Simple Science Experiments
Simple Science Experiments
You would risk damaging your eyes if you looked directly at the sun through
binoculars, but you can view the bright disc on the wall as large and clear as in the
movies. Clouds and birds passing over can also be distinguished and. if the binoculars
are good even sunspots. These are a few hot areas on the glowing sphere, some so big
that many terrestrial globes could fit into them. Because of the earth’s rotation, the
sun’s image moves quite quickly across the wall. Do not forget to re-align the
binoculars from time to time onto the sun. The moon and stars cannot be observed in
this way because the light coming from them is too weak.
2. Sun clock
Place a flowerpot with a long stick fixed into the hole at the
bottom in a spot, which is sunny, all day. The stick’s shadow
moves along the rim of the pot as the sun moves. Each hour
by the clock mark the position of the shadow on the pot. If
the sun is shining, you can read off the time. Because of the
rotation of the earth the sun apparently passes over us in a
semi-circle. In the morning and evening its shadow strikes the
pot superficially, while; it midday, around 12 o’clock, the light
incidence is greatest. The shadow can be seen particularly
clearly on the sloping wall of the pot.
3. Watch as a compass
Hold a watch horizontally, with the hour hand pointing
directly to the sun. If you halve the distance between the
hour hand and the 12 with a match, the end of the match
points directly to the south.
The time zones are shown on the world time disk pictured below. Copy or stick this onto a piece
of cardboard and cut it out. Colour the panel corresponding to time zone were you live red.
Remove the casing and glass from an alarm clock, push the minute hand through the hole in the
paper disk and fix it firmly to the hour hand. Make sure that the red-coloured panel is exactly over
the hour hand. If you rotate the disk with this, it should not stick. The clock will tell you all time of
the day on the earth.
Read off first on the red panel the
time of the place where you live.
If you rotate the disk to the left,
you will find the time zones of
places west of you. In each panel,
the time is an hour earlier. If you
rotate to the right, you will find the
places east of you. In each panel
the time is an hour later. The outer circle continues into the inner circle at the crossed arrows and
vice-versa. For example: in New York it is 6.15 in the morning. Then it is already 20.15 in Tokyo
and in New Zealand a new day will begin in 45 minutes. Or in London it is 20.03. What time is it in
San Francisco? Look at the world map: San Francisco lies in the time zone of Los Angeles. On the
rotating disk go to the left to the Los Angeles panel. The time is: 11.03.
5. Plants
Maze
Plant a sprouting potato in moist soil in a pot. Place it in
the corner of a shoebox and cut a hole in the opposite
side. Inside stick two partitions, so that a small gap is
left. Close the box and place it in a window. After a
couple of days the shoot has found its way through the
dark maze to the light.
Plants have light-sensitive cells, which guide the direction of growth. Even the minimum amount of
light entering the box causes the shoot to bend. It looks quite white, because the important green
colouring material, chlorophyll, necessary for healthy growth, cannot be formed in the dark.
6. The sun brings life
Fill a large glass jar with fresh water and place in it several
shoots of water weed.
Place the jar in sunlight, and at once small gas bubbles will
rise in the water. Invert a funnel over the plants and over it a
water-filled glass tube. The gas, which is given off by the plants
slowly, fills the tube.
Plants use sunlight. With its help, in the presence of chlorophyll, they make their building material,
starch, from water and carbon dioxide, and give off oxygen. Oxygen has actually collected in the
glass tube. If you remove the tube and hold a glowing splint in it, the splint will burn brightly.
7. Automatic watering
Fill a bottle with water and place it upside down and half-buried
in soil in a flower box. An air bubble rises up in the bottle from
time to time, showing that the plants are using the water. The
water reservoir is enough for several days, depending on the
number of plants and the weather. Water only flows from the
bottle until the soil round it is soaked. It starts to flow again only
when the plants have drawn so much water from the soil that it becomes dry, and air can enter the
bottle. One notices that plants can take water more easily from loose soil than from hard.
8. Secret path
Dissolve a teaspoonful of salt in a glass of water and cover
it tightly with parchment paper. Place the glass upside down
in a dish containing water strongly coloured with vegetable
dye. Although the parchment paper has no visible holes; the
water in the glass is soon evenly coloured. The tiny particles
of water and dye pass through the invisible pores in the
parchment paper. We call such an exchange of liquids through a permeable membrane, osmosis.
‘All living cells are surrounded by such a membrane, and absorb water and dissolved substances in
this way.
9. Rising sap
Make a deep hole in a carrot and fill it with water in which you
have dissolved plenty of sugar. Close the opening firmly with a
bored cork, and push a plastic straw through the hole. Mop up
any overflowing sugar solution, and seal the joints with melted
candle wax. Put the carrot into water and watch: after some
time the sugar solution rises into the straw.
The water particles can enter the carrot through the cell walls, but the larger sugar particles cannot
come out. The sugar solution becomes diluted and rises up the tube. This experiment on osmosis
illustrates how plants absorb water from the soil and carry it upwards.
This is again an osmotic process. Water penetrates into the pea cells through the skin and dissolves
the nutrients in them. The pressure thus formed makes the peas swell. In the same way the water
necessary for life penetrates the walls of all plant cells, stretching them. If the plant obtains no more
water, its cells become flabby and it wilts.
15. Chemistry
Colour magic
Cut a red cabbage leaf into small pieces and soak in a cup of boiling water. After half an hour pour
the violet-coloured cabbage water into a glass. You can now use it for crazy colour magic. Place
three glasses on the table, all apparently containing pure water. In fact only the first glass contains
water, in the second is white vinegar and in the third water mixed with bicarbonate of soda. When
you pour a little cabbage water into each glass, the first liquid remains violet, the second turns red
and the third green. The violet cabbage dye has the property of turning red in acid liquids and green
in alkaline. In neutral water it does not change colour. In chemistry one can find out whether a liquid
is acid or alkaline by using similar detecting liquids (indicators).
16. Violet becomes red
If you ever come across an anthill in the woods, you can
there and then do a small chemical experiment. Hold a violet
flower, e.g. a bluebell, firmly over the ants. The insects feel
threatened and spray a sharp-smelling liquid over the flower.
The places hit turn red.
The ants make a corrosive protective liquid in their hindquarters. You notice it if an ant nips you,
though it is generally quite harmless. Since the flower turns red where the drops fall, you know
that they are acid. The acid is called formic acid.
When sulphur is burned, sulphur dioxide is formed. As well as its germicidal action in sterilisation,
the gas has a bleaching effect, and the dye of the flower is destroyed by it. Sulphur dioxide also
destroys the chlorophyll of plants, which explains their poor growth in industrial areas, where the gas
pollutes the air.
Cigarette ash and sugar cannot be separately ignited, but the ash initiates the combustion of the
sugar. We call a substance, which brings about a chemical reaction, without itself being changed a
catalyst.
After the flame is blown out the stearin is still so hot that it continues to evaporate and produce a
vapour. But as this is combustible, it can be re-lighted at once by a naked flame. The experiment
shows that solid substances first become gaseous at the surface before they will burn in a supply of
oxygen.
Like all solid and liquid fuels, stearin produces combustible gases when heated, and these accumulate
inside a flame. They burn, with the oxygen of the air, in the outer layer and tip of the flame. The
unburnt stearin vapour in the middle can be drawn off, like town gas from the gas works.
This process of decomposition is known as corrosion. It often occurs at the point where two
different metals are directly joined together. With metal mixtures (alloys) it is particularly common
if the metals are not evenly distributed. In our experiment the water becomes cloudy due to
dissolved aluminium. A fairly small electric current is also produced in this process:
28. Electricity Potato battery
Stick finger-length pieces of copper and zinc wire one at a
time into a raw potato. If you hold an earphone on the wires,
you will hear distinct crackling.
31. Mini-microphone
Push two pencil leads through the short sides of a
matchbox, just above the base. Scrape off some of
the surface, and do the same with a shorter lead, which
you lay across the top. Connect the microphone with
a battery and earphone in the next room. (You can
take the earphone from a transistor radio.) Hold the
box horizontal and speak into it. Your words can be
heard clearly in the earphone.
The current flows through the graphite “leads”. When you speak into the box, the base vibrates,
causing pressure between the “leads” to alter and making the current flow unevenly. The current
variations cause vibrations in the earphone.
32. Mysterious circles
Push a length of copper wire through a piece of cardboard
laid horizontally and connect the ends of the wire to a battery.
Scatter iron filings on to the cardboard and tap it lightly with
your finger. The iron filings form circles round the wire.
The current produces a field of force in the coil. The tiny magnet
particles in the iron become arranged in an orderly manner, so
that the iron has a magnetic north and South Pole. If the bolt is made of soft iron, it loses its
magnetism when the current is switched off, but if it is made of steel it retains it.
