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Surprising Science Demonstrations?

An anonymous reader writes: "I have been called upon to conduct some science workshops for children of various ages, and I'm looking for some good demos. In particular, I've found that demos are most effective at getting students to think when they give a surprising or unexpected result, such as the classic two-slit experiment (or, for the extreme crowd, demonstrating the Leidenfrost effect by sticking one's hand into a vat of molten lead [PDF]). I'd like the Slashdot crowd's suggestions." Please don't do the lead one.

636 comments

  1. Baking soda and vinegar by npietraniec · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anything that explodes is cool. Baking soda and vinegar, Sodium and water, Magnesium and fire, drano and tinfoil... :)

    1. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Billly+Gates · · Score: 5, Funny
      Nah, how about hydrocloric acid and baking soda. Or how about a pound of sodium in water.

      I always had fun loading hydrocloric acid into a supersoaker-100 when I was a kid. You can buy it at any pool store. I could make nice messages in people's lawns with it. :-)

      Boy did I confuse the hell out of me ex-girlfriend when I wrote "I'm a dyke" in 15 foot letters into her lawn. She wondered how I did it since it was written in such nice cursive. I denied everything of course since her dad would beat the sh*t out of me. Its also fun to shoot at metal objects with it. I rusted a stop sign and broke off the pole in just 3 minutes. I had my supersoaker pumped high and I shot it with alot of pressure. The poisionous gas clouds that mist outward from the gun kind of suck though. Yes it can sting and burn your lungs.



      I am glad I matured beyond this. However if I lived in Redmond Washington, I would probably still have alot of fun doing this. :-)

    2. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by p3d0 · · Score: 4, Informative
      I rusted a stop sign and broke off the pole in just 3 minutes.
      Well, that's really nothing to boast about.
      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    3. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      >>>Yes it can sting and burn your lungs.

      Hey, guess what, the stinging and burning was just a symptom of the problem. The problem was that you damaged part of your lungs while inhailing those fumes at close range.

      Although you don't quite qualify for the darwin awards...

    4. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by soloport · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My kids (6) were fascinated with this science project.

      We also tried the Binaca cannon. (The kids also went nuts with Ace Ventura jokes :-/ "[Cough] Do you have some Binaca?")

      And, yes, my homeowner's insurance is rather pricey...

    5. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Funny

      Although you don't quite qualify for the darwin awards...

      Oh, come on, isn't there some kind of Darwin Honorable Mention that we can give him? Lord knows he deserves it....

      --

      I write in my journal
    6. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by spike+hay · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Magnesium and fire, drano and tinfoil... :)

      Better yet, magnesium, fire, and water. The 5,000 degree flame dissassociates the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. Fun. ;-)

      Also, drano and tinfoil produces hydrogen. The best way to do it is to put lye powder (seems to work better than drano for me), water, and tinfoil in a PLASTIC gas can. Then, attach the nozzle to a hose. The whole thing will heat up and send noxious steam and hydrogen through the hose. The bad stuff condenses in the hose and you are left with very pure hydrogen.

      You can mix the hydrogen with some air to make it explode, or you can let it float. Also, you can breath it. That produces a similar effect as helium

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    7. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really want to get through to these kids, try C4.

    8. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Anything that explodes is cool, Baking soda and vinegar, Sodium.....

      You forgot to list Micheal Jackson's Hair and Fords.

    9. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by npietraniec · · Score: 1

      When I was in middle school, we used to make and explode hydrogen balloons. Fun stuff

    10. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's sad that dumb cunts like you lie to imagine having an exciting childhood.. how sad. I think you're thinking of muriatic acid and tinfoil.. and melted the pole off a stop sign in 3 minutes? Like.. a playskool stop sign?

    11. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by billbaggins · · Score: 2

      Last I checked, the two categories for Darwin awards were "dead" and "alive but sterile" (either way, you're out of the gene pool). Though if his ex reads /., either one of those might apply as soon as she can find him... there can't be too many people who've discovered such things written in their yards...

      --
      "The best argument against democracy is a five minute chat with the average voter."
      --Winston Churchill
    12. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by vicious_sloth · · Score: 1

      actually its drano and aluminium foil, though i know most people confuse it and call aluminium foil tin foil, but tin has different proerties and not as easy to get as good ol aluminium, and it has to be the dry drano crystals, aluminium and water that makes it really explosive

      --
      Sun is Warm, Grass is Green
    13. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by clifforch · · Score: 1

      How about showing the kids how toggling the power supply on the school server really rapidly can induce catastrophic network failure, not to mention a decent flash from the PSU if you do it well enough?

      OK I fess up this wasn't my idea, see the bofh archives.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA the hot grits profit you!
    14. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow, you were an asshole as a kid... glad to hear you are over that....

    15. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      We did that in high school. Same class threw sodium in a lake too. I think I said something about that in the sodium guy article. Anyway, we did a few hydrogen ballons by taping them to the plants hanging from the ceiling. Worked well until we got a big one and blew the plant off it's hanger. Whoops. We tried one more with a kid holding it, but he didn't seem to enjoy it as much as we did.

    16. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Spyffe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Lasers are also fun. Cut a small hole low-down in the side of a clear (white, preferably) soda bottle. Fill the bottle with water (covering the hole!) and shine a laser through the bottle and onto the hole.
      Uncover the hole, and a small tube-like stream of water will come out. You can see the laser light bouncing through it in a fiber-optic effect, and the place where the stream hits a surface will glow.
      Warning: this may generate future fiber-optics engineers as a side-effect: use with care.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    17. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by fenix+down · · Score: 1
      Hydrogen peroxide and blood. I really don't remember a thing about the chemistry other than it makes a lot of heat that sterilizes your cuts and that whatever the active ingredient in the blood is, it's also in some kinds of dish soap. In any case I'm sure it's googleable.

      Anyway, you mix them together and it froths up like crazy. It's what they used for the bloody elevator scene in The Shining. They mixed a whole bunch of pig blood and strong peroxide, opened the door and let it whoosh. With soap it's not so impressive looking, but the upside is it doesn't stain everything in sight.

      IMSMC, if you use the really dilute peroxide you get in a drug store, it won't do much, you need a way stronger solution from a lab or something. When I saw this demo in HS, I'm pretty sure the peroxide solution was strong enough to burn you pretty bad if it got on your skin, and the results were hot enough to burn you if you jammed your arm down into it or something. It almost melted some of the plastic tub it was in, anyway.

    18. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by npietraniec · · Score: 2

      Actually, If you put hydrogen peroxide on potatoes you get the same effect. I can't remember what "ingredient" causes it, but it's there too.

    19. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, that's really nothing to boast about. [cnn.com]

      In no way am I condoning the actions of the stop-sign thieves, but if you steal a stop sign, you should get the punishment that is on the books for STEALING A STOP SIGN. Where I live, after about 11:00PM the trafic lights at most of the intersetions around my suburbish town go into a mode where they just blink yellow. What does that mean? Well, I thought it was common knowledge if you took a driving class that ALL INTERSECTIONS are inherently dangerous and the yellow lights are a reminder to PROCEED WITH CAUTION. I don't need a stop sign to remind me an intersection is dangerous, and quite frequently I DO stop at places there SHOULD be one before making sure it is safe to proceed.

      Yes, it was terrible those people were killed in an accident. Would their lives have been saved if the stop sign was still standing? Maybe. People DO run and ignore stop signs. Would their lives have been saved if they approached EVERY intersection with caution? Yes.

      I can't wait for the day they start prosecuting the gun manufacturers because guns are used in killings. I think it'll come shortly after the RIAA shuts down the P2P networks for contributory infringement.

    20. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by gazbo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Catalase, aka Hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase.

    21. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by OuD · · Score: 2, Informative
      Simple, fun, and safe (even for the kids):

      2 cm of water in a test tube
      A little Li on the bottom

      Light a match and put the flame right above the opening of the test tube. When the hydrogen reaches the flame, it will combust with a funny whistling sound.

      Just tell the kids not to drop the tubes.. the sound can be quite surprising.

    22. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      neat site. thank you = )

    23. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by n9hmg · · Score: 2, Informative

      it's not as bad as you'd think, though. Our bodies are relatively OK with HCl, in small quantities, for short durations.
      Ever choke on your own puke? I do, a couple of times a year. I've got reflux, well controlled, but occasionally, I wake up very unpleasantly. Our stomachs put together a pretty decent mixture. Not tremendously high molarity, but still strong stuff. Short exposure to vapor will let you heal soon.

    24. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or switching the voltage selector switch from 220 to 110 (if you live in a 220V area), the smell is horrible ;).

    25. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did this as my science project in HS. I read this in a book in our library and found it really cool, however looking back I dont know how safe it is. In anycase its making a cloud/bubble chamber that will show you the trails of radioactive particles shooting off a tiny (about the tip of a needle) amount of Radium I believe it was. Basically you need a peti dish filled with just enough methyl alcohol to coat the bottom surface. Put the lid on the petri dish and then place the dish on top of a block of dry ice. Let cool for about 2-3 mins until you get a nice cloud of vapor in the dish. Then take the radioactive material and place it next to the dish, you will shortly see trails shoot through the vapor. If you hold up a magnet you can see it affect the trails depending on the polarity. Im not sure how legal this is but I remember going to a chemistry supply store and them having a cloud chamber kit that included the petri dish with a needle stuck in a cork that was tipped with radium. Dont blame me if you cant have any kids after though.

    26. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by kisrael · · Score: 2

      Ah, Mr. Von Banken at Euclid High School...he'd often make things explode. He was even prepared for when us kiddies started clammering for it.

      Us: "Blow something up Von! Blow something up!"
      Him: [takes out balloon, inflates] "There. I blew something up"
      Us: "No! No! Make something explode!"
      Him: [Pops balloon] "There...can we get back to work now?"

      Every year he got a vat of..I dunno, liquid nitrogen? Some supercold substance that would make objects shatterable. And he'd cool down some natural gas from the little lab spigots, and light small puddles of it on fire in the hallway, sending it zooming down the hall.

      In terms of actual surprising results (as opposed to jus cool fire-n-explosions)...I always thought that the physics demonstration of how a sailcraft can tack against the prevailing wind was pretty damn non-intuitive.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    27. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by elvum · · Score: 2

      for the benefit of us non-USians - what's drano?

    28. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by msheppard · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you've got baking soda and water, why not demonstrate the fire extingushing effects of CO2. Mix baking soda and vinegar in a tall glass, only fill the glass about 1/3way with vinegar though. You want to pour the CO2 out of the glass and extinguish a candle, without pouring any vinegar out.

      M@

      --
      Krispy Cream is people
    29. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by vicious_sloth · · Score: 1

      its a clog remover, heres a link to the product, sorry i cannot tell you what the chemical makeup is, crystal drano

      --
      Sun is Warm, Grass is Green
    30. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by elvum · · Score: 1

      ah ok - probably sodium hydroxide then

    31. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Antos700 · · Score: 1

      Yep, I can remember our science teacher doing that in primary school. It made quite an impression when it looked like the science teacher was pretending to put out the flame, then out it went.

    32. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by drox · · Score: 2

      Hydrogen peroxide and blood. I really don't remember a thing about the chemistry other than it makes a lot of heat that sterilizes your cuts...

      IIRC it's a simple oxidation reaction, what with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) being a strong oxidizer and all.

      BTW it's not the heat that "sterilizes" your cuts. For that you would need something like 121C at 20 pounds of pressure for 20 minutes or so, like yer average autoclave. H2O2 is an oxidizing agent (a very powerful one - there's a reason that the stuff you buy at the drug store is only 3% H2O2) and a bleaching agent. IIRC It's the oxidization that makes things foam and the bleaching that kills (some) bacteria.

      It does NOT sterilize wounds. It can, however disinfect them sufficiently to speed healing.

      IMSMC, if you use the really dilute peroxide you get in a drug store, it won't do much, you need a way stronger solution from a lab or something.

      The dilute H2O2 from the drug store produces plenty of bubbles when applied to a bleeding cut, and would presumably do much the same thing to a blood sample in a lab demonstration. But you have to use a rather fresh bottle of H2O2. Over time it reverts to H2O, and won't do anything to the blood except lyse the red cells, which doesn't look near as impressive (not even if you look under a microscope). The problem for a lab demonstration is probably not the H2O2 (the dilute stuff needs no warning labels) but the blood. There are some pretty serious rules for handling and disposing of blood these days, in the age of AIDS and other blood-borne pathogens/diseases.

      Even animal blood requires some rather intensive paperwork for disposal. I know - I have to deal with some of it for my job.

    33. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      In my opinion,

      If tobacco companies can be held (partially) responsible for lung cancer deaths, then using the same logic, gun makers should be (partially) responsible for shootings.

    34. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Please call us "Americans". I can't speak for anyone else, but I find the term "USian" vaguely offensive.

    35. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by op00to · · Score: 1

      How about Yankee? The US isn't all of America...Depending on how you want to nitpick, you can be North American, South American, whatever. Canadians are Americans too. (I'm from New Jersey...and an American!)

    36. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by darqchild · · Score: 2, Informative

      Draino is a drain cleaner made mostly from Sodium Hydroxide, also known as Lye.

      However, getting pure flake lye is the ideal for this experiment. ( Pure lye can be puchased at hardware stores for drain cleaning/soap making, as well as from pool supply stores.)

      --
      What? Me? Worry?
    37. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh, come on, isn't there some kind of Darwin Honorable Mention that we can give him? Lord knows he deserves it....

      Yes, I have a big yellow pin-on button for him that says "Me Stupid".

    38. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      Last I checked, the two categories for Darwin awards were "dead" and "alive but sterile" (either way, you're out of the gene pool).

      That is not a very realistic criteria. For example, if you permanently burn all of your hair off, including eyebrows, you might as well be "sterile" because no women is going to touch you with a ten foot pole.

      (Well, maybe perhaps another candidate who mangled themself also.)

      My point is that "removing oneself from the genepool" is a continuous measurement, not boolean. But I suppose mangling oneself into ugliness is tougher to objectively measure than blowing your balls off.

    39. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by PD · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, I agree. If I ask a hit man to kill you, but I don't pay him a penny, then I should get the punishment that is on the books for talking. See the problem with the kind of justice that is performed with a simple lookup table?

    40. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by npietraniec · · Score: 1

      No one on the continent of North America uses the term "Yankee" unless they're referring to the baseball team. You're welcome to use it if you'd like though. We'll probably understand what you're talking about if it's in the proper context.

    41. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My point is that "removing oneself from the genepool" is a continuous measurement, not boolean.

      And I'm sure reading/writing here must fall somewhere in the non-zero area...

    42. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by nahdude812 · · Score: 2

      you're not inhaling it in to your lungs though, there are muscles and reflexes to prevent any of your bile from actually getting in to your lungs (if not, you'd have to deal with pneumonia afterwards). Inhaling HCl gas though, you're talking about directly damaging the bronchea, on a wide level throughout your entire lung. Plus, the fact that you've inhaled it means that it's adhered to the surfaces in your lungs all over, it wouldn't be coughable out, and would in fact dissolve the tissues of your deep lungs, leaving scar tissue behind, and reducing the efficiency of your lungs permanently.

      IANAD (I am not a doctor), so that's just how it would seem to me though.

    43. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by nahdude812 · · Score: 3, Informative

      actually any more, they have a harmless chemical that is a VERY good stabilizer (*sigh, been what, 4 years since college chem? You'd think I'd remember this much), which slows down the breakdown process (since H2O is the stable atom, H2O2 is very unstable, thus why it breaks down to H2O and O [the single O being the actual oxidizer] or 2H2O2 => 2H20 + O2 given the lack of a catalist). But the long and short is that you can now keep home or laboratory grade hydrogen peroxide on the shelf for a long time.

      I remember in chem class chunking the crust off the H2O2 bottle, and turning my finger tips white just from that (with out getting any moisture on my hands), because the stabilizing agent was so good that even dried there was still plenty of H2O2.

    44. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Shut the fuck up and call us Americans, or we'll declare you an enemy combatant and make you living Gitmo.

      btw, what do you call people who live in the country Australia? Do you make up a gay name for them too, since they live on a continent that shares names with the country?

    45. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by ibennetch · · Score: 1

      The whole thing will heat up and send noxious steam and hydrogen through the hose. The bad stuff condenses in the hose and you are left with very pure hydrogen...Also, you can breath it. That produces a similar effect as helium

      I don't know what type of bad stuff comes out of this type of reation; but I sure don't want to be sucking on a hose that had noxious chemicals in it...

    46. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by p3d0 · · Score: 1

      Well said! I tried to come up with a good response, but I gave up because I couldn't phrase it as well as you just did.

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    47. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by KaLogain · · Score: 1

      uh do gunmkaers say their guns are not dangerous at all? are guns addictive?

      --
      Life's a bitch, then she kills you.
    48. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've clearly never been south of the mason-dixon line, eh?

    49. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      are guns addictive?

      Well, actually if you see how much some of the folks I work with spend on guns, you'd be inclined ot say they are

    50. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting
      If tobacco companies can be held (partially) responsible for lung cancer deaths, then using the same logic, gun makers should be (partially) responsible for shootings.

      Tobacco companies engaged in a massive campaign of fraud and deceit. Are you claiming that firearms manufacturers have behaved similarly? Has any gun maker ever tried to cover up evidence about the deadly nature of gunshot wounds, for example?

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    51. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by mwolff · · Score: 0

      I have the Darwin Award book and inside there are all kinds of honorable mentions. For people who almost die.
      blah

    52. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Tobacco companies engaged in a massive campaign of fraud and deceit.

      Really? Because I've always thought that the warning on the side of each pack stating "Use of this product may cause cancer, ect, ect" was pretty much self explanatory.

      On the other hand, it's no mystery that handguns kill people. In fact, that's all they are made for. Have you ever wondered why is it that gangs and other thugs seemingly have no problems aquiring handguns?

    53. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Because I've always thought that the warning on the side of each pack stating "Use of this product may cause cancer, ect, ect" was pretty much self explanatory.

      And getting those warnings placed there was a volunatry action of big tobacco? Hell no. It took years, while the tobacco companies hid evidence, lied, and fought tooth and nail against any suggestion that smoking was unhealthy.

      On the other hand, it's no mystery that handguns kill people. In fact, that's all they are made for.

      Handguns are made to throw lead pellets very fast. Those pellets may be thrown for recreation, for defense, or for assault.

      Have you ever wondered why is it that gangs and other thugs seemingly have no problems aquiring handguns?

      The same reason crackheads have no problem acquiring rock: prohibition doesn't work.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    54. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      The noxious chemicals are dissolved in the water vapor. Therefore, when the water has condensed out, you have no noxious chemicals. Also, you would be able to smell it. The hydrogen gas in the bag is completely odorless.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    55. Re:Baking soda and vinegar by octalc0de · · Score: 1

      I tried switching the switch from 110 to 220 in my 110-volt library... the machine still worked. I was like WTF!

      Anyone got more info on how those voltage switches work?

  2. There's always... by JanusFury · · Score: 1, Funny

    There's always a chunk of sodium and a beaker full of water.

    --
    using namespace slashdot;
    troll::post();
  3. Here's a nice, simple one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Put some sugar (white cane) 1/4 full into a test tube. Pour on sulphuric acid to 1/2 full. Wait for a 1-2 minutes and watch the carbon rod emerge from the test tube amidst smoke!

    It's funny to watch.

    1. Re:Here's a nice, simple one. by fwc · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I had a high school teacher that did this. Let me preface this with this was the first year in a brand new school building.

      The teacher couldn't find an appropriately sized beaker or test tube so she used a chemistry bottle - I.E. one with a narrow neck.

      She put powdered sugar in the bottom and poured the sulphuric acid in, and everything went as planned, until the carbon compressed in the narrow neck and got stuck - forming a plug.

      Of course, the reaction was still going on in the bottom of the bottle - creating pressure along with additional carbon. Eventually the pressure built up enough to blow the previously-stuck carbon out, all over the ceiling and the front row of tables. Fortunately, noone got covered with hot acid.

      Last time I was in that room I could *still* see the melted part of the fluorescent light fixture which was right above the expiriment (They replaced the blackened ceiling tile). I also remember that all year we'd get a chuckle whenever someone who was on that front row would open their science notebook and see a burnt hole in the middle of their pages.

      Yes, I'd say that was a good learning experience... :)

    2. Re:Here's a nice, simple one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      hehe, my chem teacher used to call it 'negro penis', but he did it in a beaker about 3 inches in diameter, with alot of sugar and alot or h2so4. it would grow the whole period, to about 10 inches hight! if i remember correctly, the h2so4 has to be pretty pure (no/not much) h3o+.

  4. Any Chemistry Experiment by orcaaa · · Score: 1

    Try doing any chemistry experiment which results in a drastic color change. You can start with colorless reactants in separate beakers, and the mix them to produce a bright blue colored liquid(yeah Copper).

    --
    -- Reality is just an extended dream.
    1. Re:Any Chemistry Experiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mix aquaeous solutions of Sodium Iodide (clear) and Copper Sulfate (bright blue) to get a Iodine (brown) mixture

    2. Re:Any Chemistry Experiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just do an brusselator experiment. They are eyecatching, if you get it running.

    3. Re:Any Chemistry Experiment by JimmyBigFish · · Score: 1

      I was going to say something similar. Chemiluminescence is very cool. You start with 2 liquids, could be clear, could have some color. Darken the room and then add the chemicals together. Using the correct chemicals, the resulting solution can glow for hours.

      It's kinda like the glow sticks you'll see all over the place. But use something that gives off a neater color. Plus, if you can build some kind of swirling beaker, it can add a neat twist (no pun intended) to the experiment. I've seen it done where there was a funnel at the top and then a long spiraling tube. As the chemicals mixed together in the swirling tubes, by the time the resulting soltion got to the catch container at the bottom it was already glowing. Pretty neat looking.

      The discussions can be endless, from exothermic reaction to endothermic comparisons, resulting energy in exothermic reactions, etc.

    4. Re:Any Chemistry Experiment by fjordboy · · Score: 2

      I used to teach an activity class at Camp Susque called "The Wonder of it All" which was basically neat science expirements with the explanations. To begin every week, all the counselors would do a short skit to excite the campers about the activities. I did a skit called "red eye." I'm not sure who had the idea originally, I sure didn't make it up, but the skit was always incredible and wowed the kids.

      Here's the synopsis of the skit, I'll explain how it works afterwords:

      Sitting at a table is a bartender...washing his glasses. A rough looking character walks in and demands a glass of redeye (pink lemonade works better and is more funny). The bartender grabs a pitcher full of clear liquid and pours it into an empty glass. The glass fills up with a red/pinkish liquid. Another guy walks in, a city slicker, and asks for some water. The bartender, pouring from the same pitcher, pours a glass of "water" into an empty glass. The rough looking guy laughs at the city slicker and tells him he should try the lemonade, and that he'd pay for a new round. The bartender grabs both glasses, pours them into the pitcher (the liquid turns pink), and the bartender pours out two glasses of the pink liquid. At this point, a sheriff walks in and asks for some water. The bartender pours the pink liquid into an empty glass and the liquid instantly turns clear as it is poured in. (A lot of wows from the audience at this time). Here's the big finally: The sheriff says that lemonade is bad for you and that the two guys should try some water. The guys (strangely) agree and give their glasses of pink liquid to the bartender. The sheriff also hands his glass to the bartender and says he'll pay for the round of waters. The bartender pours the sheriff's "water" back in the pitcher which instantly turns into a clear liquid. After that, the bartender (slowly because it looks so cool) pours the pink liquids into the container (so you see a pink liquid pouring in and it becomes clear the instant it touches the water...looks very cool). The bartender then pours out a round of "water" to the three customers. *curtain* *Applause*

      The effect of this trick is pretty dramatic (without blowing anything up!), and it is QUITE simple with no special chemicals needed. The only things you need are ExLax, rubbing alcohol, and white vinegar, ammonia and water. To prepare, I would take and exlax pill and grind it up and mix it in a quarter cup of alcohol. This would provide enough solution for 10-20 skits. The mixture you just created is poor-man's phenolphthalein, a chemical that detects acid and turns red when it finds it.

      Prep: Get three clear glasses and a pitcher. Take the phenolphthalein and put a few drops (10-15) in the bottom of a clear glass (the ruffian's glass). Put about twice that much ammonia in the bottom of the sheriff's glass. Leave the cityslicker's glass empty and unchanged. In the pitcher, add a few drops of white vinegar to about a quart of water.

      How it works: when you pour the vinegar water into the ruffians glass, the phenolphthalein makes it turn a bright pink/red. When you pour it back into the pitcher (before pouring the lemonade for both the cityslicker and the ruffian), it will turn the entire pitcher to a bright pink. When you pour the vinegar/phenolphthalein water into the sheriff's glass, the ammonia (a basic substance) neutralizes the acid and the phenolphthalein will no longer be red...so the sheriff will have clear water. When you pour the sheriff's "water" back into the pitcher, any remaining pink water turns clear and as you pour the other two glasses of pink water in, they will be neutralized. Leaving you with a clear neutralized liquid.

      Again, the skit works great and it is a lot of fun...however, a few things to remember: practise it a couple of times to get the amounts down right (I always estimated with the amounts, so I'm not sure if my drops and measurements are right), and DON'T DRINK THE LIQUIDS! Ammonia is not good for you and vinegar is nasty. One more thing..I know ex-lax was taken off the market for a while because it was supposedly carcinegenic. I think the chemical that was problematic was phenolphthalein....so, I don't know if exlax can make poor-man's phenolphthalein anymore. Try it out (even w/o phenolphthalein, the replacement might do the trick), and if it doesn't work, just buy some regular phenolphthalein from a pharmacy or chemical supply house (it isn't uncommon...I remember using it in 7th grade chemistry).

      Another couple of cool hand's on expirements we did in the class were simple bakingsoda/vinegar expirements using film canisters (make sure they are the lids that pop into the container, not that ones that have the lid that goes on the outside)...add a bit of vinegar in the container, put some baking soda in the lid, pop the lid on, shake it, throw it...BOOM!

      Other expirements included balloon rockets, water rockets (with an air pump and 2 liter soda bottles...you could get the suckers to shoot REALLY high!), polymers (magician's slush powder makes it even better) that soak up 100 times their weight in water, cornstarch and water (makes a pseudo solid...hard under pressure but liquid when released), making huge epson salt crystals on pipe cleaners, etc...etc. I'll think of some more, but if any of those expirements sound like fun and you need more info on them, shoot me an email [peter@peterswift.nospam.org] and I can give you detailed instructions on each one.

      Still anything with explosions, dry ice, liquid nitrogen etc still seem to be crowd favorites.

      Another crowd pleased is covering your arm with rubbing alcohol and igniting it and running around screaming then say it didn't hurt at all (make SURE YOU SHAVE YOUR ARM FIRST! ARM HAIR BURNS AND HURTS A LOT...not speaking from experience or anything *cough*).

  5. ammonia fountain by segfaultcoredump · · Score: 3, Informative

    this worked before in a chemistry demo i gave in high school. It gives an unexpected result and it is colorful to boot :-) http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCESoft/CCA/CCA2/MAIN /AMFOUNT1/CD2R1.HTM for more details

  6. well, by kingofnopants · · Score: 0, Redundant

    well, you could always do the leidenfrost effect. Putting your hand in boiling lead is always a shocker!

    here's a pdf explaing it:

    http://www.wiley.com/legacy/college/phy/halliday 320005/pdf/leidenfrost_essay.pdf

    --
    Disco Stu was talkin' to you.
  7. Hot Wax by 403Forbidden · · Score: 5, Informative

    put a little wax in a foil dish, heat it over an Bunsen burner, then squirt water at it... HUGE fireball... People don't think it will happen, but it does, it also seems to be safer than oil

    Another one my chem teacher did was taking water and separating it into oxygen and hydrogen by using a battery and matching the terminals, then letting the hydrogen into a test tube and light it to make a loud "pop!"

    Also, anything that disolves metal with a liquid is good, like magnesium and acid or such.

    1. Re:Hot Wax by pizza_milkshake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      a science teacher of mine did this when i was in high school... it was probably the coolest demo i ever saw :) the "put the rose in the liquid nitrogen and then break it" was kinda cool but he didn't put it in long enough...

    2. Re:Hot Wax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      better yet....head some heroin over a bunson berner and show how it turns into liquid so that it can be injected...then ask for a volentear for a demonstration :-)

    3. Re:Hot Wax by soloport · · Score: 5, Interesting

      For the little piros-in-the-making, you could do as we did (as kids). Tightly wrap one layer of tin foil around the head of a match, being careful not to cover more than the phosphorous material (but no need to be anal about it, either).

      Set the match on the edge of a table, head pointing accross the room. Then heat the match head with another, lit match.

      The foil prevents the match head from lighting; The heat induced by the other match causes a reaction (small explosion) that sends the foil accross the room like a light-weight bullet.

      DISCLAIMER: I am NOT responsible if someone gets burned or maimed or you get your or someone else's eye poked out, trying this stuff.

    4. Re:Hot Wax by DetrimentalFiend · · Score: 3, Informative

      Something my chem teather did was take a pringles can (or any other can about the same size and shape) and put a pin-hole in the top and bottom. Fill the can with 100% hydrogen. Light the top of the can. At this point my chem teacher acted all dissapointed and moved on to another demo. Meanwhile, the hydrogen was burning (though no one could see or hear it). Eventually enough of the hydrogen had burnt up (and enough oxygen had gotten in to the can) that the flame mad its way into the can. The result was the can shooting up into the ceiling, a small fireball, and a LOUD noise. Everyone was in shock for a second or two before they realized that the demo had, in fact, really gone as planned.

      Maybe this isn't the best for little kids, but it certainly was interesting. Another cool one was when he made natural gas bubles and poped them with a splint on fire. Very cool looking effect. One last (and very invoulved) idea is to make an oscilating reaction. This takes a lot more prep, but you could have the different solutions pre-made, and just mix them in front of the kids.

    5. Re:Hot Wax by wwwillem · · Score: 1

      During my student time we always did this much simpler during dinner: Take a spoon, use a burning candle to fill it with melted wax, heat it over the candle until it bubbles and then put some liquid (beer most available and convenient :-) into the spoon. Indeed, flames up to the ceiling.

      Unfortunately, after the experiment the spoon is not really useful anymore for eating, so it is better used for the next "vulcano" :-)

      --
      Browsers shouldn't have a back button!! It's all about going forward...
    6. Re:Hot Wax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      During my student time we always did this much simpler during dinner: Take a spoon, use a burning candle to fill it with melted wax, heat it over the candle until it bubbles and then put some liquid

      Uhh, exactly how old are you? Im basing this question strictly on the fact that you had "candles" burning at your dinner table. I didn't think any slashdotters predated electric lighting.

      No disrespect what-so-ever, I'm just highly curious.

      P.S.
      I just burned up my mod points for this post (no pun intended).

    7. Re:Hot Wax by jedo · · Score: 1

      That sounds a lot like pocket rockets we made as kids. Difference is that we'd push a needle up under the foil to make a nozzle.
      The good ones would go up 30 ft.

    8. Re:Hot Wax by cei · · Score: 2

      Raquetball in liquid nitro, then throwing the ball and watching it shatter instead of bounce is fun too.

      Though when I saw that demo, one of the lab assistants was dipping the Oreos he was eating in the nitro before taking each bite (he was using long handled clamps for the dipping...)

      --
      This sig intentionally left justified.
    9. Re: Hot Wax by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > a science teacher of mine did this when i was in high school... it was probably the coolest demo i ever saw :)

      On the sodium + water trick, my chemistry teacher didn't know how much to use, and ended up raining chunks of flaming sodium all over the front half of the classroom.

      > the "put the rose in the liquid nitrogen and then break it" was kinda cool but he didn't put it in long enough...

      For Chemistry Club we froze chicken eggs and dropped them down the stairwell to make them shatter. Nice rectangular chunks... until they thawed out.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:Hot Wax by pyrote · · Score: 4, Informative

      And if you wrap it a little further down the (paper) match and put an un-folded paperclip along the side, you form a micro sized rocket engine. Remove the paperclip before launch and you have the tube for the exhaust.
      You can even make the paperclip into the launchpad.

      Here is some other designs:
      http://www.matchrockets.com/fire/mr.html - This one has Video and info on calculating velocity!

      http://users.bigpond.net.au/mechtoys/matchrocket.h tml

      http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/TRC/Rockets/match _rocket.html

      http://mrockets.hypermart.net/brett/

      http://www.reachoutmichigan.org/funexperiments/age subject/lessons/other/match_rocket.html

      --
      THE WORLD IS GOING TO END!!!! eventually.
    11. Re:Hot Wax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      piros-in-the-making? I think you mean pyros.

      Unless, of course, you are referring to MegaTokyo. :)

    12. Re:Hot Wax by connorbd · · Score: 2

      The wax thing you're talking about happens pretty regularly in commercial kitchens, usually when a cook throws some wine into a pan containing drippings to make sauce. Some of the water in the wine evaporates, atomizing fat in the pan drippings. A commercial gas range (a *lot* more powerful than your average Bunsen burner) generates enough heat to cause the flashover; a home range usually won't so you don't generally see it in home kitchens. You've probably seen it if you watch shows like A Cook's Tour where you see behind the scenes of restaurants. /Brian

    13. Re:Hot Wax by BlueUnderwear · · Score: 2
      one of the lab assistants was dipping the Oreos he was eating in the nitro before taking each bite (he was using long handled clamps for the dipping...)

