June 27, 2006 == MEDIA ADVISORY
An advanced science camp at Calvin College this week looks at light and
luminescence.
Or as camp director and Calvin chemistry professor Mark Muyskens puts it: "We
get to play with the many ways to make
colorful light, especially things that glow in the dark."
Each day this week Muyskens and his campers - students entering grades 8-10 -
are entering new scientific worlds, worlds in which scientific concepts such as
chemiluminescence, bioluminescence, absorption, diffraction and polarization
come to life in vivid color via laser demonstrations, ultraviolet light,
glowing liquids and even laundry detergent!
Behind the fun Muyskens has planned plenty of education.
"We have a lot of fun," says Muyskens, "but participants in this camp come
away with a much better understanding of the properties of light and how they
relate to color. We will be studying lots of different areas of science:
chemistry and
physics, biology and geology, and we will get an understanding of extremely
practical devices that play important roles in our everyday lives. We are
going to be busy investigating these substances and ideas with our hands and
eyes and having a lot of fun doing it.
Campers use sophisticated equipment during the week, including
spectrophotometers, UV lamps, computer molecular modeling and a fluoroscope
that they build themselves!
The sessions are held from 9 am to noon and 1 pm to 4 pm in room 306 of
Calvin's DeVries Hall. Each session has 20 campers.
Contact Mark Muyskens at muym@calvin.edu or 616-526-6269 (w) or 540-1350 (m)
-end-
Received on Tue Jun 27 09:44:45 2006
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