Egg Drop Lab
Egg Drop Lab
Egg Drop Lab
Experiment Objective:
Learning Goals:
Introduction:
The egg drop experiment is perfect for learning about gravity and about how materials
interact with one another. The end goal of the experiment is for students to create
packaging around an uncooked egg to ensure that the egg can be dropped from a height
without breaking.
The egg drop project involves several physics concepts that we have studied in class and
other concepts that you will have to research. The main concepts are:
1. Momentum
Momentum is a measure of an object's tendency to move at constant speed along a
straight path. Momentum depends on speed and mass. Within a closed system of
interacting objects, the total momentum of that system does not change value. This
allows one to calculate and predict the outcomes when objects bounce into one another.
3. Air Resistance
A feather and coin will fall with equal accelerations in a vacuum,
but unequally in the presence of air. This is because the air
molecules cause a frictional force that opposes the motion of the
falling objects. This air resistance diminishes the net forces for
each. This will be a tiny bit for the coin and very much for the
feather. The downward acceleration for the feather is very brief,
for the air resistance very quickly builds up to counteract its tiny
weight and surface area. The feather does not have to fall very
long or very fast for this to happen. When the air resistance of the
feather equals the weight of the feather, the net force is zero and no
further acceleration occurs.
4. Angular Momentum
Angular momentum measures an object's tendency to continue to spin. It can be obtained
by multiplying the mass of an orbiting body by its velocity and the radius of its orbit.
According to the conservation laws of physics, the angular momentum of any orbiting
body must remain constant at all points in the orbit, i.e., it cannot be created or destroyed.
If the orbit is elliptical the radius will vary. Since the mass is constant, the velocity
changes. A spinning body also possesses spin angular momentum.
5. Gravity
Gravity is a powerful force that has a fundamental impact on the way we
live our lives. Even walking, which we take for granted, is not
possible without gravity. Gravity provides the necessary downward
force on our bodies which creates friction between our feet and
the ground, allowing us to walk (push our body weight forward
with one leg and then the other).
When other forces are combined with gravity, such as motion (the
movement of an object), inertia (the tendency of an object to resist
change with regard to movement based on its mass), or power (the
ability to exert energy over time), it may be impossible to prevent an impact
which will cause damage.
For instance, if you roll an egg along the ground downhill at considerable velocity
towards a wall, you can reasonably expect the egg to break. Your arm provided the force
(power) to accelerate the egg to a certain velocity (motion). That motion is being
increased due to the acceleration of the egg down the hill (gravity). The egg will not
drastically vary its direction and avoid the wall (inertia tends to keep it moving in a
straight line). The combination of power, gravity, motion and inertia will probably be
sufficient to result in an impact between the egg and the wall that breaks the egg. This
impact is called the primary impact.
There is a further impact which takes place when the egg hits the wall; this is when the
mass inside the egg impacts against the inside of the wall of the egg. The egg white and
egg yolk are usually in liquid form, and though liquid has considerable mass, the liquid
inside the egg will rarely be the cause of the egg shell breaking. If you put a steel ball
bearing into a plastic egg, and then shake the egg, you can hear the impact of the ball
bearing hitting the inside of the egg, and it is easy to imagine the egg cracking because of
the steel ball bearing.
In building the container, you should think about how the energy is converted from
potential energy to kinetic energy, and the work done on the container and the work done
on the eggs.
Materials:
Procedure:
Hints:
Specifications:
Expected Outcome:
The most ideal outcome is that the egg will remain unbroken when dropped from a pre-
determined height inside the protective device, or the egg can withstand a height greater
than the one specified for the experiment.
Allow kids to try the experiment on their own. Encourage them to be critical thinkers
when constructing the device. Ask them questions during the process and allow them to
explain the how they apply the concepts learned in this lesson to their design.
CURRICULUM CONCEPTS
References:
http://cpphysics.homestead.com/eggdrop1.html
http://hubpages.com/hub/Free-Homeschooling--The-Egg-Drop
http://www.astronomynotes.com/angmom/s1.htm
http://www.lasd.k12.pa.us/teachers/purnellj/EDP8.html
http://pbskids.org/zoom/activities/sci/eggdrop.html
http://homepage.usask.ca/~dln136/projectile/pages/module1.html
http://www.mwit.ac.th/~t2080126/Eggdropproject/53EggDrop2(2007).htm
http://id.mind.net/~zona/mstm/physics/mechanics/momentum/definition/momentumDefi
nition1.html
http://cascience.wordpress.com/2008/11/13/physics-egg-drop-activity-november-13-
2008/
EXAMPLES OF EGG DROP PROTECTIVE DEVICES
EXAMPLE 1:
EXAMPLE 2: