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AN EXPERIMENTAL
SCIENCE SERIES BOOK
FRANKLIN WATTS
NEW YORK/LONDON
TORONTO/SYDNEY/1990Photographs courtesy of: Brown Brothers: pp. 27, 69, 124, 130;
The Bettmann Archive: pp. 48, 100;
New York Public Library, Picture Collection: pp. 92, 114, 120.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gardner, Robert, 1929-
Famous experiments you can do / Robert Gardner.
p. cm. — (An Experimental science series book)
Contents: Includes bibliographical references.
Summary: Demonstrates scientific principles in the fields of chemis-
try and physics by replicating experiments performed by such scien-
tists as Archimedes, Galileo, Antoine Lavoisier, and Sir Isaac New-
ton.
IsBN 0-531-10883-X
1. Physics—Experiments—Juvenile literature. 2. Chemistry, Physical
and theoretical—Experiments—Juvenile literature.
1. Physics—Experiments. 2. Chemistry—Experiments.
3. Experiments.] I. Title. Il. Series.
Qc25.G37_ 1990
530'.078—dc20 CIP AC
Copyright © 1990 by Robert Gardner
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
65 43 2Chapter One
The Scientific Method
9
Chapter Two
Eureka! It’s Archimedes
16
Chapter Three
Galileo, Harvey, and Redi
26
Chapter Four
Other Giants of
Early Science
52
Chapter Five
Isaac Newton
68Chapter Six
The “Age of
Enlightenment”
85
Chapter Seven
The New World
of Electricity
110
For Further
Reading
134
Index
137cience began when early humans noticed
and recorded the recurrent cycles that filled their
lives. They observed, on a daily basis, the way
sunset was followed by darkness until the sun
emerged again on the opposite horizon, passed
across the sky, and set once more. On a monthly
basis, they saw the moon wax from crescent to
first quarter to full, only to wane again to third
quarter, crescent, and finally disappear.
As years passed, they noticed that seasonal
changes were accompanied by changes in the con-
stellations that crossed the night sky. As the visi-
ble stars that dotted the heavens changed, the
sun’s east to west path across the daytime sky
moved slowly northward, then southward, then
northward again. They noticed also that the sun
and the moon were not the only heavenly bodies
that wandered among the stars. Certain bright
bodies that looked like stars seemed to slowly
[9]change their positions among the predominantly
fixed stars that filled most of the night sky.
We know today that these “wanderers” were
the planets Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and
Saturn. The days of the week were named for
these wanderers, the sun, and the moon. Monday
was named for the moon, Tuesday for Mars, Wed-
nesday for Mercury, Thursday for Jupiter, and Fri-
day for Venus. You can easily determine the days
of the week named for the sun and Saturn.
As long ago as 2000 3.c., Babylonians kept
careful records of the rising and setting times of
Venus before and after sunset. By the fifth cen-
tury B.c., astronomers had learned through careful
observations to predict the eclipses of the sun and
moon. Views through the carefully aligned giant
stones at Stonehenge, England, on June 21 make it
clear that the Druids, or whoever built Stone-
henge a few centuries before the birth of Christ,
were not only aware of changes in the sun’s path
across the heavens, but had carefully marked the
position of sunrise at summer solstice as well.
DEDUCTIVE VS. INDUCTIVE
REASONING
Though careful observations of the sun, moon,
and stars enabled early humans to make astro-
nomical predictions, the rise of modern science
did not begin until the seventeenth century. The
great philosophers of Greece—Socrates, Plato, and
Aristotle—were brilliant people, capable of su-
perb reasoning, who believed there was a univer-
sal and absolute truth that humans could discover
through pure reason. However, their approach
was entirely deductive; that is, they reasoned
[10]from what they thought were self-evident prem-
ises. For example, consider the following syllo-
gisms:
All men are good. Socrates is a man.
Therefore, Socrates is good.
X > Y; Y > Z; therefore, X > Z.
The reasoning in these examples is perfectly clear
and straightforward. But suppose the premise
from which the reasoning stems is wrong. In the
first syllogism we must assume that all men are
good; that is the premise. A brief study of history
and a reading of the daily newspaper will soon
convince you that such a premise is false. Clearly,
reasoning based on a false premise can lead to
false conclusions.
Modern science seeks to establish the truth of
the premises from which deductive reasoning
starts. Although it was not until the seventeenth
century that such attempts were made by a signif-
icant number of people, there were a few rare
individuals who used what we would call scien-
tific reasoning before that time. The style of Leo-
nardo da Vinci (1452-1519) would certainly be
characterized as scientific. He recognized that
details are important and that we cannot under-
stand nature or solve problems solely by reason-
ing from general principles. His studies led him to
realize the falseness of many of the established
principles about nature, which were based on the
works of Aristotle and other early Greek philoso-
phers. He believed that the way to understand
nature was through inductive reasoning (using
specific facts to formulate general principles) and
that generalizations about nature could be discov-
[11]ered by finding common threads among a large
number of specific examples. Given enough facts
and observations, we may find a common princi-
ple that unifies and explains all the specific
details. It was Leonardo who said,
Those sciences are vain and full of errors
which are not born from experiment, the
mother of all certainty, and which do not
end with one clear experiment.
Although Leonardo was correct in recognizing the
important role of experimentation in seeking to
understand nature, he was wrong in assuming
that it is the “mother of all certainty.” There may
well be exceptions to any generalization based on
specific facts, observations, events, and data no
one has analyzed. We can never analyze every
fact related to the generalization nor anticipate
each and every consequence that may emerge
from a general principle. The test of any general
principle lies in our ability to use that principle to
make predictions about the natural world that can
then be checked by experiment. As a principle
survives more and more tests of its validity, we
become increasingly confident that it is true, but
we never reach the point of absolute certainty
because there is always the possibility that an
exception may be found.
ATOMISTS VS. CONTINUISTS
Over the past 400 years the method of scientific
inquiry has enabled us to settle the philosophical
differences that emerged between two groups of
thinkers in ancient Greece, known as the atomists.
[12]and the continuists. The atomists, exemplified by
Democritus, believed that matter consisted of
atoms. They argued that if we tried to break mat-
ter into smaller and smaller pieces, eventually we
would reach a point where the matter could no
longer be divided. This smallest piece of matter
would be the atom of which everything was
made. Between the atoms was nothing—the
void.
The continuists, led by Aristotle, believed
that all matter was made of the same stuff—
hyle—which completely filled space. Hyle could
be modified into the four elements of fire, earth,
air, and water. Earth was at the center of all mat-
ter surrounded by shells of water, air, and fire.
Heavy matter, such as earth, lay below lighter
matter, such as water. Fire, because it was the
lightest, lay above all the others. Heavy objects,
such as stones, fell toward the earth because that
was the natural place for heavy matter.
Although the philosophy of Aristotle domi-
nated Western thought prior to the seventeenth
century, we know now that the atomists were
closer to the truth about matter than the contin-
uists. However, both philosophies were based on
speculation and common sense. Neither group
could support its point of view with concrete evi-
dence. In fact, the idea of designing experiments
to test the consequences of their theories never
occurred to them.
THE AGE OF SCIENCE
Individual scientists such as Leonardo da Vinci
and Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543) used sound
scientific procedures, but it was not until the sev-
[13]enteenth century that groups of people who
engaged in what we would call science began to
meet, share ideas, and form professional organiza-
tions. It was early in that century that the
Accadémia dei Lincei and the Accadémia del
Cimento arose in Italy. The Royal Society was
chartered in England in 1662 and the Académie
des Sciences was founded in Paris in 1666 during
the reign of Louis XIV. Such organizations
allowed scientists to share knowledge, to critique
one another’s work or ideas, and to gain confi-
dence in this new method of seeking to under-
stand nature’s ways.
