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Particle surfing, stretchy clocks, and invisible forces — students evaluate how the tiniest pieces of our universe challenge everything they see.
Calculate time dilation, analyze wave-particle behaviors, and crack the secrets of the photoelectric effect in this advanced theoretical challenge.
Students analyze subatomic behavior and spacetime anomalies by evaluating thought experiments that challenge our everyday understanding of reality.
Third graders design invisible worlds while analyzing how subatomic building blocks and light speed change our reality.
How do invisible rays power your remote control? Identify the amazing ways atoms and waves work in your daily life through basic recall and observation.
Challenge your sophomores to synthesize concepts of wave-function collapse, time dilation in muons, and the equivalence principle in this rigorous assessment.
Calculate relativistic mass shifts and predict particle behavior as you apply these high-level theories to modern particle accelerator engineering.
Evaluate non-classical phenomena from synchrotron radiation to semiconductor physics as students bridge the gap between theoretical models and advanced engineering.
How does reality change when things get fast and small? Synthesize relativity and quantum mechanics across these 10 challenging problems.
Crack the code of cosmic light speed and tiny particles to prove you have the brainpower of a modern scientist.
Can something be a wave and a ball at the same time? Shadow the secret lives of atoms through light patterns and glowing toys.
Can a clock actually tick slower? Challenge students to apply relativity and quantum concepts to real-world scenarios in this high-engagement formative assessment.
Students calculate relativistic shifts and analyze quantum behaviors to synthesize how microscopic events reshape our macroscopic reality.
Students transition from Newtonian logic to particle-wave duality and spacetime warping by analyzing how tiny particles and massive stars behave.
Moving beyond simple sight and sound, students analyze how invisible quantum rules and gravity warps shape the secret clockwork of our universe.
Examine how GPS timing and LED technology rely on the strange mechanics of the subatomic world in this foundational assessment of post-Newtonian concepts.
Learners apply synthesis skills across 10 challenging items to explain how the very fast and very small change our view of reality.
Young scientists develop analytical thinking by synthesizing 10 complex problems about the invisible laws governing our strange universe.
Identify how atomic clocks and light sensors apply 20th-century discoveries to everyday technology through this mixed-format assessment.
Analyze relativistic effects and quantum behavior to strengthen conceptual models of how the universe functions at high speeds and tiny scales.