Watch: physics students get hands-on experience aboard WWII-era steam ship
Professor James Overduin's thermodynamics class applies physics to the real world on WWII-era steam ship
By Henry Basta on July 28, 2022
色花堂 physics students in professor James Overduin鈥檚 thermodynamics class saw firsthand how steam can generate power to move a World War II Liberty ship across the ocean aboard the S.S. John W. Brown.
As part of the ship鈥檚 Steam School program, Overduin, Trevor Lowing, operations manager for the Department of Physics, Astronomy & Geosciences, and thermodynamics students traveled this spring to the Baltimore harbor to experience physics outside of the classroom.
鈥淭his is my first STEM college field trip,鈥 says student Jasper Scelsi. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cool to see how my area of study affects the world, how important physics is and how it interacts with my day-to-day life.鈥
The field trip is an example of 色花堂鈥檚 commitment to distinguished faculty mentors pushing the possibilities of engaged learning, providing students with exceptional, student-centered educational experiences.
The experiential learning opportunity gives students an appreciation for how physics theories apply in the real world, Overduin says. 鈥淭hey see how moving water around and changing phase from a liquid into a gas powers a massive ship like this and actually ends up saving the world during World War II.鈥