The newly organized societies enabled scien-
tists to share the fundamental tools of science that
were being developed at that time—the micro-
scope, telescope, thermometer, barometer, air
pump, and pendulum clock. These were used by
the new breed of natural philosophers to seek and
find some of nature’s unifying principles and reg-
ularities.
In this book we will examine some of the
great experiments conducted by early scientists,
experiments that changed the course of history.
You will have the opportunity to repeat some of
these experiments. For example, you can record
the rising and setting time of Venus before and
after sunset, just as the Babylonians did. It’s not
hard to locate Venus. It’s the brightest “wander-
er” in the sky. When it’s visible, it appears in the
eastern sky before sunrise or in the western sky
after sunset.
If you watch Venus, record its rising and set-
ting times relative to sunrise and sunset, and
measure the angle between Venus and the sun,
[14]perhaps you will discover the same patterns that
the early Babylonians noticed. If you decide to
make these observations, never look directly at
the sun. The sun can cause permanent damage to
your eyes.
You can watch the sun and moon, too, record
their positions, map their paths, and find the same
regularities discovered by early astronomers. But
it will take considerable time to find these pat-
terns, for you cannot change the time frame of the
heavens. As you wait and watch, you'll have time
to discover other patterns, regularities, and princi-
ples of nature that can be uncovered in much less
time. You can follow procedures that are the same
as, or similar to, those that Galileo, Newton,
Faraday, Pasteur, and other great scientists used
in arriving at the basic principles of nature. Your
discoveries will not be as original as theirs, but
you can share the same excitement of discovery
that they experienced.
The investigations found in this book were
chosen for several reasons. First, they were signif-
icant in the development of scientific thought.
Often they represented breakthroughs in our
attempts to comprehend the enigmas of nature.
Second, they can be done with relatively simple
equipment that you can generally find in your
home or school. And third, you do not have to be
an expert in physics, chemistry, medicine, or
botany in order to understand how to do the
experiments or interpret the results.
{15 ]Ithough Archimedes lived long before the
modern Scientific Revolution, his approach to
solving problems through experimentation was
1,800 years ahead of his contemporaries. Howev-
er, like the early Greek philosophers who pre-
ceded him, he regarded learning by experiment-
ing as inferior to the brilliant geometric deductive
thinking for which he is also famous.
ARCHIMEDES (287-212 s.c.)
There are more anecdotes about Archimedes than
perhaps any other scientist in history. The one
that is best known tells of Archimedes moving
about in his bathtub contemplating a problem that
the king, Hiero II, had asked him to solve. Accord-
ing to the legend, Hiero had asked Archimedes to
find out whether a crown made for him by a gold-
smith was really pure gold as he had requested.
The king suspected the goldsmith had used a less
[16]precious metal such as silver to form the crown
and had then covered it with gold. Of course, the
king did not want to destroy his expensive crown
to check his suspicions, so he requested Archi-
medes to answer his question without damaging
the crown.
As he lowered more of his body into the bath,
Archimedes noticed that the level of the water in
the tub rose. When he lifted more of his body
above the surface, the water level fell. Suddenly,
in a flash, he saw the answer. He leaped from the
tub and, completely naked, ran through the
streets of Syracuse, Sicily, shouting, “Eureka! Eur-
eka!” (Eureka means “‘I’ve got it!’’)
Suddenly seeing a solution to a problem is not
uncommon among scientists. Thinking about a
problem off and on seems to generate subcon-
scious mental activity that may provide an insight
or a new configuration of ideas that leads to a
solution. Once the solution appears, it may seem
so obvious and simple that one wonders why it
took so long to solve the problem.
According to this particular legend, Archi-
medes suddenly realized that the volume of an
irregularly shaped body could be measured by
placing it in water. The body’s volume would dis-
place an equal volume of water. Archimedes
could then weigh the crown, determine its densi-
ty (mass per volume), and compare the density of
the crown with the density of gold. Gold is denser
than silver, hence it displaces less water than an
equal mass of silver.
Archimedes’ solution to a practical problem
was useful to King Hiero, who learned that the
goldsmith had indeed cheated him, but, more
importantly, it started Archimedes on a series of
[17]experiments that led to an understanding of a gen-
eral scientific principle that you, too, can discov-
er.
INVESTIGATION 1: ARCHIMEDES’ DISCOVERY
To begin, weigh a fairly large piece of metal such
as a lead sinker, a metal cylinder, a stack of coins,
or something similar to one of these. Then find the
volume of the metal sample you have chosen. If it
has a regular shape, such as a cylinder or a cube,
you can find the volume by measuring its dimen-
sions and multiplying the area of its base by its
height. If its shape is irregular, you can find the
volume by immersing it in some water in a grad-
uated cylinder or measuring cup and seeing how
much the water level rises. If the object is too
large to fit into a measuring cup, you can use an
overflow can. (This is the method Archimedes
used with the crown.) Next, weigh a volume of
water equal to the volume displaced by the metal.
Then weigh the piece of metal while submerged
in water, as shown in figure 1.
How does the metal’s weight when sub-
merged compare with its weight in air? How does
the metal’s loss of weight in water compare with
the weight of the water it displaces?
Repeat the experiment several times using
different metals and different liquids (try rubbing
alcohol and/or witch hazel) as well as water.
Within the accuracy of your measurements, does
the metal’s loss of weight in the liquid always
equal the weight of the liquid displaced?
INVESTIGATION 2: MOVING THE EARTH
It was Archimedes who said, “Give me a place to
stand and I can move the earth.” His statement
[18]Water
Metal
Support to keep
container of water
off balance pan so
that only the metal
Metal Water pulls on the
balance beam
(a) Using a spring (b) Using an equal-arm or
balance other type balance
Figure 1. Weighing a metal in water
[19][20]
Fulcrum (nail)
9° a7"
oO ” n O ” ” ” ° ” 70
a 6 10 14 22 30 34
8 Sees 226" 9 &
: Paper Holes drilled
: clip in yardstick
Ss +—— Weights ——+
=
° ° ° °
co} °
2 Q 2 oO oO
Support fulcrum on tall
cans or upright frame as
shown here
Figure 2. A yardstick balancewas based on the principle of the lever, which he
had discovered. To find this principle for yourself,
as Archimedes might have done, take a yardstick
and make it into a simple balance. Ask an adult to
help you drill holes in it. (See figure 2.) Support
the balance with a nail at the top, center hole.
Using weights or heavy identical washers,
hang a known weight from a paper clip or a piece
of string at, say, 16 inches to the right of the bal-
ance’s center. (The point from which the balance
is supported, in this case, the center, is called the
fulcrum or axis.) What weight is required at 16
inches to the left of the fulcrum to balance the
weight on the right, that is, to make the balance
beam level? Leaving the right side of the balance
unchanged, what weight is required on the left
side to balance the beam if the weight there is
placed 8 inches from the fulcrum? Four inches
from the fulcrum?
Try a variety of weights and distances and
record the weights and positions required for bal-
ance in each case. Can you find a principle or rule
that enables you to predict all conditions where
balance will be achieved?
Now place the nail which serves as a fulcrum
so that it is no longer in the center, but rather 9
inches from one end of the beam. As you can see,
the beam is not level because the weight of the
beam is no longer equally distributed. Does the
beam rotate in the direction you would expect it
to turn? To make the beam level, place some clay
on the light side of the beam, or tape washers or
some other object to it. If you are to use the least
amount of clay or washers, where on the beam
should you place this counterweight?
[21]With the beam in balance again, see if your
principle still works. What weight placed 8 inches
from the fulcrum on the short side of the beam
will balance 100 grams (or two washers) placed 16
inches from the fulcrum on the long side of the
balance? Try other weights and positions with
this unequal-length beam to test your rule. Does
the rule always work?
Use your principle to explain what force (in
pounds) the person in figure 3a would have to
exert on the crowbar to lift the 500-pound stone.
What force would the fisherman in figure 3b have
to exert to lift the 10-pound fish? What did Archi-
medes mean when he said he could move the
earth if given a place to stand?
CHALLENGES FROM ARCHIMEDES
1. Extend Archimedes’ principle to bodies that
float as well as those that sink. How can you tell
from a floating body’s density what fraction of the
body will sink?
2. Design an object that will neither float nor
sink but remain suspended in the middle of a liq-
uid.
3. Archimedes extended his discovery to all
fluids (gases as well as liquids) by showing that a
body placed in a fluid is buoyed upward by a force
equal to the weight of the fluid displaced. To
demonstrate that this is true for a body weighed in
a gas as well as one weighed in a liquid, weigh a
collapsed, empty plastic bag. Then fill the bag
with air and weigh it again. What do you find? Try
to explain your results in terms of Archimedes’
principle.
Carbon dioxide has a density of about 1.8
[22]Figure 3. Levers in action
[23]grams per liter at room temperature and normal
air pressure. How much do you think a liter of
carbon dioxide would weigh in air, which has a
density of about 1.2 grams per liter under the
same conditions? Design and carry out an experi-
ment to test your prediction.
4. You might repeat Archimedes’ actual experi-
ment more closely if you weighed a gold object in
air and then in water. Unfortunately, most people
cannot afford gold crowns, so you would have to
use something small, like a gold ring. What prob-
lems would this present?
5. Many people do possess silver objects that are
reasonably large. Use Archimedes’ experiment to
find out if a large object such as a set of silver
spoons are really pure silver. (The density of pure
silver is 10.5 grams per cubic centimeter.)
6. Referring to figure 2, suppose you place the
fulcrum nail through the center hole or the bot-
tom hole at the 18-inch position. What happens to
the stability of the beam under each of these con-
ditions? Can you explain why?
ERATOSTHENES (276-196 B.c.)
While the brilliance of Archimedes shone in Sici-
ly, a Greek astronomer named Eratosthenes quiet-
ly found a way to measure the size of the earth. In
Syene, a city 500 miles south of Alexandria where
Eratosthenes lived, people could see the sun’s
image reflected in a deep well at midday on the
date marking the summer solstice (June 21). Era-
tosthenes realized that such an observation meant
that the sun must be directly overhead in Syene at
that time. He decided to measure the shadow of a
[24]Tower at
Alexandria
Sun's rays
Shadow of
Well at
Syene
Equator
Figure 4. Eratosthenes measures the earth
tall vertical tower in Alexandria at midday on the
same day that the sun was directly overhead in
Syene. His measurements revealed that at midday
the tower cast a shadow 6.6 feet long, a ratio of
shadow length to tower height of about 0.13. With
all this information, and assuming the light from
the sun to be parallel beams because of the sun’s
great distance from the earth, Eratosthenes calcu-
lated the earth’s circumference and diameter.
INVESTIGATION 3:
THE SIZE OF THE EARTH
Using Eratosthenes’ data and assumption as well
as figure 4, calculate the earth’s circumference
and diameter. What values do you get? The figure
that Eratosthenes obtained seemed too large to
most people of his time, and they ignored his find-
ings, which were quite accurate.
[25]Ge. realization that experimentation and
mathematics, not blind adherence to the teaching
of the ancients, were the keys to unlocking
nature’s secrets marked the beginning of what
might be called modern science.
GALILEO GALILEI (1564-1642)
Although his last name was Galilei, this scientist
is always referred to by his first name. It was Gali-
leo who brought science back to the quantitative
method that Archimedes had pioneered 1,800
years before. Galileo’s discoveries in science are
many, and he may rightly be regarded as the
father of modern science.
One of his earliest discoveries, while he was
still a student at the University of Pisa, occurred
one morning when he was attending church.
Unable to concentrate on the sermon, he watched
a chandelier, driven by varying air currents,
[26]Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) is regarded by many
as the “father of modern science.” He was forced by
the Inquisition to renounce the Copernican system
of planetary motion and to abandon his studies.swing through arcs of different lengths. Using his
pulse as a timing device, he thought that the time
it took the chandelier to swing back and forth was
independent of the arc through which it moved.
When he returned from church, he began an
investigation of the pendulum. You can carry out
the same experiments that he did. However, you
may prefer to use a stopwatch rather than your
pulse to time events. Galileo had no choice—
there were no mechanical devices in the six-
teenth century to measure short time intervals.
INVESTIGATION 4:
THE PENDULUM
To make a pendulum, clamp two pieces of wood
firmly together to suspend a long string that has a
pendulum bob on its lower end. The pendulum
can be shortened or lengthened by pulling the
string between the wooden clamps when they are
loosened. (See figure 5.) Attach the suspension for
the pendulum to a table, the top of a door frame,
or some other place where the pendulum can
swing freely.
If you use relatively light bobs, a long piece of
thread suspended from a thumbtack stuck in the
top of a door frame will do.
Half the distance the pendulum bob swings
(from the end to the middle) is called the ampli-
tude of the swing. By measuring the period of a
pendulum (the time to make one complete swing,
over and back), you can check up on Galileo’s idea
that the period is independent of the amplitude.
Why will it be more accurate to measure the time
it takes to make 50 or 100 complete swings (over
and back) rather than just one?
Begin by making a pendulum about a meter
[ 28]Blocks clamped
together
Pendulum
bob
a Amplitude
Figure 5. A swinging pendulum
long. A weight with a hook on it or a heavy wash-
er can be used as a bob. Pull the bob out so that
the pendulum swings through an angle of about
30 degrees. Determine the time it takes to make 50
or 100 complete swings. Divide that total time by
the number of swings to find the period (the time
to make one swing). Repeat the experiment, but
this time have the pendulum swing through an
angle of only 5 or 10 degrees. Was Galileo right?
[29]Does the period of the pendulum change as it
swings? How do you know?
Galileo continued to work with pendulums
and investigated a number of other variables
experimentally. You can carry out the same
experiments that he did. For example, how does
the weight of the bob affect the period of the pen-
dulum? To find out, you can vary the weight of
the bob and measure the period as before. You can
use two washers instead of one, or use a 200-gram
weight instead of 100 grams. To be sure that the
length of the pendulum does not change, always
measure the length of the pendulum from the
point of support (where the string is clamped) to
the center of the weight. How does the weight of
the bob affect the period of the pendulum?
Does the length of a pendulum affect its peri-
od? Does the period double when the length dou-
bles? To find out how the period of a pendulum is
related to its length, measure the period when the
pendulum’s length is 0.25 m, 0.50 m, 0.75 m, 1.00
m, 1.50 m, and, if possible, 2.00 m. Galileo found
that the period of a pendulum when squared was
proportional to its length; that is,
T? = kL,
where T is the period, L is the length, and k is a
proportionality constant.
To find out if your results agree with Gali-
leo’s, plot a graph of the pendulum’s period
squared (T2) as a function of its length (L); that is,
plot T? on the vertical axis and L on the horizontal
axis. Do the points of your graph lie very close toa
straight line? If so, what do you conclude?
