125 Physics Projects for the Evil Genius (8 page)

BOOK: 125 Physics Projects for the Evil Genius
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Figure 7-1
Both balls hit the floor at the same time
.

Expected Results
 

The basketball should go up and come down to be caught by the passenger in the rolling chair. This works best if the ball is thrown straight up in the vertical direction. Similarly, the coins will hit the ground at the same time. It is easier to compare the sound of the coins striking the floor than to make that comparison visually. When using a commercial apparatus, a greater distance from the floor gives a more definitive result.

Why It Works
 

The force of gravity and its associated acceleration is entirely in the vertical direction. Gravity does not in any way influence the horizontal velocity.

Figure 7-2
Ballistics car showing the steel ball has the same horizontal velocity as the car
.

Other Things to Try
 

 

  1. Place a coin at the edge of a table.
  2. Slide a similar coin toward the first one, so the moving coin just knocks the stationary coin off the table and both fall to the floor. This will occur if the moving coin strikes the stationary coin at a large enough angle.
  3. If a proper angle is chosen, the stationary coin is nudged off the table and falls nearly straight down. The moving coin will fall at a greater distance than the stationary coin.
The Point
 

Horizontal motion and vertical motion are completely independent. Excluding the effects of air resistance, the horizontally fired bullet will fall to the ground at exactly the same time as the dropped bullet. This forms the basis for an understanding of projectile motion that is greatly simplified by treating the vertical and horizontal motion separately, as if the other did not even exist.

Project 8
Target practice. Horizontal projectile—rolling off a table
.
 
The Idea
 

In this experiment, you will try to hit a target. But, to improve your odds, you can use the laws of physics to predict where a projectile will land. Your projectile will be a steel ball or a marble. The physical situation is very much simplified when the projectile is shot (or launched) in the horizontal direction only. In this project, we see how close you can get to the target using the laws of physics that describe how horizontal objects move under the force of gravity.

What You Need
 
  • steel ball or marble (to serve as a projectile)
  • inclined track to get the marble rolling (This can be a piece of grooved wooden molding or a ruler with a groove)
  • flat, smooth, horizontal table
  • stopwatch or other timer (wrist watch, cell phone)
  • cup (your target)
  • meterstick
  • optional: motion sensor (to measure velocity)
Method
 
Part 1: Find the velocity of the marble coming off the ramp
 

You will need this information to make your predictions.

  1. Set up the ramp in such a way that its position remains fixed.
  2. Place a marble at the top (or another arbitrarily mark) of the ramp.
  3. Release the marble from the mark and measure the time it takes to go to the bottom of the ramp.
  4. Repeat a few times until you get a consistent reading. Then, take the average. (If the ramp is too short or the slope is too great, it is more difficult to measure the time to go down the ramp.)
  5. Find the final velocity at the bottom of the ramp using the equation:

Part 2
 

1. As we found in
Project 5
, the vertical motion is independent of the horizontal, so we can determine the time it takes the marble to fall from the table just from the height,
h
, of the table. This is given by the equation:

2. Now make your prediction for how far the marble will go using R = vt. The distance the ball will go is now given by R = vt. Use the
v
you figured in Step 5 above and
t
from the previous step.

3. Set the (center of the) cup at the distance you predicted and try it out. No cheating. It is more fun to call your shot first, and then see if it works. Line the cup up visually, so it is
on a straight line with the motion of the marble, as shown in
Figure 8-1
.

Expected Results
 

Clearly the expected result is for you to have the marble roll into the cup. If the marble hits at about the distance of the cup, but to the left or right, that should count as a hit. Hitting the target requires accurate measurement of the marble’s velocity on the table. It is reasonable to assume that the marble does not have any significant velocity loss for the short time it is rolling on the table.

(A simpler way of doing this—appropriate for younger readers—is to
qualitatively
compare the distance the marble goes with the height of the ramp and skipping the math. The higher the ramp, the faster the marble and the farther it goes.)

The time it takes to fall from a given distance is provided by the equation:

To use this equation, the distance the projectile falls must be compatible with the units for gravitational acceleration,
g
. If you use 9.8m/s
2
for
g
,
h
must be in meters. The time to fall a given distance is shown in the following
Table 8-1
:

Table 8-1

Using this table, the distance the projectile goes is simply its velocity multiplied by the time it is in the air (from the table or equation).

Why It Works
 

The horizontal velocity of the marble is constant and unaffected by the fact that the marble is falling. The distance it moves is simply the horizontal velocity multiplied by the time.

The time it takes to fall a given distance is dependent
only
on the vertical
distance
.

Find the velocity at the bottom of a ramp using the fact that the final velocity is twice the average velocity divided by the time.

Figure 8-1
Horizontal projectile
.

The horizontal distance the marble goes is simply the horizontal velocity times the time.

Other Things to Try
 

Another way to do this is to use a horizontal projectile launcher and calibrate the velocity.

The Point
 

Horizontal motion and vertical motion are completely independent. This means when an object is moving with only an initial horizontal velocity, the time it is in the air can be determined by how long it takes to fall.

Project 9
Taking aim. Shooting a projectile at a target
.
 
The Idea
 

In this experiment, you get to shoot things around the room. You can use a toy bow-and-arrow, a toy ping-pong ball shooter, a Nerf gun, a marble launcher, or a precision projectile launcher made for this purpose. You learn to make predictions that accurately guide the projectile to the target. In this case, using the laws of physics is
not
cheating. It does, however, give you a definite advantage compared with someone who is not armed with this knowledge.

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