34. Electro-buzzer
Nail board B and wooden blocks C and D onto board A (about 5 x 5 inches). Push an iron bolt F
through a hole bored in B. Wind covered copper wire G 100 times round the bolt and connects the
ends to a battery and to H respectively. Bore a hole through block C and wedge the fret saw blade
H firmly into it so that its end is a short distance from bolt F. Hammer a long nail K through A and
bend it so that its point rests in the middle of the saw blade. Oil the point of the nail. Use a piece of
beading E as a key, with a rubber band P as spring and drawing pins M and N as contacts. Join all
the parts with connecting wire (remove the insulation).
If you press the key down, you connect the electric circuit, bolt F becomes magnetic and attracts
H. At this moment the circuit is broken at K and the bolt loses its magnetism. H jumps back and
reconnects the current. This process is repeated so quickly that the saw blade vibrates and produces
a loud buzz. If you wish to do Morse signalling with two pieces of apparatus, you must use three
leads as in the lower circuit diagram.
Neon tubes contain a gas, which flashes on and off 50 times a second because of short breaks in
alternating current. The moving rod is thrown alternatively into light and darkness in rapid sequence,
so that it seems to move by jerks in a semicircle. Normally the eye is too slow to notice these
breaks in illumination clearly. In an electric light bulb the metal filament goes on glowing during the
short breaks in current.
Clinging balloons
Blow up some balloons, tie them up and rub them for a
short time on a woollen pullover. If you put them on the
ceiling, they will remain there for hours.
The balloons become electrically charged when they are rubbed, that is, they remove minute,
negatively charged particles, and called electrons, from the pullover. Because electrically charged
bodies attract those, which are uncharged, the balloons cling to the ceiling until the charges gradually
become equal. This generally takes hours in a dry atmosphere because the electrons only flow
slowly into the ceiling, which is a poor conductor.
37. Pepper and salt
Scatter some coarse salt onto the table and mix it with
some ground pepper. How are you going to separate them
again? Rub a plastic spoon with a woollen cloth and hold it
over the mixture. The pepper jumps up to the spoon and
remains sticking to it.
The plastic spoon becomes electrically charged when it is rubbed and attracts the mixture. if you
do not hold the spoon too low, the pepper rises first because it is lighter than the salt. To catch the
salt grains, you must hold the spoon lower.
38. Coiled adder
Cut a spiral-shaped coil from a piece of tissue paper about 4
inches square, lay it on a tin lid and bend its head up. Rub a
fountain pen vigorously with a woollen cloth and hold it over
the coil. It rises like a living snake and reaches upwards.
In this case the fountain pen has taken electrons from the
woollen cloth and attracts the uncharged paper. On contact,
the paper takes part of the electricity, but gives it up immediately to the lid, which is a good
conductor. Since the paper is now uncharged again, it is again attracted, until the fountain pen has
lost its charge.
Both balloons have become negatively charged on rubbing because they have taken electrons from
the pullover, which has now gained a positive charge. Negative and positive charges attract each
other, so the balloons will stick to the pullover. Similar charges, however, repel one another, so the
balloons try hard to get away from each other.
The puffed rice grains are attracted to the electrically charged spoon and cling to it for a time.
Some of the electrons pass from the spoon into the puffed rice, until the grains and the spoon have
the same charge. Since, however, like charges repel one another, we have this unusual drama.
42. Simple electroscope
Bore a hole through the lid of a jam jar and push a piece of
copper wire bent into a hook through it. Hang a folded strip
of silver paper, from which you have removed the paper,
over the back. If you hold a fountain pen, comb, or similar
object, which has been electrically charged by rubbing on the
top of the wire, the ends of the strip spring apart.
On contact with a charged object, electrical charges flow through the wire to the ends of the strip.
Both now have the same charge and repel one another according to the strength of the charge.
The glass becomes electrically charged when it is rubbed with the wool, attracts the dolls, and also
charges them. Since the two like charges repel each other, the dolls fall back on the plate, give up
their charge to the metal and are again attracted to the glass.
46. High voltage
Place a flat baking tray on a dry glass, rub a blown-up balloon
vigorously on a woollen pullover and place it on the tray. If you
put your finger near the edge of the tray, a spark jumps across.
Since the plastic is soft, its layers are rubbed against one another by the movement of the lamp and
become strongly charged with electricity. The electrons collect on the surface, flow through the
core of the tiny lamp, which begins to glow and into the body.
The ancient Greeks had already discovered that amber attracted other substances when it was
rubbed. They called the petrified resin ‘electron’. The power, which has caused such fundamental
changes in the world since then therefore, gets its name - electricity.
49. Magnetism Field lines
Lay a sheet of drawing paper over a magnet - of course you
already know how to make a magnet - and scatter iron filings
on it. Tap the paper lightly, and a pattern forms.