[30]What is the slope (rise/run) of your graph?
What is the significance of the slope?
THE STARRY MESSENGER
In his introduction to The Starry Messenger in
1610, Galileo wrote:
It is a very beautiful thing, and most grat-
ifying to the sight, to behold the body of
the moon, distant from us almost sixty
earthly diameters [this should have been
radii, but Galileo wrote diameters] as if it
were no farther away than two such
measures—so that its diameter appears
almost thirty times larger, its surface
nearly nine hundred times, and its vol-
ume twenty-seven thousand times as
large as when viewed with the naked eye.
In this way, one may learn with all the
certainty of sense evidence that the moon
is not robed in a smooth and polished sur-
face but is in fact rough and uneven, cov-
ered everywhere, just like the earth’s sur-
face, with huge prominences, deep val-
leys, and chasms.
What Galileo saw when he viewed the moon with
the help of a telescope startled him more than it
will you when you look at the same body. The
Greeks believed that the celestial bodies were
perfect, that the moon and sun and all the stars
were perfectly spherical bodies following perfect-
ly circular orbits about the earth. Galileo saw the
imperfections of the moon with his own eyes. He
knew the Greeks had been wrong. If they were
[31]wrong about the moon, perhaps they had formu-
lated other falsehoods as well.
So strongly did people believe in the perfect
nature of celestial bodies that many attacked Gal-
ileo, saying that he was being fooled because the
telescope through which he gazed distorted the
sense of sight. They said the same about the eye-
sight of those who viewed the supernova that sud-
denly appeared in the heavens in the year 1604.
The German astronomer and mystic Jo-
hannes Kepler had written to Galileo asking him
to support the “Copernican model.” Named for
the Polish astronomer Nicholas Copernicus, the
Copernican theory held that the sun, which was
motionless, was the center of the solar system and
that the planets, including the earth, revolved
around it. But Galileo had refused. Then, after
observing through his telescope the moons of
Jupiter circling that planet, Galileo realized that
there was nothing sacred about the earth. If
moons could circle Jupiter, why should not the
earth circle the sun?
INVESTIGATION 5:
VIEWS THROUGH A
TELESCOPE OR BINOCULARS
To see the craters and valleys of the moon as Gali-
leo saw them, turn a telescope or a good pair of
binoculars on the moon, preferably during its ear-
ly or late phases when the shadows of the lunar
mountains will be longest. Of course, it will be
best if you can examine the moon frequently as it
changes from a new crescent moon through all its
phases to its final crescent just before it slips
between the sun and the earth. You will see clear-
ly that the crater-pocked surface of the moon is
[32]anything but smooth. Of course, this is not sur-
prising to you, because you have seen pictures of
the moon’s surface, some of them taken by astro-
nauts who walked on lunar soil. But try to think of
it as Galileo might have when, as the first human
to see a magnified moon, he looked upon a surface
that for centuries had been regarded as a perfectly
smooth sphere. Wouldn’t you be surprised and
excited by your discovery?
With a telescope or a pair of binoculars that
are firmly mounted or held against a fixed object,
you can observe the moons of Jupiter. Look at
them as frequently as possible to see how they
change position. It was their movement relative to
Jupiter that convinced Galileo that they must be
in orbit about the sun’s largest planet.
With the same optical device, you can see, as
did Galileo, that the Milky Way is not a fuzzy film
but rather a large number of individual stars.
Finally, use your telescope or binoculars to look at
stars and at whatever planets are visible in the
evening or early morning sky. What do you notice
about a star as compared with a planet? You will
probably observe the same difference that Galileo
noticed nearly 400 years ago.
GALILEO ON MOTION
Galileo often wrote in dialogue form. One of the
characters in his dialogues was Simplicio, who
represented the ancient “Ptolemaic” point of
view, developed by the second-century astrono-
mer Ptolemy, which placed the earth at the center
of the universe, with all bodies revolving around
it. Salviati, who had a Copernican viewpoint,
might well have been Galileo expressing his own
analysis. Unfortunately, someone convinced Pope
[33]Urban VIII that Simplicio was a caricature of the
pope himself. Galileo was brought before the
Inquisition on charges of heresy and forced to
renounce his views.
In the dialogue that follows, we see Salviati
maintaining not that two objects of different
weight will fall side by side, but that they will fall
at very nearly the same rate, whereas Aristotle
had argued that the rate of fall was proportional to
an object’s weight.
Simplicio: Your discussion is really ad-
mirable; yet I do not find it easy to believe
that a bird shot falls as swiftly as a can-
nonball.
Salviati: Why not say a grain of sand as
rapidly as a grindstone? . . . Aristotle says
that “an iron ball of one hundred pounds
falling from a height of one hundred
cubits [150 feet] reaches the ground be-
fore a one-pound ball has fallen a single
cubit.” I say they arrive at the same
time.
INVESTIGATION 6:
FALLING OBJECTS
Aristotle held that falling bodies moved toward
the center of the earth (the natural position for
falling objects, according to him) with a speed that
was proportional to their weight. Galileo is
reported to have tested Aristotle’s theory by drop-
ping two cannonballs, one ten times heavier than
the other, from the Leaning Tower of Pisa. It’s
highly unlikely that he actually did the experi-
ment; but a similar experiment was performed by
[34]the Dutch scientist Simon Stevinus at an earlier
date, and Galileo may have been aware of it. In
any case, you can test the theory for yourself in a
manner similar to the method Stevinus probably
used.
Hold a tennis ball and a baseball side by side.
Release both objects at the same time. Does the
baseball reach the floor well ahead of the tennis
ball or do they fall side by side?
For a second experiment, take a piece of
paper and release it simultaneously with a heavy
book from the same height. Which object reaches
the floor first: Can you explain why?
To remove the effect of air resistance on the
paper, place it on top of the book, being sure that
no part of the paper extends beyond the book’s
cover. Again, release the book, this time with the
paper on the book’s top surface. How do the two
objects fall this time? What do you conclude?
Finally, take the sheet of paper and squeeze it
into as small a sphere as possible. Again, release
the paper ball and a baseball side by side. How do
they fall under these conditions? Do you see why
Galileo had reason to dispute Aristotle’s teach-
ings?
INVESTIGATION 7:
THE WAY THINGS FALL
Galileo was not content to show that Aristotle was
wrong. Knowing that all objects fall in the same
manner if the effects of air resistance are negligi-
ble, he sought to understand how, in fact, objects
do fall. He realized that the speed of an object
increases as it falls, but the rate of fall was so great
that he could not measure the time accurately. So
he ingeniously devised a means of diluting gravi-
[35]ty. Instead of letting a ball fall straight to the floor,
Galileo allowed it to roll along an inclined plane.
Gravity still acted on the ball, causing it to roll
faster and faster as it descended; however, the
time required for the ball to reach the end of the
incline was now much longer than it would have
been if it simply fell straight down.
Salviati describes the method used by Gali-
leo:
A piece of wooden molding ... about
twelve cubits long ... was taken; on its
edge was cut a channel a little more than
one finger in breadth; having made this
groove very straight, smooth, and pol-
ished, and having lined it with parch-
ment ... we rolled along it a hard,
smooth, and very round bronze ball .. .
noting ... the time required to make the
descent.
Galileo used a water clock, a large elevated vessel
of water with a narrow pipe emerging from the
bottom, to measure the time. When the ball was
released, water was allowed to flow from the ves-
sel through the pipe. When the ball reached the
end of the channel, the water flow was stopped.