      Why bother with clamps? Fingers are quite adequate due to the Leidenfrost effect: body heat will evaporate the liquid nitrogen on contact, forming a nice protective film. We did that in university when experimenting with ceramic supraconductors. Clamps were provided, but we quickly noticed that they were not actually needed... Don't overdo it though, or you might discover some cute yellow stains on your fingers...

      --
      Say no to software patents.
    14. Re:Hot Wax by rweir · · Score: 1

      Or, better still, put a couple of dozen matches in the one foil tube, light it and watch fire and smoke shoot a good metre out the end of it.

      Oh yeah, it's best if you point it away from your face when it ignites:)

    15. Re:Hot Wax by Ratbert42 · · Score: 2

      Another one my chem teacher did was taking water and separating it into oxygen and hydrogen by using a battery and matching the terminals, then letting the hydrogen into a test tube and light it to make a loud "pop!"

      I work with a guy that took this to the next level. He filled a milk jug. Burned most of his hair off.

    16. Re:Hot Wax by srmalloy · · Score: 1
      Something my chem teather did was take a pringles can (or any other can about the same size and shape) and put a pin-hole in the top and bottom. Fill the can with 100% hydrogen. Light the top of the can. At this point my chem teacher acted all dissapointed and moved on to another demo. Meanwhile, the hydrogen was burning (though no one could see or hear it). Eventually enough of the hydrogen had burnt up (and enough oxygen had gotten in to the can) that the flame mad its way into the can. The result was the can shooting up into the ceiling, a small fireball, and a LOUD noise. Everyone was in shock for a second or two before they realized that the demo had, in fact, really gone as planned.

      My high-school chemistry teacher had a variation on this that he used to show why gas leaks caused explosions. He would have all the desks moved to the edge of the classroom, and then brought out a 1-gallon paint can that had a hole punched in the center of the lid and another punched in the side at the bottom. A hose from the gas line was stuck into the hole on the side, and gas was fed into the can until it could be smelled at the hole in the lid. The gas was turned off, the holes were covered with two fingers, and the can was placed in the center of the cleared space. Unblocking the holes, we would hold a lit match to the hole in the top and back away. The lights were turned off, and we could see a small blue flame at the top hole, which would get smaller and smaller. About 1 second after it disappeared, there would be a dull *WHUMP*, and the lid of the can would fly up and bounce off the ceiling.

      The gas burned at the top hole while air came in through the bottom hole until the mixture inside the can reached an explosive combination, which detonated. The fixture of the lid to the can being weaker than the can, the lid would blow off.
  8. some good ones by cybercuzco · · Score: 5, Informative
    Well, given unlimited access to equipment (as in your vat of molten lead example) Here are some good demos that ive personaly seen:


    1: Using compressed air to shoot a pencil through a peice off 1/2 inch thick plywood


    2: Using a large solenoid to magnetically rip apart an aluminum can (can is placed in the center of the circle of wires and large AC is momentarily applied)


    3: Pouring liquid nitrogen on your hand (the back, not your cupped hand)


    4: Making liquid nitrogen ice cream (pour some LN2 into a cup of milk, stir rapidly)


    5 Superconducting magnetic levitation (small permanent magnet over a critically cooled superconductor)


    6:The ever classic fire extinguisher used to propel a person across a room in a rolling chair


    7: compairing the explosions made by a baloon filled with air and h2, h2, and one with both H2 and O2 in proper amounts

    --

    1. Re:some good ones by faeryman · · Score: 3, Informative

      2: Using a large solenoid to magnetically rip apart an aluminum can (can is placed in the center of the circle of wires and large AC is momentarily applied)

      sweet! i want to try that one. or any of these.

      --


      ,
      faeryman
    2. Re:some good ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2: Using a large solenoid to magnetically rip apart an aluminum can (can is placed in the center of the circle of wires and large AC is momentarily applied)

      Can somebody explain why this works? I was under the impression that Al was largely unaffected (read: not ferromagnetic) by magnetic fields.

    3. Re:some good ones by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2

      if you do the O2/H2 baloon, remember to ask all pregnant women and folks with heart conditions to stepout of the room as well as make sure every kid in the room has there ears covered tightly.

      it is very loud and puts out a prety good shock wave.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    4. Re:some good ones by EvanED · · Score: 2

      >>3: Pouring liquid nitrogen on your hand (the back, not your cupped hand)

      This would dovetail nicely with the molten lead demonstration.

    5. Re:some good ones by cybercuzco · · Score: 4, Informative

      Youre right, it isnt ferromagnetic, but when a large alternating current is applied to the solenoid, it induces a current in the aluminum, since its a good conductor. The current that is induced produces a magnetic field that is opposite to the one produced by the current in the wires. This rips the can apart in a very cool and explosive manner.

      --

    6. Re:some good ones by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 5, Funny

      >>3: Pouring liquid nitrogen on your hand (the back, not your cupped hand)

      This would dovetail nicely with the molten lead demonstration.


      And, in all likelihood, you could wrap up the session with the ever-popular "trip to the emergency room" demonstration.

      --

      I write in my journal
    7. Re:some good ones by alienw · · Score: 2

      That would be an induction coil, not a solenoid.

    8. Re:some good ones by gr3g · · Score: 1

      My chemistry teacher did one where he cut a liter pop in half, hooked up a bunsen burner to the cap side, and the bottle was filled with soap water. If he mixed the soap right he could get a standing column about seven feet high that he would then ignite. He did this when we were watching a movie, so all we say was the room get bright and intense heat. Needless to say it scared the crap out of us for a second.

      --
      "It has always been this way and it won't change, god bless the fucked up USA" The Briefs
    9. Re:some good ones by the+gnat · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I know this is horrendously off-topic, but I'd just like to say that's one badass user name you have. I'm glad someone else enjoyed that book as much as I did.

    10. Re:some good ones by tunah · · Score: 2
      2: Using a large solenoid to magnetically rip apart an aluminum can (can is placed in the center of the circle of wires and large AC is momentarily applied)

      I always thought aluminium was non magnetic. Why does this work?

      --
      Free Java games for your phone: Tontie, Sokoban
    11. Re:some good ones by sco08y · · Score: 1

      Real men use their nuts for demos.

    12. Re:some good ones by mythr · · Score: 1

      The cans must not be pure aluminum. They are most likely an alloy containing small amounts of magnetic metals (my guess would be iron). All you need is a little, with enough current.

    13. Re:some good ones by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 2

      You know, a quick google search will show you that lots of people enjoyed that book as much as both you and I did. You can find "Twirlips" all over Usenet.

      I'm just lucky that is wasn't already taken.

      I'm also amazed that nobody has snatched up "vrimini.org" yet. ;-)

      This post will mean nothing to the innocent bystanders who haven't read A Fire Upon the Deep.

      --

      I write in my journal
    14. Re:some good ones by Raunch · · Score: 1

      > 2: Using a large solenoid to magnetically rip
      > apart an aluminum can (can is placed in the
      > center of the circle of wires and large AC is
      > momentarily applied)

      I was under the impression that aluminum was non-magnetic.

      How does this work?

      --
      George II -- Spreading Freedom and American values, one bomb at a time.
    15. Re:some good ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Piont being that you can use a solenoid as a large inductance coil... Duh!

    16. Re:some good ones by Marillion · · Score: 2
      Well, given unlimited access to equipment (as in your vat of molten lead example) Here are some good demos that ive personaly seen:

      I like putting about a 1/4 cup of sugar into a coffee mug, then add sufuric acid. The acid carbonizes the sugar and this black mass rises from the coffee mug. Don't expect the use the coffee mug again.

      --
      This is a boring sig
    17. Re:some good ones by kenthorvath · · Score: 3, Informative

      All you need is an electrically conductive material. It does not need to be metal, but metal works best. The strong magnetic field induces an electrical charge in the metal. Do this rapidly enough and with different sign changes often enough and presto! you'll get a ripped apart can. Search "eddy currents" on google for more info.

    18. Re:some good ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The AC running through the coil makes an alternating magnetic field. The aluminum can acts as a shorted secondary turn of a transformer -- which means that you get very high currents, which heat the aluminum (weakening it), and also generating a magnetic field -- the interplay between the can's magnetic field and the coil's magnetic field applies force to the (weakened) aluminum, and !POW!

    19. Re:some good ones by billbaggins · · Score: 2
      if you do the O2/H2 baloon, remember to ask all pregnant women and folks with heart conditions to stepout of the room as well as make sure every kid in the room has there ears covered tightly.
      Not to mention warning your colleagues... my chem teacher did this, having forgotten that we had had several bomb threats that week... much hilarity ensued, let me tell you...
      --
      "The best argument against democracy is a five minute chat with the average voter."
      --Winston Churchill
    20. Re:some good ones by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

      #6

      Yes this is fun, but as my physics teacher showed be sure to have lots of room (length) he ended up shooting through the door to the storage room and crashing. Good times.

      the balloon is allways good. I had professors (the same one as the rocket chair i think) just do this from time to time for fun.

      Giant bowling ball pentulums can be fun to.

      A good one to talk about pressure and state changes is a long clear tube of water with an air space (evacuated i belive) seal the ends. Then suddenly throw it down wards with the one end straight up. the water will go to the top but not all of it can shift to to the vacum effect on the other end so there will be a low pressure zone in the middle of the water column, with the low pressure the water can boil at room temp. causing a explosion. The tube won't break but it's a fun thing to watch. Bout the only non boring thing i saw in a thermo class.

    21. Re:some good ones by hozzies · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For a physics seminar a while back I was required to present to a bunch of middle-schoolers a short bit on atomic clocks and laser cooling. I quickly realized that much of this stuff was way over their heads and, more importantly, outside their interests.

      What did get them sitting up straight was a cylinder of liquid nitrogen I had ready to help me compare temperatures. (I had planned on showing just how cold cold can get.) Every time I spilled a bit on the floor they all screamed in delight. I ended up borrowing a few balloons from a fellow classmate who was presenting the same day and demonstrating instead the relationships of pressure, temperature, and volume.

      My suggestions? Go with something fairly easy to understand (especially if you're planning on keeping the attention of a wide range of ages) and also fairly exciting. Oh, and don't be afraid to improvise. :) Good luck, buddy.

    22. Re:some good ones by mdwebster · · Score: 1

      Hell, I have read it, enjoyed it myself and still didn't know what the hell you were talking about ... :)

      No memory for names, I guess ...

    23. Re:some good ones by Ledskof · · Score: 1

      Oh wow! I remember now. I'm definitely going to read that again.
      Hmm now who did I loan it do... maybe I'll just buy the hardback.

      --
      This is my sig. The post is over.
    24. Re:some good ones by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Twirlip of the Mists is one of the posters on the galactic Net. He comes across as either being kind of a newbie, or as communicating in a language so far away from English as to make meaningful translation almost impossible. His big catchphrase is, "Hexapodia is the key insight," and he talks about what humans' having six legs means in the grand scheme of things.

      Of course, toward the end of the book a certain revelation is made that puts Twirlip's comments into an entirely different light. Vinge has been overheard saying that, in fact, Twirlip was the only character in the book to really understand what was going on. He was being mistranslated, but only slightly, and not at all in the way that the other characters thought.

      He's my hero. ;-)

      --

      I write in my journal
    25. Re:some good ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another cool one I saw in a museum: pouring hot water on liquid nitrogen. It makes some sort of cloud on the ground. Very impressive.

    26. Re:some good ones by wheany · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One very easy and SAFE experiment is the one with an office chair and a bicyle tire.

      Someone sits on the (rotating) chair and holds the tire in front of him. The tire is spun, and then the person sitting in the chair rotates the tire.

      Result: The chair starts spinning.

      If the person rotates the tire fast enough, he could fall, but othervise the experiment is pretty safe, no explosions or fire, but unexpected none the less...

    27. Re:some good ones by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      Okay, I'm going to have to re-read that section, because I totally missed what you're describing... care to give me a page/chapter number? :) I've been re-reading bits and pieces of that and the sequel all summer, because they're too rich and complex to take in at once- especially when you stay up till 7am reading them.

    28. Re:some good ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or have liquid nitrogen in your mouth and exhaust the white smoke. Funnier than you think. It's not as cold as one would expect. Don't swallow it though since it expands a LOT.

    29. Re:some good ones by cybercuzco · · Score: 2

      If you read the PDF linked to in the articlee, youll see that this guy did this about 6 times with no incident. On the 7th try, the LN2 contacted his tooth and shattered the enamel. His dentist reccommended that he stop doing the experiment.

      --

    30. Re:some good ones by Jim+Hall · · Score: 1

      I would also add these, from my Physics student days at UW-RF:

      • Bernoulli's Principle demo - get a fan blower, hooked up to a hose. Use the fast-moving air to suspend a ping-pong ball in mid-air, even at an angle.
      • liquid Nitrogen cannon - get a 12" lead pipe, seal off one end. Carefully place a small container of liquid Nitrogen into the pipe, place a cork stopper firmly in the other end. Now give the thing a single, serious shake to spill the Nitrogen all over the inside the pipe, and the sudden boiling of the Nitrogen pops off the cork.
      • 2L bottle detonator - get some dry ice, and put a few slices into an empty 2L pop bottle. Tightly cap. Weight the bottle, and drop it into a large container of water so it is entirely submerged (such as a large outdoors Rubbermaid trash can.) It's amazing how long it takes the pressure to build up to cause the bottle to rupture, and it's even more amazing the splash that you get.
    31. Re:some good ones by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 2

      Matter of fact, I just happen to have my paperback copy here on the shelf. It's the 1993 printing, with 613 pages.

      Twirlip makes his first appearance on page 226, in chapter 18. (Then on page 247 there's the creepy message from Hanse that begins, "I have obtained specimens from the human worlds in our volume." Shudder.) He then shows up again on 398 (chapter 32), and finally on 484 (chapter 35).

      --

      I write in my journal
    32. Re:some good ones by bottlecap · · Score: 1

      It doesn't, aluminum is non magnetic, the solenoid would have no effecton it. The author is proably thinking back to when pop cans were made out of steel.

    33. Re:some good ones by jafuser · · Score: 2
      My understanding is that Aluminum is actually diamagnetic, which does mean it would be affected by magnetic fields, only in the opposite way of ferromagnetic/paramagnetic metals.

      Scroll down to the area titled "Slow Fall 2" at this site for a cool example of diamagnetic braking.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    34. Re:some good ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, this works very well. An pulsed coil can induce eddy currents in non-ferrous metals, which stress the material and can literally rip it apart, if the material is thin enough. here's a company that builds an electromagnetic dent remover for aircraft wings: http://www.electroimpact.com NOTE: This does not work on steel...much to the chagrin of the auto body world.

    35. Re:some good ones by srmalloy · · Score: 2, Funny
      3: Pouring liquid nitrogen on your hand (the back, not your cupped hand)

      In college, the TA running a physics lab on instrumentation had an amusing sense of humor. The day we did the thermocouple experiment (measuring the resistance of a thermocouple in water of various temperatures from freezing to boiling, and in liquid nitrogen), he showed us the 'proper' way to dispose of the liquid nitrogen (each of us having about four ounces in a styrofoam cup) -- you go out into the hall, and listen at other doors to determine which ones have lectures going on, then make a standard bowling delivery at the door, shooting the contents of the cup under the bottom of the door. The liquid nitrogen evaporates almost instantly upon hitting the floor, so all that happens is a cloud of fog suddenly billowing under the door.

      The professors apparently were long familiar with these disposals, because we never heard one of them miss a beat on their lectures. However, if you could catch a Freshman Physics class, who'd never been exposed to the joke, the shrieks were amazing to hear.
  9. Burning money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I was young, a chem teacher did a demo where he covered a dollar bill in some form type of alcohol, and burned it... the alcohol burned at a much lower temp than the bill... so the bill stayed intact. Looked pretty cool though. You'd probably have to try a few different alcohols to find one that made a visible flame (lots of them burn with a flame that you can hardly see).

    1. Re:Burning money... by shadowj · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I suspect that what you saw was a bill doused in off-the-shelf rubbing alcohol, which is basically methanol diluted with water. Soak the bill and light it; the alcohol will burn off, and the water remaining behind will keep the bill cool enough to avoid charring. A distantly related demo involves boiling water in a paper cup over a fierce fire... it's most dramatic in a roaring fireplace, but a bunsen burner ought to be good for a laugh, too. The water keeps the paper cup cool enough (100 C, of course) to avoid burning.

      --

      --Larry

      Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence

    2. Re:Burning money... by KjetilK · · Score: 2

      This is actually a lot more fun if you put your hand on fire. It is possible and quite safe. Add some salt to the mix to, to get a yellow flame rather than a blue one.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  10. i have the perfect plan by faeryman · · Score: 0
    stretch your anus out, like the goatse guy, at the start and get thier attention. then here are some demonstations

    • take a 2L pop bottle. put some muratic acid in (not much), and some strips of tin foil. cap the bottle, then throw it far away. get everyone back and watch as it swells to watermelon size then explode.
    • brake fluid + powdered pool cleaner = lots of smoke and fire.
    • make some sulfuric acid: heat some sulfur, catch the fumes in a jar, add water and mix.
    • magnesium + water! need i say more :)
    i used to do these when i was in jr high. minus the ass part though.
    --


    ,
    faeryman
    1. Re:i have the perfect plan by orasio · · Score: 1

      i used to do these when i was in jr high. minus the ass part though.

      Or was it the other way around?

  11. Liquid Nitrogen Ice cream by bogusbrainbonus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Get some milk, some cream, some sugar, some vanilla, and any other candies you may want to add, mix it with LN2 until it's frozen, and eat!!! "Steams" a lot (the steam is actually frozen water vapor). Directions here Yum!

    1. Re:Liquid Nitrogen Ice cream by octalgirl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, the guys are on board today! Almost every post has something to do with blowing things up! These are kids - do we really want to send them away with the message that science is all about creating explosive devices at home?

      And what about girls? They really are not interested in the destructive side of things. I like this ice cream one. Everyone likes ice cream. Parents won't freak out when their kids come home with a new way to make a snack, but watching Junior shoot a can across the living room is sure to rile them. Or how about something from CSI? Forensic science is becoming extremely popular and many public schools are beginning to integrate it into their curriculum.

    2. Re:Liquid Nitrogen Ice cream by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would make farting cold-comfort

    3. Re:Liquid Nitrogen Ice cream by fazil · · Score: 1

      Pfft. Blowing stuff up got me in to science in a big way. Ya can't beat blowing stuff up.

      If girls liked blowing things up.. maybe they'd be better at science.

      Science in a lot of ways is about harnessing energy to do work. Not cooking class.. We have Home Economics for that :)

      --
      -=-Ze End-=-
    4. Re:Liquid Nitrogen Ice cream by jolshefsky · · Score: 1

      Why not just use melted ice cream ... perhaps let it melt throughout the other experiments then "reconstitute" it with liquid nitrogen and serve.

      --
      --- Jason Olshefsky

      Karma: Poser (mostly affected by adding this line long after everyone else did)

    5. Re:Liquid Nitrogen Ice cream by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      Science in a lot of ways is about harnessing energy to do work. Not cooking class..

      Actually, my way-cool HS chem teacher had a lab experiment with a title like "Preparation of protein suspension in a carbohydrate base", which was making peanut brittle.

      He also showed us how to build a simple still.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  12. Collection of Chemistry Demos by segfaultcoredump · · Score: 5, Informative

    The University of Wisconsin has a site at http://genchem.chem.wisc.edu/demonstrations/ that contains links to dozens of demos (with raitings) for various categories. I'm sure there is something for each age/interest level there

    1. Re:Collection of Chemistry Demos by bellings · · Score: 4, Informative

      Another guy at the UW has a page up for a demo he gives each year called "The Wonder of Physics." I remember going to this thing once when I was 12 or 13, and being extremely impressed.

      Check it out -- I remembering him (and some graduate students) putting a lot more effort into the actual presentation than he does into the webpage...

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    2. Re:Collection of Chemistry Demos by smnolde · · Score: 2

      I used to make nylon for demonstration when I was in school years ago. Hellifi could do it again. It required two liquid monomers creating a phase boundary where the reaction occured.

      But the gist was this: Pour the denser of the monomers in a flask (30ml is sufficient) and pour the other monomer on top (use equal amount). The two will mix at the phase boundary. With tweezers, reach in and pick up the center of the polymer created at the phase boundary and pull straight up and spool around a pencil or cylinder. Since the reaction occurs at room temperature and at where the two liquids meet, the two will make nylon.

      IIRC one of the monomers was a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA).

    3. Re:Collection of Chemistry Demos by smnolde · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Another great and surprising experiment: lighting charcoal with the assistance of liquid oxygen and a match!

      See the photos here!

    4. Re:Collection of Chemistry Demos by frankenstein · · Score: 2, Informative

      I used to be a part of an organization named Science Theatre. We have demos in chem, physics, comp sci, engineering, etc. There are several demos on our website and have a book published of physics demos and another in the works. They go out and do shows for school age children and the general public and see approx 10,000 people a year. They can be found at: http://www.sciencetheatre.org. All of the demos have been worked on significantly to make them easy to do and fun for the audience. They have also tested all of the demos for safety.

  13. Levitation thing by Turbyne · · Score: 2, Informative

    Get a petri dish, a plate magnet, a superconductor, and some liquid nitrogen. Put the petri dish on top of the plate magnet, and the superconductor inside the petri dish. Slowly pour in the liquid nitrogen. When the superconductor reaches superconductivity, it'll float.

    (or do something along those lines...)

    --
    ~A'Ëq'i4d)^'$ÊSÈòB
    1. Re:Levitation thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My girlfriend has been out of town for a few days on a family trip. You can bet your bottom dollar I'll be making her levitate when she gets back tonight.

    2. Re:Levitation thing by Nate+Eldredge · · Score: 1

      That is a fun one. And if you tap the superconductor with a toothpick, you can make it spin...

    3. Re:Levitation thing by Simon+Field · · Score: 1

      Here's how to do it without the superconductor: "http://scitoys.com/scitoys/scitoys/magnets/pyroly tic_graphite.html" Simple, inexpensive, no cryogenics needed.

  14. THE carbon rod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    The inanimate carbon rod?

    "In rod we trust"

    1. Re:THE carbon rod? by TheOrquithVagrant · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. This carbon rod is quite animate, at least as long as the chemical reaction is still progressing.

      And I really doubt the rod produced in this process would hold any shuttle doors shut... :)

  15. Microwave of Course! by coryboehne · · Score: 4, Informative

    I would suggest the use of a microwave oven and a variety of things, my favorites are:

    1: Lightbulb, metal in milk to insulate, don't use anything with mercury in it.

    2: CD-Rom (all kinds work, try different ones)

    3: place a toothpick in a peice of cork, place in center of microwave, place 3 peices of cork around center cork and support fishbowl(any peice of glass that is globe like will work, the more like a globe the better) light the toothpick, place glass on top of corks around edge(for ventilation) and start microwave

    4. grape, cut the grape in half, then carefully slice the grape again in half, but leave small peice of skin connecting quarters. Fold together to make a flat side and place on microwave floor.

    Hints: use old microwave, preferably with clear front faraday cage setup, in addition to this also place a glass of water in the back of the microwave to avoid destroying the magnetio. Tinfoil and other items are fun too, play around and have fun. Ohhh yea, no gerbils etc. Have fun.

    1. Re:Microwave of Course! by coryboehne · · Score: 4, Informative

      Doh! I did'nt include a cool link in the above post... A great site with videos of most of the reactions is available at http://members.tripod.com/~hochwald/microwave/micr o.html And what ever you do, try these out first (some experiments can actually cause explosions or fumes) Probably outside experiments are the best, possibly even destroying the light in the microwave and doing them at night (should put on a good show) Of course the damage done to the magnetio is definately a factor, so be sure to have a spare handy, but with the price of microwaves (used) at around 20 bux, that should'nt be a big problem.

    2. Re:Microwave of Course! by dirvish · · Score: 2

      See my sig for more microwave ideas.

  16. sodium explosion video by call+-151 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Theodore Gray, of Mathematica fame, and recent winner of an IgNobel prize for his wooden periodic table table has a page nicely documenting what happens when you drop sodium into water, which includes a nice quicktime video of a drop of sodium into a lake.

    --
    It's psychosomatic. You need a lobotomy. I'll get a saw.
    1. Re:sodium explosion video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cripes. Repeating two very recent Slashdot stories in a single post. You trying to be an editor?

    2. Re:sodium explosion video by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2

      the dude goes on and on about how all the evidence has been of poor quality, then his damn tape is just as poor...it is dark, and the explosion seems to not have been documented as the camera begins to wave wildly just as the explosion takes place....

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:sodium explosion video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did the video go on to show dead fish and other aquatic life?

  17. Re:I know one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish I could be thirteen again so I could find that link half as funny as you did.

  18. Mod parent down! by csmorris · · Score: 1

    I don't think the kids' parents would be too pleased if you did any of that. 8O

    --
    I place the blame squarely upon tight pants.
  19. Fixed link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCESoft/CCA/CCA2/MA IN /AMFOUNT1/CD2R1.HTM

  20. angular momentum; hands-on stuff by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Informative
    I always get a good reaction with angular momentum stuff. Spin a weighted bike wheel, sit down on a rotating stool, and flip it over. Ask two students to get on the stool and find some way to cooperate so that they can start rotating together. (They can't.) Spin the wheel and hang it from a rope so it precesses.

    But better than a demonstration is anything hands-on, especially with young kids. You can do some cool stuff with the new neodymium magnets. You can hook up an oscilloscope to a microphone and let them look at their voices. (Or use computer oscilloscope software.)

  21. Leidenfrost demo. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 3, Informative

    (or, for the extreme crowd, demonstrating the Leidenfrost effect by sticking one's hand into a vat of molten lead [PDF]).

    Ah yes, this would be the one where the paper says, "Never, ever do this.". [If you use too much water, you get a steam explosion that sends molten lead everywhere.]

    You might be able to do a safer variant by dipping apples or bananas or what-have-you, though, with a blast shield between the crucible and the audience, though (and a leather apron and gauntlets and visor, unless you *like* liquid metal scars).

    1. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by Heynow21 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Any experiment requiring a blast shield get's my vote. "You might be able to do a safer variant by dipping apples or bananas or what-have-you, though, with a blast shield between the crucible and the audience, though (and a leather apron and gauntlets and visor, unless you *like* liquid metal scars)."

    2. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by Tomble · · Score: 1
      And Everything2.com has numerous stories of people at science demo type things (much like this one being planned, I suppose) having the Leidenfrost effect demonstrated on them the other way, with liquid nitrogen in their mouths, and it going horribly wrong and putting them in hospital in mind-blowing agony, with their bowels permanently screwed.

      Granted, I haven't seen any proof for those stories on e2, and I'm sure that the Leidenfrost effect is real enough and does what it's claimed to when it works, but that sort of thing does kind of reinforce my preference to not just take someones word that they know exactly what they're doing in that sort of situation, you know?

      --
      Be careful! New moon tonight.
    3. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by stratjakt · · Score: 2

      A guy got an honorary Darwin award for doing that. (Honorary because he didn't die)

      If you just hold the liquid N2 on your tongue, you can blow smoke rings, and it's pretty cool.

      If you swallow it, you're in big trouble when it turns into gas in your stomach and expands to many many times its original volume, inflating you like a party balloon.

      Though, watching the local Bill Nye wannabe's stomach swell as he collapses to the ground gasping for breath and writhing in agony would have went over BIG in my high school.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2
      If you swallow it, you're in big trouble when it turns into gas in your stomach and expands to many many times its original volume, inflating you like a party balloon.

      So... _theoretically_, burping (either repeatedly or just in one long sustained belch) immediately after swallowing LN2 would save you some major discomfort?

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    5. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by Deep+Penguin · · Score: 1

      It's an amazing burp... really. So much pressure that it makes no noise.

      LN2 expands about 720 times when warmed to 98.6.

      I do the smoke-ring trick... you do _not_ want to swallow it.

    6. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This explains why I didn't get burnt 30 years ago when I was cleaning the lead pot on a Nebitype type casting machine and slipped.

      And all these years I just thought I was lucky.

    7. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by taniwha · · Score: 1

      I've seen the LN2 demo, my physics prof did it 25 years ago - she would blow a plume of LN2 across the room - definitely made the point

    8. Re:Leidenfrost demo. by KjetilK · · Score: 2
      I've done that demonstration., it's cool, and I have a hard time understanding how you can possibly have so much water on your hand you get this problem.

      Throwing lead up in the air is cool too, they come down as drops... :-)

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  22. My personal favorite by Boglin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My favorite was always the standing fire wave. First, take a metal pipe and cap both ends. Drill hole at even intervals along the end of the pipe. Cap both ends, but put a speaker on one end. Also, attach a nozzle where you can pump gas into the pipe. For the show, hook the gas line up to the nozzle and turn it on. Next, set a fire on the gas coming out of each hole. You should get a series of flames of even height. Now turn on the speaker and hook it up to source with a constant frequency. If you set the frequency to one of the resonant frequencies of the tube, you should see the flames forming a wave. (Please note, I am just trying to recall how this was done from memory. I may have left out some crucial step that stops this from just being one big pipe bomb. Don't try this at home unless you are sure of what you are doing.)

    1. Re:My personal favorite by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      Something like this? _Very_ cool looking. I'm curious, to what degree does the sound bouncing off the far end affect the flames?

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    2. Re:My personal favorite by billbaggins · · Score: 2
      I'm curious, to what degree does the sound bouncing off the far end affect the flames?
      That bouncing is why you set the speaker to the (well, a) resonant frequency of the tube. The waves going one direction reinforce the waves going the other way. Any other frequency would probably not result in much visible effect, since the reverberations would tend to even out.
      --
      "The best argument against democracy is a five minute chat with the average voter."
      --Winston Churchill
  23. You need a copy of ... by Devlin-du-GEnie · · Score: 2, Informative
    ... Vacuum Bazookas, Electric Rainbow Jelly, and 27 Other Saturday Science Projects by Neil Downie. $13.27 at Amazon and it ships in 24 hours.

    The book is chock full of science-geekly fun. The demonstrations are clear and exciting. Kids will love them. The accompanying explanations are in-depth. If you do them all and learn why they work, you'll soak up a fair amount of physics.

  24. Here's a classic by foistboinder · · Score: 5, Informative

    Suspend a cinder brick (or other heavy object) from the ceiling with a rope. Pull it back until it just touches your forehead and let go so it swings like a pendulum. It you don't move, it will just touch your forehead on the return swing (or a little short of it). Listen to the gasps of horror from those in your audience who think your head is about to be smashed.

    1. Re:Here's a classic by Turbyne · · Score: 5, Funny
      NOTE: I've seen a professor sucessfully fail at this experiment, with a little impact crater on his face.
      DO NOT PUSH THE PENDULUM ON RELEASE
      --
      ~A'Ëq'i4d)^'$ÊSÈòB
    2. Re:Here's a classic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so THAT'S what I did wrong. I tried this, but instead of pulling the brick towards me, I pushed it away from me and let go.

      I was in the hospital for 6 weeks.

    3. Re:Here's a classic by Mmmrky · · Score: 4, Funny

      My hs physics teacher was fond of his suspended bowling ball and used it in numerous demonstrations--all very well and good until the support breaks and the ball flies into an unsuspecting student.

      Moral of the story--Flying bowling balls have a considerable amount of momentum, and they hurt.

    4. Re:Here's a classic by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

      NOTE: I've seen a professor sucessfully fail at this experiment, with a little impact crater on his face.

      Easy way out. Just say,
      "I made a crater on my face on purpose because today is Astronomy Day, kids!"

    5. Re:Here's a classic by isayhello · · Score: 1

      My high school physics teacher used to do this with a cleaver starting at his chin. And then he'd lean back in his chair and lift it to a more sensitive region. Works a little better on the high-school crowd than gradeschoolers, tho. :)

    6. Re:Here's a classic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or if you're really brave...

      One time I saw this same thing done with an axe. Of course, the one demonstrating this showed the axe was sharp first by shopping a vegetable or something (can't remember what, it was a long time ago).

    7. Re:Here's a classic by billbaggins · · Score: 3, Funny

      Or, more likely... "I bade a crader on by pace begause doday is Astrodoby Day, gids!"

      --
      "The best argument against democracy is a five minute chat with the average voter."
      --Winston Churchill
    8. Re:Here's a classic by knodi · · Score: 1

      With a sufficiently massive object, this can be, suprisingly, kinda dangerous.

      When a person "in the know" pulls back, they know they must stay perfectly still. Therefore, they lock their bodies in a rigid vertical.

      However, to hold back the mass while rigid, you have to lean back a few degrees. Then, after releasing the mass, your rigid body leans back to vertical to compensate. All subconsciously (who ever THINKS about keeping their balance?).

