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1.IntroductionThe combined emphasis on active learning, computational and application-based approaches within the classroom has motivated the incorporation of Simulation Led Optical Design Assessments in the upper division PS 330 Optics course in the Department of Physics & Astronomy at Washburn University during the Fall 2020 semester. [1, 2] The PS 330 Optics course is a traditional lecture-based course for upper division physics majors, meeting for three 50 minute lessons each week over the course of a 15 week semester. A complete year of College or General Physics serve as prerequisites for the course. The course was taught virtually as a result of the COVID-19, however the curriculum is not dependent upon the virtual format and can be used as easily with traditional in person courses. As a small department, upper division courses are offered on an every other year rotation, such that junior and senior physics majors enroll in the course simultaneously. Furthermore, being offered during Fall semester, the PS 330 Optics course will be among the first upper division courses taken by many of the students enrolled. A total of eight students enrolled in the PS 330 Optics course during the Fall 2020 semester: seven physics majors (three juniors, four seniors) along with a chemistry major (senior). The PS 332 Optics Lab is taught simultaneously with the PS 330 Optics lecture course. While the lecture course need be taken as a prerequisite or concurrently with the lab course, the lab course is not directly associated with the lecture course as it is not required for majors. As such, only a subset of students enrolled in the PS 330 lecture will be enrolled simultaneously in the PS 332 lab. This eliminates the luxury of relying upon the lab course in order to supplement the lecture course with application-based optical experience. The instructor was therefore motivated to give students in the lecture course practical experience in optics, independent of the lab curriculum. The PS 330 Optics lecture course used the 5th edition of Hecht’s Optics as the primary resource. [3] The main topics covered in the course are wave motion, electromagnetic theory, propagation of light, geometrical optics, polarization, superposition, interference, diffraction, Fourier optics and holography. The instructor specializes in biomedical imaging, holographic microscopy and Fourier optics, so the instructor supplemented the later portion of the curriculum with additional materials specific to those fields. In order to build application-based experience into the PS 330 Optics curriculum, three Simulation Led Optical Design Assessments were adopted in course. The first two of these assessments were implemented as projects in-lieu of weekly problem solving homework assignments from the text. In order to reflect the emphasis on this approach to the later portion of the course, the final exam also employed the same format. 2.Preliminary ActivitiesComputer modeling and simulations using GNU Octave were incorporated throughout the course in order to promote active learning and student interactions in the course (Fig. 1). Beyond providing improved visualization of advanced topics, these computer models and simulations also served to introduce many students to computational methods and applications—a good number of students in the course will have little to no computational experience prior to enrolling in the course. Even those students with computational experience were generally not familiar with computational aspects particular to modeling optical and imaging applications, so it was essential that computational modeling and simulations be incorporated into the curriculum early and frequently in order to give students the skills necessary to complete the simulation aspects of the assessments presented here. These activities started by simply having students adapt parameters in existing code in order to demonstrate the physical dependencies of the phenomena upon those parameters, such as varying the signs of the spatial and temporal terms in a wave function in order to see the effect on the wave’s direction of travel. Students would later go on to further adapt code from later simulations in order to generate a desired result, such as representing a given function via a Fourier series. Students would also write their own code, such as when modeling diffraction. Beyond one-dimensional applications, these activities also introduced students to coding for 2D applications, such as Fourier Optics, spatial filtering and 2D convolutions. Students worked through computer activities in pairs, while the instructor monitored student progress and was available for questions. Although students worked through the computational activities in pairs, they were each responsible for writing up graded independent summaries of each activity. This way, while students were able to learn together, they were required to demonstrate their understanding of the material independently. 3.Simulation Led Optical Design AssesementsFor the final in class computational activity (Optical Simulation of a Digital Fourier Holographic Microscope), students were provided with an example simulation of an entire optical device and the corresponding optical design schematic (Fig. 2). This final in class activity served as a working model of the methods and expectations for the simulation led optical design assessments. Students were then assigned two simulation led optical design assessments for homework, followed by a third simulation led optical design assessment as their final exam (Fig. 3). The second simulation led optical design assessment (Digital Holographic Microscopy) built off of the previous assessment (Fourier Optics) and was closely related to the Optical Simulation of a Digital Fourier Holographic Microscope example provided as the final in class activity. This way, the simulation led optical design assessments were built with scaffolding intentionally incorporated within them. For each assessment, students were instructed to create a schematic of the optical design of the system. Furthermore, students were also required to simulate how each sequential element of the device operates on the field and to describe those operations in their write up (Fig. 4). To do this, students first had to simulate a sample. As with the preliminary activities, students again worked in pairs on their assessments but were responsible for their own graded, independent write up. 4.ConclusionSimulation Led Optical Design Assessments were well received by students in their upper division optics course. Furthermore, these assessments had the benefit of providing application-based experience to students in a lecture course that had no required optical lab component. Beyond providing students with a deeper understanding of optical design, interactions and devices, these assessments also reinforced student understanding of computational methods. ReferencesJoint Task Force on Undergraduate Physics Programs, Phys 21:Preparing Physics Students for 21st-Century Careers, American Phys-ical Society(October2016). Google Scholar
AAPT Recommendations for Computational Physics in the Undergraduate Physics Curriculum, AAPT,2016). Google Scholar
E. Hecht, Optics, 5thPearson,2017). Google Scholar
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