The weight of the water collected was used to
measure time.
You can do the same experiment using a
long, rigid, very straight piece of aluminum or
steel channel and a steel ball that will roll easily
along the channel. A water clock like the one
shown in figure 6 can be used to measure time.
When a partner releases the steel ball by giving
the pencil that blocks it a sharp pull forward (not
[36]When finger is lifted
water flows through
f_ tube to cylinder
Water
|-———___ Ring to support
1-hole large funnel
rubber po
stopper
Ring stand
Narrow tube
Graduated
cylinder
Block fastened to Pencil. Pull forward Ball
channel to stop ball to release ball
at end of “fall”
Metal channel —inclined plane
Figure 6. Galileo’s methods for diluting gravity
and measuring time.
37]upward, which may give the ball a spin back-
ward), you can remove your finger from the top of
the plastic tube that exits the bottom of the large
funnel through a rubber stopper. When the ball
reaches the wooden bumper at the bottom of the
track, place your finger on the tube again. The
time can be measured in terms of the weight or
volume of water in the collecting vessel because
the amount of water that flows from the funnel is
proportional to the time it flows.
Make several runs, as Galileo did, for each of
a number of different distances. You might let the
ball roll 1.0 m, 0.75 m, 0.50 m, and 0.25 m. Take
the average time for each distance, being careful
to discard data when you are sure the “clock” was
started or stopped too soon or too late, or when the
ball was not released or did not roll properly.
Using the data you have collected, plot a
graph of the distance the ball rolled as a function
of the time squared. What do you find?
Salviati reported Galileo's results:
...in such experiments, repeated a full
hundred times, we always found that the
spaces traversed were to each other as the
squares of the times. ...
Do your results agree with Galileo’s? That is, do
you find your graph to be a straight line?
Galileo realized that the distance traveled
would be proportional to the time squared only if
the acceleration (the ratio of the change in veloci-
ty to the change in time) were constant. To see
why this is true, look at the graph in figure 7.
The diagram is an approximate velocity-time
[38]tise av 20m/s
run > at ~ 2.05 ~ 12S
2
Slope (acceleration) =
40
2
S$
x
Ss
Velocity, v(m/s)
10
*Note: A means “change in”
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0
Time, t(s)
Figure 7. A velocity-time graph for a
falling object
plotting for a falling object. We see that after one
second the object has a velocity of 10 m/s (meters
per second), after two seconds it is 20 m/s, after
three seconds it is 30 m/s, and so on. Now the
area under this graph at any point in time gives
the distance the object has traveled. After all, dis-
tance equals velocity multiplied by time, whether
the velocity is constant or changing. After one sec-
ond the distance traveled (the area under the
graph) is the area of the little triangle with a base
of one second and an altitude of 10 m/s, which
represents a distance of 5 meters. After two sec-
[39]onds the total area under the graph is 20 m; after
three seconds it is 45 m, etc. The following table
shows the total distance fallen after each of the
first four seconds.
Time (s) Distance fallen (m)
1 5
2 20
3 45
4 80
As you can see, when the time doubles, the dis-
tance fallen increases four times. Reasoning in
reverse, we can see, as Galileo did, that if the dis-
tance traveled is proportional to the time squared,
the acceleration must be constant.
Galileo had no means of measuring the short
time intervals required to estimate the actual
acceleration of falling bodies, but by diluting grav-
ity he was able to show that falling objects do
indeed accelerate at a fixed rate.
To see or hear this in another way, have an
adult with carpentry skills help you build blocks
on a clothesline, as shown in figure 8. A hole is
drilled in the center of each block so that the line
can pass through it. Then with knots or tape the
blocks are set at distance intervals of one, four,
nine, and sixteen units (the squares of 1, 2, 3, and
4) from the line’s end. For example, the blocks
might be 6 inches, 2 feet, 4.5 feet, and 8 feet from
the floor when the line is held vertically by an
adult standing carefully on a stepladder.
When the blocks are allowed to fall, you will
hear each of them strike the floor with a “click.” If
the blocks fall with constant speed, what will you
hear? If they fall with constant acceleration, then
[40]16 units of height
Knots of tape
to hold blocks
at fixed heights
= 9 units
HG 4 units
1 unit
Floor
Figure 8. Blocks on a string
the distance they fall is proportional to the time
squared. So, in two units of time a block will fall
four times as far as it will in one unit of time. In
three units of time it will fall nine times as far as
in one unit of time, etc.
What do you hear when the blocks are
allowed to fall? Are the intervals between clicks
[41]spaced in the same way as the distances (1, 4, 9,
16)? Or are the clicks equally spaced in time?
What do you conclude about the falling blocks?
Do they fall as Galileo would have predicted?
INVESTIGATION 8:
PROJECTILES
Galileo was the first person to correctly explain
and predict the path of a projectile, although
Leonardo da Vinci had described the path a cen-
tury earlier in an unpublished notebook.
Galileo assumed the vertical and horizontal
motions of a body to be independent of one anoth-
er. In other words, an object will be subject to the
same vertical acceleration whether it is moving
horizontally or not. A body launched with a cer-
tain horizontal velocity will continue to move
with the same horizontal velocity because there is
nothing to change its horizontal motion (assuming
air resistance is negligible).
To test this idea, you can predict the path of a
projectile, map it, then check to see if the projec-
tile follows the path you predicted. Begin by
building a ramp like the one shown in figure 9.
Clamp the ramp to a level surface, such as a
low table or a heavy box. Release a small steel ball
ora marble from the top of the ramp a dozen or so
times. Let the ball land on a piece of carbon paper
placed over the paper “runway,” carbon-side
down. If you release the ball from the same posi-
tion each time, the ball should land at about the
same place on the paper. Draw a circle around the
clustered landing points that have been marked
on the white paper where the ball hit the carbon
paper, and measure the horizontal distance from
the bottom of the plumb line to the center of the
[42]Steel ball or
marble projectile
Grooved ruler
serves as
launching ramp
end of ruler
Block to
raise ruler
into ramp
Wooden base
Clamp base
of ramp to
table or box
Plumb line
Tape
Paper runway
Nails hold front
Sheet
mapping path
LD (see fig. 10b)
Figure 9. A ramp for launching projectiles
[43]circle. This will give you the average horizontal
distance the ball traveled after being launched
from the end of the ramp.
The flight time of the projectile can be deter-
mined from the graph in figure 10a, which was
obtained from the data in figure 7. From the graph
we can obtain the equation
h = 5 m/s? X t2
or
h = 17 gt?,
where g is the vertical acceleration of falling bod-
ies, which is approximately 10 m/s? (meters per
second squared), h is the height of fall, and t is the
time of fall. As we found earlier, the height fallen
(h) is proportional to the square of the time. The
proportionality constant in this case is simply
2 g or half of 10 m/s?.
To find the time of flight, you simply take the
square root of h divided by 1/2 g. Suppose the ball’s
launch position is 0.50 meter higher than the
point where it lands. The time of flight then will
be
/ 0.50 m
eee SoS etait eee See ee
t= 5.0 m/s? Vv 0.10 s 0.32 s
Knowing the flight time, you can now find the
horizontal velocity, which Galileo predicted
would not change throughout the projectile’s
flight. Suppose the ball traveled 0.32 meter hori-
zontally as it fell through the 0.50 meter height.