      End results? The mass DOES tend to smack your face. Suprise! The kids will always crack up, and they'll go home thinking physics is for chumps.

      --
      Austin is more fun than Dallas.
    9. Re:Here's a classic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At my high school the swinging bowling ball was securely anchored to the floor of the next level, as was the row of swinging bowling balls (when the teacher was out, we'd get aluminum cans and fire them across the room with the bowling ball pendulum row.. what's the name of that device with the many suspended balls that transfers energy through the balls in the middle so only the ball on the end bounces?)

    10. Re:Here's a classic by Jim+Hall · · Score: 1

      This one is better to do if you mount a post into a bowling ball. Balls are round, so they don't have sharp edges that can smack you when the object swings back in your direction.

      -jh

    11. Re:Here's a classic by egarrido16 · · Score: 1

      I've found that a properly mounted bowling ball works best. One does not need to worry about any torque applied to the ball and string/wire.

      It's easy too: all you need to do is properly have a hole drilled in which you can place a metal rod with a loop at the end. Attach the wire to the loop (very securely), attach the other end to the ceiling, and voila, you have a much reduced chance of looking like a computer game character with the "flat" cheat turned on.

      --
      "Brevity is the soul of wit." -Polonius, Hamlet.
    12. Re:Here's a classic by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      Pull it back until it just touches your forehead and let go so it swings like a pendulum. It you don't move, it will just touch your forehead on the return swing (or a little short of it).

      There's a scene in Contact (the book, at least - still haven't seen the film) involving this with a huge pendulum. Back in high school, my physics teacher and I had both read it, and I don't think anyone else in the class yet had. He recrutied me to participate in our own version, with a bowling ball (duckpin, IIRC) suspended from the ceiling swinging toward my face.

      After I stepped away, he also demo'd what would happen if you gave the pendulum a little extra push as you let it go - it went wooshing through the spot where my head had been. So if you go this, be careful when you let it go!

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    13. Re:Here's a classic by azcoffeehabit · · Score: 1

      Oh no, someone is gonna try this at a party.

      --
      :)(smile)
    14. Re:Here's a classic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Newton's pendulum

  25. Potassium by Mister+Transistor · · Score: 1

    I have a few cubes of elemental potassium (stored in anhydrous mineral oil!) It's a greyish-silver chunk of metal in a cube about the size of a bullion cube. It is soft; you can cut the edge off with an X-acto knife. A small chip about the size of a grain of rice when thrown into water (toilet bowl) will fizzle and dance around and burst into a cool purple flame!

    I also have some elemental Sodium, which will also fizzle and dance on the water, but will not burst aflame, unless you put it into a wad of spittle (yecch!) then it bursts into a bright yellow-orange flame.

    --
    -- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --
  26. A good old classic. by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

    Just have a vat of liquid nitogen, put in something (a rose for example), remove it and shatter it by throwing it on the floor (or use a hammer). Fun experiment, and looks impressive with the fumes of the liquid nitrogen ;-)
    I wouldn't try the hand-in-boiling-lead anytime soon. Back when I was a kid, I made figures out of lead and I got some nice burns because of that. Lead splatting on your hands is not fun, and the Leidenfrost experiment didn't really help.

    --
    Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    1. Re:A good old classic. by EvanED · · Score: 2

      >>Just have a vat of liquid nitogen, put in something (a rose for example), remove it and shatter it by throwing it on the floor (or use a hammer). Fun experiment, and looks impressive with the fumes of the liquid nitrogen ;-)

      Racquet balls work very well. Start the demonstration with them: start playing with a normal one. Someone takes it, dunks it in LN2, and starts playing again...

      >>I wouldn't try the hand-in-boiling-lead anytime soon. Back when I was a kid, I made figures out of lead and I got some nice burns because of that. Lead splatting on your hands is not fun, and the Leidenfrost experiment didn't really help.

      It's one of those "very impressive if you can do it but very dangerous if you can't" experiments.

    2. Re:A good old classic. by russellh · · Score: 1
      Just have a vat of liquid nitogen, put in something (a rose for example), remove it and shatter it by throwing it on the floor (or use a hammer). Fun experiment, and looks impressive with the fumes of the liquid nitrogen ;-)

      I remember this being done with live bugs of various types. They shatter, of course, but when they thaw, all the various parts of them begin to move again... eewww!

      --
      must... stay... awake...
    3. Re:A good old classic. by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Now *that* is cool... I should try it the next time I have liquid nitrogen at hands...not that that happens often :-)

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    4. Re:A good old classic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -- Remember Christine Watkins

      Uhhh... who?

    5. Re:A good old classic. by mediahacker · · Score: 1

      Start the class wearing a large band-aid on your knuckle. When it comes time for the demo, leave the room shortly ( to get the Liquid N2 ). Bend your finger and use another band-aid to tape on a small cocktail wiener at the end. Dip the end of your "finger" into the beaker of LN2 and hit it with a hammer. Especially good if bots of it spray out into the classroom...

  27. Simple diffuser, blows to suck by mysterious_mark · · Score: 1

    On the discharge side of a shop vacuum (such that it is blowing) put an large funnel, this makes a diffuser. Though the air is blowing out, objects will be sucked into the diffuser because the higher air velocity in the back of the diffuser creates a lower pressure, (Bernoulli principle, conservation of energy). Counter intuitive, and cool, one of my favorite demos when I taught physics. Another cool demo is how to make a Magneto-Hydrodynamic engine in a petri - dish, a battery current causes the water to swirl, email for details. MM

  28. sound interference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    My physics professor did some neat demonstrations about constructive and destructive interference of waves. One of the experiments involved setting up two speakers side by side, playing the same note. As he rotated the set of speakers, the constructive and destructive fringes would pass over each member of the audience. To be effective, you need to get the right combination of separation of speakers and note.

    It might not be as impressive to kids who weren't studying sound waves, though.

    1. Re:sound interference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also known as a "Comb Filter"
      2 mics in close proximity to a single sound source will show this effect as well

  29. Demos Galore by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    The American Chemical Society (ACS.org) and affiliated sections are full of resources for this sort of thing. Every year they put on a big program called National Chemistry Week'. The National Academy of Sciences (nas.edu, nationalacademies.org) has outreach programs as well.

  30. Powdered metal by xX_sticky_Xx · · Score: 1

    Get a pound or so of finely divided iron, a bunsen burner, and a fan. Turn the fan on "high" and point it towards the burner and release the powdered iron. Guaranteed excitement!

    --

    ---

    I didn't want to leave this space blank.
    1. Re:Powdered metal by krugdm · · Score: 2

      Fill a funnel with sawdust and attach a hose to the end. Blow the sawdust out towards a flame and get a huge fireball.

    2. Re:Powdered metal by soloport · · Score: 2

      Really dry white flour works, too... Must be very careful, though. The larger the cloud, the larger the fireball.

    3. Re:Powdered metal by sco08y · · Score: 1

      Douse the students, yourself and the classroom with gasoline. Light a cigarette.

  31. Air Pressure by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

    I saw one once in junior high, where some guy place some newspaper sheets that were unfolded ontop of a yardstick, and made sure there were no airbubbles or anything like that. The yardstick was on top of a table sticking out about halfway, when he hit the yardstick, and it broke. Somthing about the surface area of the newspaper x psi of atmosphere > force on stick. Also, try goobleck. It's a cornstarch based substance that behaves as a solid or a liquid. Water is the other ingredient, but I don't remember the ratio. If you stick your fingers into a bowl and try to pull out quickly, your hand will get get stuck as if it were a solid.

    --
    Nice Marmot
    1. Re:Air Pressure by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Also, try goobleck. It's a cornstarch based substance that behaves as a solid or a liquid. Water is the other ingredient, but I don't remember the ratio.

      It's actually called "ooblech," not "gooblech," but what you're talking about is what you call a "non-Newtonian fluid." Technically, a non-Newtonian fluid is one whose viscosity is not constant for all shear rates. There are two types of non-Newtonian fluids: rheopectic and thixotropic. The viscosity of rheopectic fluids increases with increasing force; in other words, the harder you smack them, the stiffer they get. Thixotropic fluids are the opposite; their viscosity decreases as the amount of force applied increases.

      If you read much science fiction, you'll inevitably run across the idea of liquid armor, sometimes called "armorgel" in the books. The basic premise is that you could cover vulnerable parts of your body-- like your torso, or your elbows-- with a garment that incorporates pockets filled with rheopectic fluid. As you move around, it feels like these little pockets have water in them, but when something dramatic happens-- like getting shot, or cracking your elbow on the tarmac-- the fluid hardens to absorb some of the force and to protect you. It's a fairly common idea, and one that's not totally far-fetched.

      The suspension of cornstarch in water forms a rheopectic fluid. It looks and acts like a liquid when it's inert, but when subjected to force, it changes is viscosity pretty dramatically. For example, you can take a handful of cornstarch-water liquid and pass it from hand to hand rapidly. While you're doing it, it feels like it has the approximate consistency of silly putty or bread dough. As soon as you stop moving it, the viscosity drops drastically and it runs through your fingers.

      Another fun demonstration is to take a moderate amount of cornstarch-water suspension-- say, 500 ml or so-- and pour it from a height of about five feet onto a tile floor. The fluid will pour like water, but when it hits the floor, it'll bounce like dough or putty. After a bounce, or two if you're really lucky, the mass will return to its liquid state and go all puddly.

      Thixotropic fluids are more common and less interesting, because they're very thick when at rest, but grow thinner when subjected to force. The most common thixotropic fluid is ordinary tomato ketchup.

      --

      I write in my journal
    2. Re:Air Pressure by getch(); · · Score: 1

      I saw the yardstick/newspaper thing on Mr. Wizard (best show ever) when I was a kid. It doesn't involve any explosions, but it is pretty counterintuitive.

    3. Re:Air Pressure by yo303 · · Score: 1
      Another fun thing to do is to put the stuff in a bowl and hit it in with a hammer. The hammer will bounce off. If the bowl is shallow, the oobleck will even crack into pieces.

      yo.

    4. Re:Air Pressure by infinite8s · · Score: 1

      So what's the ratio or cornstarch to water?

    5. Re:Air Pressure by SteveAstro · · Score: 1

      There are two types of non-Newtonian fluids: rheopectic and thixotropic.

      There are actually many types of non-Newtonian behaviour, of which shear thinning and shear thickening are two. Some materials (like porridge) have a YIELD STRESS - that means that a certain amount of force is needed before there is any flow at all - in other words, you can stand a spoon over at quite a large angle in a bowl and it won't move, but JUST past that critical angle it will move. Another good demo is a dilute solution of paraffin wax in paraffin (kerosene). If heated up gently, then cooled it, ir forms a solid, which resists flowing at all. Shock it and the "solid" shears instantly to a liquid !

      Incidentally, cornstarch solutions are also electro-inspisative - they thicken with applied voltage. Great care is needed with THAT demo.

      Steve

    6. Re:Air Pressure by jred · · Score: 2

      According to: Bartholomew and the Oobleck make Oobleck

      The recipe will make enough for a class of 30.

      YOU NEED: ~a large mixing bowl ~mixing spoon ~green food coloring ~10 cups (21/2L) of cornstarch ~6 cups (11/2L) of room temperature water

      DIRECTIONS: Put water in the large bowl and add food coloring drop by drop until the water turns green. Now mix in the cornstarch a cup at a time. Mix throroughly. Have some extra cornstarch available for thickening the mixture. Place a glob of the mixture in a paper cup and give one to each students.

      --

      jred
      I'm not a mechanic but I play one in my garage...
  32. Aluminum pipe and magnets. by nilram · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Physics department head at the college I attended was constantly doing High school demos.

    One I found interesting involved a long aluminum pipe a steel cylinder just small enough to fit in the pipe and a cylindrical magnet (or cylider containing a magnet) of the same size.

    First demonstate that the magnet is not attracted to the aluminum by pressing against the pipe.

    Then drop the steel slug through the pipe. It should slide through unhindered and quickly fall out the other side.

    Now drop the magnet through the pipe. The moving magnet will induce an electric field in the pipe which in turn induces a magnetic field and slows the magnet. And hence it falls very slowly.

    Then of course there are the two syringes of different diameter coupled by a plastic tube to illustrate hydraulics.

    1. Re:Aluminum pipe and magnets. by EvanED · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This has added value if you mention that (at least according to the physics teacher I had...) Kennywood Park uses this method to break the fall of the Pit Fall (take you up 300 ft (if my memory stands; it very well may not) and drop you).

    2. Re:Aluminum pipe and magnets. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, even better than that is to use a plastic tube (regular old acrylic works nicely, it's clear). Then wrap wire around it at a couple points, and put LEDs in the little wirewraps. When the magnet is just going through plastic there's no current and it just falls. But when it passes through a little wirewrap, it induces a current, which makes the magnet slow down and the LEDs light up. Really cool, if you put the coils about a foot apart you can feel the resistance in the tube each time the magnet passes a coil.

    3. Re:Aluminum pipe and magnets. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try a cow magnet and a copper pipe: Longer time likely.

    4. Re:Aluminum pipe and magnets. by Nate+Eldredge · · Score: 1

      I've seen this done with aluminum tubing and cow magnets. It didn't work very well. Cow magnets aren't very powerful, and you can't see the magnet inside the tube.

      Something that works better: Get an aluminum plate (I think we used one about 1/4 inch thick) and a very strong magnet, like a hard drive magnet. Demonstrate that the two do not attract each other. Now hold the plate at an angle and slide the magnet down it. You'll notice that it slides much slower than you expect, especially since both surfaces are smooth.

    5. Re:Aluminum pipe and magnets. by physicScholar · · Score: 1

      I saw the demo with a copper pipe and some cow magnets. It worked great. If the pipe isn't too long, then you can look down it and watch the magnet fall. It's really cool; it's definately stuck with me after high school.

      --
      physicScholar
  33. friction demo. by jericho4.0 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    It's kind of boring, compared to the others, but any experiment that shows that surface area has no relationship to friction goes against most peoples intuition.

    Or you could stick some flys in a microwave. They live because their bodys are to small to absorb the radiation. This one really needs a kitten to set up with though....

    --
    "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    1. Re:friction demo. by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 2

      It's kind of boring, compared to the others, but any experiment that shows that surface area has no relationship to friction goes against most peoples intuition.

      Just to clarify, friction does have a relationship to surface area. It's a very simple relationship, too: more surface area between two objects means more friction.

      The net result, though, is zero, because increasing the surface area of contact increases the friction by a factor, X, and decreases the pressure at the interface, which in turn reduces the friction by the same factor, X. The net result is that friction is constant as surface area of contact varies.

      But it's not true to say that there's no relationship between friction and surface area. It's just that it's a complex, dysfunctional relationship, that's all.

      --

      I write in my journal
    2. Re:friction demo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I doubt that... I've had people say roaches will live but they don't. All it takes is the tiny bit of water in their body to boil and pop! their dead. It's a common mistake, the roaches can live with radation but they can not live with the water in their body heated up to a boil.

    3. Re:friction demo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does that mean fat tires on cars give you no better traction than skinny ones?

    4. Re:friction demo. by jericho4.0 · · Score: 1

      Correct. All fat tires do is handle heat better.

      --
      "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    5. Re:friction demo. by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 2

      No. Traction is more than just friction. It's the combination of simple sliding friction with surface area, weight, and other factors.

      To think about sliding friction in terms of your car, imagine locking all the wheels and then trying to tow the car over a flat surface. Basically, you'd be dragging your car down the road. Do it once with normal tire pressure, and measure the amount of force required to do it. That force is N. (Newtons, horsepower, whatever units you prefer. It doesn't matter; because all we're doing is comparing before-and-after.)

      Now reduce the air pressure in your tires. Your tires get softer, and they flatten out a bit, increasing the surface area that touches the road. This increases the sliding friction of the car-road system, but decreases the pressure at the tire-road interface. So this time, when you drag the car, you'll find that it takes exactly N units of force to do the job. The net result in terms of sliding resistance is zero.

      But traction is a more complex idea than simple sliding friction. Traction, as I said before, is a function of friction, surface area, weight-- even the mechanical factors associated with the "knobbiness" of your tires. If you were to put slick, skinny tires on your car, you'd find that they slip on the pavement quite easily. On the other hand, fat, knobby tires are less likely to slip when spinning against the ground, because of those factors I mentioned. This becomes especially apparent when you're driving on dry soil or sand. Because of the traction factors, skinny tires will tend to slip and dig themselves into the ground, while fat tires will be more able to grab the loose surface.

      --

      I write in my journal
  34. Electricity is always fun by csmorris · · Score: 1

    If you have the room (and access to the equipment), you could try showing off stuff like Tesla coils, plasma balls, those 'Earthquake in a Can' thins (sry, can't think of the proper name), and such. I know I loved that stuff when I was a kid (er, well I guess I still do!).

    --
    I place the blame squarely upon tight pants.
  35. Science for Kids by rlp · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Many years ago, I did a couple of science programs as part of a science after-school program at a downtown middle school.

    First one was chemistry. Did a mixture of hands on plus some interesting demos. Hands on was stuff that was designed to be SAFE - indicators, baking soda and vinegar, etc. Demos were designed to be visually interesting. Burning magnesium, volcano (ignite ammonium dichromate), thermite, fun with liquid nitrogen. (Keep the kids WELL BACK for these). The kids loved it.

    Second one was on crypto - simple encoding, decoding, and cryptanalysis (breaking caesar cipher by brute force, and substitution cipher by letter frequency analysis). Kids were divided into teams of four for a set of exercises. One of the teachers told me the kids were passing encoded messages in class for weeks afterwards.

    Make sure the kids have fun AND learn something and you'll be successful. Good luck.

    --
    [Insert pithy quote here]
  36. I forget what it is called by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2

    but when I was in 6th grade, I did a magic show with chemistry stuff...my dad was a chemistry teacher in high school and gave me some salts....I forget what exactly they were potasium and some other kind. any way, I labled it as turning 2 solids into a liquid.....the kids seemed to be impressed, though I found out the hard way that it made amonea or an amonea type substance.

    it was pretty cool.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  37. Power your project with lemons by dsb · · Score: 1

    lemon power
    or
    cedu.niu.edu
    or more google

    1. Re:Power your project with lemons by dsb · · Score: 1

      correct link
      http://www.geocities.com/molerat1964/lemon.h tm

  38. Lots of things: by BlackGriffen · · Score: 2

    Boiling water in a paper cup: the cup must not be coated with wax, it works because paper burns at 451 F, and water boils at 212 F. Just keep the flames low enough that the rim of the cup doesn't light up.

    Crushing cans: There are several variants, but the cheapest one involves putting some water in the bottom of an otherwise empty soda can. Boil the water until you see steam coming out. Then, quickly tip the can over in to about an inch or two of cool water.

    Mag-Lev: find an aluminum pot lid. Everyone knows that aluminum isn't magnetic, right? Well, rig up the lid so that it's attached to a drill. Take a small disk magnet (rare earth works best) and attach it to an armature (easiest way is to take some sort of steel latch or hinge and just stick the magnet to it). Spin up the lid, and hold the magnet over it with the armature. The key is that if it weren't for the mag lev effect, it would fall on to the pot lid.

    Angular momentum: Student + weights they can hold + disk they can sit on and spin = good fun. Show them how pulling the masses is speeds them up, and holding them out slows them down.

    There's a whole lot more, but that's all I can think of right now.

    BlackGriffen

    1. Re:Lots of things: by smnolde · · Score: 2

      The rate of heat transfer from the flame to the paper is less than the rate of heat transfer from the paper to the water. This is why the water boils before the paper burns.

      If you boil off too much water then the water cannot absorb the heat, then paper heats to combustion, then the paper burns.

    2. Re:Lots of things: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Angular momentum is lots of fun!

      Here's a nice bet to make with some other people (who aren't incredibly strong)

      Go to a playground with one of those spinning things with handles with at least 3 people. Run in a circle while spinning the thing until you're all running as fast as possible, then jump on.

      Make sure everyone has their arms fully extended (furthest from the center of the circle).
      On the count of the 3, have everyone pull their entire body towards the middle of the thing.
      Watch as they all fly off.

      I did this once (and got a bloody knee from it, stupid sand/gravel playground). The first guy flew off the instant we pulled in. I held on for a little bit but then fell off. The third guy flung himself into the middle of the thing laying on his stomach so that little force was exerted on him (unless he moved, which he didn't). So we sat there watching him spin wildly while yelling "STOP THIS THING"

    3. Re:Lots of things: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crushing cans: There are several variants, but the cheapest one involves putting some water in the bottom of an otherwise empty soda can. Boil the water until you see steam coming out. Then, quickly tip the can over in to about an inch or two of cool water.

      My chemistry teacher did this in high school. One of the bright but devious kids asked, "Would that work with other liquids, like alcohol?" As it sounded like a nice inquisitive question, the teacher responds "Sure!".

      Goes in back...
      puts alcohol in the can...
      boils it over an open flame...
      flips it over to crush the can...
      and IGNITES A HUGE ARC OF FIRE, NEARLY LIGHTING HIS BEARD ON FIRE!

      That would have to qualify as a surprising result. Never did figure out if the guy whose idea it was in the first place knew what was going to happen, though I've always had a hunch he did:)

  39. the grain silo effect by wrhix · · Score: 1

    One of the most educational (and fiery) demos I ever saw was a demonstration of the effect of aeration on flame.

    Take a large ladle and pack it full of a fine dry flammable. The demo I saw used fine sawdust, but flour (or coal dust!) should also work. Light the contents of the ladle, they will just smolder. Then swoosh the ladle hard through the air. The smoldering fine particulates will get mixed with air and a nice fireball will result. A great demo of how flame depends on oxygen as well as fuel.

  40. Stab a Paper straw through a raw potato by cyber_rigger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you put you thumb over the end of a paper (or plastic) straw
    you can jab it through a raw potato like a dagger.

    Sealing the end allows the air pressure to build up and make the straw super rigid.

    1. Re:Stab a Paper straw through a raw potato by sigwinch · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sounds like a great way to take a core sample of your thumb too...

      --

      --
      Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

    2. Re:Stab a Paper straw through a raw potato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Works great with an apple, too.

  41. Exploding bubbles by EricTheMad · · Score: 1

    Run an electric current through some soapy water. Then just poke the bubbles with a smoldering toothpick. You could even let some of the kids hold the bubbles.

    --
    -- Remember, we're not happy until you're not happy. -- Local FAA Inspector --
  42. unexpected result by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    fasten a small weight to the end of a rope and hang it from a horizontal rod while holding the other end of the rope on the other side of the rod. let go and the weight falls.

    if you wrap the rope a few times around the rod and then let it go it won't fall. no knots are tied in the rope so the only thing holding it is the friction between the rod and the rope.

    the amount of friction increases as the rope is looped more times around the rod. this is why it falls when its only half looped around the rod in the first instance.

    the number of times the rope needs to be looped around the rod depends on the type of rod, rope and weight used but it will work for any combination if there is space on the rod for enough loops.

  43. Gauss Rifle by shadowj · · Score: 1

    How about this? It's amazing what you can do with just a few carefully placed permanent magnets... look, ma, no electricity!

    --

    --Larry

    Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence

    1. Re:Gauss Rifle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hmm... Interesting when you consider the similarities between magnetism and gravity. This "gun" effect could be similar to slingshotting objects around planets.

      In fact, maybe you could, on a smooth flat surface, place magnets in various places for "planets", then roll a ball bearing toward one so it "slingshots" around it. Maybe even around a second one if you plan the trajectory carefully. Maybe that would be an interesting demonstration. Never tried it, though.

  44. For chemistry by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 2

    One of the more surprising experiments I rememberd from high school where the teacher took two perfectly clear liquids--water, for all we know--an poured them together. They instantly turned a bright, fire-hydrant yellow. There were gasps all around the room.

    I don't remember what the two substances were, but I seem to recall that one was lead-based and the lead combined with something else to form the precipitate (it later settled to the bottom, I think).

    I'm sure any competent chemist, especially one in the paint industry, should be able to point you in the right direction for something like this.

    My personal favorite experiments are those where I personally confirmed some fundamental property of nature. I've ``proven'' that absolute zero is about minues three-fifty Fahrenheit; distinguished lead shot from iron shot from tin shot by calculating their specific heat; and measured the speed of sound using a tuning fork.

    Don't just tell the kids some fact. Give them the chance to prove it for themselves.

    Cheers,

    b&amp

    --
    All but God can prove this sentence true.
    1. Re:For chemistry by rlp · · Score: 2

      Probably Lead Iodide - take a solution of Lead Acetate (clear solution), mix with solution of Potassium Iodide (clear solution) and bright yellow Lead Iodide should precipitate out. Obviously, keep kids AWAY from solutions containing lead - which is poisonous!

      --
      [Insert pithy quote here]
    2. Re:For chemistry by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      There was a picture of this effect on the cover of our HS chemistry book. One of the coolest demostrations I recall was our chem teacher making brass pennies he coated them with a zinc powder, and heated them, telling us that he had read an old book, and discovered how to turn copper into silver (following the zinc coating) and gold once it was made into brass. After the lecture, we all got to make our own brass pennies.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
  45. Luminol by Cheeziologist · · Score: 1

    I might not remember the experiment entirely, but i loved it when we experimented with luminol. I think you can produce the glowing blue effect by dropping bleach into the luminol. Of course it always works with blood :-P Kids love glowing/shiny things...it should be great to demo

  46. But what's realistic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although explosions, dangerous chemical reactions, and plasma weapons are fun and exciting, realistically most are not that feasible.

    A great one I saw is a bit more dependant on thinking and getting the imagination of the kids to run, involving the new species of sewer lice found in German sewers blah blah blah.
    http://www.flinnsci.com/homepage/bio/sewerlice.htm l is the link. Depending on your acting, this can be great! The teacher I was observing had the whole class of high school students faked out and going "Ewwww!" the whole time.

  47. Vaseline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seem to recall a demo where a very small dab of petroleum jelly was immersed briefly in liquid nitrogen, removed, and then struck with a hammer.
    VERY LOUD BANG!

  48. Physics Demo -- Kinetic Energy by bats · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Take a tennis ball and a basketball. Bounce each separately in front of the kids. The place the tennis ball on top of the basketball and drop both. If you do it right, so the two are in contact when the basketball hits the floor, it will definitely shock them. The basketball will hardly bounce as its kinetic energy is transfered to the tennis ball. The tennis ball will shoot up into the air as if fired from a cannon! Be sure to have lots of head room for this one.

  49. Other possible problem by coryboehne · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you were to release the cinder block with the flat side facing you and the rope attached in the middle, were it to turn in mid-swing and come back with at a 45 degree angle to the release position it would most surely split the skin from hairline to eyebrow.

    1. Re:Other possible problem by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 2

      If you were to release the cinder block with the flat side facing you and the rope attached in the middle....

      That's why the wise man uses a bowling ball with a hook in it for this particular party trick: no corners.

      --

      I write in my journal
    2. Re:Other possible problem by NanoProf · · Score: 2

      That's why I always do this with a suspended bowling ball instead.

      --
      Curtains for windows?
    3. Re: Other possible problem by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Funny


      > If you were to release the cinder block with the flat side facing you and the rope attached in the middle, were it to turn in mid-swing and come back with at a 45 degree angle to the release position it would most surely split the skin from hairline to eyebrow.

      Yeah, but the whole point was to educate the children by entertaining them!

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  50. Stupid Physics Tricks by gunnk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Back in college we (the Society of Physics Students) would have a demonstration of stupid physics tricks. Try some:

    1 - Spewing liquid nitrogen. WARNING: I've done this but if you screw it up it is your own fault and will HURT YOU. It is possible to take a mouthful of LN2 then immediately spray it back out in an impressive cloud of vapor. This works because a tiny layer of LN2 vaporizes when it hits your tongue, thereby insulating you from the LN2. This effect is very short-lived and you can FROSTBITE YOUR TONGUE if you don't immediately spew it back out!!!

    2 -- Balloons in a trash can. Put 1 inch of LN2 in the bottom of a trash can (you *might* get this to work with dry ice -- easier to come by). Ask the audience to guess how many balloons will fit in the trash can (don't let them see the LN2!)Begin dropping balloons into the trash can. The balloons will shrink to a fraction of their room temp size as they cool down. Think "clowns in a car" for geeks.

    3 -- Bed of Nails. I've lain on a bed of nails built out of heavy plywood and standard nails. This takes work to build: the nails MUST all stick out exactly the same distance through the wood, and you should remove any burrs or extremely sharp tips. I *believe* we used nails on a 1 inch grid (which was overkill for safety). USE A PILLOW! Your head is heavy and ROUNDED -- it will end up supported on only about 4 nails: NOT ENOUGH. You may want to do a little research to get the optimal grid size "nailed down".

    4 -- Corn starch solution: Cool stuff. Under pressure a thick corn starch solution will act like a solid. Without pressure it is a liquid. Fill a pan with it, demonstrate that it flows, then (with viewers gathered around) slap your hand into it hard. They'll expect a splash that never comes. This works because corn starch is a long molecule that curls under pressure, interlocking the molecules into a "pseudo-solid". Throw it back and forth like a ball. Don't pause, though: the impact with your hand will keep it solid only for a second before it "melts" again!

    5 -- Get a large piece of Transparent Aluminum, a sonic screwdriver, and a tribble.

    Actually, that one tends to offend squemish members of the audience, so we'll skip it here...

    --
    Life is short: void the warranty.
    1. Re:Stupid Physics Tricks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your spewing reminded me of a chemistry demonstration that wasn't really a classroom demonstration, but a cool drunk party trick was to take a high proof grain alcahol, and spew it onto a large flame, we had a burning branch from a bonfire, and he blew one of the best fireballs I've ever seen. You will want the flame fairly far from anyone as the fireball was about 10 ft dia. from his mouthfull of rum. If you swallow it it doesn't hurt quite as much.

    2. Re:Stupid Physics Tricks by ripler · · Score: 2

      For a slightly more "visual" version of the bed of nails, you can add Newton's second law of motion.

      You will need the following additional components: a cinder block, a sledge hammer (~8lbs.), and safety glasses. Long sleeve shirt, and long pants reccomended.

      Set the Cinder block on top of the person laying on the bed of nails. It is best to make sure the subject is as flat as possible. Hit the cinder block with the sledge hammer with enough force to break it. Watch as people look in disbeleif, as the subject on the bed of nails does not start leaking bodily fluids.

      The cinder block will break, but because accelleration is inversely proportional to mass, it is transfered to the person under the block slowly enough to not crush the human subject, and be safely absorbed by the surface area of the nails. (or something like that, I am sure to be corrected if I am wrong.)

      CAUTION: Do not try this sans block. Human physiology does not react well to sudden interaction with sledge hammers.

      The safety glasses are important for preventing small shards of the block from damaging your eyes as they can tend to shoot off in all directions.

    3. Re:Stupid Physics Tricks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spewing liquid nitrogen. WARNING: I've done this but if you screw it up it is your own fault and will HURT YOU.


      Jearl Walker said he used to like doing that one, until his teeth started cracking.
    4. Re:Stupid Physics Tricks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Set the Cinder block on top of the person laying on the bed of nails. It is best to make sure the subject is as flat as possible. Hit the cinder block with the sledge hammer with enough force to break it. Watch as people look in disbeleif, as the subject on the bed of nails does not start leaking bodily fluids.


      Key part: "with enough force to break it".


      I saw this on the TV show "Newton's Apple" once. The host was going to sledgehammer a guest scientist. The scientist told him, "Now hit the block really hard and break it." But the host didn't want to hurt him, so he didn't do it that hard. Instead of transferring all the energy into the block, he transferred it into the inelastic block+scientist system. The scientist goes "Oooof! Ughh... Uh.. try that again.. except please break it this time..."

  51. Another one i thought of.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    concentrated sulfuric acid + hexane = BIG BOOM!!! of course, make sure its LESS THAN A DROP of hexane, and not much sulfuric acid... my chem teacher pulled this one off by accident.

    he put some hexane in a sink, the NEXT DAY he comes in and for a demo pours some sulfuric acid in the sink and a huge fireball resulted!

    1. Re:Another one i thought of.... by EvanED · · Score: 2

      This incidentally is (one reason) why you don't pour many chemicals (e.g. sulfuric acid) down sinks...

    2. Re:Another one i thought of.... by sco08y · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's why you *never* pour organics down the drain. Ever. Aside from being illegal as hell. Get a big jar, and pour all the organics into that and dispose of them properly.

      BTW, unless you have a license, you're not allowed to dispose of acid by neutralizing it with a base and pouring that down the sink. Always remember to make that part of the experiment, otherwise you need a treatment permit.