The filings form into curved lines and show the direction of the
magnetic force. You can make the pattern permanent. Dip the
paper into melted candle wax and let it cool. Scatter the iron filings on it. If you hold a hot iron
over the paper after the formation of the magnetic lines, the field lines, the pattern will be fixed.
Make two ducks from paper doubled over and glued and
push a magnetised pin into each one. Place the ducks on cork
disks in a dish of water. After moving around they line up with
their beaks or tail tips together in a north-south direction.
The ducks approach each other along the magnetic field lines. Their movement is caused by
different forces: the attraction of unlike magnetic poles, the repelling effect of like poles, and the
earth’s magnetism. Set the magnets so that two poles which will be attracted are placed in the
beaks.
55. Air
Diving bell
You can immerse a pocket-handkerchief in water, without it getting
wet: stuff the handkerchief firmly into a tumbler and immerse it
upside down in the water.
Air is certainly invisible, but it nevertheless consists of minute particles, which fill the available space.
So air is also enclosed in the upturned glass, and it stops the water entering. If, however, you push the
glass deeper, you will see that some water does enter, due to the increasing water pressure, which
compresses the air slightly. Diving bells and caissons, used under water, work on the same principle.
As the pressure of the air in the balloon increases, so does the counter-pressure of the air enclosed
in the bottle. It is soon so great that the breathing muscles in your thorax are not strong enough to
overcome it.
57. Air lock
Place a funnel with not too wide a spout into the mouth of a
bottle and seal it with plasticine so that it is airtight. If you
pour some water into the funnel, it will not flow into the bottle.
The air enclosed in the bottle prevents the water entering. On the other hand, the water particles at
the mouth of the funnel, compressed like a skin by surface tension, do not allow any air to escape.
Close one end of a straw, push the other end through the funnel, lift your finger, and the water flows
at once into the bottle. The air can now escape through the straw.
The lid is only slightly tilted when it is hit. In the space formed between the lid, newspaper and table,
the air cannot flow in quickly enough, so that there is a partial vacuum, and the normal air pressure
above holds the lid still as if it were in a screw clamp.
When the air pressure is higher in fine weather, the rubber is pressed inwards, and the end of the
pointer rises. When the air pressure falls, the pressure on the rubber is reduced, and the pointer falls.
Because the air in the bottle will expand if it is heated, the barometer should be placed in a spot
where the temperature will remain constant.
61. Weather frog
A tree frog made of paper will climb up and down a ladder like a real weather frog and predict the
weather. Bend a 2f-inch-long strip of metal into a U-shape and bore through it so that a sewing needle
can be turned easily when inserted through the holes. The needle is made able to grip by heating, and
the frog, made from green paper, is fixed on to it by a thin wire. Stick the metal strip firmly on to the
middle of the wall of a four-inch-high jar, and at the side a cardboard ladder. Wind a thread round the
needle, with a small counterweight at the end. Stick a paper disk on a piece of plastic foil, and draw
the other end of the thread through the middle. The foil is stretched over the mouth of the jar so as to
be smooth and airtight, the thread is tightly knotted, and the hole sealed.
When the air pressure is high (fine weather) the plastic foil is pressed inwards and the frog climbs
up. When the pressure is low (bad weather) the pressure on the foil is less and the frog climbs back
down.
62. Fountain
Punch two holes in the lid of a jam jar and push a plastic straw a
distance of two Inches through one. Fix three more straws together
with adhesive tape and push through the other hole. Seal the
joints with warm plasticine. Screw the lid to the jar, which should
contain some water, turn it upside down and let the short straw
dip into a bottle full of water: a fountain of water rises into the
upper jar until the bottle is empty.
The water pours out through the long tube, and the air pressure in the jar becomes less. The air
outside tries to get in and pushes the water from the bottle.
When you blow, the air pressure in the bottle is increased, and
at the same time there is a partial vacuum just inside the neck.
The pressures become equalised so that the ball is driven out as
from an airgun.
When you press the plastic bottle, the air inside is compressed. When the pressure is great
enough, the plastic straw is released from the plug of plasticine, the released air expands again,
and shoots off the projectile. The plasticine has the same function as the discharge mechanism in
an airgun.
67. Egg blowing
Place two porcelain egg-cups one in front of the other, with an
egg in the front one. Blow hard from above on to the edge of the
filled cup. Suddenly the egg rises, turns upside down and falls
into the empty cup. Because the egg shell is rough, it does nor
lie flat against the smooth wall of the egg-cup. Air is blown
through the gap into the space under the egg, where it becomes
compressed. When the pressure of the cushion is great enough,
it lifts the egg upwards.
The air current does not hit the ball, as one would assume, with
its full force. It separates and pushes through the places where the ball rests on the funnel. At
these points the air pressure is lowered according to Bernoulli’s law, and the external air pressure
pushes the ball firmly into the mouth of the funnel.
You will never do it if you blow at the coin from the front - on the false assumption that the air will
be blown under the coin because of the unevenness of the table and lift it up. It will only be
transferred to the dish if you blow once sharply about two inches horizontally above it. The air
pressure above the coin is reduced, the surrounding air, which is at normal pressure, flows in from
all directions and lifts the coin. It goes into the air current and spins into the dish.
Bernoulli’s law explains this surprising result. The air current goes through at high speed between
the card and the spool, producing a lower pressure, and the normal air pressure pushes the card
from below against the spool. The ascent of an aeroplane takes place in a similar manner. The air
flows over the arched upper surface of the wings faster than over the flat under-surface, and therefore
the air pressure above the wings is reduced.
74. Wind funnel
Light a candle and blow at it hard through a funnel held with
its mouth a little way from the flame. You cannot blow out
the flame; on the contrary it moves towards the funnel.
When you blow through the funnel the air pressure inside is
reduced, and so the air outside enters the space through the
mouth. The blow air sweeps along the funnel walls: if you hold the funnel with the edge directly in
front of the flame, it goes out. If you blow the candle through the mouth of the funnel, the air is
compressed in the narrow spout, and extinguishes the flame immediately on exit.
During combustion the oxygen in both tumblers is used up - the blotting paper is permeable to air.
Therefore the pressure inside is reduced and the air pressure outside pushes the tumblers together.
During combustion the carbon contained in the paper, together with other substances, combines
with the oxygen in the air to form carbon dioxide. The gas pressure in the tumbler is reduced by the
expansion of the gases on heating and contraction on cooling. The air flowing in from outside
pushes the water into the tumbler.
78. Heat
Bottle ghost
An empty wine bottle, which has been stored in a cool place, has
a ghost in it! Moisten the rim of the mouth with water and cover it
with a coin. Place your hands on the bottle. Suddenly the coin will
move as if by a ghostly hand.
The cold air in the bottle is warmed by your hands and expands, but is prevented from escaping by
the water between the bottle rim and the coin. However, when the pressure is great enough, the coin
behaves like a valve, lifting up and allowing the warm air to escape.
The air enclosed in the bottle expands on heating and presses on the water surface. The displaced
water escapes into the straw and shows the degree of heating by its position. You can fix a scale on
the side of the bottle.
The arrow turns quite quickly some way to the right because the knitting needle expands on heating
like other substances. With an ordinary steel knitting needle the arrow would only turn a little,
because steel only expands half as much as aluminium. Since the aluminium is longer as well, the
difference is still greater. The expansion is clearly visible in electricity power cables, which sag more
in summer than in winter. If you take the candle away from the knitting needle, the arrow moves
back.
The butter on the silver spoon melts very quickly and releases
its pea first. The peas from the steel spoon and the glass rod fall later, while that on the plastic
spoon does not move. Silver is by far the best conductor of heat, while plastic is a very poor
conductor, which is why saucepans, for example, often have plastic handles.
85. Non-inflammable material
Place a coin under a cotton handkerchief and ask someone
to press a burning cigarette on the cloth stretched over the
coin. You need not be afraid of scorching the material, because
only a harmless speck of ash will be left.
86. Fireguard
Hold a metal kitchen sieve in a candle flame. To your
surprise the flame only reaches the wire net, but does not
go through it.
Jet boat
Bore a hole from the inside through the screw top of an
aluminium pill tube about four inches long, and pour some
water into the tube. Fix the tube in an empty sardine can
into which you have fixed three candle stumps and place
the can in water. If you light the candles the water soon
boils, and the jet of steam escaping from the back drives
the boat.
Steam is formed in the boat’s boiler when the water boils. Because it expands sharply, it escapes
at high pressure through the nozzle and causes a recoil. Do the experiment in calm weather!
91. Hovercraft
Place a tin lid on a hot plate and heat it well (take care!). If
you then let a few drops of waterfall on the lid, you will
observe a small natural phenomenon. The drops are
suspended in the air like hovercraft and whiz hissing to-
and-fro for a while.
On contact with the heated metal the water drops begin to evaporate at once on the underside.
Since the steam escapes with great pressure, it lifts the drops into the air. So much heat is removed
from the drops by the formation of steam that they do not even boil.
92. Rain in the room
Rain after sultry days makes the inside of the windowpane
suddenly sweat. You can distinguish the tiny water droplets
through a magnifying glass. Where do they come from?
After it has been raining the air outside cools sharply because
the water evaporates and thus uses heat. The warm air in the
room, which is saturated with water vapour, especially from cooking, cools down only slowly on
the windowpane. But cold air cannot hold so much moisture as warm air, and therefore loses
some of it on to the pane. It forms water droplets - exactly as when it is raining out-of- doors and
moist, warm air meets cold air.
94. Hygrometer
Coat a strip of writing paper two inches long with glue and roll it onto a sewing needle. Stick a
strip of shiny photographic paper about 3 inch wide and one foot long onto its end so that its
shiny surface faces the glue-covered side of the writing paper. The filmstrip is rolled round the
needle like a clock spring. Punch a small hole through the middle of the bottom and lid of a
furniture polish tin, and also air holes in the bottom. File off the metal projections formed. Push
the needle through the central holes and stick the end of the filmstrip firmly to the side of the tin.
Fix a paper pointer in front of the needle with a cork disk, and a bead behind it.
The gelatin layer of the photographic film expands - in contrast to the paper layer - with increased
air humidity, causing it to wind up sharply, and move the pointer to the right. When the humidity of
the air falls, the pointer returns to the left.
95. Water from the desert
We still read in the newspapers of people dying of thirst in the desert, but many of them could
help themselves in this emergency. An experiment on a small scale in a sandbox will show you
how to do it. Dig a fairly deep hole and place a beaker in the middle. Spread a suitably sized piece
of transparent plastic foil over the edge of the hole and lay a small stone in its centre so that it dips
down to the beaker in the shape of a funnel. The edges are fixed firmly into the sand. Soon,
especially in sunshine, small drops of water form on the underside of the foil. They become larger
and larger and finally flow into the beaker. The effect of the sun is to heat the ground strongly
under the foil. The moisture held in the sand evaporates until the enclosed air is so saturated that
small drops of water are deposited on the cooler foil. Even desert sand contains some moisture. If
you also place cut up cactus plants into the hole, you will obtain enough water to survive.
Water behaves oddly: when warm water-cools it contracts, but if the temperature falls below
390. For 40C, it suddenly begins to expand again. At 320 F or 00 C it begins to freeze, and in
doing so increases its volume by one-eleventh. This is the reason why the ice sticks out of the
bottle. If you had closed it, it would have cracked. Think about burst water pipes in winter and
frost cracks on roads, in which water collected under the asphalt freezes.
101. Iceberg
Place a cube of ice in a tumbler and fill it to the brim with
water. The ice cube floats and partly projects from the
surface. Will the water overflow when the ice cube melts!
The water increases its volume by one-eleventh when it
freezes. The ice is therefore lighter than water, floats on the water surface and projects above it. It
loses its increased volume when it melts and exactly fills the space, which the ice cube took up in
the water. Icebergs, which are a danger to navigation, are therefore especially harmful because
one only sees their tips above the water.
102. Cutting through ice
Place an ice cube on the cork of a bottle. Fix two objects of
equal weight on a piece of wire, hang the wire over the ice and
place the whole lot out of doors in frosty weather. After a certain
time the wire will have cut through the ice without dividing it.
This trick of nature is explained by the fact that ice melts when
it is subjected to pressure. Water is formed where the wire is resting, while it immediately freezes
again above it. Skating is only made possible by slight melting of the ice under the moving
surface, which reduces the friction.
104. Liquids
String of pearls
Let a fine jet of water pour on a finger held about two
inches under the tap. If you look carefully, you will see a
strange wave-like pattern in the water. If you bring your
finger closer to the tap, the waves become continuously
more ball-shaped, until the water jet resembles a string of
pearls. It is so strongly obstructed by the finger that
because of its surface tension - the force that holds the
water particles together - it separates into round droplets. If you take your finger further away
from the tap, the falling speed of the water becomes greater, and the drop formation is less clear.
It is surprising how many coins you can put in without the water
spilling over. The water mountain is supported by surface tension,
as though it is covered by a fine skin. Finally, you can even
shake the contents of a salt cellar slowly into the glass. The salt
dissolves without the water pouring out.
111. Speedboat
Split a match slightly at its lower end and smear some soft
soap into the slit, if you place the match in a dish of tap
water, it moves forwards quickly for quite a time. Several
matches could have a race in a bathtub.
