webEJS Open Source Brownian Motion Gas Model
Explore Description 1 as an interactive EJS simulation for mechanics.
1. Watch or Launch
Launch the Interactive
Open the simulation, adjust the controls, and compare what changes on screen before answering the concept-check questions.
2. Big Ideas
What Students Can Learn
- Connect temperature to average particle kinetic energy.
- Use Brownian motion or molecular motion as indirect evidence for particles.
- Relate collision frequency to pressure or diffusion-like behaviour where shown.
- Distinguish a particle model from a literal picture of real atoms.
Guiding Question
How does the particle motion change when the thermal condition is changed, and what macroscopic effect does that explain?
3. Try the Investigation
Start from the Particles
Ask students to describe particle motion before naming the thermal concept. Focus on speed, spacing, and collisions.
Change Temperature Only
Increase or decrease the temperature setting if available, then compare particle speed and collision frequency.
Link Micro to Macro
Use the observed particle behaviour to explain a macroscopic quantity such as temperature, pressure, or state.
Discuss Model Limits
Ask which parts of the animation are useful simplifications and which should not be taken as exact pictures of real molecules.
4. Teacher Notes
Lesson Use
Use the model as a bridge from visible random motion to the kinetic model of matter. Let students first describe what they see, then introduce average kinetic energy and collisions as explanatory ideas.
Discussion Prompts
Ask: What changes when the temperature setting changes? What evidence suggests the particles have more kinetic energy? How could invisible particle motion explain pressure, diffusion, or Brownian motion?
Teaching Moves
Avoid letting students treat the animation as decorative. Require a before-and-after comparison and a sentence that links microscopic particle behaviour to a measurable or visible macroscopic effect.
5. Concept Check
These questions are generated from the topic and the concept illustrated by the simulation. Use them after students have explored the model.
Concept Score
Correct first attempts build a streak and unlock higher point multipliers on this device.
1. What does Brownian motion or molecular motion help students infer?
2. When temperature is increased in a kinetic model, what should generally happen to particle motion?
3. Why is a simulation useful for kinetic theory?
4. What comparison gives the clearest evidence?
5. What is a strong explanation after using the model?
7. Learning Pulse
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