read all about electromagnetism in our interactive article.
A look at a fluid mechanics technique called the Steady Flow Momentum Equation.
An introduction to a useful tool to check the validity of an equation.
See how the motion of the simple pendulum is not-so-simple after all.
This is the technology section of stemNRICH - Core.
PhysNRICH is the area of the StemNRICH site devoted to the mathematics underlying the study of physics
How does the half-life of a drug affect the build up of medication in the body over time?
Estimate these curious quantities sufficiently accurately that you can rank them in order of size
Advanced problems in the mathematical sciences.
Use your skill and knowledge to place various scientific lengths in order of size. Can you judge the length of objects with sizes ranging from 1 Angstrom to 1 million km with no wrong attempts?
Show that even a very powerful spaceship would eventually run out of overtaking power
When you change the units, do the numbers get bigger or smaller?
Explore the rates of growth of the sorts of simple polynomials often used in mathematical modelling.
Which units would you choose best to fit these situations?
A ball whooshes down a slide and hits another ball which flies off the slide horizontally as a projectile. How far does it go?
How high will a ball taking a million seconds to fall travel?
Can you work out the natural time scale for the universe?
Problems which make you think about the kinetic ideas underlying the ideal gas laws.
Explore the Lorentz force law for charges moving in different ways.
Have you got the Mach knack? Discover the mathematics behind exceeding the sound barrier.
Can you match up the entries from this table of units?
What is an AC voltage? How much power does an AC power source supply?
Ever wondered what it would be like to vaporise a diamond? Find out inside...
Investigate why the Lennard-Jones potential gives a good approximate explanation for the behaviour of atoms at close ranges
Investigate some of the issues raised by Geiger and Marsden's famous scattering experiment in which they fired alpha particles at a sheet of gold.
Where will the spaceman go when he falls through these strange planetary systems?
A simplified account of special relativity and the twins paradox.
Explore how can changing the axes for a plot of an equation can lead to different shaped graphs emerging
Work out the numerical values for these physical quantities.
An article about the kind of maths a first year undergraduate in physics, engineering and other physical sciences courses might encounter. The aim is to highlight the link between particular maths. . . .
An article demonstrating mathematically how various physical modelling assumptions affect the solution to the seemingly simple problem of the projectile.
A think about the physics of a motorbike riding upside down
When a mixture of gases burn, will the volume change?
Some explanations of basic terms and some phenomena discovered by ancient astronomers
Derive an equation which describes satellite dynamics.
A look at different crystal lattice structures, and how they relate to structural properties