Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Experiment 3- Bounce a Sound


Bounce a Sound
By: Jessica Vaughn & Tonya Estep


Materials: Ticking watch, two cardboard tubes, plate, cork mat, and four books.


Step 1: Build two piles of books, both the same height and lay one tube on each of the piles of books. Place the ticking watch at the end of one of the tubes.




Step 2: Listen at the end of the other tube. You cannot hear the watch ticking!


Step 3: Hold the plate near the ends of the tubes and listen at the other end. Now you can hear the watch ticking.



Step 4: Try holding the cork mat near the ends of the tubes instead of the plate and listen at the other end. Now you cannot hear the watch ticking anymore!



Sound waves travel down the tube. When a plate is placed at the end of the tubes, the sound bounces off of the hard plate and travels up the second tube to your ears. However, when you place the soft cork in the same location, it soaks up the sound waves, making it harder to hear the ticking watch.

Standards

GLE 0307.11.2 Use a variety of materials to produce sounds of different pitch and volume.

GLE 0307.Inq.2 Select and use appropriate tools and simple equipment to conduct an investigation.

Related Science Project Links

Andrea Dalton's Project- See Some Sound

LaToya Keaton's Project- How the Ear Works

Below is the mini lesson and worksheet for this lesson

Bounce a Sound Mini Lesson

Bounce a Sound Worksheet

3 comments:

  1. Very beautiful pictures. I like the smiles on the pictures that make the readers enjoy the experiment. A few suggestions. 1. Spacing- may have the same set of the text and the picture closer and put a little spacing between different sets. 2. May have the same listener. That will reduce the factors of different observers. 3. the distance from between your ears and the tubes should be constant to reduce the effects of distance variation. A very nice blog presentation!

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  2. Neat experiment. Kids would like this. Would any other objects work besides the plate or the cork? Great job girls!

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  3. Could you use something besides books under the toilet paper rolls to stop the vibration of the watch on the table? Also, does it matter how thick the books are (for example, a dictionary compared to a thin story book)? Neat experiment ladies :)

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