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Spins Lab 1: Instructor's Guide - 2003 version

Main Ideas

Students' Task

  1. Run Stern-Gerlach simulations
  2. Perform a statistical analysis to find probabilities (with confidence intervals)
  3. Model spins systems

Prerequisites

None

Props/Equipment

Activity: Introduction

We usually prepare students with some discussion of magnetic moments and the results you would classically expect from a Stern-Gerlach experiment. This includes some discussion of the Stern-Gerlach apparatus.

Activity: Student Conversations

Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4

Activity: Wrap-up

By the end of the lab, students should:

  1. be familiar with the phenomena of making Stern-Gerlach measurements, what happens when you make several measurements of a single particle, and how to prepare a particle's state using a Stern-Gerlach experiment.
  2. know how to calculate probabilities of measurement outcomes from the number of particles measured at each possible output.
  3. understand how to express confidence in their calculated probabilities using statistical tools.

One point of difficulty in this lab is distinguishing between a superposition and a mixture of states. This is a very productive conversation to have with the students.

Extensions

We use the results of these experiments to develop a model of two state quantum systems in Hilbert space from a phenomenological perspective.

This lab has been broken up into parts in order to be better integrated into a classroom setting. If you currently have a 2 hour lab block set aside, this lab may be the best choice. If not, we have found that the smaller activities often work better.

This lab contains the following small activities: