Hunting Exoplanets with Your Phone: A Classroom Experiment That Actually Works

Finding planets around other stars sounds like it requires a space telescope. It does not — at least not the analogy version. This is the story of how a lamp, a ball, and a smartphone became a peer-reviewed physics classroom experiment, published in The Physics Teacher in 2024.

11 March 2024 · 8 min · Sebastian Spicker

Can a Planet Have a Moon? Teaching Exomoon Detection with a Disco Ball Motor

Every classroom treatment of exoplanet detection focuses on the transit method. What gets omitted is that moons of exoplanets could also host life — and that with a small motor and a slight modification to the standard transit experiment, you can show students what an exomoon signature looks like in a light curve. Published in MNU Journal in 2023.

14 September 2023 · 7 min · Sebastian Spicker

Fremde Welten: Teaching Exoplanet Detection in the Secondary School Classroom

A unit for lower secondary physics classes (grades 8–10) on detecting exoplanets with analogy experiments. Published in Unterricht Physik in 2023, it starts where students’ misconceptions are — with the (wrong) assumption that you can just look at exoplanets through a telescope — and works forward from there.

14 June 2023 · 7 min · Sebastian Spicker