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Physics: An Experiment in Losing Your Marbles 6 Views
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Description:
It's experiment time! No, we're not digging up any bodies from graveyards - different science class. In this one, we're going to be checking out the speed of a marble, and then analyzing our data in terms of motion mapping, distance vs. time and velocity vs. time. And then, if there's time left over... we may play a game of marbles. We've got them... might as well.
Transcript
- 00:03
An experiment in losing your marbles.....
- 00:22
talking about speed and velocity is great and drawing graphs and motion maps [Car travelling fast and graph appears]
- 00:27
super helpful but it's kind of weird to think about motion without seeing
- 00:31
anything you know actually move so we're going to take care of that right now
- 00:36
yep it's time for an experiment okay first off we need our lab equipment [Lab equipment appears]
Full Transcript
- 00:42
don't worry no Bunsen burners for this one for now we need the following a
- 00:45
meter stick tape masking tape or scotch tape would be ideal because we're going
- 00:49
to be writing on it meaning we'll need a marker a plain old piece of paper which
- 00:53
is going to be origami'd into a launch shoot a hole punch a pencil or pen or
- 00:58
even a twig from the backyard if it's as wide as a pen or a pencil something
- 01:01
fairly long and skinny basically a book not a comic book either something with
- 01:05
an inch or two thick a marble or a ball bearing nothing too wide here something [Assortment of stationary equipment appears on desk]
- 01:09
to keep time with a stopwatch if you're a track coach the rest of us might just
- 01:13
use a stopwatch on our phones clock and we'll also need a long spot of clean
- 01:17
floor here's the whole list hit pause and go start hunting and gathering got
- 01:22
everything or figured out substitutions for everything you're missing good so
- 01:26
what are we going to do with all this stuff we're gonna find out how long it
- 01:30
takes our marble to go different distances which means we'll be dealing
- 01:33
with displacement and velocity all that jazz and we're going to track our data
- 01:37
because we're good scientists like that and then then we'll calculate the
- 01:41
velocities for our measurements but let's not get too far ahead of ourselves [velocity calculation appears]
- 01:44
as we can see this experiment has some assembly required so let's hop to it
- 01:48
first of all fold the paper in half lengthwise then fold that in half again [Piece of paper folded twice]
- 01:52
the other way we're just making it a little stronger so go ahead and tape the
- 01:56
side so it doesn't open at the folds now we're going to make a track for our
- 02:00
marble so fold it into thirds and make sure the track is wide enough for our
- 02:04
marble to roll freely not too wide we don't want it bouncing from side to side [Marble rolls across folded piece of paper]
- 02:08
this is going to be our launch chute eventually we're going to be making a
- 02:12
ramp with this shoot so pick which end is
- 02:15
going to be the bottom where the marble will come rolling out then with our
- 02:18
marker make marks on the sides at 4 centimeters and 8 centimeters up from [Person marks at 4cm and 8cm on piece of paper]
- 02:23
the bottom you'll make these too high up the sides we don't want them higher than
- 02:27
the top of the marble now go ahead and punch holes at those marks save the
- 02:31
scraps for the next time you need confetti and slide your pencil pen
- 02:35
Tinkertoy stick whatever through the holes like this this is going to serve [Pencil through holes in piece of paper]
- 02:39
as our starting gate for the marble so we want to be sure we don't have a
- 02:43
struggle getting the pen free if it's a tight fit just make the punched hole
- 02:46
a little wider and put a couple of pieces of the tape over the top to hold
- 02:49
the walls in place, chute assembly complete time for a little housecleaning
- 02:52
no really we need to clean the floor get a wet towel or a mop and wipe down a [Man fetches a mop]
- 02:57
good long spot for our marble to roll on we don't want our experiment to fail
- 03:01
because we run into a glob of yesterday's oatmeal Plus mom will be
- 03:05
super happy doing science and cleaning the floor major brownie points! [Mum holding brownies and slips on the floor]
- 03:09
Once that's done go ahead and set up the chute tape the bottom to the floor then
- 03:13
rest the top on the book so we have a ramp time for some testing..send your
- 03:17
marble down the chute and see where it goes
- 03:19
is it going straight running into any bumpy patches if the marble is going all [Marble rolling on the floor]
- 03:23
wonky you might need a different patch of floor to work with but if it's all
- 03:26
good time to mark our track use the meter stick to measure a meter from the
- 03:30
end of the chute mark that spot with a piece of tape and write the distance on
- 03:34
the tape go ahead and do that for meters 2 through 5 also you're probably itching
- 03:39
to get started by now but before we can get that marble moving we need to be
- 03:43
ready to collect the data we'll need to have two separate grids one for fast and [Fast and slow grids appear]
- 03:47
one for slow and each grid needs to have 5 spots for distance 5 spots for time
- 03:51
and 5 spots for velocity got that done then let's get rolling go ahead and set
- 03:57
up your starting gate slide the pen or whatever through the set of the holes
- 04:00
closest to the floor then load up the marble into the chute so it's resting [Person places marble into chute]
- 04:04
against the pen get your stopwatch ready pull out the pen and start the stopwatch
- 04:07
when the marble hits the end of the chute stop the clock when the marble