    3. Re:Another one i thought of.... by fjordboy · · Score: 2

      In eighth grade, my science class was using a program called "ISCS" which stands for some sort of "independant study curriculum science" or something like that. Basically, we were split up into lab partners, given books and set to work. There was no limit to the amount of chapters you could get done, and my lab partner and I were very competitive and we wanted to be the first people to complete the book in the year. Towards the end of the book we were on chapters that required chemicals that our teacher hadn't mixed for us yet, so he generally let us use the chemicals straight from the stock jars in high concentration...he would just have us use much less of them or he would have us mix our own stock solutions. Generally, all the chemicals got thrown down the sink (a science lab sink that had containment below the floor for the organic stuff or something) with liberal amounts of water. However, when we reached chapter 23 we had to do an expirement that required sulfuric acid, sodium thiosulfate and "winkler's" solutions 1 and 2. The teacher gave us the straight solution without diluting it...telling us to be VERY careful because it was both expensive and dangerous (he didn't want to bother making a diluted solution because no one else was expected to reach that chapter and it would be wasted). So, we completed the expirement and proceeded to the sink where we planned on pouring out our extra chemicals. When I tipped the beaker of sulfuric acid...something interesting happened...all of a sudden there was a loud hissing sound and a HUGE cloud of purple gas throughout the room. I heard the teacher yell and the class headed toward the exit immediately. In the end, the class had to be evacuated (indeed, the whole science area) and the teacher (kindly) explained to me the dangers of pouring sulfuric acid down the sink and showed me the proper place for it.

      Suffice to say, my lab partner and I were the first people to ever finish the entire book in one year and we finished it with over 5 weeks to spare. So, in the time that we expected to have fun and fool around, the teacher had us mix stock solutions of sodium hydroxide instead...which, if you couldn't guess, is incredibly boring.

  52. Inductive vs. Deductive Reasoning Demos by MarkedMan · · Score: 1

    I've always wanted to have a multi-day demo, where I would use a closed box and marbles, similiar to a Pachinko machine. There would be marbles of slightly different sizes, different weights and different colors. (Only the different colors would be immediately obvious to the observers.) I would put marbles in the top and they would come out of the bottom. Different places depending on certain criteria. For example, on the first day the red marbles would come out on the left, the green marbles would come out on the right and the blue in the middle. I would ask the students to a) predict where the marble I was putting in would come out, and b) how the result was accomplished. At the end of the class, I would open the box to reveal the various mechanisms. I would have several of these boxes, making the deductions increasingly difficult each day.

  53. Flourescent Pickle by Crispin+Cowan · · Score: 5, Informative
    Pickles flouresce (glow) when subjected to 120VAC. To demonstrate:

    1. Get a lightweight, 2-prong extension cord.
    2. Do not plug it in yet.
    3. Bare the ends, and wrap them around two medium-large nails.
    4. Insert the nails into the pickle.
    5. With all hands off the pickle and the bare metal, plug in the cord.
    6. Observe that the pickle glows around the contact points with the nails.
    Caution:

    • Never tough the pickle or the bare metal while the cord is plugged in: shock hazard (duh :-)
    • Put the pickle on a non-conductive surface, e.g. sheet of wood.
    • Consider doing it out doors, as it smokes and is smelly.
    • Adult supervision required. You assume all risk.
    Crispin
    ----
    Crispin Cowan, Ph.D.
    Chief Scientist, WireX Communications, Inc.
    Immunix: Security Hardened Linux Distribution
    Available for purchase
    1. Re:Flourescent Pickle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But...are you a Ph.D.?

    2. Re:Flourescent Pickle by wtpooh · · Score: 2

      I've found this works better when you use a couple of old forks instead of nails. The pickle around the nails tends to burn away / dry up , and then you have to move them. With forks, there is more metal in contact with the pickle, so it takes longer to go dead.
      Also, I believe that the yellow glow is actually the excitement of the sodium in the pickle juice, not real flourescence.

    3. Re:Flourescent Pickle by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

      Pickles flouresce (glow) when subjected to 120VAC

      Extra credit for anybody who eats it when done.

    4. Re:Flourescent Pickle by Nygard · · Score: 3, Funny

      I did this in my apartment at college during a New Year's Eve party. The thing nobody ever mentioned before that is it really, REALLY STINKS!

      Do this outside or in a well-ventilated area. Do not chase your guests out into the cold dark night. Well, it was Pasadena, CA, so it wasn't that cold, but still -- beware the stinky pickle.

      Also beware the stinky, half cooked pickle after it's sat out on the deck for the next month.

      --
      "Genius may have its limitations, but stupidity is not thus handicapped." --Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)
    5. Re:Flourescent Pickle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > but still -- beware the stinky pickle

      Is this some pickup line I haven't heard before?

    6. Re:Flourescent Pickle by cthugha · · Score: 3, Funny

      I had a chem lecturer who did just this very demonstration as a fun way of introducing emission spectra (pickles contain high quantities of sodium, making the pickle act like a sodium lamp). As the demo wore one the glow from the pickle decreased, presumably because some chemical change in the pickle wrought by having large quantites of current pumped through it tied up the sodium. To compensate, the lecturer cranked up the voltage on the power supply he was using, which worked fine until his hand slipped and he accidentally ramped the voltage all the way up to the supply's highest setting (240V IIRC).

      Needless to say, this was well in excess of the pickle's tolerances, and it exploded, showering fat orange sparks everywhere (nearly catching an unlucky student volunteer involved in the demo) and sending an almighty stink throughout the lecture theatre. So bear in mind that a pickle has exactly the same limitations as any other electrical component when doing this experiment.

      Ah, first-year chem, those were the days. Exploding pickles, naked guys wandering into lectures...ahem, exucse me, I digress...

    7. Re:Flourescent Pickle by Crispin+Cowan · · Score: 1
      Good idea!

      Crispin
      ----
      Crispin Cowan, Ph.D.
      Chief Scientist, WireX Communications, Inc.
      Immunix: Security Hardened Linux Distribution
      Available for purchase

    8. Re:Flourescent Pickle by gvonk · · Score: 2

      Also, use a powerstrip or power source with a switch so that you don't have to touch the cord to turn it off.

      --


      El Karma: excelente(principalmente la suma de moderación hecha a los comentarios de los usuarios)
    9. Re:Flourescent Pickle by dramaley · · Score: 1

      I've eaten pickles after making them glow with 120 VAC. They taste similar to before, though a bit drier and definitely warmer. If you eat the parts that were in direct contact with the electrodes it also tastes a little burned.

      --
      ----- "I'm still sane on three planets and two moons."
    10. Re:Flourescent Pickle by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Records show that Monica Lawinski visited the webpage for this experiment when she was pissed at Clinton.

  54. Thermite and Gas Filled Balloons by Student_Tech · · Score: 1

    (I saw this in a chem lecture a few weeks ago).
    Get a ceramic container with a hole in the bottom. Put some steel wool to cover the hole and put some Iron Oxide (Rust) and aluminum shavings. Get a container to hold some molten iron underneath it. Stick a magnesium fuse in the ceramic container, light, stand back and watch.

    Lots of light, some heat, and a quick reaction as the molten iron pours out the bottom of the container. You probably don't want anybody too near it though.

    Although filling 3 balloons, one with Helium, one with Hydrogen, and one with oxygen, and then touching them off one at a time was good to watch also. (No boom, small boom, Big Boom). It also isn't quite so destructive.

    And yes, I am a college student that saw these both in chem lecture in the last month.

    1. Re:Thermite and Gas Filled Balloons by stephenisu · · Score: 2, Informative

      Do a fourth with 2 parts Hyrdrogen 1 part oxygen it will be about 5 times bigger than the oxygen one (once demonstrated by ISU's SCUM club)

      --
      Sigs? We don't need no stinking sigs!
    2. Re:Thermite and Gas Filled Balloons by EvanED · · Score: 2

      My high school chem teacher did the thermite reaction. There's now a small bead of iron imbedded in the table which missed the beaker of water and sand (works well; water has a high specific heat, and the sand will keep the falling iron from breaking the glass) underneath.

  55. book by graybeard · · Score: 2

    I recommend Vacuum Bazookas, Electric Rainbow Jelly, and 27 Other Saturday Science Projects. Loads of fun things to do, and each project includes a section for the science behind the project, which will allow you to get as in-depth as you want.

  56. scifun.org by Tim · · Score: 2

    www.scifun.org is a good website oriented toward experiments that can be performed with household items. There's also a TV show that corresponds to the website that has been playing nightly on PBS (in the Seattle area, anyway).

    --
    Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
  57. Old Nassau - Haloween Reaction by vanadium4761 · · Score: 1

    Of course this one is great, especially this time of year. http://www.mun.ca/educ/ed4361/virtual_academy/camp us_a/woodlandm/Demo1.html.

  58. Halloween fun with chemistry... by tlambert · · Score: 2

    Chemical Magic - 2nd edition
    L.A.Ford, E.W.Grundmeier (Designer)
    Dover Pubications (August 1993)
    ISBN: 0486676285

    There is one that's especially good for Halloween, where it starts out whit, and after about a 20 second delay, turns orange, and then another 20 seconds or so, turns black. It's a Potassium dichromate experiment that's pretty cool (it's an endothermic reastion that causes the color change for yellow (hidden in the white) through orange, to black (a dark blue/black).

    You may also want to look at:

    http://scifun.chem.wisc.edu/demoser.html

    And:

    Chemical Demonstrations - A Sourcebook for Teachers - 2nd edition
    L.R.Summerlin, J.L.Ealy Jr.
    Amer.Chem.Soc. (1988)
    ISBN 0-8412-1481-6 (v1), 0-8412-1535-9 (v2)

    -- Terry

  59. compress a coke can by johnty · · Score: 1

    put a bit of water into a coke can and heat it over a stove until most of the water is steaming off.

    grab it quickly (not with your hands, I guess) and put it face down into a basin of cold water.

    it compresses the can pretty well :D

    while on the topic of compression, get a 2l coke bottle (yes, you can do lots of things with pop!) and half fill it with water and pump a few bars or air into it (check what the maximum capacity is - i think below 10 bars should be safe). Makes a good rocket when you let go.

    --
    I am unique, just like you, and you, and you...
  60. Cool demos I've seen. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I don't know about "surprising", but the following demos are certainly crowd-pleasers:

    • Turning sugar into a carbon sponge.

      To do this, put some sugar in a beaker under a fume hood and use tongs to pour a bit of concentrated sulphuric acid on it from a second beaker. The acid catalyzes water extraction from the sugar (which is exothermic), giving you a big mass of carbon puffed up with steam. This sponge is much larger than the original sugar sample (demo looks coolest if this greatly overflows the beaker; you get a column of carbon coming out of it).
      Handle the acid with great respect, as it'll eat through anything organic or metallic. Phosphoric acid probably works for this too, though I haven't seen it done.

    • Shrinking a balloon in liquid nitrogen.

      Inflate a balloon, tie a string to it, and then lower it into a dewar of liquid nitrogen. As the balloon approaches the nitrogen, the air nearest it cools and becomes a lot more compact (remember gas laws). What you end up with is something that looks like a deflated balloon, with either very cold air or (if you dunked it) liquid oxygen and nitrogen in it. Leave it on a counter, and it may re-inflate (try not to freeze all of the rubber if you want it to do this).

    • Shattering things with liquid nitrogen.

      Dip just about anything containing water into liquid nitrogen, and it turns into a rock. Do this with something fragile, like a flower, and you get a flower that shatters as if it was made of glass when you tap it on a desk. This is very impressive.
      I've heard of someone dunking a banana and shattering it with a hammer, but you'd have to leave it in for quite a while to make sure it's good and cold. When I tried similar things, the ice deformed instead of shattering.

    • Removing a balloon "cateract".

      This one only works if you have a high-powered laser handy. I suppose in a pinch a sufficiently powerful ordinary light source would do too. Stick a coloured balloon inside a transparent one, inflate the inner balloon half way, tie it off, and then inflate the outer balloon fully. You end up with a coloured balloon inside a transparent one. Shine a laser or other very bright, localized light through the balloons and the coloured balloon will have a hole melted in it and pop, leaving the transparent balloon intact.
      This was a fun demo put on by the local science centre. I suppose you could use a fresnel lens to focus sunlight down, but a) that's cheating and b) that works by a different method (the hot spot is only at the focal point).

    • Shattering glass with a feedback squeal.

      Do do this demo, mount a speaker and a microphone next to a target. For best results, use a directional mic and the mic/target line at right angles to the speaker/target line (i.e. pick up sound from the target, not the speaker). Place an object prone to vibration (like a wine glass or other drinking glass) in the target zone, turn on your amp, and tap the glass's rim. It will shatter very shortly.

    • Making standing waves.

      Get a glass or plastic tube, fill it a third full of water, seal the ends in a way that's waterproof, and lay it on its side. Put a speaker at one end, and hook up a signal generator to an amp to feed the speaker. Feed it with a sine wave and vary the range from about 1-10 kHz. When the frequency matches one of the resonant frequencies of the air channel in the tube, water "walls" will form at the antinodes due to the pressure vibration at the nodes exerts on the surface of the water.
      I suppose if you turned the power up sufficiently you could get the same thing happening in a tilted or even vertical tube, but this would get quite loud and possibly dangerous (if you hit a resonant frequency of part of your support frame, vibration could damage a tube made of glass).

    • Making mad scientist potions with liquid nitrogen or dry ice.

      Fill beakers or glasses with coloured water (or kool-aid), and then either drop in a pellet of dry ice or pour on a couple of teaspoons of liquid nitrogen. Both will sit on a vapour cushion on top of the water for quite a while, and the cold will make dense fog on top of the water. Instant mist-boiling potion.
      If you decide to drink this, use dry ice instead of liquid nitrogen, and blow out when you sip so the pellet drifts away from you. Better yet, don't drink from it at all. Frostbite isn't fun.

    • Melting through cans with thermite.

      This is a fun and safe demo, but needs to be done in a fume hood due to fumes and sparks. Set up a retort stand holding two or three small cans. Cut the tops off of the cans, and fill them half full of sand. Line up the cans over each other, and put a patio stone or similar large flat slab of stone or concrete under the retort. Put a large can filled with sand on top of the stone, under the bottommost can. Over the topmost can put a ring stand with a piece of steel mesh you don't mind losing. Put a piece of paper or tissue on top of this, and put a small pile of thermite powder on the paper. Put on a leather gauntlet, and use a firework sparkler to touch off the thermite (ignition temperature is higher than an ordinary flame provides, a burner flame may detonate the pile, and a sparkler is safer than a powder trail of something easier to ignite). Optionally, put a small amount of something more sensitive on top of the thermite and light that with a burning wooden splint, but a sparkler is both simpler and safer.

      NOTE: Do this with the fume hood down most of the way, and for safest results put a blast shield in front of the retort stand. There will be many, many sparks thrown by this demo.

      The thermite will burn very brightly yellow-white, and will throw sparks everywhere and give off vapours (probably either water from the paper, or boiling iron oxide that wasn't consumed; I haven't checked). The thermite will burn the paper almost instantly, dumping white-hot molten iron through the rapidly disintegrating screen, through the sand in each can, through the bottom of each can, and down to the large can of sand at the bottom of the retort stand. It may eat through the bottom of this, but at worst will just slightly etch the stone (the stone won't react catastrophically with molten iron, and has enough heat capacity that you certainly won't melt through it and is thick enough that it won't crack through from heat shock).

      This demo is quite safe, with proper precautions, and very impressive.


    Lastly, things not to do. This is not an exhaustive list:

    • Don't dip your hand in lead.

      If done right, this can be safe, as water boiling off your hand forms a vapour cushion briefly. This is easy to screw up, and has drastic consequences if anything goes wrong. Don't do it.

    • Don't put liquid nitrogen or dry ice in your mouth.

      This can also be done safely if done right, for the same reason - the dry ice or liquid nitrogen boils, forming an insulating vapour cushion. Briefly. If you hold it too long, or are just unlucky, you get a very painful and inconvenient case of frostbite, or worse. Don't do this.

      I've heard of people drinking small amounts of liquid nitrogen. This is beyond stupid.

    • Don't do anything involving pryrotechnics, shattering objects, molten metal or other hot liquids, liquid nitrogen or other cryogenic liquids, or strong acids or bases without a blast shield between the demo and your audience.

      Protective gear is a must too, but even without it, a spark or a splash will only hurt _you_. Hurting your audience must be avoided at all costs.


    Have fun.
    1. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Mitchell+Mebane · · Score: 1

      Melting through cans with thermite.

      This is a fun and safe demo, but needs to be done in a fume hood due to fumes and sparks. Set up a retort stand holding two or three small cans. Cut the tops off of the cans, and fill them half full of sand. Line up the cans over each other, and put a patio stone or similar large flat slab of stone or concrete under the retort. Put a large can filled with sand on top of the stone, under the bottommost can. Over the topmost can put a ring stand with a piece of steel mesh you don't mind losing. Put a piece of paper or tissue on top of this, and put a small pile of thermite powder on the paper. Put on a leather gauntlet, and use a firework sparkler to touch off the thermite (ignition temperature is higher than an ordinary flame provides, a burner flame may detonate the pile, and a sparkler is safer than a powder trail of something easier to ignite). Optionally, put a small amount of something more sensitive on top of the thermite and light that with a burning wooden splint, but a sparkler is both simpler and safer.

      NOTE: Do this with the fume hood down most of the way, and for safest results put a blast shield in front of the retort stand. There will be many, many sparks thrown by this demo.

      The thermite will burn very brightly yellow-white, and will throw sparks everywhere and give off vapours (probably either water from the paper, or boiling iron oxide that wasn't consumed; I haven't checked). The thermite will burn the paper almost instantly, dumping white-hot molten iron through the rapidly disintegrating screen, through the sand in each can, through the bottom of each can, and down to the large can of sand at the bottom of the retort stand. It may eat through the bottom of this, but at worst will just slightly etch the stone (the stone won't react catastrophically with molten iron, and has enough heat capacity that you certainly won't melt through it and is thick enough that it won't crack through from heat shock).

      This demo is quite safe, with proper precautions, and very impressive.


      I would just like to point out that magnesium ribbon is useful for igniting thermite.

      --

      The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
      --Aristotle
    2. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by lingqi · · Score: 1
      # Don't put liquid nitrogen or dry ice in your mouth. This can also be done safely if done right, for the same reason

      actually... i think not. IIRC even if you make sure your tongue / cheek does not freeze and die off -- your teeth will suffer a great deal from this. and as we all know, dentists are... well... not *always* a pleasure to visit. especially when you have frozen your gums / cracked your molars / whatever (this can happen from when you breath out, actually -- i suppose it can be avoided if you just kept the L.N2 boiling inside your mouth -- but the frosty breath you create is, actually, quite spectacular.

      --

      My life in the land of the rising sun.

    3. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by adagioforstrings · · Score: 1

      Shattering things with liquid nitrogen.

      I don't know if this was true or not, but my high school biology teacher used to claim that when he was in college, he (or someone else) froze a dead cat in liquid nitrogen, and then broke it in the lab (or a professor's office?). I believe when it made a bit of a mess when the cat bits returned to normal temperature. :-)

    4. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      Shattering glass with a feedback squeal. Do do this demo, mount a speaker and a microphone next to a target.....

      I find N'sync and Yoko Ono music works quicker.

    5. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by John+Harrison · · Score: 5, Funny
      Protective gear is a must too,

      In high school we had lots of explosions in physics class. Only one was unintentional. The teacher was demonstrating Ohm's law hooked a tungsten wire to a car battery. It glowed red hot. He then added two more wires (nine times the power) in parallel and the wires glowed white hot and then turned to liquid and dropped onto the battery. Seeing the fire, one of the kids yelled, "She's gonna blow" as a joke, but it seemed likely so many of us covered our faces. The battery exploded at that moment. I was on the front row and didn't notice any ill effects. The next day my pants came out of the washer missing the entire front of them. My shirt was in a similar condition. The chalkboard in the classroom was white except for the outline of the teacher's profile. You could see that he held his arms up to cover his face.

    6. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Xpilot · · Score: 4, Funny

      The chalkboard in the classroom was white except for the outline of the teacher's profile. You could see that he held his arms up to cover his face.

      Wow. Just like what happens to the coyote in "Road Runner".

      --
      "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
    7. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by coldmist · · Score: 1

      Shattering things with liquid nitrogen

      One time NASA came to town and they did this with a raquetball ball. Dipped it in, then threw it against the gymnasium wall and it shattered. Very cool. I picked up off of the floor one of the tiny chunks after the demonstration and kept it ;)

      --
      Don't steal. The government hates competition.
    8. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by KjetilK · · Score: 2
      • Don't dip your hand in lead.
      • Don't put liquid nitrogen or dry ice in your mouth.

      These are both cool and very safe experiments. I've done them both, several times. You can really trust the Leidenfrost effect, it is very well understood, and it works every time.

      The point with drinking liquid nitrogen is that how hard you attempt to drink it, it will never get down your throat, because it evaporates so fast, and you'll get fumes (vapor) out your nose. Looks really cool!

      But then, when you're demonstrating things to kids, you have the added responsibility that they don't go home and do stupid things. But for non-drunk adults, I see no reason not to do these things.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    9. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by CoughDropAddict · · Score: 2

      I've heard of people drinking small amounts of liquid nitrogen. This is beyond stupid.

      No kidding.

    10. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      I once swallowed a small ammount of dry ice. I was fine. It was a pea-sized bit if you want to know....

    11. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Spunk · · Score: 1

      Great post! I went to school with the guy who swallowed Liquid Nitrogen. Don't do it!

      Removing a balloon "cateract"

      Why does this one work? The laser has to go through the outer balloon as well as the inner. Why don't they both pop?

    12. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Verteiron · · Score: 2, Informative

      You answered it in your question. The laser goes through the transparent outer balloon. It's absorbed by the colored one inside. Thus, you're heating it, rubber melts, and *pop*.

      --
      End of lesson. You may press the button.
    13. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      He then added two more wires (nine times the power) in parallel


      Isn't that only three times the power, and the same power per wire?

      Voltage V across the wires is constant since they're hooked up to a battery, which maintains constant potential. If the resistance of a wire is R, then if only one is hooked up, the current will be I = V/R by Ohm's law, and the power will be P = IV = V^2/R.

      Three of them in parallel will have a combined resistance R' = 1/(1/R+1/R+1/R) = R/3. Then the current through all three will be I' = V/R', or I' = 3I. The current through each individual wire will still be I = V/R, since they have the same potential difference across them. The power across each wire will still be P = IV = V^2/R. The power dissipated across all three will be P' = I'V = 3IV = 3P, or three times larger than what was dissipated across only one wire.
    14. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 1

      I would just like to point out that magnesium ribbon is useful for igniting thermite.

      The magnesium ribbons I've seen tended to be difficult to light and to go out, but it may be that they were just old or otherwise unsuitable.

    15. Re:Cool demos I've seen. by CvD · · Score: 1

      More dry ice:

      You can make dry ice squeal too. Put a little pellet on a hard surface and take a coin and push down hard on the coin. It will squeak. Why I don't know. :-)

      Putting a dry ice pellet in a bottle of coke is fun too. Most of the coke will boil straight out.

      Of course the most fun we had at school with dry ice was putting some in a plastic ketchup bottle (with a screw on cap) and closing the cap, then letting it sit out by the lockers for a while. About 5 minutes later, it exploded loudly, sending ketchup flying everywhere! :-)

      Cheers!

      Costyn.

  61. Best Demo Ever * THERMITE * by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I forget the one of the powders used, but basically we welded with thermite set off by glycerin and magnesium *something*. It was really cool, the glycerin reaction lit the thermite which fell onto a pieces of metal and literally welded it together. It ruled, since the reaction wasn't instantaneous, but when it went the ignition of the thermite was awesome...

    If anybody knows the other compound used to react with the glycerine please follow up.

    1. Re:Best Demo Ever * THERMITE * by EvanED · · Score: 2

      The two metals are Aluminum and Iron Oxide. See the post "Thermite and Gas Ballons" for more details of how to set this one up. (That description has a slightly different method of triggering the reaction.)

    2. Re:Best Demo Ever * THERMITE * by Mitchell+Mebane · · Score: 1

      Magnesium ribbon?

      --

      The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
      --Aristotle
    3. Re:Best Demo Ever * THERMITE * by Pathwalker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Potassium Permanganate?
      It's dark purple, and is rather impressive when mixed with glycerin...

  62. 'speriments by sstory · · Score: 1

    my thermo guy always loved sipping and spitting liquid nitrogen. But i wouldn't recommend it--you can crack a tooth. for a simple one, get a metal gas can, heat it up, cap it, and pour cold water on it. Then when you explain to people that the air that surrounds us is what crushed it, it's pretty amazing.

    1. Re:'speriments by topham · · Score: 2

      Whats really amazing is watching a railcar do the same thing (for petroleum products).

      My dad saw the aftermath, the guys pressure washed it inside and out, then closed it. >crunch.

      Rather expensive though.

    2. Re:'speriments by grnbrg · · Score: 2
      Whats really amazing is watching a railcar do the same thing (for petroleum products).

      You mean like this?

      :)

      grnbrg

  63. Damp Finger and Fry Grease? by yamcha666 · · Score: 1

    I noticed the PDF explaining how you can soak your hand and dip it into molten lead for a split moment, and you won't suffer any injury.

    Would this be possible with a damp finger and standard french fry grease heated to 350 F?

    1. Re:Damp Finger and Fry Grease? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably not due to the fact that they are different liquids. The lead trick more than likely depends on the fact that lead is a very slow and large molecule that takes some time to move around the inserted object.

      Grease is a very fast liquid compared to lead. If you want to try it your more than welcome to. I won't though

    2. Re:Damp Finger and Fry Grease? by zeugma-amp · · Score: 1

      I'm suprised I haven't seen more posts discussing the linked PDF. I read through the thing and really laughed my ass off.

      Quote:After wetting a nger in tap water,I prepared to touch the top surface of the molten lead.I must confess that I had an assistant standing ready with rst-aid materials.I must also confess that my rst several attempts failed because my brain refused to allow this ridiculous experiment,always directing my nger to miss the lead.

      He discusses performing the trick of putting liquid H2 in his mouth, then goes on to say "the last time"... and describes the nasty side effect of this experiment going bad. Kinda makes you wonder why this guy is still alive.

      --
      This is an ex-parrot!
    3. Re:Damp Finger and Fry Grease? by WizardX · · Score: 1

      I would have to disagree, from personal expericance. When I was going to school, I worked at a restaurant, and every morning I did the frying. On many occations I 'dipped' various fingers into the greese, I did pull them out vary quicky, though. Granted they were warm, never burned myself, unless is splattered.

    4. Re:Damp Finger and Fry Grease? by Kotetsu · · Score: 1

      I've seen tempura chefs pluck the cooked food out of the oil with their fingers without getting burned. Not something you want to try at home, but impressive to watch.

      --

      "Bite me, it's fun!" - Crowe T. Robot
  64. Things with flames by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three that come to mind are.

    1. Put candle in middle of a pie tin. Fill tin with water colored with food dye. Light candle then put an inverted jar over the candle and into the water. AS the candle flame uses up the oxygen, the water gets sucked up into the glass jar.

    2. Light a candle. Mix some baking soda and vinegar in a jar or glass. Then pour the 'air' (i.e. CO2) in the jar onto the flame to put it out. Some times it helps to make a paper flume to pour the gas down and direct it to the flame, just don't catch the paper on fire.

    3. Need a hard boiled egg, a jar with an opening smaller than the egg, and a candle. Light candle in the bottom of the jar, then put the egg on the jar so it seals the opening. The candle burns up the oxygen and atmospheric pressure pushes the egg into the jar.

    Have fun!

  65. First memorable Science Experiment? by Quirk · · Score: 1

    Although I had chemistry sets from a very early age, the first memorable, school science experiment I recall was in jr. high physics, 1st experiment: describe all the empirically recordable attributes of a lit candle. I don't know why, but I really wanted to ace that one but (bad pun but really) I got smoked.

    --
    "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
    Cohen
  66. Kelvin Water Drop Experiment by CraigV · · Score: 4, Informative

    A stream of water is split in two using a tubing "tee". Each stream then is allowed to drop through a bottomless can and into a catching can. The pairs of cans are crosswired and well-insulated. With the water streams breaking up into droplets as they pass through the bottomless cans, an initially slight imbalance of charge is amplified until a spark jumps between them. Typically a 1" spark can be attained after flow of 30 seconds or so. As the charge grows, the water dropplets of each stream repel each other providing an indication of the voltage buildup. If the weather is humid or the insulation of the cans inadequate, the charge leaks away without jumping the gap.

    A google search on "Kelvin Water Drop Experiment" gives lots of additional info.

  67. Grab the coin! by MavEtJu · · Score: 2

    Get a bucket of water, drop a coin in it and run an electric current through it (my father did this with an old telephone-bell-generator). The moment you put your fingers in the water your muscles start to shake and you hardly can get them deeper in it.

    --
    bash$ :(){ :|:&};:
  68. A balloon in a vacuum container by Dr.Luke · · Score: 1

    Take an uninflated balloon and place it in a sealed container. Then use an motor pump connected to the container by a hose to pump the air out of it and create vacuum inside. The balloon will "magically" inflate by itself. The end of the balloon has to be tied of course. I saw it in a physics class once - very cool.

  69. Two Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two thoughts:

    1) Van de Graaf generators. Lots of fun stuff.

    2) I always liked the inductance coil with a ring trick. Hold the ring down over the coil until it gets to hot to hold anymore, then let go and watch it jump off, pick it up, pass it around and let everyone see how hot it is.

  70. Fun with Plasma! by Ferguson · · Score: 0

    How 'bout Tesla Coils!

    It would be a fun experiment and it would be great to teach a little about one of the greatest and most underappreciated minds in history. There are tons of pages on how to do his experiments.

    http://www.amasci.com/tesla/tesla.html#tplan

  71. Sulfur Carbon Rock Monster by serutan · · Score: 2

    Put a half-inch or so of ordinary white sugar in a small beaker and add some *fuming* sulfuric acid. I have no idea of the quantities. Over the next minute or so it turns orange, then begins to smoke and bubble, then turns black as the carbon is stripped out. The carbon is then pushed upward by more carbon, rising straight up out of the beaker to a height of 6 inches or so, like a cylinder of black rock.

    The way I saw this demonstrated was in a short film produced by one of my high school classmates. All you saw was the torsos of two guys at a chem lab table, measuring and pouring things, as one of them talked about his dinner at a middle eastern restaurant the night before. As he got to the part where the belly dancer came up to his table, the bubbling and steaming got going. When she started shaking her body in his face the carbon was rising out of the beaker...

    Classic.

  72. Lemon Pickle by Vraylle · · Score: 1

    Lemon-powered light bulbs, glowing pickles... So where's my lemon-powered pickle?

    --
    Mutant Freaks of Nature: "Frighteningly Addictive"
  73. fire stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    take a clear tube and set a candle in the bottom. Then ask the kids what they think would happen if you threw flour in and then do it and you get a nice boom and a dust explosin. i have done it before in front of four graders and it was safe for classroom demonstration and they loved it.

  74. Monkey and The Hunter by Ghoser777 · · Score: 2

    I love gravity experiments, and the "Monkey and the Hunter" experiment is by far my favorite. If I'm shooting a monkey hanging onto a tree, would it be in the monkey's best interest to continue holding onto the branch, or to let go? One would think, let go. But because gravity effects the bullet the same amount as it effects the monkey (save air resistance, but that's why we're using Physics air ;)), letting go will actually increase the chance of a hit.

    Another gravity favorite shows the previous result in a slightly different setting. Take a bunch of balls with different weights but equal friction coefficient. Then take a "Pine Wood Derby"-esque ramp and race the balls to the bottom. My brother did this experiment in elementary school, and he was quite suprised to see that the time it took for balls to reah the bottom was independent of weight.

    Matt Fahrenbacher

    --
    James Tiberius Kirk: "Spock, the women on your planet are logical. No other planet in the galaxy can make that claim."
    1. Re:Monkey and The Hunter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Monkey hunters don't need any knowledge of physics to know they need to aim higher the greater the elevation and distance of their target. Any monkey hunter worth his salt would be instinctively using the proper amount of gap necessary to hit the monkey. If the monkey let go, he probably wouldn't be hit unless the monkey hunter was a total amateur.

    2. Re:Monkey and The Hunter by Talloaf · · Score: 1

      I'm probably wrong, but don't they have to have similar radii? The balls aren't sliding down the ramp but rolling which would involve suck some of the kinetic energy into rotation, so that they would travel at different speeds?

  75. Paint Can by krugdm · · Score: 2

    I can't remember the exact details of this one, but...

    I had an instructor who took a paint can with the lid attached. There was a hole in the middle of the lid, and a hole on the side of the can at the bottom. He used the bottom hole to pump the can fill of methane, then lit a match at the top hole where a small flame appeared.

    He then continued to lecture as the methane in the can burned, rising in the can and being replaced by air coming in through the side hole.

    Everyone had pretty much forgotten about it when the last bit of methane burned out and the flame dipped inside the can. The explosion blew the lid to the roof of the two-story lecture hall!

    1. Re:Paint Can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stumped. why does it do that?

    2. Re:Paint Can by srmalloy · · Score: 1
      stumped. why does it do that?

      As the methane burns at the top, air comes in through the hole at the bottom until an explosive mixture is reached inside the can.
  76. Birthday paradox by RV.eq.VFG · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The birthday paradox is suprising. It is a good example of how bad humans are at calculating probabilities.

    Ask everybody in the workshop to shout out their birthday (day, not year) one at a time, and ask people to raise their hand if they have the same birthday. In a class of 30, the chance of a coincidence is 70% example, explaination.

    There is a 50% chance that two people out of a group of 23 will share a birthday.

    If noone shares a birthday you may look silly though :-)

  77. Good story telling works wonders. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My favorite demonstration was an explanation of Galileo's experiment about falling objects at the leaning tower.

    The classroom was one of those ampitheater type rooms with a big slate top lab table at the bottom. We were just starting to learn about gravity. The professor (who looked exactly like John Denver - glasses, hair cut, smile, . . . everything) starts telling the legend about Gallileo. He was a great story teller. When he mentions the tower, he puts a lab stool up on the table. Then he says its a leaning tower, so he puts a couple notebooks under the legs to make the stool lean. "Then Galileo climbs the tower . . ." so the prof climbed up on top of the stool. And proceeds to drop pairs of objects to the floor.

    I'll never forget watching 'John Denver' standing on top of that 'leaning tower' dropping things to the floor. Or that the objects fell at the same rate regardless of their weight.

  78. Microwaves, Marshmallows & Light speed by gehrehmee · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I haven't confirmed this one myself, but if it works, it's pretty cool.

    1) Get an older microwave. In particular, one without a turntable.
    2) Get a microwavable tray as big as possible that will still fit inside the microwave.
    3) Fill the microwave with miniature marshmallows.
    4) Run the microwave long enough for some of the marshmallows to brown.
    5) Measure the distance between the dark mashmallow bands, and convert to meters.
    6) Multiply this distance by 2 (or 4?), and then by the microwave frequency, which should be listed on the back of the microwave.
    7) If my instructions are correct, you should get a number awfully close to the speed of light.

    What I've been told is that the microwaves can form a standing wave. The distance between dark marshmallow bands should be the wavelength, which when multiplied by the frequency, should give you the speed of light. (c = f*w).

    --
    "You know, Hobbes, some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help" -- Calvin
    1. Re:Microwaves, Marshmallows & Light speed by physicsgirl · · Score: 1
      Yes, it's a great experiment. Just two comments:

      * in all the microwaves i've seen, you can stop the turning of the tray by removing the small plastic thing below.

      * use a large bar of chocolate instead: you can see immediately where it melts first - but don't wait to long, or the chocolate will burn (nasty smell).

  79. My sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, my sig is about a clear as a foggy day in London. Notice my nick? It says "jawtheshark", that's me... You will find an explanation of the sig here. Yes, I should change it, nobody gets it anyway.
    Sorry for posting anonymously, but I'm not going to waste Karma ony you :-)

  80. Motor Gyroscope by Dr.Luke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The most impressive physics demo I've ever seen was with a motor gyroscope. It's quite small in size but it's got a low friction very dense heavy rotor inside (about 10 lbs) which can spin up to very high rpms. It's got two convinient handles along its axis. It is first connected to the outlet and is spun. After it's spining rapidly you cannot change the direction of its axis even when you pick it up in the air and even with two people trying. It's spooky. Imagine picking up a small 10lbs dumbbell and not being able to turn in any way with some invisible force preventing you whichever way you push it!

    1. Re:Motor Gyroscope by zulux · · Score: 2


      If you need a cheap motorised gyro - old IDE hard drives with metal platters are supprisingly good and strong. They do spin down quickly when their power is removed.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

  81. 500ml Water + 500ml Alchohol != 1 L of liquid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Measure 1/2 a liter of water, put it in a seperate cup.
    2. Measure 1/2 a liter of alcohol; put it in a seperate cup
    3. combine the two cups, and measure ... and the combined mixture will not have a volume of 1 litre as expected. It will be significantly less -- as in 800 ml... then ask the kids, where did the 20% go? (the molecules interspersed).

  82. Sound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once saw a demo that was about Sound in a enclosed space. A peice of glass is put above a speaker and the speaker is truned on. Nothing happened. Then the speaker is cut of and a plexi glass tank is used to cover it and the speaker turned on and the glass started to vibrate till it shattered. It was a long while ago so I don't rember the details.

  83. Bed of nails by mrleemrlee · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This one required quite a bit of work, but you have it forever once you've done it ...

    Make a bed of nails. Probably 50x150, with nails every half-inch or so on a backing of double-thick plywood. You set the stage by taking off your shirt, so it's guaranteed to get attention. Then you simply lay down. This demonstrates how mass can be distributed in a way that no one nail is supporting enough weight to break skin.

    My physics teacher in high school did this one, and it has stuck with me lo these many years later.

    When he was showing us formulas and equations and such, he always couched them in terms of a person in peril -- standing at the top of a cliff, being whirled around by angular momentum or whatever. The solution to the equation was always accompanied by "And then ... you die ..."

    All of these lessons have stuck with me far better than my junior-year chemistry lessons, for which the teacher left the class to make soup (don't ask) and drink liquor in the lab and told us to learn it from the book.

    1. Re:Bed of nails by alouts · · Score: 2

      Wow, that sounds frighteningly like my chem and physics teachers too. You didn't happen to grow up in northern california, did you?

    2. Re:Bed of nails by mrleemrlee · · Score: 1

      Nope. Southeast Michigan.

  84. Some pretty cool ones... by Ionizor · · Score: 1

    If you're going for "most kids won't know the answer", a good one is a cart with a fan mounted on it so that the fan points towards the front of the cart to create an internal force. Ask them if they think the cart will move or not. They'll probably say yes. Flip it on and prove to them it won't move. Then turn the fan around so it points behind the cart, flip it on and watch it go.

    Another effective one is lifting a board by using a pool of water that gets frozen by the endothermic reaction in the beaker on top of it. I've seen that one twice.

    --

    --
    Todd's Law: All things being equal, you lose!
  85. Van De Graaf generators is always a favorite by Dr.Luke · · Score: 1

    You can never go wrong with one of those spinning rubber belt machines. Two meter long lightings can't but impress any crowd. A giant version of this machine was recently featured in XXX movie (in the dance club)

  86. Three color cycle chemical reaction by Qzukk · · Score: 1

    I forgot the name of this, but I recall an experiment with a liquid that cycled repeatedly through clear, brown, and purple colors (for a while, one of the components (hydrogen peroxide I think) eventually ran out)

    Its a pretty display at least.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  87. unlimited supplies, eh... by deedude · · Score: 1

    how about this experement i'm sure it'll amuse the kiddies =)

  88. http://stanley.chem.lsu.edu/webpub/demo-1-atmosphe by tkjtkj · · Score: 2, Informative

    peek at this site for ideas:

    http://stanley.chem.lsu.edu/webpub/demo-1-atmosp he re.pdf

    --
    "There are 11 kinds of people: those who know binary, those who don't, and those who could not care less!"
  89. Boiling water 'til it freezes! by kwerle · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is one of my alltime favorites. I've been thinking about getting a vacuum pump so that I can do it in the comfort of my own home.

    One cup of water in a vacuum chanber. Pump out the atmosphere. Water boils until only the low energy water is left, which then freezes.

    1. Re:Boiling water 'til it freezes! by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is one of my alltime favorites. I've been thinking about getting a vacuum pump so that I can do it in the comfort of my own home.

      One cup of water in a vacuum chanber. Pump out the atmosphere. Water boils until only the low energy water is left, which then freezes.


      Gee, you really went in a different direction in the second paragraph from where I thought you were going in the first.

    2. Re:Boiling water 'til it freezes! by kwerle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I guess I was asking for that
      lalala
      15 seconds... :-)

    3. Re:Boiling water 'til it freezes! by micromoog · · Score: 2

      Also, if you put a marshmallow (or preferably one of those marshmallow easter bunnies) in the jar, it will swell to many times its original size as the atmosphere is removed and the trapped air in the marshmallow expands. Let the air return and it immediately shrinks back.

    4. Re:Boiling water 'til it freezes! by cheesyfru · · Score: 2

      Of course, this is only pumping out the dissolved air from the water, which will cause bubbles to rise from the top and look like boiling. Still pretty cool.

      Speaking of interesting water temperature tricks, this one still freaks me out. Take two ice cube trays. Fill one with cold tap water, and the other with piping hot tap water. Put both of them on the floor of the freezer. Guess which one will fully freeze first? Hint: it ain't the cold one.

  90. Rubbing alcohol by Lionel+Hutts · · Score: 2

    I strongly doubt that any methanol is sold as rubbing alcohol anymore in any civilized country. It takes a decent amount to kill, but not much to permanently blind.

    Usually people use isopropanol.

    --
    I Can't Believe It's A Law Firm, LLP does not necessarily endorse the contents of this message.
    1. Re:Rubbing alcohol by AJWM · · Score: 2

      You are correct. Most rubbing alcohol is about 70% isopopyl alchol (isopropanol), the rest being water and maybe some scents or oils or whatnot.

      Methanol (aka methyl alcohol or wood alcohol) is widely available as gas-line antifreeze for cars. (Well, widely in climates cold enough to need it. You might not find it south of the snow belt.) Since the methanol is hygroscopic, it absorbs any water in the gas tank/gas line and also lowers its freezing point.

      --
      -- Alastair
    2. Re:Rubbing alcohol by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      Right. The funny thing is that "rubbing alcohol" says "isopropanol" right on the label.

      I have associated the two ever since I was a child!

      I have seen windshield wiper fluid antifreeze that had methanol in it. I don't remember the details, such as concentration.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  91. Go for easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the easiest I have seen, is to take equal amounts of water and vinegar, and mix them together. The resulting ammount is not the two added together. So, you can present it as being anti-mathmatical. "One and one does not equal two." you can tell your students, sure to perk up any anti-math students. Or just students who think math is dumb, etc... Another benifit of this experiment is, you can have the students do it themselves, no hazard at all. They can, with their own eyes and hands, measure the exact ammounts going in, and show how much is comeing out. Then go about explaining -why- (size of molecules, etc).

    Microft
    -Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master.

  92. A big ball and and a little ball by Dr.Luke · · Score: 1

    One of my favorite simple but elegant experiments is like this: take a big bouncy ball (eg basketball) in your hand and place a small bouncy ball (eg 1/5 the size) on top of the big one so their surfaces touch. Then drop them together on the floor from a small height (eg 2-3 feet). Counterintiutively once they touch the ground the big ball will remain there and not bounce at all while the small ball will fly up 8-10 feet in there (in proportion to the size ratio).

  93. raining baloons by paradesign · · Score: 5, Interesting
    in the gym at school our crazy chem teacher filled a baloon with pure hydrogen. it was a fairly large baloon. he then floated it up nearly to the cealing. then with a long stick and a candle he poped it and a crapload of water cam raining down, it was just like the Hindenberg, just, not as, um, catastrophic. he then explined the hydrogen from the baloon + oxygen from the air + energy (candle) == water + bang.

    it was cool at the time i swear

    --
    I want 2D games back.
    1. Re:raining baloons by deander2 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I do believe you're remembering this incorrectly. Yes, H20 will be the result of burning H2 and O2, but it'll be in the form of water vapor, not a liquid.

      Also, remember that H2O expands something like 500+ times in volume when turning into a gas. That would have had to be one helluva balloon to make a "crapload" of water.

    2. Re:raining baloons by jackal! · · Score: 4, Funny

      I do believe you're remembering this incorrectly. Yes, H20 will be the result of burning H2 and O2, but it'll be in the form of water vapor, not a liquid.
      Also, remember that H2O expands something like 500+ times in volume when turning into a gas. That would have had to be one helluva balloon to make a "crapload" of water.
      I don't question his memory... I think his teacher activated the emergency sprinkler system...

      --

      Who moderates the meta-moderators?

  94. If he keeps taking these sort of risks... by diesel66 · · Score: 1

    he may demonstrate natural selection!

    --



    eleven plus two / twelve plus one
    1. Re:If he keeps taking these sort of risks... by coryboehne · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hey, he may not get the Nobel, but for sure he can acheive the Darwin.

  95. Momentum, actually by NanoProf · · Score: 5, Funny

    This demo (which works very well) shows conservation of momentum. The tennis ball or basketball bounced alone will hit the floor with velocity V relative to the floor and rebound with velocity -V relative to the floor. When you drop the tennisball/basketball combo, the basketball hits the floor first, rebounding with velocity -V as before. The tennis ball, which is still moving downwards, then immediately collides with it at a relative velocity of 2V. The tennis ball rebounds with velocity -2V relative to the basketball, which is itself moving upwards at velocity -V, so the tennis ball moves upwards at -3V relative to the ground. Since the height attained goes as the square of the velocity (kinetic energy going like velocity squared and potential energy change due to gravity being linear in the distance ascended) the tennis ball travels nine times higher.

    I've also done this demo with three balls stacked on each other. It's much harder to get them all aligned, but when it works, the topmost ball goes (optimally) forty nine times higher than when bounced alone.

    Note that the momentum conservation equations that give the perfect reversal of relative velocity assume that one object in the collision is much more massive than the other (i.e. basketball versus earth and tennis ball versus basketball). In this limit, the velocity of the more massive object is essentially unchanged by the collision.

    Once, for fun, I calculated that if you extended the stack of balls to something like 20 that the topmost ball would attain orbital velocity :-).

    --
    Curtains for windows?
    1. Re:Momentum, actually by coryboehne · · Score: 3

      20 balls = orbital velocity ehh, well here's how to do it (I think, let me remind you that IANAP).
      Take a large peice of PVC piping (correct diameter of basket ball) drill a small hole into the pipe and use a nail to hold up the balls. (put balls in before you stand up the pipe) stand up the pipe and remove the nail. (might require using a little double sided tape or something to hold the balls together on the descent). If this really will acheive orbital velocity then you will surely impress all the kiddies.

    2. Re:Momentum, actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of balls, if you are mail and preform this experiment be sure to cover yours.

    3. Re:Momentum, actually by Tomble · · Score: 2, Funny

      And...
      ...What happens if you replace the tennis ball(s) with, say, ping-pong ball(s)? Does it still work? Do they end up on the moon? I have to know!!

      --
      Be careful! New moon tonight.
    4. Re:Momentum, actually by Salis · · Score: 1

      If only launching things into orbits were that easy. ;)

      Friction, viscous stresses, and drag (all really the same thing), would significantly reduce the velocity of the high flying balls so that they would not go near as high.

      Sorry!

      Salis

      --
      Favorite /. tagline: "On the eighth day, God created FORTRAN." And it was good.
    5. Re:Momentum, actually by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Um, not only that - but each ball in the "stack" has to be considerably more massive than the one directly above it.

      Sure, for a demo with only 2, a basketball and tennis ball do the trick. For 3, you could probably use a ping-pong ball as the 3rd. one.

      You quickly reach a point where you run out of useful objects though. With 20, what's the size of your ball on the bottom? A small meteorite?

    6. Re:Momentum, actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, there are G forces to consider, and the fact that you're only releasing the potential energy the mass already had. you still need to provide the lift forces, albeit you can use cranes etc to do so, with the 20 ball method. and at some point you reach the point were one or more of the balls will shatter because the transfer of energy occurs faster than the molecular bonds can adapt to them.
      the reason we can make a 'gun' to shoot payloads to the moon is because we make the transfer of escape velocity forces take much longer in the range of whole seconds, to keep the g-forces below 20, and still obtain escape velocity.
      20 objects transfering force to eachother just plain isn't possible, unless you know a way to make ceramics and like materials bounce.

    7. Re:Momentum, actually by CvD · · Score: 1

      We actually used an egg with this experiment. Its kinda cool to see the egg rocket away, although you can't really 'test' bounce the egg before setting it atop the basketball.

      Whee!

  96. Burning Magnesium in CO2. by highfreq2 · · Score: 1

    Start a strip of magnesium burning, then place it into a hollowed out piece of dry ice, and cover.

    Not only does the magnesium it keep burning it does so with a violent blue flame.

  97. Gun cotton by margaret · · Score: 1

    Making gun cotton (or nitrocellulose) is fun. We did in in organic chem lab when I was in college. IIRC, we mixed equal parts concentrated sulfuric acid + nitric acid, then stired in some cotton. Then we rinsed the cotton and let it dry. Our TAs discreetly suggested that we make some extra stuff, then put it in an empty pringles can (its foil-lined) and drop a match down it. Poof - instant flame thrower!

  98. From the Article on Leidenfrost effect. by rueba · · Score: 3, Funny

    At http://www.wiley.com/legacy/college/phy/halliday32 0005/pdf/leidenfrost_essay.pdf at the end.

    "I have long argued that degree-granting programs should employ ''fire-walking'' as a last exam. The chairperson of the program should wait on the far side of a bed of red-hot coals while a degree candidate is forced to walk over the coals. If the candidate's belief in physics is strong
    enough that the feet are left undamaged, the chairperson hands the candidate a graduation certificate. The test would be more revealing than traditional final exams."

    I'm all for it! This will show whether they really believe in the scientific method in their guts.
    (Fortunately I completed my undergrad in May)

    --
    The only reason all cover-ups appear to fail is that you never hear about the ones that succeed.
  99. Let the rim of the cup burn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The boiling-in-paper-cup was my thought, as well. Never had a problem with wax-coated Dixie cups, other than possibly-flammable drippage. (I'd be more worried about the thin plastic coat they put on the 'plain' ones.)

    This one really mystified me when I was 6 or so and got my first chemistry set. I'd say that *allowing* the cup to burn illustrates the point- when you see the rim torch down to the waterline like a burning ship, you understand exactly what's going on- "Oh, duh, Dixie cups aren't magic, it's the water, stupid!"

    Don't underestimate the ability of *someone* viewing your demo to go down the wrong track in understanding.

  100. Dangers of liquid nitrogen by DaveNay · · Score: 5, Funny

    My favourite experiment was when my chemistry teacher was introducing us to liquid nitrogen. As he was talking he had a large thermos of the stuff sitting on the table. He put on his lab gloves as he was talking, and then put his had into the thermos with his first finger dipped into the nitrogen. When he got the part where he was explaining how objects soaked in nitrogen turn brittle, he pulled his hand out of the thermos, and smacked his first finger against the edge of the counter. The collective gasp from the students when his finger shattered was followed by total silence (or was there some screaming too?). What he has done is "loaded" the glove with a piece of sausage in the finger of the glove - when he had his hand in the nitrogen, it was safely curled up in a fist! Needless to say, the demonstration was effective, and we were all very carefull when handling liquid nitrogen.

    1. Re:Dangers of liquid nitrogen by jkeegan · · Score: 1

      Wow. Today I imagine he'd be getting sued for doing something like that..

      --

      ..Jeff Keegan
      seven syllables explain TiVo: kee gan dot org slash ti vo
  101. Discrepant Event by AlphaBrav · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What you are looking for is a discrepant event. There are plenty of archives of neat (and safe) discrepant events on the net, just hit a search engine.

  102. A radio with just a diod a coil and a capacitor by Dr.Luke · · Score: 1

    One demo thing technically inclined students enjoy is how simple it is to build a simple radio. All you need is a coil and a capacitor which serve as the tuning circuit and a diod which removes the carrying frequency. Well, and of course a small earphone

  103. My Leidenfrost Experiment by goldid · · Score: 1

    When I was in elementary school I did my science fair project on the Leidenfrost phenomenon. I believe it can also be known as the Sessile Effect. With the help of my physicist father, I ruined a number of Mom's frying pans by heating them up far too hot while experimenting. For the age I think was pretty good and I got to the state science fair.

    The best part was just watching those little droplets of water dance around. Nature is just so cool.

    The worst part was not having a real thermocouple and having to fashion one out of an old oven themometer dial.

  104. Electrolysis of a litmus solution by Dr.Luke · · Score: 1

    Dissolve some litmus in a slightly salty water and soak a napkin in it. The connect two wires to a 9V battery and stick the other ends into the napkin. A big red blotch will start forming around one of the electrodes.

  105. you've got your sig wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Once again I point the blame squarely at tight pants." -- Coach Z


  106. Anybody know this one? by dfung · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Geez, whatever you do, please don't do the lead experiment referenced in the original article. Not only was the original experiment foolhardy, but the later ones with liquid N2 (and shattered teeth) are even worse.

    OK, when I was in maybe 10th grade, I went to some sort of statewide science symposium. Of course, the first night, we had a professor give a talk that included a lot of exactly these sorts of graphic examples of chemistry and physics for entertainment.

    The big show stopper at the end of his lecture was amazing. There was some sort of chemical reaction - I have no memory of the reaction whatsoever, but he went through it fully on the blackboard beforehand. It had a metal reaction chamber, manufactured such that it made a quiet whistle as the reaction went on - must have been the evolution of gases. Perhaps there was some sort of glow or light as well. He asked that everybody (hundreds of us in the lecture hall) be very quiet, and they turned off the lights as well. At first not much happened, then it started to whistle, and got quieter and quieter. Everybody is sitting in suspense - you could hear a pin drop other than the whistle.

    When the whistle was almost inaudible (which meant that the reaction had run to completion) there was some other combination that occurred. With the result of an incredibly, mind-shatteringly loud and unexpected BANG accompanied by a powerful flash of light. I clearly remember seeing the professor's grinning face in the flash.

    Whatever it was, it was great. Didn't convince me to be a chemist, but surely made me think about it.

    Anybody know what this was? It seems like this might have been something that was separating hydrogen and oxygen from water, then explosively recombining. Or perhaps it was something about activation energy - the original solution decomposes into stable components until the original material isn't present anymore, then the temp climbs and kapow!

    David Fung

    1. Re:Anybody know this one? by Trusty+Penfold · · Score: 1

      It was possibly just an explosion. Take a large metal can with a lid; punch a hole (1cm say) in the bottom and a smaller hole in the lib.
      Fill the can with natural gas (bung a bunsen burner pipe in the bottom and turn it on). Light the gas coming out of the top. Remove the tube from the bottom of the can and wait.

      The flame will get smaller as the remaining gas is used up. At some point, however, the mixture of air and gas left in the can will reach the right ratio to be explosive - the flame will jump inside the can, there will be a loud bang and the lid will fly off.

      Nb. this is not particularly safe to demonstrate to small children - at the very least the loud bang will scare some of them.

  107. Re:I know one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are much too mature to be reading such filfth!

  108. Implosion from water condensation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    One of my favorite experiments is to put about 1/4 cup of water in a gallon gas can (the metal kind). Heat it on a stove, burner, etc. until it starts boiling, let it boil a minute or so (until the water vapor pushes out enough of the good ol' ordinary air), then cap it, and drop the whole thing in a tub of cold water. Assuming the cans are still as thin, the can should appear to crush itself, as the water vapor recondenses into 1/1700th (or something like that) of its volume.

  109. Phrack by Mitchell+Mebane · · Score: 1

    Back issues of Phrack have some good explosives info.

    Phrack

    For example, this.

    --

    The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
    --Aristotle
  110. Strobe lamp and a fan by Dr.Luke · · Score: 2, Informative

    By shining a strobe lamp in the darkness onto a fan and varying the strobe frequency you can make it appear to smoothly stop rotating or even make it rotate backwards!

  111. my 30 second answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    boil a kettle of liquid nitrogen set atop a block if dry ice

    do a color changing chemical reaction with liquids (we had one go oscillate between blue and yellow)

    the candle in the inverted jar experiment, set atop a dish of water (shows a vacuum, and that fire needs oxygen)

    sprinkle pepper onto a bowl of water, then rub some dish soap on your fingertip, and then touch the water and watch the pepper magically scatter (shows surface tension)

  112. Two tuning forks by Dr.Luke · · Score: 2, Informative

    Place two identical tuning forks close by. Hit one and it will start humming. Then silence it with your hand and you'll notice that the one you did not touch is humming too (because of the resonance)

  113. Here's one from High School by Gleep+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    I came up with this one for my high school chemestry teacher while I was the TA for the class. I'm sure you know the one about the light bulb with the two terminals you lower into water. Plain water - no light. Salted water - light. Add a common ordinary flasher button under the light bulb and you get a FLASHING LIGHT. Then ask the class to explain it. This will DEFINATELY stretch their minds and you'll get answers like "Well, it's alternating current..." and such. After everybody who has given ANY opinion gets bonus points you reveal the trick and the entire class gains wisdom.

  114. Siphon Effect by quitcherbitchen · · Score: 1

    It's best to set this one up beforehand.

    Get one of those large filter flasks with the side spout that is below the top of the glass. Attach some tubing to the spout and let it hang down. Fill the flask almost all the way up with water.

    Then stick a funnel into the top and cover it all with a box. Pour a small bit of water into the top to brim up the water level and a siphon effect will drain the whole flask.

    Little input, large output. Not as good as boiling lead, but easy to do with common lab-gear. You could involve the kids too. Have them draw what they think is in the box, etc.

  115. Another 2L pop bottle variant by AJWM · · Score: 3

    Take a 2 liter empty pop bottle (plastic!). Drill a 1/4 inch hole in the cap. Pour about a spoonful of alcohol (eg rubbing alcohol -- it has to be concentrated enough to burn) into the bottle, swirl around, and dump out the excess. Put the cap (with hole) on the bottle and carefully hold a flame to the hole.

    If you get the fuel-air mixture right (this may take some practise) the rocket will launch itself a good 10 feet or so vertically, maybe 20 or 30 foot range if launched at an angle.

    I've never seen one of these burst (those bottles ought to hold over 100 psi), but you never know -- you might have a defective bottle. And you are playing with fire. Beware bursting and fire hazards.

    (Or, in the words of the motto of the Denver Mad Scientists Club, "sumus scientes, noli hic domi temptare" (we're scientists, don't try this at home).)

    --
    -- Alastair
    1. Re:Another 2L pop bottle variant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes, this does work. We used to do this to kill time at work using bleach bottles. 1/4" hole was exactly what we did. We'd place the bottle in an oven to get the air warm inside then spray in denatured alcohol for the fuel. We got some to go 50-60 feet across the parking lot leaving a nice trail of fire like in "Back to the Future". We did attempt vertical launches a couple of times to some success. We stopped after we had an explosion on the launch pad that set off car alarms in the area :)

    2. Re:Another 2L pop bottle variant by spRed · · Score: 1

      I've seen it done with a 5 gallon water coolor bottle. No adjustments to the opening, and just stand it on the ground with the opening pointing up. When Lit it makes a very impressive whitsling noise and a 3" tube of fire shoots about about a foot from the top.

      I was about twelve, and the demonstator made the mistake of telling me how it was actually done after the show. During the show he said it was a 'special hard-to-obtain liquid'.

      Which is another good point, lie to little kids so they don't hurt themselves .. or burn down their parent's house. (Not that I ever did, but I came close).

      --
      .sig Karma out the wazoo, better to spend points elsewhere if this is above 2 or below 0
    3. Re:Another 2L pop bottle variant by Datoyminaytah · · Score: 1
      Nice sig. I like this one:

      assert(birth_date!=time-86400)

      --
      assert(birth_date<time-86400)
    4. Re:Another 2L pop bottle variant by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

      Just filling the water bottle 1/3 with water and pumping it up with a hand pump can give over 100 ft, fairly easily- the record is 1000 ft for a two stage water rocket. Why make life more complicated?

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  116. Gases by dasunt · · Score: 1

    Helium will raise your voice drastically. Most of us know this.

    There is another gas, if I recall correctly, sulfur hexafluoride, if I recall correctly, which will drastically lower your voice. Of course, the gas in question is heavier then air, so to get it out of your lungs afterwords, you have to stand on your head. Was a crowd pleaser last time I checked. (Double check that gas before trying, btw, this was 10 years ago, my memory could be foggy)

    1. Re:Gases by coryboehne · · Score: 2

      Don't know about sulfur hexafluoride, but I can tell you FOR SURE that nitrous oxide (NO2) will do the same thing.

    2. Re:Gases by captainktainer · · Score: 1

      It'll do a lot of other things, too. Like make you do the Ballmer "I'm a monkey!" dance, or start reminiscing about pretty clouds - in your nice, deep voice, of course. For entertainment value for your students, and blackmail opportunities for your colleagues, this one's the kicker.

    3. Re:Gases by squidinkcalligraphy · · Score: 2, Informative

      hehehehe.
      HAHAHAHA

      (btw that should be N2O; NO2 is poisonous)

      Not really sure if the students will respect you too much after you collapse into a giggling heap on the floor after demonstrating the voice lowering effects. Then again, if you let them try it for themselves... For that matter they could make it themselves by gently heating ammonium nitrate (added bonus: heating it too quickly will cause an explosion)

      Experiments with nitrous oxide may encourage students to pursue a career in dentistry ;)

      --
      "I think it would be a good idea" Gandhi, on Western Civilisation
  117. Feynman discusses a variant of this by piyamaradus · · Score: 1

    Feynman, in one of his popular biography-like-books, discusses a similar trick with flaming benzene on the hands, protected by a thin layer of boiling. I don't recall whether it's truly film boiling that protects the hands, but his failure is forgetting about surface hair first...

  118. A split coil by Dr.Luke · · Score: 1

    Take a coil connect its two ends to a small (3V) light bulb. Take a second coil and run AC current through it. As you move the first coil closer towards the second the light bulb will light up and gradually become brighter

  119. My favorite as a kid by Tablizer · · Score: 1


    The slashdot effect

    Before slashdot..........after slashdot

  120. railgun by constantnormal · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I think the home brew railgun described in Slashdot 2002-03-01 would make a lot of kids think about how it works and maybe even lead them into a little mathematical thought, concerning the cascading of the accumulated momentum across the stages of the device.

    It might open one or two students' minds to some of the notions of finite math and calculus, which would be a bonus. Plenty of opportunities to use a simple spreadsheet model to calculate the kinetic energy from the final stage.

    Most students would benefit from a practical analysis of Newton's Laws of Motion, and this is an excellent opportunity to relate mathematics to the visceral impact of ball bearings shooting through 2x4's.

    Don't forget to film it for later analysis and instant replays, as you probably don't want to be shooting high-velocity projectiles in close proximity to the students very often.

  121. RPI Physics Department Magic Show by OmniGeek · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in the 1980's, when I was a Physics grad student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Instutute in Troy, NY, there was a tradition of putting on physics "Magic Shows" for the freshman classes. A few dramatic classics included these:

    Make liquid oxygen by passing air through a coil of copper tubing immersed in a bath of liquid nitrogen (oxygen boils at a higher temperature than nitrogen). Great care is needed in working with LOX, it makes the damnest things catch fire!!!

    Dip a cotton ball on the end of the proverbial 10 foot pole into liquid oxygen, wave it over a safely-distant flame, and create a BIG orange fireball.

    Demonstrate that liquid oxygen is paramagnetic (weakly attracted to magnetic fields) by taking a BIG electromagnet with a small gap, placing a small test tube of LOX below the gap, firing a high DC current through the magnet, and video-watching the LOX being sucked up into the magnet gap.

    With thanks to the late Professor Harry Meiners, otherwise a difficult person to work with, but a great showman...

    --

    "My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
  122. Re:This is a troll how could you mods fall for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://www.inchem.com.ph/hcl.htm
    Go read and learn about hydrochloric acid. You sure as fuck cannot buy it at "any pool store" I'm really sick of the kids getting on daddies computer and you mods eat it up like caviar.

  123. Mix Sodium Hydroxide with some olive oil... by rd · · Score: 1

    measure it just right and you'll get a nice bar of soap.

  124. clock reactions? by dunham · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've always been impressed by clock reactions. This time of year, if you can get an orange/black one going for halloween it would be perfect:

    http://www.mun.ca/educ/ed4361/virtual_academy/camp us_a/woodlandm/Demo1.html

  125. put your hand in a tub of liquid nitrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    then quickly pull it out. a pocket of gas is insulation for your hand for a few short seconds. some pro's can even put LN2 in their mouth. don't swallow it though. the 20000 to 1 volumetric expansion when LN2 turns to gas won't be pretty.

  126. Hollow Penny, Surpise exploding can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting


    1) Take a newer U.S. Penny, make a small notch on the edge of it with a blade, place in sulfuric acid. (Newer penny's are made of zinc, plated with copper... after about 10 or 15 minutes, the result is a paper-thin shell of copper shaped like a penny, almost like tin-foil.)

    2) Get an empty #10 can with a plastic lid (such as a coffee can). Punch a hole in the side, about 1/3 to half way up - the hole should be just big enough to fit in the end of a rubber hose (such as a bunson-burner hose). Pack some ordinary all-purpose flour into the hose. Stick the end of the hose in (about 18-24 inches long - with the flower at the end in the can), and seal around it. Place a burning candle into the can. Demonstrate that you cannot ignite a pile of flower, then place the lid on the can, and blow on the hose - BOOM!

  127. Easy, water perpetually flowing uphill. by Jack9 · · Score: 1

    Rig a pump, a rubber bucket/tub, use some springler tubing (some of which you want to saw in half to make the upward sloping ramp. Pump water up, let it slide down and the kinetic energy carries it up a noticeable sloping half-pipe back into the tub. Simple, interesting.

    --

    Often wrong but never in doubt.
    I am Jack9.
    Everyone knows me.
  128. But what about.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm surprised that no-one has mentioned the glycerine/potassium permanganate trick yet. See it here

    This is *not* a hands-on demonstration. keep the kids well back and wear goggles.