Loss of weight
Tie a stone by means of a thread to a spring balance
and note its weight. Does it in fact alter if you hang the
stone in a jar of water! If you lift up a large stone under
the water when you are bathing you will be surprised at
first by its apparently low weight. But if you lift it out of
the water, you will see how heavy it actually is. In fact
an object immersed in a liquid (or in a gas) loses weight.
This is particularly obvious with a floating object. Look
at the next experiment.
The weight remains the same. The water spilt out of the
container weighs exactly the same as the whole block of
wood. The famous mathematician Archimedes discovered
in about 250 BC that a body immersed in a liquid loses as much weight as the weight of liquid
displaced by it. This apparent loss of weight is called buoyancy.
The water level falls. Since the coin is almost ten times heavier than water, the box containing the
coin also displaces, because of its larger volume, ten times more water than the coin alone. This
takes up, in spite of its greater weight, only a small volume and so displaces only a small amount
of water.
122. Volcano under water
Fill a small bottle full of hot water and colour it with
ink. Lower the bottle by means of a string into a
preserving jar containing cold water. A coloured cloud,
which spreads to the surface of the water, rises upward
out of the small bottle like a volcano.
Hot water occupies a greater volume than cold because the space between the water particles is
increased on heating. It is, therefore, lighter and experiences buoyancy. After some time the
warm and cold water mix and the ink is evenly distributed.
You can accompany the submarine by several ‘frogmen’. Simply toss broken-off match heads
with it into the bottle. They float, because air is also contained in their porous structure. If the air
bubbles are made smaller by the transmitted water pressure, the match heads dive deeper too.
127. Gravity
Bewitched box
Stick a false bottom in a thin cardboard box and hide a lead
weight in the space below. You can always balance the box on
the corner in which the piece of lead is lying.
You must, however, first standardise your balance. Hang a letter, which weighs exactly four ounces
onto the paper clips and mark the displacement of the top right-hand corner by an arrow on the
wall. With letters of more than four ounces the balance moves further and you know that you need
more postage. This simple construction is a first-order lever, which is suspended by a pivot just
like a normal letter balance. The left-hand narrow edge of the card forms the loading arm, and the
upper edge the force arm, which shows, because it is longer, even small differences in weight.
132. Magic rod
Lay a rod over your index fingers so that one end sticks
out further than the other. Will the longer end become
unbalanced if you move your finger further towards the
middle!
The rod remains balanced however much you move your finger. If one end becomes over
weight it presses more strongly on the finger concerned. The less loaded finger can now move
further along until the balance is restored. The process can be repeated by the combined effects
of the force of gravity and friction until the fingers are exactly under the centre of the rod.
The force of gravity prevents the nut from joining in the rolling movement of the tin. It hangs
upright under the rubber and winds it up at each rotation. A force is produced in the rubber by the
tension, and this causes the backward movement.
Paper bridge
Lay a sheet of writing paper as a bridge across two tumblers,
and place a third tumbler on it. The bridge collapses. But if
you lay the paper in folds, it supports the weight of the tumbler.
The cigarette would split at once without the cellophane casing, because on bending the pressure of
the tobacco filling would push through the paper at the point of greatest strain. The cellophane
casing is so tough that it distributes the pressure from the inside evenly over the whole length of the
cigarette. After untying the knot and unwrapping, you only need to smooth out the cigarette.
139. Uncuttable paper
Place a folded piece of writing paper round a knife blade.
You can cut potatoes with it without damaging the paper.
The paper is forced into the potato with the knife. It is not
cut itself because the pressure of the blade on the paper meets
a resistance from the potato. Since its flesh is softer than the
paper fibre, it yields. If, however, you hold the paper firmly
on top, the pressure balance is lost, and the paper is broken.
The result is truly surprising, but illustrates a physical law. The coins undergo an elastic impact
when they are knocked together by which the same weight as the flipped coins carries on the
movement at the other end of the row. The sharpness of the flip decides how fast and how far the
coins fly off but has no effect on their number.
144. Inertia
If you pull slowly, the strain and the additional weight of the
object causes the upper cord to break. But if you pull jerkily,
the inertia of the block prevents the transfer of the total force
to the upper cord, and the lower one breaks.
If you aim well, you can shoot away all the coins in this way. The inertia of the coin column is so
great that the force of the flipped coin is not sufficient to move it or completely overturn it.
