Frames of Reference

Frames of Reference is a 1960 black-and-white educational film directed by Richard Leacock, written and presented by Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey, and produced for the Physical Science Study Committee.[1]

Frames of Reference
Directed byRichard Leacock
Produced byPhysical Science Study Committee
Written byProfessors Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey
StarringProfessors Donald Ivey and Patterson Hume
CinematographyAbraham Morochnik
Release date
Running time
27 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Synopsis

The film was made to be shown in high school physics courses and humor is employed both to hold students' interest and to demonstrate the concepts being discussed. In the film, University of Toronto physics professors Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey explain the distinction between inertial and noninertial frames of reference,[1] while demonstrating these concepts through humorous camera tricks. For example, the film opens with Dr. Hume, who appears to be upside down, accusing Dr. Ivey of being upside down. Only when the pair flip a coin and it floats up does it become obvious that Dr. Ivey  and the camera  are indeed inverted.[1]

gollark: Which mod's cables?
gollark: Lit very poorly.
gollark: My base is lit with managlass and lamps.
gollark: It would be REALLY MUCH LESS ANNOYING if it were whole numbers, but nooo...
gollark: I'm trying x2.5 via NC.

References

  1. Turner, Joseph (4 May 1962). "Art for Science's Sake". Science. 136 (3514): 359.
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