  129. triple point of water by jonadab · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Draw some tap water into a large beaker with some ice cubes, take a
    big sip, then stick it under a glass dome and crank down the pressure
    until you can get it to a nice rolling boil without melting the ice.
    You can impress people of all ages with that one. The trouble will
    be in convincing them it's science, as opposed to magic.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  130. Re:plasma ball by adius · · Score: 1, Informative

    My favorite is creating a plasma ball in a microwave. First light match and put it under a large round glass container (make sure there is ventilation on the bottom so the fire doesn't go out) put inside of microwave, close door, turn it on and watch the fun!

  131. Shoot the Monkey by beefstu01 · · Score: 1

    My personal experiment was a variation of the "Shoot the Monkey" experiment showing the priciples of gravity.

    You all have probably seen this one, but here's how it goes. On one side of the room you have a projectile and a way to fire it (gun, blowgun, dartgun, etc...), and on the other side there is a stuffed monkey (bottle, etc...). When the projectile is launched, the monkey falls, and pegs the monkey. Little kids will think that the monkey will dodge the bullet, but it won't, gravity works the same on all bodies.

    Anyways, that's my favorite. Quite possibly my second favorite experiment was when my teacher taped a mirror onto the woofer of a speaker and then shone a laser on it. The light reflected off of the mirror and made a neat pattern on the ceiling.

    Well, those are my two favorites that I've seen, but I bet you that there are about a million and three that I haven't mentioned. Have fun!

  132. A Tin Can and Water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    When I was a little child in grammer school
    we conducted this experiment:
    Fill a clean 1 gallon gas can with .25 gallons of
    water.DO NOT put the cap on yet. Place on stove and bring water to a boil.
    With oven mittens, take the can off the stove, and
    place in the sink. With oven mittens again, screw
    the cap on. Pour cool water on the
    can in the sink.
    You have now proved the existence of atmospheric
    pressure. As a child I remember being startled at this unexpected result.

  133. Try looking for phlogisten by FireWhenRady · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I once taught a Sunday school class that involved science. One really neat experiment to gain the idea of scientific hypothesis needing experiments to confirm was detailing the discovery of Oxygen in air by Joseph Priestley.

    We first lit some candles in small aluminum candle holders (cupcake baking foils) and watched the candle get smaller as it burned and saw the light coming out coming and felt the heat. So I formulated the hypothesis that wax must have a substance in it that is given off as heat when it burns. The candle gets smaller, the heat and light come off. Obvious.

    So I suggested that we capture this stuff, lets call it phlogisten, a name I suggested that Priestley had used for the substance.

    We could catch it in a jar by putting the candle in a the aluminum cupcake holders, floating the foil in water in a saucepan and putting a jar over it. As the phlogisten came out of the candle it would go into the air pushing the water down and so we could measure how much was given off.

    Nice scientific experiment. Obvious hypthosesis, easy and cheap experiment, expected result. If you know the actual result, you have a wonderful way to show that one needs experiments as well as theory to further science.

  134. Re:This is a troll how could you mods fall for it by Buck2 · · Score: 1

    You used to be able to buy muriatic acid at a pool store. I don't remember the molarity, but it was pretty strong stuff. Enough to affect the pH in a pool (with just one bottle), at least.

    One summer I used many bottles of pool-store-bought muriatic acid to etch away at a long, long driveway in preparation to retreat it with a paint. I actually went through a few brooms which basically fizzled away in the process.

    I don't know how much I believe the melting down of a stop sign pole but it would definitely burn a lawn.

    --

    As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
  135. The only thing is the shrapnel... by Raunch · · Score: 1

    DC current applied backwards to a capacator makes it explode.

    Although that's not really surprinsing to most people, as most people have no idea what a capacator is.

    --
    George II -- Spreading Freedom and American values, one bomb at a time.
    1. Re:The only thing is the shrapnel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got me there buddy. I know what a capacitor is... what's a capacator ?

  136. My favorite by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

    I still remember this demonstration from the Museum of Science and Industry when I was about 8 years old...

    It was a large box with pegs, and a hole at the center, top. The balls would fall through the hole, down the pages, and land into slots at the bottom. On the front glass was a bell curve painted on the glass.

    I watched in amazement as time after time, the balls would fall into the shape of the bell curve, even though they were falling randomly.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  137. Potato + PVC pipe + Tennis racquet = French Fries by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 2

    My neighbors are doing a "Science Can Be Fun" demo for some schoolkids (they work at NCAR in Boulder) and the project for this year is making french fries.
    PVC pipes and fittings (including a large-handled valve for a trigger) are all available from the hardware store. The racquet was a few bucks at a thrift store, and they plan to spray fries (raw, but still) over the heads of the kids.
    The lesson is simple -- stay in school and someday you'll get paid to make projectile weapons in your garage.
    Or maybe it's PV=nRT. I forget.

  138. Drinking Corrosive Substances by elzbal · · Score: 0

    One of my favorites (that hasn't been mentioned already, AFAIK):

    Get a beaker of Hydrochloric Acid and a beaker of Sodium Hydroxide. Using a dropper, show how caustic they are on various substances. Then, without warning, pour some of each into a new beaker and take a drink.

    Of course, there's nothing wrong with drinking warm salty water. :)

  139. Demonstrate the principles behind Fiber Optics by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    This would be best for 7th or 8th graders and above, or anyone who has done science on angles of reflection. You go through the whole spiel and then as a demonstration you show how it works by using water and a laser beam.

    Step 1) Find a laser that you can use for this demonstration.

    Step 2) Shine the laser beam through the bottom of an empty two liter bottle. Mark it and burn a hole through the bottle one side. (One hole in the bottle not two)

    Step 3) Cover the hole, fill with water, cap the bottle, remove plug.

    Step 4) Shine laser beam so it passes through the bottle, then the water, and then the hole. Uncap the bottle.

    The laser beam should follow the stream of water from bottle. So there it is, a simple demonstration of total internal reflection like in a fiber optic cable.

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  140. Oh, and (Re:triple point of water) by jonadab · · Score: 1

    Of course, after it's been boiling intensively for a minute,
    turn off your vacuum pump and let the pressure back in, and
    immediately take the dome off and pick up the beaker and
    drink some more of the water.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  141. Careful Stirring Cornstarch/Water by purduephotog · · Score: 2

    I have a friend that demo'd this to some students- they stirred the mixture with a glass rod- unfortunately the shear increase was far greater than they expected (even during their tests for some reason) and the rod snapped into 3 pieces- 2 of which lacerated and punctured her hand quite severely.

    Be careful on ANY demonstration that you have not rehearesed completely, and, as corny as this sounds (no pun intended), hold a 'review' session with your peers to make sure you have considered all things that could go wrong.

  142. Propane with / without oxygen by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2
    Another variation on the burning and oxygen display:

    Fill a balloon with propane. light it... Note that you don't get an explosion... just a fireball.. Burns at the interface of air/propane. Fill second balloon with oxygen/air. Add propane... Do the same thing (I forget the proportions... I think it's 1 Oxygen to 2 propane). Note an actual EXPLOSION because gasses are pre-mixed. This is a good intro to the mathematics of explosives (and things like why car gas tanks don't usually explode like in the movies)

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  143. Top this! by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

    (or, for the extreme crowd, demonstrating the Leidenfrost effect by sticking one's hand into a vat of molten lead [PDF])

    You could top that by chopping off your head and blinking your eyes.

    1. Re:Top this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just stick your head in the molten lead.

  144. Re:Don't click that link! by MightyDrake · · Score: 1

    Not only does it recursively open as many windows as possible, but my virus scanner reported a virus.

    Can a moderator edit out that link?

  145. NO! (Re:Damp Finger and Fry Grease?) by jonadab · · Score: 1

    > Would this be possible with a damp finger and standard french
    > fry grease heated to 350 F?

    Don't do this. Your finger might be fine, but you could get some
    nasty burns in random other locations as the grease splatters.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  146. Keep it simple (at least for the kiddies) by binner1 · · Score: 1

    How about paper towel inside a plastic cup. Invert, and submerse in water.

    It'll make the younger crowd ooh, and ahh. It may even give the older ones something to think about.

    -Ben

  147. Re:A radio with just a diod a coil and a capacitor by NortWind · · Score: 1
    "students enjoy is how simple it is to build a simple radio."

    I second this idea. Here's a links to a cheap but good kit. There are some other kits available too, google away.
  148. Alumin(i)um and Iodine volcano by BluBrick · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a thoroughly spectacular demonstration of many physical and chemical properties and concepts.

    Make a dry mix of pulverised Aluminium and Iodine.
    Then pour a small cone of the mix onto a fireproof base (my chem teacher used an asbestos sheet, but I'm not sure if asbestos is used in schools any longer). Make a small well in the top of the cone. The mixture is stable, right?

    Well, watch what happens to the mixture when you put a single drop of water in the well. You get a plume of purple smoke and a handful of sparks.

    The real question to ask the kids is "Why didn't the reaction begin until the water was added?".

    IIRC, it goes something like this:
    When Iodine dissolves in water, some of it hydrolyses into an acid (hydroiodic?) which reduces the oxide film on some the aluminium, leaving bare elemental Aluminium in contact with water, oxidising it. The heat from the water oxidising the Aluminium sublimes the Iodine, creating the purple plumes and melts more Aluminium leaving bare Aluminium in contact with oxygen in the air, starting the main reaction.

    You might want to use a fume hood, though, gaseous Iodine is a little unpleasant.

    --
    Ahh - My eye!
    The doctor said I'm not supposed to get Slashdot in it!
    1. Re:Alumin(i)um and Iodine volcano by ottffssent · · Score: 1

      "...gaseous Iodine is a little unpleasant."

      And more than enough to get you out of even college chem labs when someone does something very similar very accidently.

  149. electrolysis by siliconwafer · · Score: 1

    Got a power supply and some salty water? Electrolysis is a great experiment. Fill a 2 liter soda bottle with Hydrogen, and have one of the students light a match under it. BOOM... great experiment with great results :)

  150. Your hand stays dry by vanguard · · Score: 2

    I'm not very good with chemistry but here's two that I thought were neat.

    1) Fill fish tank with water.
    2) Put rosen on the surface of the tank.
    3) Put hand in the tank.
    4) Observe that as you pull your hand out of the water it's totally dry.

    1) Fill glass with ice.
    2) Fill same glass the rest of the way with water.
    3) Observe that the ice is sticking above the rim of the glass and the water is up to the very rim.
    4) As ice melts, the water level doesn't change *at all*. The amount that the ice sticks out is equal to the the amount that water expanded as it turned to ice.

    Vanguard

    --
    That which does not kill me only makes me whinier
    1. Re:Your hand stays dry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Fill fish tank with water.
      2) Put rosen on the surface of the tank.


      The surface? Screw that! If I ever get Rosen near a fish tank full of water, I'm submerging her head completely and keeping it under until she stops struggling!

  151. One word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Induction.

    You can induce the electrical current in any conductive object (metals lend themselves to this nicely) by applying alternating magnetic fields, thus causing a normaly non-magnetic metal to become magnetic. If you had a strong enough magnetic field, you could induce pretty much any material. As an aside, Al works great as railgun slug. It works even better if the core is something stong and resistant to heat, such as ceramic composites. There's nothing quite like lobbing small ammounts of molten Al at insane velocities.

    You know, you would not believe the ammount of people who think that Al is not electrically conductive, and have Al wiring in their houses... *laughs*

    1. Re:One word: by vicious_sloth · · Score: 2, Informative

      acutally you induce a magentic feild with an electric current, you pass an electric current though a conductive material and a magentic feild is prodduced, and vice versa, try this, get a multi-meter and hook both leads together, then pass a magnet rapidly over the wire (works best if you have a horseshoe mageitc, and rapidly move the wire up and down thru the middle of the horsshoe magnet) if you have a strong enough maget, or sensitive enough meter, you should see readings on the meter, an analog meter works best in showing the effect. that same principal is at work here, except in reverse.

      --
      Sun is Warm, Grass is Green
  152. Helium voice by nygeek · · Score: 1
    Here's one that's easy and fun. Get a bunch of helium-filled balloons. Carefully puncture one and inhale the helium. Then talk.

    What's happening is that the helium has much lower viscosity than air and as a result your vocal cords vibrate at much higher frequencies.

    You can demonstrate this easily and cheaply. For kids of the appropriate age, you can provide enough balloons that they can all try it themselves. Much fun.

  153. Fun with bottles by lirkbald · · Score: 1

    A couple tricks you can do with a gallon bottle (like apple cider often comes in)

    Get a peeled, hard-boiled egg. Take a scrap of paper, light it on fire, and drop it in the jug. While it's still burning set the egg on the opening of the bottle. After a bit, the paper will burn out, and shortly thereafter the egg will be sucked into the bottle, as the air inside cools and shrinks.

    Equally good is the trick of getting the egg back out again. Tip the bottle upside down so the egg comes to rest in the neck of the bottle. Put the bottle to your mouth and blow into it, hard. As soon as you take your mouth away the egg should pop right out. Careful, or you'll get a mouthful of sooty egg :-)

    A second trick. You'll need a small piece of window screen, cut a bit larger than the bottle's mouth. It needs to be screen with pretty small holes. Make sure both the bottle and the screen are scrupulously clean- any bit of soap on anything will break surface tension and get you very wet.

    Now, fill the bottle clear to the brim with water, and set the screen over the top. Hold it in place, and flip the bottle. You should be able to take your hand away and the screen will stay in place, and the water will stay in the bottle. This is a very impressive demonstration of both surface tension and air pressure.

    (explanation: the air can't go through the holes because the surface tension of the water across the hole is high enough to prevent a bubble from forming; thus the water can't leak out)

  154. 'few more by cosyne · · Score: 2

    Steam crushing a can-
    Hold a soda can with a little water in it in some tongs. Heat it up over a bunsen burner or similar so the can is full of steam. Then place it mouth end down in a plate of water. The temperatre will drop, and PV=nRT will crush the can in a fraction of a second.

    Barbells and an office chair.
    Not too difficult- sit in the chair, hold the barbells (or even just your arms and legs out), get them to spin you up, then pull the weight in to increase angular velocity. Just don't puke.

    Baloon in a car
    You'll probably have to videotape this unless you can fit everyone in a vehicle with good acceleration and cornering. Anyways, get a helium baloon, hold it in the most spacious area of the car, and subject the car to acceleration. Floor it, hit the breaks, take some corners at speed. Maybe some steep climbs or drops if you're adventurous. (Don't try this on a busy street). When you're getting pressed back into your seat as the car speeds up, the baloon is going forward. When you take a hard right and get pressed up against the door on your left, the baloon leans right. Basically, it's 'anti-acceleration' in the same way that it's 'anty-gravity'.
    When my physics prof asked the class to think about this and tell him what the baloon would do, the only person to get it right was my friend who was being a jackass and trying to give the obviously wrong answer.

  155. Is this like... by Tomble · · Score: 1
    I remember reading years ago something about how an onion would glow in the dark if you stuck it in a microwave... Hmm, that sounds insane, I expect I'm forgetting some detail, like you had to paint it with radium first or something stupid, but either way, I'm fairly sure it wasn't a joke. Well, I never did try it, as I didn't have a microwave then, and later I forgot.

    Well, point is, supposing this story was real, is this the same sort of thing? What's it all about?

    --
    Be careful! New moon tonight.
  156. Re:plasma ball by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 4, Funny

    You haven't lived till you created plasma balls by shorting an AT power supply that was between your legs at the time. (this wasn't the intended goal)

  157. Incredible Shrinking Oildrum by Llama+Keeper · · Score: 2

    The Coolest Physiscs Experiment that I have ever seen is as follows.

    You'll need the following:
    1) An old oildrum or other large steel drum that has a tight sealing lid.
    2) A large CO2 filled fire extinguisher
    3) 2 gallons of boiling water
    4) A Ballpean hammer
    5) Spectators

    Here's how to do it:

    1) Place the drum outside in a field or a nice clearing.
    2) Boil the water (rolling boil)
    3) Pour the boiling water into the drum, set the lid on loosly, wait about 45 seconds and then seal the lid.
    4) Start hosing down the drum throughly with the fire extinguisher.
    5) when you've expended the entire fire extingusher take the ballpean hammer and give the side of the drum a good whack.
    6) Jump Back

    If your drum seals well it should with an awesome whooshing sounds just collapse and flatten out. You pbly should have the kids stand back a bit and definitly need to waer safety glasses and overalls (scalding water flys if you do it wrong). Very impressive and tons of fun!

    --


    Rule of Life Number 2: Remember, it can all go to hell at any minute. --Jimmy Buffet
  158. Ignition from high air pressure by micromoog · · Score: 2

    Take a strong glass tube with one open end, about 12" long and 1/4" inside diameter. Place a small piece of cotton ball in the tube. Press a plunger with a 1/4" rubber stopper on the end into the tube, hard. When the air pressure gets high enough, enough heat is generated to spontaneously combust the cotton with a small flash (think diesel engine).

  159. A screenplay in the making by volpe · · Score: 2


    Don't dip your hand in lead.
    Don't put liquid nitrogen or dry ice in your mouth.
    [etc]

    I think you've just written the script for "Jackass II".

    1. Re:A screenplay in the making by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 2

      Hmm...

      New from the makers of "BumFights" (once they get out of jail)...

      "BumScience!"

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    2. Re:A screenplay in the making by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back in high school we had the opportunity to put liquid nitrogen in our mouths and really what could go wrong?

  160. Another classic by CMU_Ken · · Score: 1

    A word for word recitation of Faraday's "The Chemical History of a Candle" lectures could be appropriate.

  161. Cheap, Easy Fire Tornado!!! by mikebludevil · · Score: 1

    This is a great demonstration that really gets some oohs and aahs, and is very easy and relatively safe.

    Equipment:

    1. Lazy Susan Turntable (about 12" diameter)
    2. Cereal Bowl
    3. Ordinary Barbeque Lighter Fluid
    4. Window Screen Netting
    5. Match

    Take the Screen, roll it into a cylinder that will stand upright on the lazy susan, making a cage. Staples work just fine to make the cylinder.

    Fill the bottom of a bowl with some lighter fluid. Drop a lit match into the bottom, and it will catch on fire. It's a good idea to use a little fluid at first, then work your way up to get the right sized tornado.

    Put the bowl in the center of the lazy susan, place the screen cylinder around the bowl (you might have to fasten it to the turntable with a couple of pieces of tape.

    SPIN the lazy susan slowly, and watch a pillar of flame rise up inside the screen!!!

    This creates a flame tornado that extends to the top of the screening!

    Convection and combustion are the two basic principles taught here. By spinning the tube, you increase the rate of evaporation of the lighter fluid, and improve the air:fuel mix, which burns hotter and higher than with just the bowl alone.

    I did this demo with a group of 5th graders at our local elementary school, and they loved it. Definitely add a disclaimer to this one... don't want the kids burning down the house. And keep a fire extinguisher handy just to be extra safe.

    If you really want to go over the top, use an old record player instead of the lazy susan, and gradually step up the speed... cool effect.

  162. Gravity experiment. by Jakester2K · · Score: 1

    Here's one I saw in a college physics class a long time ago. I believe the scientific point was gravity's effect on the trajectory of a projectile. I seem to recall it was also an anecdotal reason why squirrels don't dive off a tree branch when they hear a gunshot.

    A small metal hoop with a cloth bag attached was suspended from an electromagnet several feet in the air at one end of a stage. At the other end of the stage was a blowgun with a ball in it. At the end of the blowgun was a sensor -- triggered by the ball exiting the barrel -- which would cut off the electricity to the electromagnet holding the metal basket. IIRC, the blowgun was aimed directly at the center of the metal hoop.

    The prof would blow through the blowgun, the hoop would drop, and the ball would end up inside the basket. Worked every time.

    The wierdest thing was that you couldn't see the ball in flight.

  163. Floating Vacuum-cleaner Ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Atttach a nozzle on the OUTPUT of a vacuum cleaner so it aims Upwards into the Air at a 45 degree angle, place a BEACH-BALL in the stream of out-blowing air about a foot away, and Watch It Just SUSPEND there - since the air moving around the ball creates LIFT enough to keep it up.

    sorry about the AC post, but i'm away from my CPU, and forgot my password (having to remember umpteen gazillion passwords is a #%# pain!), so here's a URL to my site (which means its not actually an 'anonymous' post anymore... ;-)

    best regards,
    john

  164. Hydrogen by zerOnIne · · Score: 2

    True story, and an occasion to remember for any students present should you repeat this demonstration.

    A friend of mine walked into the first lecture of his chemistry class. This particular lecture series was being held in the gymnasium of the college, with the students piled in on the bleachers down towards one end of the gym, where a small table had been set up. This tabled contained a small bunsen burner and three empty-looking 2-liter soda bottles, with their caps screwed on. As the students settled into place, the professor walked into the room, and quietly lit the bunsen burner. He then proceeded to unscrew the cap from one of the bottles, carefully placing his thumb over the opening. He turned to the class, and with no further introduction stated, simply: "This bottle contains hydrogen. It burns readily." He then took his thumb off the end of the bottle and quickly touched off the stream of pressurized gasses on the burner, and *FWOOM*. A flame somewhere on the order of 30 feet long shot out of the bottle. (or so I'm told ... but when it's right in front of you, i'm sure it would *seem* a lot like 30 feet). At the end of this demonstration, the first five rows of bleachers had been completely cleared (into the next few rows). The first few rows remained empty for the rest of the term.

    --
    09
  165. Simple one by Cheese+Cracker · · Score: 1

    Use liquids with different density that doesn't
    mix, like vegetable oil and water. Use food
    coloring for better effect. When the kids have
    seen that the oil floats on top of the water, pour
    some salt into the glass... it will bring parts of
    the oil to the bottom.

  166. crowds like exploding stuff by t_pet422 · · Score: 1

    Here at the UIUC a group called Physics Van always puts a chunk of dry ice in a 2-liter bottle with a little water. Then then put that in a big plastic trash can. When the CO2 causes the 2-litre bottle to pop, the trash can lid goes flying in the air. Always a croud pleaser!

  167. Optics by knix · · Score: 1

    One of the coolest experiments I saw with optics involved either a big glass "beer" mug or a glass coke bottle. You fill the mug or bottle with coke or anything dark and show how it looks full. You then put the bottle/mug in a fish tank and you can see how thick the glass is because the light does not bend as much when it goes from glass to water. Very interesting. For a permanent display you can incase a coke bottle in Acrylic or something like that.

  168. Gravity demonstration by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 2

    One thing my physics teacher did was to hang a rod sideways from the high ceiling of a gym by the ribbon from a cassette tape. On the rod he hung 2 garbage bags full of crumpled newspapers. Students would walk towards the bags and the gravity principles would take over and the bags would be attracted to the students. Was a good demonstration of how gravity works between 2 bodies

    And then there's always the good ol' fashioned shatter stuff with liquid nitrogen. Always a crowd pleaser. One demonstration I saw at a science museum was freezing beer vs. vodka (low vs. high alcohol content) and observing how long it took, since alcohol has a lower freezing point then water

    --
    There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
    1. Re:Gravity demonstration by Nate+Eldredge · · Score: 1

      Hmm, that first one seems more likely to be static electricity than gravity. If you have a 1 kg bag of paper and a 100 kg student 1 cm apart, the gravitational force is only about 7*10^-5 N, or about one millionth of the force of gravity on the newspaper. The breeze caused the student walking by is a much, much greater force.

  169. Don't Forget Your Chemistry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    • There are nice chemical reactions that oscillate a solution between two different colors
    • start your demonstration by filling a piece of vacuum hose with dry ice, and clamping it close at the two ends. Then watch it for a little while, act as if the experiment fails and throw it in the garbage bin. This will create a nice effect later on during the demo.
    • Write all experiments you will perform on a large sheet of paper using invisible ink, and make them appear one by one using a large paint roller during the demonstration
    • There are chemical reactions that create (blue) light; these can be used to show a nice blue glow when you pour liquid from one vessel into another.

  170. some ideas by pfalstad · · Score: 1

    get a length of copper tube from home depot, the thicker the better. I got a length of tube and then some repair coupling to put over it, to make the tube thicker. then drop a strong magnet down the tube. It will float slowly down instead of falling at a normal rate. here's a page describing a simmilar experiment.. you can get great magnets from wondermagnet. (the spherical ones work best.)

    Another fun thing: get two linear polarizers and then show that they are transparent when lined up but opaque when crossed. This is pretty cool if you haven't seen it before. You can get nice big ones from edmund optics.

    Also you can get 1/2 wave retarder film from this same place; put the retarder film between the crossed polarizers, and it opens up a little "window" which allows you to see through the otherwise opaque polarizers.

    Other stuff you can do with polarizers: look at a window and observe that the glare on the window is dimmer when you turn the polarizer the right way. Also cross two polarizers and put a piece of clear plastic (like a CD case) between them, and you can see all sorts of pretty colors. Also you can take a clear plastic bag and stretch it and put it between the two polarizers, and the colors will indicate the stresses in the bag.

  171. sodium iodide: contact explosive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2NH4-OH + 3I2 -------> 2NI3 + 2H20 + 3H2


    1) Get concentrated Ammonium Hydroxide and mix it with Iodine crystals. Decant the solution and wash the pasty precipitate in water. WARNING: KEEP THE PRECIPITATE WET! (if it gets in the sink, wash it down the drain with profuse water, i.e. leave the faucet running for a long time)


    2) Set up a ring stand in the corner of the room with a piece of paper taped across the room. Sometimes I put three rings with filter paper taped on them. Apply a thin layer of the paste onto the paper right before you begin your show.


    3) Avoid going anywhere near the ring stand. I mean no movement within a few meters if you can spare. Launch into your show and give your explosive ample time to dry.


    4) Get a long stick and tape a feather to the end.


    5) Give a talk about explosives and how they make our life easier for engineers, etc. Take the feather-stick and lightly brush the contact exlposive.


    6) BAMN! And I do mean BAMN!


    note: do not use this for pranks, it's too sensitive for transport

  172. Slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    News for nerds, stuff that craters!!

    Get it!? Weee I'm funny!

  173. Pop can implosion by coldmist · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My science teacher in high school did this one that I really liked:

    Heat up an empty pop can over boiling water (using tongs of some sort), right side up. Then, quickly turn it upside down and plunge it into an icewater bath. It will implode with a small pop and end up almost as small as if you had stomped on it to crush it for recycling.

    --
    Don't steal. The government hates competition.
  174. Surprising Demo by smoondog · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nothing was more surprising than our surprise demo on capacitors, where a 10,000 volt capacitor was charged by the prof and discharged onto an arc of aluminum foil. Boom.

    -Sean

  175. My H.S Physics Teacher and his Bed of Nails by Salis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My high school physics teacher, once we got to the section on Newton's laws, did this every year...for real:

    First he would take out a large 'Bed of Nails', a body length piece of wood with nails evenly spaced out over the wood with the pointy-sides faced upwards, and lay down on it. Then he would take another, smaller piece of wood with nails driven into it and put it on his chest, with the pointy-sides facing his chest. Then another teacher would come into the room, bringing in a **CINDER BLOCK** and put it directly on top of the nail-laden wood on top of the physics teacher's chest. Then the assistant would pull out a _Sledgehammer_ and give the cinderblock a hit with full force.

    The cinderblock breaks, the physics teacher survives, and his shirt is only slightly imprinted with a grid of pointy impressions. The force of the sledgehammer's impact is completely absorbed by the cinderblock and not the teacher's body. If the cinderblock did NOT break, the teacher would receive a hundred holes in his body.

    He did this every year and never received a wound. Amazing, really.

    Salis

    --
    Favorite /. tagline: "On the eighth day, God created FORTRAN." And it was good.
  176. falling feather, + pure oxygen by pfalstad · · Score: 2, Interesting

    other memorable demonstrations from 9th grade science class:

    put a feather in a vacuum chamber and watch it fall as fast as a rock.

    fill a mason jar with pure oxygen, light a piece of steel wool (which will have a very feeble red glow where you lit it, if anything) and then put it in the pure oxygen. It lights up real good.

    fill a mason jar with pure hydrogen and then open the jar and light it up. It just makes a big bang if memory serves.

    (there are probably safety considerations with the last two which I'm forgetting.)

    Someone already mentioned the gas can filled with boiling water which you seal and then cool it down to cause the gas can to be crushed by atmospheric pressure. That was another good one, from high school chemistry.

    Also in high school chemistry we had an "acid tasting experiment" which I don't recommend you try. :) We tasted successively stronger acids until we got to hydrocloric acid, as I recall. I just got a slight whiff of that one, not a real good taste.

    There are a lot of good little science toys, I mean demonstrations, at Scientifics Online. The van de graaf generator is cool, of course. There is also a magnetic levitator which is very cool, but its scientific value is unclear. :)

  177. Bubbles are cool by squidinkcalligraphy · · Score: 1

    Any experiment involving gases can be turned into an experiment involving bubbles and gases. They form a nice visible barrier. Just put the gas-creating reation into a container with a small-ish neck, and cover this with a thin film of detergent.

    Fill bubbles with H2 for nicely concentrated explosions.

    Create smoke filled bubbles.

    Blow bubbles over a tub of dry ice and water, and they `float' over the tub (the high density of the CO2 keeps them there).

    Demonstrates both the properties of gases, and surface tension.

    --
    "I think it would be a good idea" Gandhi, on Western Civilisation
  178. Airspeed vs. pressure--suck by blowing :-) by Zoop · · Score: 2

    This one was shown me by my dad, a sometimes physics prof in his retirement, when he needed to show the principles of lift as he instructed high school youth on sailplanes (gliders):

    All that's required is a solid wooden spool with a single hole, and a circular piece of construction or preferably card stock paper, about 10cm in diameter.

    1) Ask the kids what will happen if you blow through the spool with the disk centered on the hole on the other side, flat side toward the spool hole. (they should expect it to be blown away when you take your hand off)
    2) Place your index finger onto the paper over the hole in the spool, and put the other end of the spool to your mouth.
    3) Blow into the spool very hard.
    4) Take your finger off the paper. The paper should stay in place. When you stop, it will fall off.

    This demonstrates that swiftly-moving air has lower pressure than stationary air--hence sucking the paper to the spool by blowing.

  179. try this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drop a supermagnet Nicodium? whatever. onto a steel toed shoe. Then do it again but this time drop it down a copper pipe aimed at your steel toed shoe. (motor effect).Put a whole bunch of the magnets together and do it again. Bet the class how long it will take to hit your shoe first after they see you drop it without the pipe. Or almost the best demo I've ever seen get a piece of heavy steel round mill stock ringing. Like 2 or 3 inches in diameter and several feet long. Place on Styrofoam so that you can get it ringing then lift it up and point the small end at the class. Really cool. You can do full wave, half wave, three waves, depending on where you and how many Styrofoam blocks you got. To get it started to ring just tap it with somthing then rub it in one direction till it gets really loud. Pick it up in such a way that your hands are exactly where the blocks are supporting the rod or it will quickly stop ringing. Almost a pain weapon. It's cool.

  180. Burning Mg strips in dry ice by wirespring · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Here's a cool (cold, actually) one: Buy 2 roughly 2lb blocks of dry ice. Scoop out a golf-ball sized hole in one of the blocks, and drop some magnesium shavings in. Ignite the shavings with a lighter/bunson burner/etc. Do not look directly at the burning Mg. It will hurt. But _do_ notice that it burns a bright white. Now put the second block of dry ice down on top of the first block so that it covers over your pit full of burning Mg strips. You'll notice that even though the Mg is now in an atmosphere of pure CO2, it continues to burn. And now it's a pretty (and much less painful) red color.

  181. My favorites by Bald+Wookie · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of my favorites is the sodium acetate tower. It is a very safe demo that gets a good reaction out of just about any age group. You make a supersaturated solution of sodium acetate in a spotlessly clean beaker. Show everyone the clear liquid (looks like water) then start slowly pouring it on the table. Crystals of sodium acetate form as you pour, and the water is trapped within the crystals. You wind up with a pile of fairly dry looking sodium acetate and no liquid. Very impressive. Sodium Acetate Tower

    Another one I like is the burning carbon disulfide demo. I've seen this done using a long glass tube full of carbon disulfide gas. Drop a glowing splint in one end of the tube, and as it falls you get an amazing blue flame. Here's a link (hope you speak a little German) CS2

    They did it a bit differently. As you might guess, this lab is a bit more hazardous and you do get some stink from the sulfur. It's pretty though.

    Making your own mirror is another great demo. You prepare a small batch of silvering solution. ISTR using silver nitrate and nitric acid, maybe using an aldehyde as a reducing agent. I'll try to link to a recipe. Anyway, you mix the solution in a round bottom flask and begin swiriling. It takes about a minute, but as you swirl a silver mirror plates out onto the glass. Tollens Mirror

    I used a bit of a different procedure, but this looks like it should work. You may consider keeping the flasks a little on the warm side (100-120 F) just before you do the demo. I've gotten better results compared to using cold glassware.

    A great set of books is Tested Chemical Demonstrations, Vol. 1-4, by B. Shakishiri (University of Wisconsin Press.)

  182. Ripley's Believe It or Not by Radical+Rad · · Score: 2

    This explains how some guy I saw on that Ripley's TV show poured molten lead into his mouth without burning the crap out of himself. It's been a while since I watched it but IIRC, he seemed to keep it in a pool on his tongue for a couple of seconds and then spit it out.

    It's long been a running joke that people with Physics degrees end up in the Unemployment line. But now when you go to the fair and see a circus geek sticking his hand in molten lead, ask if he went to M.I.T. And the guy next to him that bites the heads off of chickens may have a PhD in Philosophy.

  183. Stolen from Phrack magazine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine this. A great, inflated, green garbage bag
    slowly wafting down from a tall building. It gains some speed as it nears the ground. People look up and say, "What the....?" The garbage bag hits! *BOOM!!!* It explodes in a thundering
    fireball of green bits of plastic and flame!
    "What is this?" you may ask. Well, this is the great "Acetylene Balloon Bomb." And here is how to make it.
    Ingredients:
    ============
    (1> For a small bomb: a plastic bag. Not too big. For something big(ger): a green, plastic garbage bag.
    (2> Some "Fun-Snaps". A dozen should be more than enough.
    (3> Some garbage bag twisties. String would also do.
    (4> A few rocks. Not too heavy, but depends on size of bomb and desired velocity of balloon/bomb.
    (5> PRIME INGREDIENT: Acetylene. This is what is used in acetylene torches. More on this substance later.
    (6> One or more eager Anarchists.
    Construction:
    =============
    (1> Fill up a bathtub with cold water. Make it VERY full.
    (2> Now get put you garbage bag in the water and fill it with water. Make sure ALL air/oxygen is out of the bag before proceeding.
    (3> Now take your acetylene source (I used it straight from the torch, and I recommend this way also.), and fill the bag up with acetylene.
    (4> Now, being careful with the acetylene, take the bag out of the tub and tie the opening shut with the twisty or string. Let the balloon dry off now. (Put it in a safe place.)
    (5> Okay. Now that it is dry and filled with acetlene, open it up and drop a few rocks in there. Also add some Fun-Snaps. The rocks will carry the balloon down, and the Fun-Snaps will spark upon impact, thus setting off the highly inflammable acetylene. *BABOOM!*
    (6> Now put the twisty or string back on VERY tightly. You now have a delicate but powerful balloon bomb.
    To use:
    =======
    Just drop off of a cliff, airplane, building, or whatever. It will hit the ground a explode in a fireball.

  184. liquid nitrogen by mshurpik · · Score: 1

    believe it or not, but you can dip your fingers in liquid nitrogen. i've done it, and i've seen others do it. hand comes out fine if you only do it for, like, 0.1sec....and obviously you'd be crazy to leave it in there longer than that.

    watching dry ice skate across the floor is cool too. same principle applies in both cases...a layer of gas between the cold object and the warm one.

    what else...color changing reactions are pretty cool. shake the bottle, bright red, shake it again, bright blue, etc.

    1. Re:liquid nitrogen by mshurpik · · Score: 1

      oops. OP mentions sticking hand in molten lead. my bad, and...jesus christ.

    2. Re:liquid nitrogen by BlueArchon · · Score: 1

      Um... it's also possible to dip your hand into liquid nitrogen, and to put some in your mouth and blow smoke :)

      Can't remeber the source, but google for it...

    3. Re:liquid nitrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Um... it's also possible to dip your hand into liquid nitrogen, and to put some in your mouth and blow smoke :)

      Anybody courageous/foolish enough to drink liquid nitrogen? What happened? Same thing as seagulls + Alka Seltzer? A helluva belch?

    4. Re:liquid nitrogen by BlueArchon · · Score: 1

      Don't know if this is true, but read here

    5. Re:liquid nitrogen by Twintop · · Score: 2

      I actually did this on Friday night for the first time. If you coat it in saliva and roll it around your mouth, the nitrogen will never actually touch the inside of your mouth.

    6. Re:liquid nitrogen by ibennetch · · Score: 1

      Um... it's also possible to dip your hand into liquid nitrogen, and to put some in your mouth and blow smoke :)

      um..the article....???

      [thinks]...or are you harassing your parent comment?

  185. A few suggestions. by tm2b · · Score: 2
    Here are the ones I loved many years ago, in high school... These are just a few, the sites I pointed at above have other similar projects. Have fun!
    --
    "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
  186. Safe Leidenfrost demo with Fire! by Nameis · · Score: 1
    One of my favorite chem tricks was demoed to me by my HS physics teacher. Thanks Mr. Fristead!

    Mix up a solution of water and soap in a tub. Run your favorite flammable gas through a flexible tube into the tub so that you get nice bubbles.

    Now have a Bunsen burner set up a safe distance away (5-10ft). Gather a large set of bubbles into your hands and place in the flame of the burner. You will get a nice column of flame in your hands for 3-5 seconds and the wonders of the Leidenfrost effect will protect your hands...but not your beard, so make sure that you keep your hands away from your body.

    This is a really fun and safe experiment...email me if you need more details or pictures!

  187. Hovercraft by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2

    A piece of plywood, a sheet of plastic (shower curtain), and the absolute cheapest electric leafblower you can find will slide a 200lb person all the way across the gym floor.

  188. Crush a 45 gallon drum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe I saw this accomplished at the science museum in chicago. Heat up the drum for a bit then drop in ice, should make it implode.

  189. Collection of Physics Demos by FredtheDead · · Score: 1

    The University of Florida Physics Department has a similar site for demonstrations.

  190. Ooblick recipe: by targo · · Score: 2

    1 cup cornstarch
    1 cup baking soda
    3/4 cup water
    N drops of food coloring

    At least that's the way I have done it.

  191. Neat stuff.... by trotski · · Score: 1

    You can't go wrong with a tesla coil!

    Huge sparks, loud noise, the intense smell of ozone. I remember the first time I saw a tesla coil in grade 6, a friend of mine's dad built hit a tesla coil for that years science fair. I gotta tell you, few science experiments have been more memorable for me. Most people are impressed when they're shown something that develops a potential 1000 kV!

    Another interesting one, especially for maybe senior physics or 1st or 2nd year physics/engineering is showing a photoelastic material, you can really see how stress and strain as well as stress concentrations spread develop in a material.

    The coolest experiement I ever did in 2nd year physics (it was an electricity and magnestism course, awful course by the way, I got a C+, my lowest mark ever :P ) was levetating a magnetic cube using a superconductor.... seeing that cube floating there almost felt like an illusion!

    Oh, finally for a quick and fun effect (especially at the end of a 3 hour chem lab or something tedious like that) is pouring say a litre or two of liquid nitrogen on the ground, that gets people interested right away!

    --

    "Entropy is the bad-guy, and he is everywhere"
  192. be damned careful about that one... by NevermindPhreak · · Score: 5, Funny
    i always remember what my high school chemistry teacher told us. when she was in college, they showed anyone wanting to be a science teacher why you should always test out your experiments before you do them in front of a class. it was a sort of "science experiments gone wrong" kind of video. anyways, my chem teacher always had a laugh whenever she described the video, because it had many different amateur videos of chem experiments that teachers decided to record for whatever reason while they did them in front of the class. her favorite was the one where the teacher decided to chuck some sodium into water, but didnt measure the amount out correctly before he started. she would always say "you just saw the teacher throw the sodium in, and then the camera got knocked over, and all you saw was students lying all over the ground"...

    that same teacher showed us a kinda cool experiment herself. drain about 1/4 of the coke out of a 2-liter coke bottle, and drill a very small hole in its cap (the smaller, the better). next, take about a roll of mentos (the original kind, i think, test it out yourself), and place small holes through the center of each. now take some fishing wire and thread them through all the mentos in a line, and tie the ends with something heavy like steel nuts. make sure the mentos are tied together tight, and give a little extra fishing wire on one side. thread this extra fishing wire into the bottom of that coke cap with the hole in it, and screw the cap on the coke bottle, holding the fishing wire to make sure the mentos do not touch the coke inside. drop the wire to let the mentos drop into the coke, and move out of the way. some odd reaction takes place that causes the cap to shoot off and hit the ceiling, and pop spews close to 10 feet in the air. at least, thats what happened when my chem teacher did it. the janitor was pretty pissed that he had to clean the ceiling after that one.

    alternately, you could just offer someone a coke while theyre eating several mentos :)

    1. Re:be damned careful about that one... by ed1park · · Score: 1

      this reminds me of some bottle rocket "experiements" that my friends and I used to do.

      One variation is to use a 2 liter coke bottle, baking powder, toilet paper, and vinegar.

      Empty the bottle and fill the bottom 1/5 with vinegar.
      Pour the baking soda into the sheets of toilet paper and roll them up into mini cigars. Make sure they are thin enough to fit down the hole of the bottle easily.

      When you are in a huge open field with no one around, quickly stuff a bunch of the tp cigars down into the bottle and then screw on the cap.

      It may take some time for anything to happen, depending on the quantities you mixed, but the result is usually a powerful explosion with the bottle rocketing off a hundred yards or so. :)

      Another one I used to do is take grain alcohol, (190 proof) or something similar (isopropyl alcohol 70%?) and pour it into a dry/empty 2 liter coke bottle. Pour only enough to coat the insides well as you want the bottle to fill up with the vapours. Shake it up.

      Also, you should have drilled a decently sized hole into the bottle cap. Grab a small piece of toilet paper and roll it into a small fuse.
      Screw the cap on and place the fuse into the hole. Light it and the that sucker fly!

      Warnging: Grain alcohol is *extremely* flammable. I almost set my dorm on fire with that... Have a fire extingusiher ready or something. :(

    2. Re:be damned careful about that one... by srmalloy · · Score: 1
      i always remember what my high school chemistry teacher told us. when she was in college, they showed anyone wanting to be a science teacher why you should always test out your experiments before you do them in front of a class. it was a sort of "science experiments gone wrong" kind of video.

      I got to attend one of those 'oops' demonstrations in high school. Our chemistry teacher, Mr. Swift, was going to demonstrate the thermite reaction. So he set a ring stand up on the floor, with a crucible holder clamped to the ring stand, and a small crucible in the holder full of the thermite mixture (powdered iron oxide and aluminum), with a magnesium strip for a fuze. Under the crucible was a bucket to catch the crucible.

      Mr. Swift lit the magnesium and turned out the classroom lights. We all watched as the magnesium burned down, and then watched the fountain of tiny glowing bits of molten iron. Then we heard a *crack* as the crucible broke. No problem, that's what the bucket is there for. So the glob of white-hot molten iron hits the bottom of the bucket... and burns through. Then burns through the base of the ring stand. And the linoleum flooring. And into the concrete foundation.

      The next time Mr. Swift did that demonstration, there was six inches of sand in the bucket.
  193. frozen water vapor? by rtscts · · Score: 0

    eh, you mean frozen oxygen?

  194. Warn them of a dangerous toxin by emerald_glitter · · Score: 2, Funny

    Refer them to this site, or print off some choice pages and hand it out in class. Ask them what they think they should do about educating the public... etc.

    Then you can show them this site.

    After that, you can tell them that gullible is no longer in the dictionary. Hope that there aren't any who hesitate and look around before rolling their eyes and groaning.

    -eg

  195. orange and pinkish purple by Erpo · · Score: 2

    Here's a colorful one:

    Try putting (about) equal volumes of CCl4 (carbon tetrachloride) and aqueous KI (potassium iodide) in a test tube together. The clear, non-polar CCl4 will sink to the bottom, and the clear, polar, KI solution will sit on top. Now add a few drops of Br2 (liquid elemental bromine) to the solution and shake. The top layer will turn orange and the bottom will turn pinkish purple, but stay totally separate.

    This reaction happens because bromine is a stronger oxidizing agent than iodine. When the bromine is added, it replaces the iodine in solution, forcing it to become I2 (elemental iodine) which mixes with the CCl4 below and turns it pinkish purple. The extra leftover bromine turns the solution on top orange.

    It may not be as exciting as blowing something up, but it illustrates an important scientific principle (relative strengths of oxidizing agents) and it still looks cool :).

  196. Good old hammer and anvil by Zspdude · · Score: 2
    Lie flat on your back, and (very) gently place a large iron anvil on your chest. Once the anvil is resting on your chest, have someone strike it with a large hammer. The inertia of the anvil at rest will absorb the blow and you will feel no effects from even a very heavy blow.

    That is if you like having an anvil on your chest...I've seen this done, but I'm not sure if you have to hold your breath or keep your chest expanded(likely). Very neat though, as it seems certain to the viewer that the person under the anvil must be crushed by the hammer blow.

    --
    What's in a Sig?
  197. No, that won't work. by fireboy1919 · · Score: 2

    Keep in mind that each collision has to be such that the weight of the first object (i.e. tennis ball) is negligable compared to the second (basketball). Perhaps you'd be able to get it down to orbital velocity, but the size of the balls would be going down as well. I doubt that the last ball would be big enough to see with the naked eye, unless the first ball you started with was very, very, large.

    Also, I am fairly certian that IF you couldn't get up to orbital velocity because you'd reach terminal velocity first (i.e. drag would be such a problem that there's no way anything would leave orbit).

    Several hundred feet is probably a better target to shoot for with such an experiment (though that may fail, too).

    There's a reason that the highest flying toys are rockets. They can get the highest the most.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  198. Haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone else read that as "the classic two-shit experiment"?

  199. tin foil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    is apparently pretty hard to find. Even McMaster-Carr (industrial supplier, with a huge variety) didn't have any.
    Aluminum foil is another story.

    1. Re:tin foil by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      is apparently pretty hard to find. ... Aluminum foil is another story.

      Yes, and it's also hard to find real lead penicls.

      The usage of "tinfoil" is well-established.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  200. Air Pressure by frantzdb · · Score: 2

    These are all great. Here's one I havn't seen yet:

    Boil a few ounces of water in a tin can so the can is full of steam. Then with tongs, invert the can into a bath of cold water. The can crushes itself instantly.

    --Ben

  201. tin foil; "breath" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Tin foil is quite hard to find. Aluminum is not tin, guys. If you're going to be trying to teach, for heaven's sake, please don't put out bum dope, darn it!

    The verb is "breathe"; please note the "e" on the end of the word. You don't "breath" air; you "breathe" it.

    Enby in Waltham

    1. Re:tin foil; "breath" by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      I know it's aluminum foil. That's just the common term.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  202. Even more surprising demo... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...would be to put that capacitor on the rear of the naughtiest kid in the room... ;o)

  203. donut on a string by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could do the old donut with a string tied around one side demo... when you swing the string + donut over your head you can talk about centripetal and centrifugal acceleration and ask the kids what will happen when the string cuts through the donut (it will go off in a tanget to the cirlce of your swing... this demonstrates orbits... if the force of gravity from the sun on the Earth were suddenly shut off, earth would fly straight ahead).

  204. chain reaction demonstration... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to illustrate the principal of a chain reaction (like what happens when a nuclear bomb goes off), an old professor of mine had a large plexiglass box filled with set moustraps. on the swing (the thing that kills mice) of each trap, there was a rubber cork (like the ones used in chemistry). One rubber cork is tossed into the box (which has a hole in it's top... but that's the only hole) and it sets off a trap sending it's cork flying. Those two corks set off two more and etc. etc. etc. pretty soon the whole box goes crazy (a chain reaction).

  205. make beer by brer_rabbit · · Score: 2

    might as well get 'em started early. Make beer. If you need a demo, watching active fermentation is more exciting than a lava lamp!

  206. Safety; pinch hazard with modern magnets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I was reading through the various posts, enjoying all the ideas, but was really rather worried that some people might not know the dangers and get hurt. Many of these things are fun, but some are awfully risky!

    If you have two modern high-flux magnets, sugar-cube size or bigger, PLEASE be careful not to get pinched between them! I was somewhat careless, and got trapped. It hurt, pretty badly, and I tried to pull free. BAD! As you pull yourself out from between them, the inverse-square law still holds.

    The magnets don't know you are between them, and simply squeeze harder as the gap between them becomes smaller. Ultimately, the pressure is like that between the jaws of a pair of pliers with a strong hand gripping the handles, and I left a little piece of myself between the magnets; a little blood. (Healed completely; don't know why; I was lucky.)

    What you have to do is live with the pain until you can force something between the magnets so they won't come any closer together. (No, not a piece of steel...)

    Enby in Waltham

  207. Make a 55 gal. drum implode by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 1

    Step 1) Obtain a 55 gal. drum, with a small hole at the top.

    Step 2) Provide a large heat source.

    Step 3) Place 55 gal. drum on heat source.

    Step 4) Pour enough water into the drum so that it just covers the bottom, and creates steam.

    Step 5) Allow the water to boil inside the drum. This will cause the vapor pressure inside the drum to change, and the atmospheric pressure inside the drum to drop dramatically.

    Step 6) Spray 55 gallon drum with (preferably cold) water...for about 2-3 seconds.

    Step 7) *WHAM* ... 55 gal. drum will more or less implode on itself instantaneously, crushed by the weight of the atmosphere. It will look like a truck hit it at 100 MPH. I've seen it before, its insane.

    Here, have 60 more ideas:

    Becker demos

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

  208. Why not... by toby360 · · Score: 1

    Increase the kinetic energy being transferred from the larger heavier balls by perhaps creating massive spheres of solid rubber and the top ball being small and of a much less dense material. You probably won't need all 20 balls.

  209. Or Coca-cola. by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

    Or Coca-cola.

  210. Roll coins through a magnetic field; rejectors,&am by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Slug rejectors make coins roll down a ramp between two powerful magnets. The coins that conduct electricity well are slowed down a good bit, and drop straight off the end of the ramp. Coins with lower conductivity (U.S. nickels) leave the ramp at a good speed, and fall into a separate hopper (next test is for bounce).

    Try to get a slug rejector (PC term is "acceptor") and see how it works. There's more interesting stuff in there.

    Also, let a US dollar bill hang straight down; bring a strong magnet next to it, and see the magnet attract the magnetic ink. Do the same with an ordinary personal-account bank check, using the oddball MICR numbers along the bottom. (MICR = magnetic ink character recognition)

    Some time back, US dimes, quarters, and 50-cent pieces were made of coin silver, a silver alloy. However, when the value of our currency dropped, the Ag in the coins was worth more than the denomination of the coin. Several 100,000,000 (?) slug rejectors had to be accommodated, and the sandwich coin, with Ni alloy faces and a Cu layer in the middle, was issued. (Interesting item is that the sandwich might be explosively clad, possibly by a subsidiary of T.I.).

    For the unlucky, Ag is silver (from the Latin, argyrum, iirc), Ni is nickel, and Cu is copper (Latin cuprum, iirc. Two-letter symbols for chemical elements *always* are cap. for the first, lower-case for the second. Anything else looks as stupid as ".79" (79/100 of a cent).

    nbodley[at}theworld[dot}com

  211. Let a strong magnet slide down a copper plate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try to get a flat sheet of flashing copper, or something thicker; a thick sheet of aluminum is probably easier (and affordable :). Clean it off, and hold it at an angle. Put your magnet (a rod is not a good choice) at the upper edge, and let it slide down the plate. Takes a while...

  212. another good one by Axeon · · Score: 1

    Here's a good one. Take two gears, a foot of wire and some pvc pipe and affix them together so that all the energy from one gear transfers to the other, and vice versa. If you do it just right, you should have a crude but basically safe perpetual motion machine. Make sure to do it outdoors, preferably on a bed of gravel, so that the heat you generate does not cause a fire. You can use the surplus energy to run your computer lab and any other miscellaneous power needs for the next week or so, until the machine is consumed in a flash of excess heat. My girlfriend used it to reverse her polarity. However, the implementation can be kind of difficult. Warning: do not attempt in an atmosphere of pure hydrogen. Do not attempt with radioactive building materials. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt with midgets.

  213. Spectacles don't necessarily teach all... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that kids need to know. They do, or should, get kids interested, and that's good. However, I can see many important principles simply get to be ignored.

  214. Mosbauer Effect is the Most Surprising I've Seen by Lucas+Membrane · · Score: 3, Interesting
    It's not visible. You have to use a detector and count rays. But it is very surprising. It has two pieces of material that emit and absorb gamma rays of a certain wavelength. You can show that one piece of the material absorbs rays emitted by the other. But introduce a slight relative motion between the two pieces, maybe 1 cm/sec or so, and the absorbtion doesn't work anymore. It's too selective, and the change in energy from the trivial relative motion puts the rays out of the energy range that is absorbed.

    The demonstration at the equator, as shown on BBC, that demonstrates how the direction of rotation of water going down a drain reverses on account of moving a couple of hundred feet across the line was also amazing. But it was not genuine. It's bunko artists who are quite skilled. Lots of experiments like that one.

    A torsion pendulum that can demonstrate the gravitational force from movable masses would also be a great demo.

  215. Are these demos effective? by Goonie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This is slightly OT, but I've always wondered about how effective these shows are in getting kids interested in science. Sure, they enjoy them greatly when they go, but do they actually care about why all this is happening, and how people figured out all this stuff?

    How do you get people enthused about the actual process of science - coming up with hypotheses, figuring out how to test them, analysing the results, and so on?

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    1. Re:Are these demos effective? by Faust7 · · Score: 1
      How do you get people enthused about the actual process of science - coming up with hypotheses, figuring out how to test them, analysing the results, and so on?

      You don't. Those well-suited to such work usually discover it for themselves.

    2. Re:Are these demos effective? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      This is slightly OT, but I've always wondered about how effective these shows are in getting kids interested in science. Sure, they enjoy them greatly when they go, but do they actually care about why all this is happening, and how people figured out all this stuff?

      What do you mean? The Al Queda kids were *really* into it and eager to know more.

    3. Re:Are these demos effective? by Ravagin · · Score: 2

      Perhaps one ought to explain why the trick works (antithetical to the usual magic show, I know) so that the kids see thet there is, well, a science behind it - something they can study and understand and play with themselves.

      Just a thought.

      --

      Karma: T-rexcellent.

  216. A few more. by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

    The obvious liquid nitrogen ideas have been mentioned already. Try putting one end of a length of thick rubber tubing into the liquid nitrogen. Evaporating liquid at the bottom causes liquid above it to be propelled out the top of the tube. It makes a rather spectacular display as the liquid coming out rapidly evaporates. You can practice this first and aim it at unsuspecting audience members. They just get a chilly blast of nitrogen gas.

    Disolving the copper coating off of pennies is fun.

    Make soap bubbles in a dish using methane. Have someone scoop it up in their hand and then ignite it in a large burst of flame.

    My AP physics teacher had a projectiles section where we launched pneumatic rockets at him from about 150 feet away. Each team's rocket launched at a slightly different pressure. We could time it's flight and measure the distance it went. We each had three shots to work out an appropriate launch angle and try and hit the teacher(A+) or get a lower grade for landing nearby.

  217. Bed of nails, firewalking, by KjetilK · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I do dome "risky" demos. I've got a world record in firewalking, I've done the lead thing, and it's not that extreme at all. Firewalking is of course the demo but it takes a lot of resources.

    I'd say: get a bed of nails. The bed of nails is probably the demo that hurts the most of the things I do, but it is not dangerous. It doesn't hurt just lying there, but then you put some brick s on you chest, and you get someone in the audience to break them with a sledgehammer. But it looks absolutely astonishing.

    Check out David Willey's homepage. There's not much info on how to do things, but he does all kinds of weird things, and he's the guy who organized these firewalking record events.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  218. liquid nitrogen by Dexter's+Laboratory · · Score: 1

    Pour some liquid nitrogen in your mouth and breath out. It works and apparently is not dangerous if you do it right...

  219. Heating Water to Boiling in a Paper Cup by Catmeat · · Score: 2

    Fill paper cup with water, place on bunsen burner. Because the paper is thin, the cup is a fairly good thermal conductor. The paper never get's hot enough to catch fire as all the heat from the burner is conducted into the water.

  220. No, drinking liquid nitrogen is NOT SAFE! by joib · · Score: 2

    I don't know about the Leidenfrost effect, but drinking liquid nitrogen is absolutely not safe. There was a notice in New Scientist not long ago when some undergraduate tried this, and failed. He spent like 3 weeks in intensive care, and parts of his stomach had to be replaced, IIRC.

    So yeah, it looks cool (yes I've seen it), but personally I'd rather be slightly less cool in the eyes of the audience and not risk spending a month in intensive care. Of course, YMMW.

    1. Re:No, drinking liquid nitrogen is NOT SAFE! by KjetilK · · Score: 2

      Hm, yeah, I can imagine that if you get this stuff down the throat, you're in deep trouble. Hm, every time I've done it, I have found it completely impossible to get it anywhere near the throat before it evaporates. Douglas Osheroff (nobel laureate in physics) told me that he actually got some nitrogen down the throat when he did this. But I mean, the whole point of the demonstration is to make things look cool, and getting it down the throat makes no impression, because people can't see down your throat. If you only keep it in your mouth, then, it is quite safe. You would have to really work hard to get it down the throat, and that, you obviously shouldn't do. It is not because it is cold, but because liquid nitrogen has, what 700 times? the density of vapor, that's how much it expands.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    2. Re:No, drinking liquid nitrogen is NOT SAFE! by King_TJ · · Score: 2

      Did you read the entire article that this discussion is linked to?

      The guy who wrote it even explains *why* drinking liquid nitrogen isn't always "safe".

      He says he successfully did that experiment a couple dozen times with no problem, until the last time - when the enamel on his two front teeth shattered from contracting, due to the extreme cold.

      I don't think I'd want to risk screwing up my teeth over this stunt....

  221. Fun With the Ideal Gas Law by frenchs · · Score: 2, Informative

    Demonstration of the Ideal Gas Law:

    PV = nRT
    Pressure × Volume = No. of moles × Universal Gas Constant × Absolute Temperature

    First off, you will want to do this outside. All you need is a small amount of dry ice, water, and a plastic soda bottle (20oz, 1liter, or 2 liter are all fine). I would reccomend a 2 liter, because it's more impressive. Put enough dry ice in the bottle to barely cover the bottom of the empty 2 liter bottle. Then be ready for action, because you will want to put about an equal amount of water as dry ice in your bottle. After filling the bottle with water, the dry ice will start being convered to CO2 gas, and you will want to cap the bottle. Place it in the middle of a field or something and make sure everyone is well away from it.

    You can take this time to explain that Dry Ice is a solid form of Carbon Dioxide, and when it is in a system with water, it undergoes sublimation (solid to gas, no liquid phase). And that it's gaseous volume is 800 times that of the solid volume. (so if you want to measure and get all scientific, you could).

    Just about when you get done explaining this stuff, your experiment should alert you that it's ready. The pressure that the CO2 exerts on the closed volume system becomes too great, and the bottle gives and a rather loud sound is produced. Like everyone said, explosions are cool ;)

    So if we apply the science to it.

    2 liters = (approx) 2000 cubic centimeters

    2000cc/800 = 2.5cc of dry ice needed to fill the system with gas.

    So lets say we put 5cc of ice, and 5 cc of water in.

    5cc * 800 = 4000cc space needed for the gas to expand

    system volume(2000cc) - water volume(5cc) = 1995cc

    This would pretty much gaurantee an explosion. But for the kids, you might give them this information and see if they can come up with the minimum amount needed to make the bottle explode, make them draw upon some basic math skills :)

    Ok, now that I've gone though all this, check your state laws to see if this fun experiment is illegal, it is here in california ;) http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cacodes/pen/12301-12 316.html

  222. Two polarizing lenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take two polarizing lenses and rotate those against each other.

  223. No explosions by KjetilK · · Score: 5, Informative
    Well, I'm not so sure all the kids like things that explodes. Some may only be frightened, and they will forever think that science is only about destroying things. It is a real problem that many people think that.

    I much rather like demonstrations that are counter-intuitive. Especially things that seem "supernatural" to do, yet are very natural indeed. I'd like to point out the work of David Willey, whom I've worked with. He organized a world-record firewalk, and I attended (yeah, I've got a world record in firewalking... :-) ).

    Check out his article in Skeptical Inquirer: The Physics Behind Four Amazing Demonstrations.

    David has done quite a lot of explosions and rocketry too, he knows all about that too, but his best demos is really those that seem risky, but are not. The liquid lead is among them.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    1. Re:No explosions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know a single lay person who thinks that science is only about detsroying things. I don't know a single lay person who thinks that "counter-intuitive" experiments are fun or interesting. Our demo group in uni does the Iodate clock at a lot of shows. It's very slightly interesting, but unlikely to garner the kind of crowd approval that other, explosive demos garner.

    2. Re:No explosions by kurtz25 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I agree with the nutjob who thinks that kids don't like eplosions! There is a worldwide problem of people thinking that "science" means "exploding stuff." Just put some ice in a beaker and boil it to show the tri-point. That experiment kicks ass. It's like "Whoah! Check it out!!! There's ice, water AND steam in this beaker! Thanks, science!!!"

    3. Re:No explosions by bmud · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure all the kids like things that explodes.

      Generally kids are suckers for an explosion. After the first blast, they enjoy toying with the byproducts.

      But for things that explodes, the second explosion happens at point blank range. This usually maims all involved.

  224. Turn water to blue, clear, blue, clear... by Tx-0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I was studying chemistry I had fun with this. Sorry, I'm used to MKS system. Prepare 1 liter of solution containing: 10 grams of NaOH 10 grams of C6H12O6 (any of the 16 works, only changes speed) 1 drop of 1% solution of Methilene-Blue (well, I've never used a drop, but directly joined a couple of grains) Fill half a bottle and close it. Within a little time it seems clear water, since NaOH+C6H12O6 turns Methilene-Blue to a not-oxidized state, but as you shake the bottle, the Oxigen takes it to blue again, then it turns again clear... You can repeat it some times; open the bottle if it doesn't work anymore: maybe you've consumed all the Oxigen... Have fun!

  225. Sodium by Nate+Eldredge · · Score: 1

    Dropping bits of sodium metal in water fizzes nicely, and demonstrates how alkali metals can break the H-OH bonds in water (IIRC). However, be very careful how much you use. A teacher of mine once did this, using larger and larger bits of sodium each time, until finally one bit was just a little too big and made an explosion that destroyed the dish and glass shield, and showered the front row with shards :)

  226. Couple of my Chemistry teacher's favourites... by sjehay · · Score: 1

    Demonstration of a 'chip pan fire' - ignite a small crucible-full of cooking oil, stand well back, squirt with water from squeezy bottle. Fireballs up to the ceiling if you get it right :-)

    Also the custard bomb (demonstrating speed of reaction increases with surface area) - can't remember the specifics, but it involved a spark in a custard tin with a small amount of very fine powder in it: big bang, lid blown off etc.

  227. Wilson Cloud Chamber by chris_sawtell · · Score: 2

    One of the most exciting on-the-benchtop physics experiments I have seen was a Wilson Cloud Chamber detecting cosmic rays. So simple yet it makes radiation visible. I was spellbound by something this simple.

  228. Iodine Clock Reactions by srichman · · Score: 2

    Iodine clock reactions are the bomb. Especially if you pour your mixture back and forth between beakers so a stream of it is cascading at the time the color changes.

  229. gyroscope + chair by BizGeek · · Score: 1

    One that is simple and surprising and can actually be done and felt by students is to use the following:

    1 large gyroscope - wheel with handles on each side can easily be improvised
    1 Rotating chair
    1 Student

    Simply get the student to sit in the chair and hold the gyroscope so its rotational axis is horizontal i.e. the wheel is vertical. Then spin the wheel. Once its spinning the student should be told to tilt the gyroscope to one side - and wow the student and chair will start to move round, tip it the other way and the chair will stop and move in the other direction.

    Even as someone with a degree in physics and a good understanding of the conservation of angular momentum it's a spooky experience.

  230. Genie in a Bottle by Nate+Eldredge · · Score: 1

    Get a large bottle (those 5 gallon water cooler jugs work well). Swirl a little alcohol around inside, so it evaporates. Then light the top. You should get a nice ring of flame travelling down in the bottle, then back up.

    I don't know what this demonstrates, but it looks cool.

  231. My favourites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These might be redundant. I wasn't about to read all 4+ pages to check...

    1) Liquid nitrogen a rose and smash it
    2) Liquid nitrogen something lead and demonstrate the pitch change when you strike it.
    3) Frogs leg and some electricity
    4) Swivel chair and big spinning heavy thing to hold to demonstrate the gyroscopic effect.
    5) big long magnetic coil and aluminium disc demonstrating eddy currents and induced magnetism. (disc levitates)
    6) anything with a van der graaf generator
    7) reasonably high power red laser popping a green balloon inside a red balloon.
    7) something safe and cheap you can give away that's fun and makes kids figure out how it works.

  232. Boiling lead(?!). Also microwave. by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 2, Funny
    The guy in that PDF poured liquid nitrogen in his mouth, and plunged his fingers into boiling lead. Presumably, the lead experiment came first, leading to a vast inhalation of lead fumes, because WHAT THE HELL IS HE THINKING? Ah well, we all have fun in our own ways.

    Anyway, cool experiments using a microwave oven, of course, include the grape experiment (leading to ball lightning, preferably), and the actual microwaved ball lightning experiments.