150. Sound
Humming flute
A square piece of paper has one corner snipped off, and two
notches made in the opposite corner. Roll the paper in the
direction of the arrow in the figure to make a tube about as
thick as a pencil and push the notched corner back into the
opening. Draw a deep breath through the tube. This causes a
loud humming note. The air, which is drawn in sucks up the
paper corner, but since it is slightly springy, it begins to vibrate.
The vibration is quite slow, so the note is deep.
The apparatus works on the same principle as a car horn. If you close the circuit by pressing the horn
button, the screw C becomes magnetic and attracts the base of the tin. So the circuit is broken in front
of the screw K. Screw C loses its magnetism, and the base of the tin springs back to the screw K. The
process is repeated so quickly that the tin plate produces the horn note by its vibration.
The paper behaves like the skin of a drum. Although only the tiny legs of the insect beat on it, it
begins to vibrate and transmits such a loud noise that you would imagine that a larger organism or a
rattling clockwork motor was in the bag.
158. Light
Pinhole camera
Bore a hole in the middle of a box. Stretch parchment paper
over the mouth of the box and secure it with a rubber band.
If you focus this simple camera on a brightly-lit building from
a dark room, the image appears upside down on the screen.
Our eyes work on the same principle. The light rays fall
through the pupil and lens and project an inverted image on
the retina. The image is turned the right way up again in the
sight centre of the brain
Quite simple! Bend the light rays back to the coin. Pill the
cup with water and the shadow moves to the side. The light
rays do not go on in a straight line after striking the surface
of the water, but are bent downwards at an angle.
The light rays coming from the immersed pencil are bent at
an angle when they emerge from the water into the air at the
side of the glass. Because salt solution has a different composition from pure water, the angle of
refraction is different. We know that how much light rays are bent when to pass from one
substance into another entirely depends on the ‘optical density’ the different substance.
The three highly glazed surfaces of the bent picture postcard behave like mirrors and multiply the
image of the coloured pieces of cellophane. A polished surface reflects better, the flatter the light
rays hit it. But since part of the radiation is absorbed into the surface, the image reflected from it is
not so clear and bright as with a mirror.
We know that dark surfaces are more strongly heated by sunlight than light ones, and such heat
difference is the secret of the light mill. The sooty side of the foil absorbs the light rays and is
heated about ten times more strongly than the light- reflecting bright side. The difference in the
amount of heat radiated from the sides of the blade causes the rotation.
If the eyes have stared for a long time at the left-hand picture, the part of the light- sensitive retina
which is irradiated by the red surface tires and the optic nerves concerned become father insensitive
to red. So on looking at the white surface in the right-hand picture, they do not perceive the red
radiation, which is present in white light. They are only sensitive to the yellow and blue components,
which together give green. But the part of the retina, which has received the picture of the white fish,
is now sensitive to the opposite colour to green, namely red. Coloured after- images can be produced
with other colours just as well. Each colour changes into the opposite: i.e. blue into yellow, yellow
into blue and green into red.
The right eye sees the inside of the tube and the left the open hand. As in normal vision, the
impressions, which are received by each eye, are combined to give a composite image in the
brain. It works particularly well because the image from inside the tube, which is transferred to
the palm of the hand, is in perspective.
188 Moon rocket
Hold the picture so that the tip of your nose touches the star,
and turn it round slowly to the left. The rocket flies into the sky
and lands again on the moon. Each eye receives its own image
on viewing and both impressions are transmitted to give a
composite whole in the brain. If you hold the star to the tip of
your nose, your right eye only sees the rocket and the left only
the moon. As usual, the halves of the image are combined in the
brain. As you turn the picture on its edge, it does not shrink any
more because both eyes see the same image by squinting.
When you look over your fingers your eyes are focussed
sharply on the wall. But the fingers are then projected on the
retina in such a way that the images are not combined in your
brain. You see the tips of both fingers doubled. These finally
combine to give the illusion of a round or oval image.
190. Illusions
When you cross them over, the position of the sides of the fingers is
exchanged. The sides normally facing away from one another are now
adjacent, and both touch the tip of the nose together. Each one reports
separately, as usual, the contact with the nose to the brain. This is deceiving
because the brain does not realise that the fingers have been crossed over.
When the eyes see the pencil fall they first send a signal to
the brain, and from here the command ‘Grab’ is sent to the
hand. Time is naturally lost in doing this. If you try the
experiment yourself, it must succeed, because the commands to let fall and to grab are
simultaneous. We call the time between recognition and response, the reaction time. The time
lost in a dangerous situation can mean death for a car driver.
From pure habit you have started at the left and finished at the
right, as you usually do when writing. This was a mistake! Because
if you had thought about it, the writing must be laterally reversed.
THE END