- 04:10
hits the 1 meter mark yay we officially have data since we're using the starting
- 04:15
position close to the ground we'll mark down our measurement
- 04:18
in the slow grid put the distance in the distance column and the time in the
- 04:21
time column we probably didn't need to tell you all that did we will do the
- 04:24
velocity when we're done running all the distances so pause this and find your
- 04:28
marble hopefully didn't end up under the fridge
- 04:30
got it excellent get your starting gate ready load up the marble and time how [Marble released from starting gate]
- 04:35
long it takes to hit the 2 meter mark write your data down and repeat for meters
- 04:39
3 4 & 5 then do it all again for the fast starting position and consider all
- 04:44
this marble chasing your cardio work for the day all right got all your times for
- 04:47
each distance this is a time when distance and displacement have the same
- 04:51
value by the way we should all have 10 measurements let's go ahead and find the
- 04:55
velocities the equation for velocity is the change of displacement divided by [Equation for velocity appears]
- 04:59
change in time for this experiment the starting time and displacement will both
- 05:03
be 0 so we have to divide each distance by the time it took the marble to reach
- 05:07
it so go ahead and record the 10 velocities and now it's time to get [Velocities appear in fast and slow grid columns]
- 05:11
graphic don't worry...just mean we're going
- 05:14
to be drawing take a motion map for both speeds remember motion map arrows to
- 05:19
scale we need to jog your memory go check out the previous lesson that's
- 05:23
also where we learned how to do displacement versus time graphs and
- 05:26
velocity versus time graphs too so why don't we do those too if we have a
- 05:30
favorite graphing program go ahead and use that or rock it old-school with
- 05:34
graph paper and a pencil put both fast and slow data on the same graph that'll [Displacement v time graph appears]
- 05:38
make it easier to compare them if we've done everything right the displacement
- 05:41
versus time graph will have slanted lines and the velocity versus time will
- 05:45
have horizontal lines and don't forget to title the graph, label the axes etc no
- 05:50
shortcuts we're going the long way here ok awesome we've got a table of data
- 05:55
we've got a motion map and graphs let's take a minute to think about what we've
- 05:59
learned and ask ourselves some questions did the marbles roll at at constant
- 06:03
velocity for the whole 5 meters was it easier to read the motion map or the [Questions appear on clipboard]
- 06:06
displacement versus time graph looking at your displacement for his time graphs
- 06:10
what is the difference between your fast and slow plots what does this tell you
- 06:14
where the velocities you calculated for the different trials about the same and
- 06:18
what could cause a difference in those how much faster was the fast velocity
- 06:22
over the slow one is this what you expected?
- 06:24
why or why not? And last but not least what went wrong in the
- 06:28
experiment and what worked really well are you feeling really ambitious you [Man looking excited]
- 06:32
want to be a full-on real-life scientist science isn't about just doing math
- 06:37
drawing graphs and rolling marbles all over the place a good piece of science
- 06:41
needs a good lab report to put it all together so let's look at what goes into
- 06:45
a lab report and if you're feeling like a science superstar you can write one up [Boy band playing on stage]
- 06:49
on your own for this marble lab first we've got a heading that's going to have
- 06:53
your name your partner's names if you had any and your teachers names any
- 06:57
stuff that would help the report get back to you if it ended up being in the
- 07:00
lost and found any report needs a title get creative call it losing my marbles [Title of report appears on page]
- 07:04
or the rolling marbles of time or just be boring and call it marble lab then we
- 07:09
want to write an abstract say what the experiment was meant for give a brief
- 07:12
description of how you did it and then a quick wrap-up of the results this is a
- 07:16
short summary about 200 words give or take then we can tackle the official
- 07:20
intro this is where we set the mood for the report kind of like lighting candles [Man in a bath tub]
- 07:24
and putting on our Gregorian chants playlists explain why you are doing the
- 07:28
experiment and what you are testing for and talk about the math that you'll be
- 07:31
using everyone wants a warning when there's
- 07:33
math ahead but don't go crazy here you want 400 words max then we have our
- 07:38
materials and methods section this explains what you used in what you did
- 07:42
with it did you have any problems any malfunctions this is the detail section [Materials and Method section points appear]
- 07:45
try to keep it between 300 and 750 words Up next results here will show the data
- 07:51
in a table or graphs or both just so happens to be a both huh if your data is
- 07:55
pretty polished you shouldn't have to do a lot of explaining here so keep it
- 07:58
short 50 to 250 words last is the discussion section you can cut loose
- 08:02
with this gain any valuable insights to the secrets of the universe as the
- 08:05
marble rolled on anything you took away that could apply to real life anything
- 08:09
surprise you if you're stumped take some more time to think about the experiment
- 08:12
as a whole and look we know that this is a big job now how many people write [Marble rolls on a desk]
- 08:16
reports just for the fun of it and the people who do they're awesome and
- 08:19
amazing and should be on a watch list somewhere not a bad list to be on
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