Since the time it took to travel the 0.32 m was 0.32
second, its horizontal velocity was 0.32 m/0.32 s
= 1.0 m/s. With this information, or whatever
[44]your data turns out to be, you can now predict the
flight path of the projectile using a table like the
following. In this table we use the same data men-
tioned above—a flight time of 0.32 second and a
horizontal velocity of 1.0 m/s. The height fallen is
measured from the bottom of the ball at the end of
the ‘launching pad.”
Slope = —fi8@_ = 4h _ 50m _ 2
run at2 10s?
80
70 }—-
60;-
50
Height, h (m)
30 ;-
20- : :
*at? = 10 s*
*A means “change in”
5 10 15 20
(s?)
Figure 10a. Height vs time squared
45]Start (end of ramp)
Horizontal distance (cm)
5 10 15 20 25 30
Vertical distance (cm)
Figure 10b. A projectile’s path at 1/5 scale
46 |Horizontal
distance
Height traveled (cm)
fallen (cm) (distance =
Time (s) (h = 12 gt?) velocity X time)
0.05 1 5
0.10 5 10
0.15 11 15
0.20 20 20
0.25 31 25
0.30 45 30
Using the data in the table will give the predicted
path (shown at one-fifth scale) in figure 10b. If you
map the path you have predicted carefully on a
large piece of cardboard and place it next to the
launch pad as shown in figure 9, you can check to
see if the predicted path matches the path actual-
ly traveled by the projectile. What do you find? Do
the two motions, vertical and horizontal, seem to
be independent of one another?
WILLIAM HARVEY (1578-1657)
The advancements in physics and astronomy that
were taking place through the efforts of Coperni-
cus, Tycho Brahe, Galileo, Kepler, and others
were accompanied by similar developments in
biology. Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) was a great
artist and anatomist. His book De Humani Cor-
poris Fabrica contains marvelous drawings of his
dissections of cadavers. Examine some of Vesali-
us’s drawings, which can be found in many librar-
[47]An engraving of William Harvey's experiments on
bandaged arms. By applying pressure to the blood
vessels, Harvey demonstrated the mechanism of blood
circulation in veins and arteries.ies. It was Vesalius who showed that women and
men have the same number of ribs (twelve pairs).
People had assumed from the biblical story of
Eve’s creation from Adam’s rib that women had
one more rib than men.
William Harvey, who was born fourteen
years after Vesalius died, began to experiment
with living animals after studying anatomy. His
knowledge of anatomy and his experiments led
him to conclude that blood did not ebb and flow as
the Greek physician Galen had maintained, but
rather circulated from the heart through arteries
to the body and then back to the heart through
veins. Harvey noted that the auricles of the heart
were separated from the more muscular ventri-
cles by one-way valves that would allow blood to
flow only from auricle to ventricle. At the junc-
tion between arteries and ventricles there were
again one-way valves that would allow flow from
ventricle to artery and not the reverse. Harvey
also found valves in the veins that allowed blood
flow only toward the heart.
When he tied off an artery in an animal, the
artery always bulged on the side toward the heart.
When a vein was tied off, the bulge always
appeared on the side away from the heart. Just as
Galileo, Copernicus, and Kepler had been ridi-
culed for doubting the wisdom of the ancients, so
Harvey was refuted by colleagues who quoted
from Galen but never took the time to repeat Har-
vey’s experiments.
INVESTIGATION 9: BLOOD FLOW
Through your science teacher you may be able to
buy or obtain a sheep or a beef heart. Another pos-
sible source of such hearts would be a butcher
[49]shop or a slaughterhouse. Once you have the
heart, you can dissect it under adult supervision
to see the one-way valves and chambers that Har-
vey observed. From your observations, how do
you think blood moves through the heart?
Even if you can’t obtain a heart, you can find
evidence for the one-way circulation of blood in
your own arm. Find a clearly visible vein on the
back of your hand or on the inside of your fore-
arm. If you have trouble seeing a vein, let your
arm hang down for a minute or two and open and
close your fist so that blood will tend to collect in
the veins of your hand and forearm.
Hold one finger firmly near the lower end of a
vein so as to seal it off. Use another finger to
“sweep” blood in the vein from the point where
you have closed it off toward the heart. You will
find that you can empty a part of the vein. In fact,
with care you can locate some of the valves in
your veins. Can you sweep the blood away from
the heart? What do your observations tell you
about the way blood can flow in your veins? How
many valves can you locate? Are they all the same
distance apart?
Try the same experiment on the same veins
in other people. Are the results the same? Are the
valves in their veins located at the same places as
the valves in your veins?
FRANCESCO REDI (1626?-1697 or 1698)
Redi, who was a poet as well as a scientist, had
read Harvey’s work and was particularly inter-
ested in Harvey's speculation that small living
things such as the maggots that appear on decay-
ing organic matter might arise from seeds or eggs
[50]too small to be seen. It had been assumed for ages
that these organisms arose by spontaneous gener-
ation, that somehow the decaying matter itself
spawned the life that fed on it. Redi set out to test
this idea.
INVESTIGATION 10:
DOES LIFE ARISE BY
SPONTANEOUS GENERATION?
Redi’s investigation should be repeated in the
summer when there are flies around. Obtain sev-
eral glass vessels that can be sealed and will not
break when heated. (Canning jars are good.)
Under adult supervision, heat the vessels in a
pressure cooker or autoclave to sterlize them. In
each vessel place a piece of recently cooked meat
that has not been in contact with flies. Leave sev-
eral of the vessels open so flies can enter. Seal sev-
eral with stoppers, and cover several with gauze
so that air can enter the vessel but flies can’t. Put
the vessels in a place where there are flies and
leave them for several weeks. Observe the vessels
carefully on a daily basis.
In which vessels do you find maggots? Can
you find eggs in or on any of the vessels? In which
vessels does the meat eventually rot? What can
you conclude from your observations?
Upon completion of the experiment, careful-
ly discard the contents in the garbage or compost
pile, then clean the vessels thoroughly with soap
and hot water.
[51]A... Galileo and others had established a
method of scientific inquiry based on experiment
and mathematical analysis, a number of natural
philosophers eagerly began to practice the new
approach, making startling discoveries of their
own. Among them was a young Italian who came
to Galileo's side just prior to his death.
EVANGELISTA TORRICELLI
(1608-1647)
After hearing of a book on mechanics by Torricel-
li, Galileo, who was by then an old man and near-
ly blind, invited Torricelli to Florence in 1641.
Torricelli was delighted to have the opportunity
to converse with this man whom he greatly
admired. He remained in Florence as Galileo's
secretary and companion for the last three
months of Galileo’s life. While there, Galileo told
him a story that led Torricelli to perform the
experiment for which he is best remembered.
[52]A craftsman familiar with the operation of lift
pumps was called into a mine to try to fix a pump
that would no longer lift water from a deep well.
After checking the pump, the craftsman reported
that the fault lay not with the pump but with the
fact that the water was more than 34 feet below
the pump. The craftsman told the owner of the
mine that a lift pump could not raise water more
than 34 feet. Galileo was troubled by this story
because the operation of a lift pump was ex-
plained by the old Aristotelian concept ‘‘Nature
abhors a vacuum.” As the piston in the pump
rose, it created a partial vacuum in the cylinder,
causing water to enter the cylinder because “Na-
ture abhors a vacuum” and so will fill any attempt
to create one. If this explanation were true, why
should nature not abhor a vacuum more than 34
feet above the water?
Although Aristotle had taught that air was
weightless, it was becoming fashionable to chal-
lenge the master, and Torricelli responded ac-
cordingly. If air does have weight, he argued, then
it would act like a giant sea and exert a force on
everything within it, including the water at the
bottom of a mine. When the pressure above the
water was lowered by a pump, the water would be
forced up the pipe by the air and enter the pump’s
cylinder. If the weight of the air could only push
water to a height of 34 feet, then the pump would
be useless when placed more than 34 feet above
the water’s surface.
