Provided by: Crash Course |Published on: September 29, 2022
Videos Grades 9-12, ap-college
Synopsis
This video explains temperature and the linear or volume changes caused by thermal expansion using the example of bridge expansion joints and the volume of air in a car at different temperatures.
The video also uses the properties of an ideal gas and the ideal gas law to demonstrate the mathematic relationships between temperature, pressure, and volume.
The video uses animations, mathematical equations, and relatable real-world examples to demonstrate the concepts.
Additional Prerequisites
The video moves quickly and covers a lot of content. Teachers should pause the video periodically and replay portions to ensure students absorb all the information.
Students should already be familiar with kinetic energy and mathematical proportionality.
The video starts by briefly introducing a sponsor and ends with more information about the sponsor beginning at 8 minutes.
Differentiation
Cross-curricular connections can be made with engineering courses by further investigating expansion joints and their applications beyond bridges.
This video can be connected to climate change for physics and engineering classes by exploring how rising global temperatures will affect how we construct roads, bridges, and other infrastructure or how power plants currently use heat, temperature, and pressure to power electricity-generating turbines.
Students could explore how geothermal energy and passive solar technology rely on differences in temperature to provide renewable energy or passive heating and cooling for buildings.
This video can also be connected to climate change for Earth sciences classes by discussing how the ideal gas law and temperature relate to atmospheric warming, global wind patterns, and the greenhouse effect.
Students can delve further into this topic by checking out these videos on heat and the laws of thermodynamics.
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All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.