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Mica Demo Kit NGSS

SKU #PF-8
Availability: In Stock
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When one polarizing filter is rotated, the colors change!

Mica

SKU #RM-910
Availability: Out of Stock
Out of Stock
Placed between two crossed polarizing filters, beautiful colors can be observed.
1 lb.

Description

When placed between two crossed polarizing filters, beautiful colors can be observed. Each different thickness appears as a different color. When one polarizing filter is rotated, the colors change. Each piece of mica is approximately 8 x 8 cm and about as thick as card stock. Available while supplies last. Includes two 2" x 2" polarizing filters to view effects.

choking hazard

Lesson Ideas

Download the pdf of this lesson!

When two polarizing filters are placed atop one another, they can be transparent or opaque to light. By rotating one of the filters, the transmitted light passing through the filters may be turned 'on' or 'off'. When the filters do not transmit light, the polarizing filters are said to be 'crossed polarizers'. Certain materials such as cellophane tape, Plexiglas, corn syrup, and stretched polyethylene exhibit beautiful colors when placed between two crossed polarizing filters.

Experiments:

  1. Place a piece of mica between two crossed polarizing filters. Each color represents a different thickness of the mica. Try rotating one polarizing filter. Try rotating the mica.

  2. When a piece of Plexiglas is placed between two crossed polarizing filters and squeezed, stress lines appear. Engineers use this method to discover the stress areas in new structural designs.

  3. Place a piece of polyethylene between two crossed polarizing filters. Then stretch the polyethylene by pulling it. Examine the stretched polyethylene sheet between the crossed filters.

  4. Use the special cellophane tape to create designs on a sheet of acetate. Then examine the results by placing it between two crossed polarizing filters. Rotate one of the filters.

  5. If you look at the words on a printed page through a crystal of calcite, you will see double. These natural, nearly transparent crystals exhibit the property of 'birefringence', i.e. they break light into two distinct polarized beams. By rotating a polarizing filter over the crystal, it is possible to view one image at a time. This phenomenon can be displayed using an overhead projector.

About Polarizers:
Only vertically oriented light waves may pass through the polarizing filter on the left. Only horizontally oriented light waves may pass through the filter on the right. If the filter on the left is placed on top of the filter on the right, no light will be able to pass through at all.

If the polarizing filters are aligned parallel to each other, light may pass freely through both filters. By placing transparent objects between two polarizing filters, it is possible to identify those materials which rotate polarized light!

Try sandwiching a plastic baggie between two filters and stretching it. When certain plastics are put under stress, they rotate polarized light. Try placing transparent tape between two polarizing filters. Some brands of tape work better than others. The more layers of tape, the more light is rotated.

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Reviews

3 reviews
Mica kit
Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Jul 21, 2022
Wow we have enjoyed this experiment and lessons we learned and still learning. I will continue buying projects here as the products and price has been great .
L Miller

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Good size Mica
Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Feb 11, 2019
The chunk of mica is very good for the price/size and is a great pairing to learn about polarized light.
Jeromy Rech

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A delight of rainbows
Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon Review star icon May 16, 2012
A reasonably priced kit offering a variety of examples of the power of polarization. Using the supplied materials many "lessons" can be taught about optics, engineering - the list is almost endless if you use your imagination! I like to combine the polar filters with the rainbow diffraction glasses and prisms to teach different ways to see "the rainbow" in others - to encourage respect for our differences, and how that is what makes us special. I usually teach early elementary children, but even our older kids like to drop by for the science and social reviews.
Teena K.

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NGSS

This product will support your students' understanding of the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)*, as shown in the table below.

Elementary Middle School High School

1-PS4-3

Students can use this tool to conduct an investigation of how different materials affect the path of a beam of light.

MS-PS4-2

Students can use Polarizing Filters to develop and use a model to describe how waves are reflected, absorbed, or transmitted through various materials.

HS-PS4-1

Students can use Polarizing Filters to conduct investigations and use mathematical representations to support a claim regarding relationships among the frequency, wavelength, and speed of waves traveling in various media.

Suggested Science Idea(s)

MS-PS4-2
HS-PS4-1

Students can use Polarizing Filters to experiment and model how light waves are altered when transmitted through various materials.

 

* NGSS is a registered trademark of Achieve. Neither Achieve nor the lead states and partners that developed the Next Generation Science Standards were involved in the production of, and do not endorse, this product.

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