To test his hypothesis, Torricelli took a tube
about three feet long, sealed it at one end, and laid
it in a trough of mercury. When he raised the
closed end of the mercury-filled tube, keeping the
open end beneath the mercury surface, he found
[53]that the tube remained filled with mercury until
the mercury level in the tube was 30 inches above
the mercury in the trough. Torricelli had in-
vented the barometer. He argued that the empty
six-inch-long space at the top of the tube when
vertical must be a vacuum because it had been
filled, was now empty, and no air bubbles had
been seen rising in the tube.
Because mercury is 13.6 times as dense as
water, Torricelli reasoned that a column of water
could be supported by the air’s weight to a height
13.6 times as high as the mercury column. Thirty
inches is, of course, 2.5 feet, and 13.6 multiplied
by 2.5 feet is just 34 feet. Torricelli’s hypothesis
explained the pump’s failure very nicely.
It would be fun to repeat Torricelli’s experi-
ment, but it’s not recommended because mercury
is poisonous. However, you could do the experi-
ment using water instead of mercury if you can
find an adult to help you and a stairwell more
than 34 feet high.
INVESTIGATION 11:
A WATER BAROMETER
You'll need some thick-walled clear plastic tubing
that is about 35 feet long. Slowly add this tubing to
a large container (a washtub is good) partially
filled with warm water (to reduce the formation of
air bubbles) dyed with food coloring to improve
visibility. The tub should be at the bottom of the
tall stairwell. Allow water to enter the tubing as
you slowly submerge and coil it in the tub of
water. There should be no air bubbles in the tube.
Once all the tubing is filled, place a small cork or
rubber stopper into the top end of the tube under
water. Have an adult carry the sealed end of the
[54]long tube slowly up the staircase while you hold
the lower end beneath the water. How high up is
the column of water before it finally leaves a
space at the top of the tube? Why do you think
Torricelli chose to use mercury?
BLAISE PASCAL (1623-1662)
Another test of Torricelli’s hypothesis was sug-
gested by Blaise Pascal. His experiment, which is
easily done today, was carried out in 1648.
Torricelli’s explanation of the lift pump fail-
ure and of his new instrument, the barometer,
came to be known as the sea of air hypothesis
because it assumed that the air, like water in the
sea, exerts a pressure. Since pressure increases as
we go deeper into the sea (or any water, for that
matter), it follows that since we live at the bottom
of the sea of air, air pressure should increase as we
descend in the atmosphere.
To test the sea of air hypothesis and Aristot-
le’s idea that nature abhors a vacuum, the French
mathematician and physicist Blaise Pascal de-
signed a simple, but ingenious, experiment.
INVESTIGATION 12:
TESTING THE SEA OF
AIR HYPOTHESIS
On September 19, 1648, Pascal's brother-in-law,
Périer, carried out the experiment Pascal pro-
posed but could not perform himself because of
poor health. You can do the same experiment in a
somewhat easier manner than Périer, for he had
to carry and assemble a mercury barometer sev-
eral times as he ascended the Puy de Dome moun-
tain in France. At the same time, a friend at the
[55]base of the mountain checked an identical barom-
eter periodically to be sure the height of the mer-
cury column remained constant.
You can use an aneroid barometer, which is
much easier to carry and avoids the need for the
toxic element mercury. Read the barometer at the
foot of a tall building. Then carry the barometer
with you as you ride the elevator to the top of the
building. How does the reading on the barometer
at the top of the building compare with the read-
ing on the first floor? To be sure the barometer
reading has not changed at street level, return to
the bottom floor and again read the barometer.
A better experiment would be to actually car-
ry the barometer up a tall mountain in a car or on
foot, or, with your parents’ permission, to ascend
to several thousand feet while holding the barom-
eter in an airplane that is not pressurized.
What happens to the barometer reading as
you move upward in the atmosphere? Do your
results enable you to decide between the sea of air
hypothesis and the idea that nature abhors a vac-
uum? If so, which hypothesis offers the better
explanation of the results you obtained? Can you
think of any other explanation for your results?
GIOVANNI DOMENICO CASSINI
(1625-1712)
Cassini is often known as Jean Dominique Cassini
because he spent half his life in France after leav-
ing Italy to work at the Paris Observatory at the
invitation of Louis XIV. By the time he came to
France, Cassini had determined the rotational
periods of Jupiter and Mars, as well as the orbits of
Jupiter’s moons. He went on to discover four
[56]moons of Saturn and found that the ring around
Saturn was actually a double ring with a space
between that became known as Cassini’s division.
But his most important work was determining the
distance to Mars, which he did by measuring the
parallax of Mars. Cassini in Paris and his col-
league, Jean Richer, in French Guiana, about
5,000 miles away, simultaneously viewed Mars
against the background of the distant stars. By
comparing their results, Cassini calculated that
Mars had an orbit with a radius about 80 million
kilometers (50 million miles) greater than the
earth’s. The relative radii of the orbits of the plan-
ets had been known since Kepler showed that the
quotient of a radius (R) of a planet’s orbit cubed to
its period (T) squared was the same for all planets.
That is,
R3 oe K,
T2
where K is a constant.
Once the distance between the earth and Mars
was established, it was possible to determine the
actual radii of the orbits of all the planets.
INVESTIGATION 13:
USING PARALLAX TO
MEASURE DISTANCE
You probably can’t arrange to have an astronomer
friend observe Mars against the background of the
distant stars from a point several thousand miles
away, but you can use the method of parallax as
Cassini did to measure the distance to an object
that is considerably closer than some very distant
one.
[57]To understand what is meant by parallax,
hold a pencil at arm’s length. Look at it first with
one eye and then with the other. Notice how the
pencil appears to shift with respect to more dis-
tant objects. This shift is called parallax. If you
hold a second pencil on top of the first one, they
will not shift relative to one another. Objects that
are the same distance away show no parallax, one
to the other. If you move one of the pencils closer
to your eye, you'll see that now there is parallax
between them when you close first one eye and
then the other or if you shift your head from side
to side.
To use parallax to measure distance, sight on
two objects that form a straight line but are at
greatly different distances from you. One object
might be a mountain, a monument, or a steeple a
mile or so away, the other a star or some other
faraway object. The distant object should be so far
away that very nearly parallel light rays are com-
ing from it to points a few meters from you. Walk a
few steps at right angles to your line of sight and
look again. The two objects are no longer along
the same line of sight.
To measure the distance to the nearer object,
we will use the distant object as a reference point
and use the parallax between the two objects to
find the desired distance. With a board like the
one in figure 11a, use two pins to establish a sight
line from your eye through the near and distant
objects. Now measure a baseline of several meters
or yards perpendicular to your line of sight. Move
to the other end of the baseline and again sight
along the two pins to the distant reference star,
mountain, or whatever. Use a third pin (pin 3)
together with pin 2 to mark the new line of sight
[58]| Ruler
Pin 1
Cardboard
sheet
Pin 2
rw
{a) Line up two pins with
very distant object and
nearer object whose
distance you want to find.
Top view
A- sight lines to very
distant reference
object
Nearer
object
whose
distance is
to be
determined
4
|
|
|
|
|
| Sight line
| to near
j object X
from second
| sighting position
<>
Distance moved
between sightings
(b) Move several meters
along a line perpen-
dicular to the sight line
you've established. Sight
along the same two pins
(1and 2) to the very
distant reference object.
