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Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium Nathan Hearn Sarah Kautz Margo Levine November 30, 2007
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Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Dec 30, 2015

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Sarah Kautz. Margo Levine. Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium. Nathan Hearn. November 30, 2007. Goals. Gauge level of public understanding about non-visible light Can public draw conclusions about the state of an object using visible and non-visible information?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Multi-Wavelength LightAdler Planetarium

Nathan HearnSarah KautzMargo Levine

November 30, 2007

Page 2: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Goals

• Gauge level of public understanding about non-visible light

• Can public draw conclusions about the state of an object using visible and non-visible information?

Page 3: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

These images show the same object.

Can you describe what is shown in eachimage?

What does the bottom image tell us?

Page 4: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

These images show the same object.

Can you describe what is shown in each image?

Why can you see the bones in thebottom image but not in the top one?

Page 5: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Sample

• size: N = 49

• ages range: 5 to 65

• diversity:– male and female– mostly families with young children, couples

Page 6: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Recognition

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Identify object Identify nonvisible image Know terminology

IR

X-Ray

Sample size: 49

Page 7: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Higher Understanding

• Difficult to determine whether the public associated x-ray and IR with light.– IR: questions were inconclusive – X-ray: 63% of sample understood that x-rays

penetrate the skin. At least 14% of sample knew that visible light does not penetrate the skin.

Page 8: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Our Experiences

• Objects (hairdryer, hand) were easily recognized

• People quickly understood that IR shows heat– Could be due to a suggestive color table (hot = red,

cold = blue)

• Wording of questions is crucial – “Is hair dryer on?” vs. “Is hair dryer on or off?”

• People comfortable comparing x-rays to light

Page 9: Multi-Wavelength Light Adler Planetarium

Future Work

• More time needed to develop questions– Questions need to be more specific– More ways to categorize responses

• Difficult to determine whether public is aware of different types of light.