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Unit 1 Presentation. Safety in the Science Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook. Marie Curie (1867-1934). First famous woman scientist in the modern world Received Nobel Prizes in both Chemistry and Physics Coined the term radioactivity
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Unit 1 Presentation Safety in the ScienceLaboratory and Creating the Science Notebook
Marie Curie (1867-1934) • First famous woman scientist in the modern world • Received Nobel Prizes in both Chemistry and Physics • Coined the term radioactivity • Her notebooks are still so radioactive that they cannot be handled without special PPE.
Edwin Howard Armstrong (1890-1954) • American electrical engineer • Invented many of the circuits used in radio, radar, and television • Inventor of modern frequency modulation (FM) radio
Famous Scientists’ Notebooks Montage montage An art form consisting of putting together or assembling various smaller pictures to create a larger work. - Reference: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/montage
TASK: A montage of four famous scientists’ notebooks is displayed on the next slide. What are the types of information recorded in these pages?
THE CHEMISTS OF THIS CLASSROOM HAVE WORKED _______ DAYS WITHOUT A SAFETY INCIDENT
Safety Contract Task • Sign copy of the contract. • Take home for your parent to read, sign, and return. • Affix a minimizedcopy in your science notebook. • Be sure to include an entry in your Table of Contents.
MSDS Guiding Questions • What section of information is most important? Why? • What potential hazards does your substance pose? • What type(s) of personal protective equipment (PPE) is/are recommended when handling your substance? • What basic first aid do you need to be aware of before using your substance in the lab? • How should your substance be disposed? • Note any words or acronyms used in the MSDS with which you are not familiar.
RULE OUTCOME FEATURE
Bibliography • http://tech.li/2012/03/caltech-einstein-papers-project/ • http://www.alberteinstein.info/ • http://news.cnet.com/2300-11386_3-10010546-4.htmlnewton • http://www.optics.arizona.edu/SSD/art-optics/historical.html • Here's a page from the notebook kept in the lab of Edwin Howard Armstrong (1890-1954), an electrical engineer who invented many of the circuits used in radio, radar and television. (from the Columbia University Libraries Special Collections). • http://www.aip.org/history/curie/resbr2.htm