Then use pin 3 to es-
tablish a new sight line
along pins 1 and 3 to the
near object whose
distance you want to
find.
Why is
triangle 123
similar to triangle
YZX?
(c)
Figure 11. Measuring large distances using
parallax
59]to the nearer object. Because of parallax the near-
er object has now shifted its apparent position
relative to the distant reference object. (See figure
11b.)
From the distances between pins 1 and 3,
pins 1 and 2, and the length of the baseline, you
can determine the distance to the nearer object.
Figure 11c will help you to understand this. The
dotted sight lines to the distant reference object
are parallel because the reference is so far away.
What is the distance to the nearer object?
How could you determine the distance to the
nearer object if it were not possible to align it with
the distant reference object? See if you can do this
same experiment using a camera in place of the
board and pins. Why did Cassini have to use a
baseline of several thousand miles in order to
measure the distance to Mars?
ROBERT BOYLE (1627-1691)
Boyle was a brilliant child born into the Irish aris-
tocracy. As a teenager he studied the works of
Galileo and became dedicated to the study of
science.
When he was about thirty, Boyle learned that
Otto von Guericke (1602-1686) in Germany had
built an air pump that enabled him to evacuate
vessels so as to obtain excellent vacuums. In fact,
Guericke, who was somewhat of a showman, had
demonstrated that teams of horses could not pull
apart metal hemispheres that he had put together
and then evacuated with his air pump. With the
help of Robert Hooke (see page 65), Boyle
improved upon Guericke’s pump and used the
pump to show that in a vacuum Galileo was
[60]right—a feather and a piece of lead both fall with
the same acceleration.
His work with an air pump led him to inves-
tigate air and to discover the law which bears his
name. In his original research, Boyle used a J-tube
sealed at the top of the short loop. He trapped air
in the short, sealed side of the J-tube, then com-
pressed it by adding mercury to the long side. In
the experiment that follows, you will not use mer-
cury because it is poisonous, but your results
should be similar to those that Boyle obtained.
INVESTIGATION 14:
BOYLE’S LAW
To carry out an investigation similar to Boyle’s,
you will need a plastic cylinder and syringe (the
35-milliliter size works well), like that shown in
figure 12a.
The narrow or nozzle end of the syringe
should be tightly sealed with a small cap or in
some other way. A thin wire can be used to insert
the piston to its initial setting in the cylinder
(somewhere between 30 milliliters and 35 millili-
ters), as shown in figure 12b. The wire will allow
air to enter or leave the cylinder so that initially
the pressure will be the same on both sides of the
piston. After the wire has been removed, give the
stage that rests on the piston a little shove to free it
from friction. If the piston does not bounce back
up, it may need to be lubricated with a small
amount of silicone lubricant so that it can slide
freely in the cylinder.
Record the initial volume of the air in the
cylinder when there is no weight on the platform,
then add a brick of a known mass (about 1 kilo-
gram) to the platform. Give the platform another
(61 ]Platform
Thin wire or
string to set
piston at
initial volume.
Remove string
when piston is
at proper
position.
Supporting
block
Sealed end
fa) (b)
Figure 12. A modified syringe: equipment for
Boyle’s law
short push downward to free it and again record
the volume of the gas trapped in the cylinder.
Continue to do this until you have added four or
five bricks (about 5 kilograms) to the platform.
Then remove the bricks one at a time, giving the
platform a short push each time, and again record
the volume of the trapped air. Take the average of
the two volume readings you have made for each
number of bricks as the volume for that weight.
Use your data to plot a graph with pressure,
in bricks or kilograms, on the horizontal axis and
volume on the vertical axis. It’s true that bricks
aren’t units of pressure, but because the cross-sec-
[62]tional area of the piston is constant the load on the
piston will be proportional to the pressure.
Based on the graph you have obtained, it
should be clear to you that pressure and volume
are not proportional. In fact, as the pressure
(weight on the piston) increases, the volume
decreases. This would suggest plotting pressure as
a function, not of volume but of the reciprocal of
the volume (1/volume). What do you find when
you plot such a graph? What do you conclude?
Now examine the graph a bit more closely.
You probably assumed that the pressure was zero
when there was no weight on the platform. But as
Torricelli taught us, there is a sea of air pushing
on the piston. Further, if the pressure were truly
zero, there would be nothing to confine the gas
and it would expand to an infinite volume. But
the value of 1/volume for a volume of infinity
would be zero. So it makes sense to extend (ex-
trapolate) your straight line graph of pressure as a
function of 1/volume to the point where 1/vol-
ume is zero. Since the pressure at this point will
be the true zero for pressure, you can change the
numbers on the pressure axis to reflect that fact.
From your new graph, what do you conclude
about the relationship between pressure and the
inverse of volume? Boyle arrived at the same con-
clusion about 330 years ago.
CHALLENGES
FROM BOYLE
1. Determine the mass of the bricks you used in
the experiment, and replot the graph using units
of force on the vertical axis instead of bricks.
Before you do this you should know that a kilo-
gram weighs 9.8 newtons. To check this for your-
[63]self, hang a kilogram mass on a spring scale cali-
brated in newtons.
2. Since pressure is defined as force per unit
volume, you will have to know the cross-sectional
area of the cylinder in order to determine the
pressure in units of newtons per square centimet-
er or square meter for each reading. How can you
find that area?
If you plot pressure, in newtons per square
centimeter, as a function of 1/volume, will it
change the general shape of your graph? Will it
change the shape of the graph if you plot pressure
in pounds per square inch as a function of 1/vol-
ume?
3. Use the graphs you have made to determine
the pressure exerted by the air. At sea level, air
pressure is approximately 10 newtons per square
centimeter, which is 100,000 newtons per square
meter, or 14.7 pounds per square inch. How close-
ly does your value for air pressure agree with the
value given above? If you live at an altitude well
above sea level, compare the value from your
graph with the reading on a barometer.
4. From his experiment, Boyle found, as did
Torricelli, that the pressure of the air was able to
support a column of mercury 76 cm high. Remem-
bering that the density of mercury is about 13.6
grams per cubic cm, show that such a column of
mercury is equivalent to a pressure of about 10
newtons per square cm.
5. In your experiment, the temperature of the
enclosed air was probably constant. Do you think
Boyle’s law would hold if the temperature
changed significantly during the experiment?
[64]6. Show that Boyle’s law is true not only for air
but for other gases as well.
ROBERT HOOKE (1635-1703)
Hooke was a versatile scientist who experimented
in various fields. His mechanical skill proved
invaluable to Boyle in building an air pump that
could create vacuums of better quality than those
produced by Guericke. His major discoveries
were in biology and physics. Like the great Anton
von Leeuwenhoek (1622-1723), he built micro-
scopes and examined microscopic organisms. He
was the first to develop a compound microscope,
and, while studying the bark of a Mediterranean
oak with one of his microscopes, he discovered
the structure of cork.
INVESTIGATION 15:
CORK AND CELLS
Have an adult help you cut a very thin slice from
a piece of cork. Place the cork on a slide and ex-
amine it under a microscope. Notice the pattern of
tiny rectangular holes. Hooke referred to these as
cells. What do you think was in these cells when
the cork was alive?
Hooke went on to show that the cells were
filled with a liquid when alive, and the attention
of investigators shifted to the contents rather than
the rectangular walls.
INVESTIGATION 16:
HOOKE’S LAW
Hooke was also a physicist, and he explained one
of his investigations as follows:
[65]