    Also be sure to check out some of these other ones. I especially like the soap.

    Be sure that you can defend yourself against the parents, though, as they will likely not be very pleased, and will want to rip your lungs out, or some such mischief.

    Have a ball (lightning).

  233. A variation on this one... by griblik · · Score: 1

    If you hold a pin/needle flat against the match with the pointy end touching the head when you wrap the foil round it, you can remove the pin to leave a small exhaust hole.

    That way you get the whole match flying across the room :)

    See http://www.freecell.com/rockets/howto.html for more detail...

    --
    Warning: May contain nuts
  234. Homemade 'trick' by dk.r*nger · · Score: 1

    I've amazed a few by taking a few ounces of nail polish cleaner in a glass and then dropping those foam-packaging chips in, one by one.

    Won't work with anyone who took much interest in anything above 10th grad chemistry...

  235. Solution: use bowling ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our physics prof used a bowling ball.
    He also had a student do it. :)

  236. Demonstrations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure how well this relates, but some of the best technology oriented demonstrations i've ever heard of/seen, which also have a nice artistic flare to them would be from SRL

    http://www.srl.org

  237. good for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  238. A macabre ad-hoc demonstration by jjkivilu · · Score: 1

    One day back in the secondary school, there was a traffic accident (a pedestrian bumped by a car) just outside our school building and of course people were in window staring the scene. At some point our physics teacher came by, observed the scene for a little moment, and then declared: "There you see. Momentum prevails."

  239. Not quite that hot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Magnesium burning in O2 is actually below 2000 C. The _color temperature_ of the light emitted by the flame is 5000C, though, but thats a different thing.

    God I love nitpicking...

    --------------
    Death to the sarcasm impaired!

  240. Shocking! by jakedata · · Score: 2, Informative

    In high school, I was often asked to visit the lower school to do science demonstrations.

    The all-time favorite was the Van DeGraff generator. There is something about your hair standing straight out that always amuses the kids. I also lit fluorescent tubes in my hand.

    I got the best results by making them stand on a milk crate to keep them from discharging through the floor. Before they got down, I had them "slap me five" so they didn't feel the spark discharge.

    You can use the demonstration as a lead-in for static attraction and repulsion and a whole raft of other topics depending on the age group.

    Just make sure you get a -small- one. The one I used was 18 inches tall and came from Edmund Scientific.

    By the way, if you haven't been to the Boston Museum of Science, then you haven't seen the worlds largest Van DeGraff generator. Quite a show!

    http://www.mos.org/sln/toe/

    -jake

  241. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  242. Mine's not as cool... by MegaFur · · Score: 2

    sheesh. We got some crazy people here. Seems like everyone's messing around with liquid nitrogen and microwaves and such.

    The stuff I remember is a lot simpler:
    bending water stream
    1. air up a baloon and rub it against some cloth to get a nice clump of static electricity.
    2. go turn on the tap water and hold the balloon really close to the stream *without* touching it. You will see the water bend towards the balloon. Fwee.

    crushing can
    you need tongs, a heat source (like a stove), a pot of cold/room temperature water, and an empty metal pop can
    1. using the tongs, hold the pop can right-side up over the heat source until the can is really hot.
    2. now quickly, still using the tongs, place the can upside-down into the water (part of the point is to make sure the mouth of the can is completely covered.)
    The can should now be quickly and dramatically crushed. The reason is difference in air pressure coupled with rapid temperature change.

    Also, of course, the levitating magnet thing is cool (superconductivity).

    Another source for science demos is magic books. Go to some bookstore and pick out an interesting magic book. Just skim until you find one that exploits more science or math than misdirection. Some do, some don't. It's also possible to use magic tricks to get kids' attention and make a dramatic impression, as this post by DaveNay (532546) humorously demonstrates.

    --
    Furry cows moo and decompress.
  243. three things I liked doing as a kid by xutopia · · Score: 1

    Experiment 1. take a bobby pin or a needle a kleenex and a bowl of water. Take the kleenex with two hands and place the needle on top. Place the kleenex on the surface of the water. The needle will float. Experiment 2. Take some corn starch and a pail of water and a decent sized rock. Mix corn starch with the water until you have a liquid (so you could pour the content of the pail on the floor if you wanted) that is still thick. Take the rock and gently place it on the liquid. See it sink. Now take the rock out and take a ladder or a chair. Drop the rock into the pail from two meters high. Funny he? :) no splashes and it doesnt sink immediatly! :) Experiment 3. Go to a lake or have a pail of water you don't plan to keep. Have one person with five layers of jogging pants goggles and protective apparail trow one pound of sodium in a lake or drop it in the pail and run. Show it to people that are sitting at a distance. This is also fun with the school toilets.

    1. Re:three things I liked doing as a kid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... please tell me you haven't done the last experiment.... half a kilogram of sodium in a lake would result in a very large explosion. The sort that would easily get the person dropping it in killed. Horrendously irresponsible, and I'm pretty sure that even if he wasn't killed or injured the experiment would still be highly illegal....

  244. blow out a lightbulb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My favorite is the electric lightbulb that you can light with fire and blow out like a candle. It works like this:

    ------ gallows
    | |
    | L
    |
    |
    |--h--|
    | X | pedestal

    The lightbulb L is hanging from a gallows. X contains the battery for the lightbulb. h is a small hole in the pedestal. The battery power is turned on and off by a phototransistor. If you bring a match or a lighter or any other flame to the lightbulb, it will shine through the hole and the phototransistor will turn on the battery, turning on L. After that you can remove the match/lighter because L itself will provide enough light to keep the phototransistor happy. But if you blow at the lightbulb, because it is suspended by a wire and not fixed, it will be moved by the airflow, so that it's not above the hole anymore. This means the phototransistor is now dark and the power is turned off. You have blown out the lightbulb.

  245. Plasma balls?? by TheLink · · Score: 2, Funny

    Please clarify "plasma balls" and "between legs".

    --
  246. Re:plasma ball by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

    You can do it with grapes by cutting them almost in half then setting the two halves next to each other. I've done it.

  247. Thank heavens for the Leidenfrost effect by n9hmg · · Score: 2

    I used to be the lab tech in a lead smelter. One day, taking the temperature (about 680F) on a kettle of soft lead (non-alloyed), a refinery rat ran a forklift into the stack of pallets I was standing on, causing me to fall partway into the kettle. Fortunately, Most of my body was below the level of the rim, so I kind of landed on my upper ribcage. My left arm, holding the thermocouple, went in up to the elbow... for about 200 milliseconds.... It's amazing what terror can do for you. It was, as always, about 130 degrees in the refinery, plus, I'd been helping skim a kettle, so I was pretty sweaty. I ended up with a somewhat pink arm with silvery, lead-covered hairs, and a melted thermocouple handle. The refinery supervisor joked that he was afraid they'd have to do a "de-shit" treatment on that batch.
    It didn't even merit an incident report. The whole place was a death trap. It was pretty common to have one guy point out to another that he was on fire, and have the burning man ask to be put out, because he had his hands full. Quite a place.

  248. Atmospheric Pressure by Frodo2002 · · Score: 1

    I am not sure if anyone has suggested this already, but you can give a cool demonstration of the crushing force of atmospheric pressure in the following way:

    Find the biggest hunk/jock in the crowd as a volunteer. Wrap him up in a trash bag up to his neck. Obviously leave his head sticking out. Then take a vacuum cleaner and suck the air out of the bag. This takes a little practice since you have to wrap the tube up in the bag and stick it down his back and make sure that everything seals reasonably well. Then ask him to move. He will be so stuck he cannot do anything at all...

    Words of caution: Don't get his head involved. I am quite sure this will collapse your lungs if they got involved in the demo. Also, I never saw this tried with someone standing and probably with good reason because as the air is sucked out I am sure he/she would fall over like a rigid pole and injure themselves. Sit the victim on a chair or something like that.

  249. Silver Nitrate, Magnesium & Water. Oh, & N by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

    Don't let the fact these *suggestions* are at darwinawards.com put you off. ;P

    Silver nitrate, magnesium, and a drop of water
    Drink liquid nitrogen!

    They're completely safe really - I found them in "honourable mentions" so they're not actual, proper, Darwins!

  250. 9v Battery and Steel Wool by Cade144 · · Score: 1

    This is a nice demo to show electrical resistance in wires. Take a decent sized battery, and some nicely fine steel wool. Apply electrical current so that it flows through the steel wool. The steel wool will glow and then burn due to the electrical resisance.
    Sorry, I don't know the relevent math on this one.
    Perform this expreiment on a non-flamable surface and use appropriate safety gear.
    Do not allow students to wear necklaces or bracelets of steel wool and let the students apply electricty, (even if your back was turned for just a minute,) you may face diciplinary action from the administration.

    1. Re:9v Battery and Steel Wool by dexter+riley · · Score: 1

      I saw this on a outdoor survival show, using the car battery and some steel wool. It's a quick way to start a fire, if you can't find two Boy Scouts to rub together.

      -DR

  251. The correct response was... by qurob · · Score: 1


    "This sort of thin ain't my bag, baby!"

    1. Re:The correct response was... by Loligo · · Score: 1

      One copy of "Swedish Water Boiling Vacuum Pumps and You", by Kwerle...

      -l

  252. Gasses heavier than air by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

    My chemistry teacher last semester pulled this one:

    He had a couple of gasses in class, one of which was helium, and the other was a heavier-than-air gas, bromide something, I believe. To show us both how vibration worked, and something about gas laws, he sucked down first some helium, which we've all done, and know that it makes your voice very high. Then he sucked down some heavier-than-air gas, and his voice became very low. Then he had a girl in the class do the same thing.

    Interesting.

    --
    sig?
    1. Re:Gasses heavier than air by impala · · Score: 1

      IANAC*, but I'd check the gas before inhaling one recommended by a slashdotter. Bromine sits just below chlorine on the periodic table, probably not real good for you.

      *I am not a Chemist.

    2. Re:Gasses heavier than air by Noren · · Score: 1

      IAAC, and I'd bet that the gas used was SF6. It's fairly commonly available and biologically inactive. The only caution with using it or any other heavier than air gas is that you need to allow it to escape from your lungs- it will do this eventually by diffusion, but it's better to hang upside down and breathe so that it leaves in time for you to get enough oxygen.

  253. Science and history context by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Add context to the experiments, historic and scientific context to the experiments.

    Doc Staffan Andesson, does a theather of natural (physics) history. Quite effective. The audiance is in the story, learns a lot of science and history, while taking part of the story and experiments. Bombs and story is da thing.

    There are some quicktime video clips: http://www.ambassaden.net/fysik/videoklipp/klipp1. html

    and some streaming: http://www.ambassaden.net/fysik/kulturnatten2001/

  254. compress a gas can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A teacher I had would heat a rectangular, 1-gallon metal can, then cap it tightly and hang it from the ceiling. By the end of the lecture the can would be crushed.

  255. Light from Glass by CompVisGuy · · Score: 1

    When I studied physics (aged 16-18), our teacher came into the class and said he had a demo for us. He said that before each demonstration or experiment, teachers had to assess the demo for health and safety purposes -- and that "today's demo will be neither healthy nor safe".

    He went on to connect about 450V AC across a glass rod, suspended by clamps above a wooden lab desk cover.

    The glass rod became quite hot and then started to give off light -- a very white light -- and after a few mins the glass melted and broke the circuit.

    I guess this was demonstrating the continuum between conductors and insulators, and electron excitation/relaxation and light emission, along with the material properties of glass (i.e. to get white light you would require electrons of a range of energy levels to drop state and emit photons of a broad range of frequencies -- hence you can conclude something about the atoms in the glass).

    It was very cool.

    --


    "The noble art of losing face will one day save the human race"---Hans Blix
  256. Chemistry Demonstrations by __aayykx6243 · · Score: 1

    Scroll down to the bottom of the page for the American Chemical Society, North Jersey Section, Teacher Affiliates Group. There are several good crowd pleasers there.

    1. Re:Chemistry Demonstrations by __aayykx6243 · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... don't understand why the link did not come through. Here it is again in plain text. http://www.njacs.org/teacher.html

  257. Anti-Gravity by howiefl · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Check out this group's (Lifters) web page for amazing experiments in what appears to be anti-gravity. There are simple and complex plans for others that wish to re-create these experiments.

    http://jnaudin.free.fr/html/lifters.htm

  258. Simple and cheat, but fun. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One very simple one is setting a vacumer (?) to blow and balance a ping-pong ball in the air-stream. Trust me, it isn't as hard as it seems. Just try it. :) (Keyword: Bernouilly's Law)

    Another one for demonstrating standing waves is the following. Set up a fairly thin metallic plate on a standard. Then spread out some sand on top of it. Now, with a little bit of experimenting, you can get very interesting patterns by using a violin ... eehh... thingie on the side of the metal plate. (How do you call that thing violinists use to get sound out of their violin?).

    1. Re:Simple and cheat, but fun. by Griffon4 · · Score: 1

      The violinist's "thingie" is called a bow. Geesuz, apparently you all went to school where they cut the funding on the music program but left the science programs intact. ;)

  259. science for the common person... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems these days that people are knowing less and less. Two instances I can think of.

    A Lunar eclipse occured a few years back and my wife and I were at a bus stop looking up. Another person standing there asked what was happenning so we explained how the moon reflects light from the sun and that when it enters the earth's shadow you will see the eclipse... his response, "I don't believe in that"

    Another instance where I got on the elevator and pressed the button for the second floor. In the building I live in the quickest way to the street is not to the ground floor and out to the lobby but off at the second floor and out the side of the building. The other person in the elevator started complaining that that since he had pressed the ground floor button before I pressed my second floor button that he should have his floor before I got mine??!!!

    Go figure on these.

  260. Nuclear Meltdown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Demonstrate the dangers of George Bush's energy policy ;)

  261. keep some things simple by physicsgirl · · Score: 1
    Hello, i have done various things like this both for kids (8 - 12) and older girls (16+). First, one has to discern whether you have to attract the kids (say on a fair) or if they are there already (for an afternoon @ college, school, youth club). I guess you are aking about the later case. There, you do not need too many loud exploding never-seen-before things to attract them, just some teazers to keep their attention.

    It is certainly important to show them spectacular events, but you should not forget that the essence of science is both surprise and understanding. So choose (at least) some things that they can easily understand (but keep the math out unless asked), and some experiments they can perform themselves. They get to watch enough in the schools already. I've seen that they enjoy *doing* things most. Good suggestions can be found at the exploratorium:

    http://www.exploratorium.edu/snacks/snacksbysubjec t.html

    In our afternoons, we usually feed them vacuumized sweets (alltime favorite), especially marshmellow mice work well, because they won't become sticky. Maybe one last suggestion: try not to mix children with and without physics classes in school: it makes explaining much harder, if some shout all the time - but we've heard this before... :/ Cheers

  262. Unexpected math (topology) results by michael_cain · · Score: 2
    One that I like that has unexpected results, uses very little equipment, and involves no loud noises is fooling around with a Mobius Strip (a paper loop with a half twist) and related objects. Let the kids demonstrate, by drawing a line on it without picking up the pencil, that it has only one side. Similarly for one edge. Cut it down the middle, like you wanted to split it into two thinner loops, and you get one long loop. Make a loop with a full twist and cut it down the middle and you get two interlocked loops.

    There's even a cool Escher print based on it.

  263. thatcher illusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    This is not quite along the lines of violently hot or explosive materials, but it is quite surprising if you've never seen it: http://www.essex.ac.uk/psychology/visual/thatcher. html

  264. Two cinder bricks by Tomster · · Score: 1

    The setup: a discussion about density.

    Take two bricks. One is a real cinder brick, the other is a styrofoam brick painted grey to look like the other brick.

    At an appropriate point, you pick up the styrofoam brick, pretending it's a real brick, and throw it at someone in the front row. Done right, the victim (and everyone else) believes a ~10 pound cinder brick is flying at them. In our class, the girl's reaction was to bat at the brick with both hands. Of course, it went flying, and she (and most of the rest of us) stared at it in shock for a couple seconds before figuring out what had happened.

    -Thomas

  265. back when I was in school. by dkemist · · Score: 2

    The two "neat" experiments I remember professors doing in a chemistry lecture were:

    1. lighting balloons of hydrogen. I think this was most impressive because people are conditioned to think that floating balloons on strings are simply helium. I came a lecture hall on my first day of freshman chemistry there were several balloons on strings... how cute. Then the professor lights a dowel rod about a meter long and pops each of the balloons. The resulting explosion is quite bright and loud. Good attention getter.

    2. inhaling argon. I'm not sure how safe this one was, but as most people know you can suck in helium and get the whole Donald Duck voice thing. I also had a professor inhale argon (significantly heavier than air.) The resulting voice is very deep and eerie sounding.

  266. Smoke ring machine. by msheppard · · Score: 2

    Get a box, about the size of a bread box actually. Cut a 2-4 inch ROUND hole in one side, and cut most of another side off the box and replace with a plastic sheet, like a garbage bag or a length of saran-wrap. You need to be able to open and close the lid of the box still.

    Now the danger (it isn't science if it isn't dangerous), light a piece of paper on fire, on a plate or something fireproof, and blow it out pretty quick so it generates a lot of smoke. Put this in the box and seal it up (make sure the flame is out, but still makes some smoke)

    Now tap on the plastic side of the box and you can blow BIG smoke rings out the hole. You can shoot these things like 20 feet.

    And now the kewl part, set a candle up about 10 ft from the box, and blow it out with the smoke ring. If you hit the candle with the center of the smoke ring, you blow it out. If you set it up on a table and get the aim down, you still blow the candle out after the smoke runs out.

    BTW: This will set off smoke alarms and the like, so be prepared for that. If you disable your smoke detector, why not put a new battery in it while your there?

    M@

    --
    Krispy Cream is people
  267. Light refraction experiment/gag by ruiner13 · · Score: 2
    One that I remember from my high school days involved 2 glass stir-sticks and a beaker full of some sort of solution that had the exact index of refraction as the glass sticks. The experiment starts off by saying that you have magic water that can fix broken glass. You take one of the sticks and break it into several pieces, then drop it in the beaker of solution. You can say "abracadabra" or whatever you'd like (drama is good), then reach into the beaker and pull out the other stick still in one piece from the beaker which has been in there the whole time, invisible of course, making it look like the broken stick has been magically fixed again.

    I wish I could remember what the solution consisted of, but it is a neat little experiment that teaches that various phases of matter (in this case solids and liquids) can have the same index of refraction despite being very different chemically and physically. Hope ya like it!

    --

    today is spelling optional day.

  268. Experiment suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Had a science teacher who once put some lighter fluid in a flask, knowing the students wouldn't notice it was in there. Filled the flask with water in front of us and then lit it... making it look like she had just lit tap water on fire. :)

  269. How about... by EaTiN+cOfFeE+bEaNs · · Score: 1

    Bringing them out to a desolate pond and dropping about 5 pounds of pure sodium in there?

    --
    No TiVo and no caffeine make me something something...
  270. vacuum effect by mamba-mamba · · Score: 2

    For this simple demonstration of vacuum you need an orange, a vessel (a drinking glass or cup with a diameter smaller than the orange), a small piece of combustible paper, and a match or lighter, to ignite the small piece of paper.

    Put the paper in the vessel. Ignite the piece of paper. While the flame is going strong, push the orange firmly against the opening of the vessel. The flame will starve off to nothing pretty fast. More importantly, the gasses inside the vessel will cool rapidly, creating a vacuum inside the vessel.

    You will then find that the orange is stuck quite stubbornly against the mouth of the vessel.

    Kids usually like this.

    --
    By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  271. Pickle Bulb by Mals · · Score: 1

    This is one that a prof of mine did once, he stuck two electrodes through a pickle and sent a lot of electricity through it. The end result is a yellow glowing sodium based light source which looks really cool.

  272. Finagans Law? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anything can be a fuse.

    Bore two holes partway into a scrap of 2X4 an inch or so apart. Take two copper rods and put them in the holes. Solder resisters of various sizes and wattage ratings between the two rods, so it looks like a ladder. Rig up a way to energize the rods from a good voltage source (Plug, cord, switch, AC outlet).
    Plug it in, flip the switch, and watch the resistors pop, smoke and or burn. If you arrange the resistors the right way, they will pop in order from the bottom of the ladder to the top.

  273. Demo of Work Hardening by Peahippo · · Score: 1

    There is bar of some alloy sold through science supply houses. The bar can be bent into a horseshoe shape by hand, but the work-hardening done to the metal from the bending makes it too hard to bend back straight.

    For some reason, the physical action of this demo reminds me of the demo that illustrates how much energy 100 watts is. Hook up a hand-cranked generator to a switch and then to a socket, into which is a 100W bulb. Crank away at the generator with the switch off, and it's easy. Switch the light bulb into the circuit and the cranking job is suddenly VERY DIFFICULT. Wiggling all those electrons is real work -- you're not apt to forget to turn the room lights off again after that.

    --
    [also misbehaves on Kuro5hin as Peahippo]
  274. The zero gravity fire extinguisher by Fafnir_b · · Score: 1

    Put a burning candle in a glas jar which can be totally cealed, but is big enough for the candle to burn for some ten or twenty seconds. Ask the students what they think will happen if you let the jar (with the burning candle in it and the lid closed) fall to the ground (closing the jar is just to prevent any kind of wind blowing out candle during its descent). As a burning candle's oxygen supply depends on convection, and the falling jar is a zero gravity-system (in which there isn't any convection), the candle will cease to burn after far less then a second of falling. Just make sure you don't waste too much time between closing the lid and letting the jar fall down.

  275. equilibrium by geolane · · Score: 1

    Water, stirring device, dry ice, universal (pH) indicator, strong + weak bases (sodium hydroxide / ammonia), strong + weak acids (sulfuric / acetic)

    This may seem like a long list of requirements, but it's very cool- watch as the dry ice changes the pH to more acidic- pour some strong base in, for a quick color change, then a slow changing back to acid.

  276. Methane Bubbles by reidab · · Score: 1

    My HS chem teacher loves this demo. Attach a peice of rubber tubing to one of the classroom gas jets and stick a funnel in the other end of it to spread out the gas. Put a bit a diswashing soap in a flat container. Place the funnel flat side down in the soap, turn on gas. You will create a tower of bubbles filled with methane. Once you get a tower going, you can slice it off with a yardstick or something like that and it will float to the ceiling (or just up, if you're doing it outside.) Light a match and toss it at the cloud. Large, cool-looking fireball.

  277. vacuum effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, what a terrible name for this experiment.

    In this case, the vacuum is doing nothing (as they often do), it is the pressure of the atmosphere holding the orange against the glass.

    Do that experiment, then explain that and the weight of a 50 mile high column of air. Then explain that only 33ft of water exerts the same pressure.

    Now we're talking science.

    1. Re:vacuum effect? by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      Yeah, actually a better "hands-on" demo would be to have a vertical pipe full of air in a swimming pool, preferably in the deep end of the pool, with the upper end open and exposed to the atmosphere. At the submerged end of the pipe, a remote controlled valve could be attached. You could have kids dive down, and put their mouths around the bottom of the pipe, then open the valve.

      When their lungs are sucked out of their bodies, the kids will truly appreciate the power of vacuum. The survival rate for this demo would probably be pretty low, since most kids rely on their lungs to breathe.

      By the way, that 33ft/atm is for sea water only.

      In fresh water it is closer to 34 feet.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  278. hazards of demonstrating by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    hilarious old mail message I found:

    In my old Physics textbook (Fundamentals of Physics, Holliday and Resnick, 3rd
    ed.) there is an essay by Jearl Walker (Cleveland State University and columnist for Scientific American. Some examples Walker performs:

    * places his (wet) hand into a crucible of molten lead at 400 deg F.

    * holds liquid nitrogen (-200 deg C) in his mouth.

    * and yes, walks on hot coals:

    "I have walked over hot coals on five occasions. For four of the walks I
    was fearful enough that my feet were sweaty. However, on the fifth walk I
    took my safety so much for granted that my feet were dry. The burns I
    suffered were extensive and terribly painful. My feet did not heal for
    weeks." He also relates some other mishaps: How too much water on his
    hand caused molten lead to spatter on his arms and face. Liquid nitrogen
    cracked two front teeth.

    Received: from neptune.chem.uga.edu by mail6 (8.6.12/Netcom)
    id GAA20736; Thu, 11 Jan 1996 06:47:37 -0800
    Received: (from andy@localhost) by neptune.chem.uga.edu (8.6.12/8.6.9) id JAA00887; Thu, 11 Jan 1996 09:50:41 -0500
    Date: Thu, 11 Jan 1996 09:50:41 -0500 (EST)
    From: Andy Dustman
    X-Sender: andy@neptune.chem.uga.edu
    To: georgia-skeptics@netcom.com
    Subject: Re: ATLANTA JOURNAL (1-9-96) 'A COOL HEAD ON HOT COALS'
    In-Reply-To:
    Message-ID:

  279. Re:some ideas - Polarizers by Jamey · · Score: 1

    Still another thing to do involves *three* polarizers. Place A & B at 90deg angle to each other - no light. Place C at 45deg angle in front of both - still no light. In back of both - still no light.

    Place C *BETWEEN* A & B - WTF is that light doing coming through *NOW*????

  280. Cloth that burns without being consumed by ttocs_47 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I was a cubscout leader, I stumbled on a cool idea used in a ceremony. Soak a cloth in a mixture of 40% acetone and 60% water (keeping it in a sealed jar so the acetone doesn't evaporate). Then you can light it on fire, and the evaporating acetone burns, but the cloth itself doesn't. A link to the details in the context of cubscouts is here

  281. Counterintuitive results by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

    Fluids are non compressable.

    For the demo, you need a couple of identical glass bottles with good, sturdy screw on caps.

    Glass salad dressing bottles _should_ work. (As always, try it before you demo it in public!)

    Have the kids select one of the bottles. Hand it around so that the kids KNOW it's glass. Everyone knows that glass breaks if you hit it hard enough.

    Now, fill it with water. And I mean FILL IT! there can be absolutley NO air bubbles whatsoever in the bottle when it's capped. The best way to do this is to fill it and cap it underwater in a bucket.

    Before you attempt the demo, make sure the now filled bottle is free of bubbles. Because while fulids are non-compressable, gases compress REALLY easily and that can result in a broken bottle and bits of glass flying everywhere. Safety gear is a MUST, as is a clear barrier between you and the audience. Just in case.

    Take a LARGE nail with a LARGE head and a two by four, and use the water filled bottle as a hammer to drive the nail into the two by four. Don't hit the nail TOO hard and don't bang on thenail too many times.

    The water essnetially turns the glass bottle into a solid hunk of sturdy matter, due to the incompressablilty of the water.

    Keep in mind that every time you hit the nail with the bottle, you are inducing microscopic stress fractures in the glass at the point of impacts. Do this enough and the bottle will eventually break.

    But for those few moments you are hammering a nail with a glass bottle full of water, you will have SEVERELY messed with the way the Universe works in the minds of the audience.

    Once you've demonstrated that fluids are non-compressable, you can then demo some simple hydraulics with syringes and tubing.

    And remember, wear safety glasses, an apron and have a shield between you and the audience.

    Because occasionally, the Universe likes to mess with YOUR mind from time to time.

    --
    Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
  282. polarization filters by dfries · · Score: 1
    Getting some polarizated filters and having the class look at their LCD watches or laptops is pretty fun. Explain the principle about it blocking light.

    The fun part is when you take something like a laptop, rotate a polarized fitler so it is black (hold it there), take another polarized filter and put it between the laptop and the first one. If you rotate it just right you will see through to the laptop.

  283. Belousov Zhabotinsky reaction by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 2
    This is a wierd piece of chemistry: the reaction oscillates. When it was discovered nobody would believe it.

    I've seen it demonstrated by Jack Cohen (science writer and reproductive biologist). Its cool.

    Do a google search to find a number of recipies.

    Paul.

    --
    You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
  284. Walking on broken glass, chair spinning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1.
    Get a carpet bag and put a lot of broken glass in it. Walk on the glass barefoot, putting your full weight on it. Be sure to use a little whisk broom to sweep the glass off your feet before putting your foot back on the floor.

    2.
    Get some small dumbbells and an office chair that can spin a full 360. Tell them to hold their arms out and then spin them. Once spinning, tell them to pull their arms in. They'll spin surprisingly faster.

    May it be of benefit.

  285. trivalizing science? by peter303 · · Score: 2

    The average laymen thinks scientists are just playing with toys when they see museum demos or visit a "science" store. They forget that science is a way of thought based on reproduceable experimentationa nd observation. It has generated more wealth per average living human being in the past three centuries than the tens of thousands of years of human existance under alternative ideologies.

  286. Solid CO2 and indicator by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

    This is easily the best demonstration i've ever seen. Fill a big glass measuring cylinder or beaker with water and enough indicator to make it noticably green, then drop some cubes of solid carbon dioxide in. It will bubble up through the green water, making it acidic as it goes, so the whole tube turns from green to yellow to red, and then when the bubbles hit the surfae you get streams of thick white gas streaming down the sides.

    It looks like the "mad scientist" bit from any old monster movie.

  287. The Flying Circus of Physics by lemonk · · Score: 1

    Get this book. Has tons of examples of interesting physics principles. I cherish my copy from 1988 :p

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/04 71 02984X/qid=1034540370/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/002-810948 7-6660861?v=glance&n=507846

    --
    You are only popular on the Internet.
  288. Rocket Fuel by SEWilco · · Score: 1
    Simpler example: rocket fuel.
    Liquid oxygen and alcohol.

    A NASA presentation used a small sponge in a flat dish. Pour alcohol on the sponge and ignite it, producing an almost invisible small flame (you already know you can add chemicals to make the flame visible, but it is not necessary). Pour a small amount of liquid oxygen (far away) in something like a long-handled ladle (small cup with long handle -- metal probably needed so it won't be too fragile). Pour the liquid oxygen in the dish.

    This should be done in a high-ceilinged gymnasium so the flame might not reach the ceiling. Ensure that there is not a fire alarm or sprinkler which will be set off by the demonstration. Test first. Might be safer outdoors...if it won't alarm neighbors and if you have alerted police and fire departments to ignore calls from neighbors and passerby.

  289. FOAD, USian is appropriate KTHXBYE (nt) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    en tea, beyatch

  290. Some experiments I will never forget... by cr0sh · · Score: 2
    I am not sure these will be appropriate for your audience, because when I was a part of them, it was during high school. However, all of them left a great impression on me that I will never forget.

    To be honest, I have forgotten the details of most of these experiments, so while I cannot give you exact methods or reasonings, the gist of the experiments should come through enough for you to consult with other sources and collegues to fill in the gaps of my mind.

    To that end, the experiments:

    1) Measuring the speed of sound - from this one I remember we first determined in class how you could measure the speed of sound, variables, and how you would set up the experiment, then what the answer would work out to be if done a certain way. Then, the class was led outside, and one person held two sticks and banged them together. Another person was instructed to listen for the return sound from the science building we were standing away from some number of feet. Someone else was timing with a stopwatch. I am not sure of the process, but from all of this we got data that we used in class to determine the speed of sound, based on how we should do it - we weren't that far off, if I remember right, for our height above sea level and the condition of the weather outside - and we were real close to what we had gotten in the classroom.

    2) Hitting a target - perhaps a little closer to home today than then - basically calculating trajectories, parabolas, etc. In the classroom, we calculated given a certain amount of pressure in a rocket (we used an air powered rocket for safety and distance reasons), angle, etc - what was needed to be put into the rocket in order for it to hit a target set some distance away. Once we had calculated that, we then went out on the football field (to the amusement of the PE class of the period), and launched the rocket. We hit the target, as our calculations said we would (now, class, can anyone tell me how an ICBM works?).

    3) Measuring the mass of an electron - OK, this one is REALLY fuzzy in my mind, and in the end, we were off by a whole heck of a lot, but not as much as you would think given the equipment. All I really remember about this was some very complex mathematics, a bit of reasoning, and the use of an old occiliscope and power supply.

    4) Water below freezing - in this experiment, which involved more than I am letting on here - we showed in individual labs how you could keep water liquid, even though you brought it down below freezing. We used stainless steel containers, regular water, ice and salt in a styrofoam container to bring the water down that was in the stainless steel container, some thermometers, etc. I also remember another part of the lab that involved a different substance, that you heated, it went from solid to liquid, then you gradually cooled down to room temperature (by lowering the bunsen burner flame), but it stayed liquid. Then you let it cool off really well, still liquid, then you put in a seed of the solid substance, and it immediately crystalized solid again (in time for the next class, I suppose). Cool thing to watch.

    Those are the ones among my favorites. They could be enhanced in different ways (like the trajectory one - build a spud cannon instead for the demo, on a stand that permits tilting it like a mortar, at known angles). Hope these help - good luck!

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  291. Floating pennies by BillX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is an experiment I did in a chem class back in high school. My memory might be a bit fuzzy.

    Pennies are not all copper, but a thin copper 'shell' around another metal. With a small file, file a few (3 or so) notches in the sides of the penny so that the other metal is exposed. Place the filed penny in a beaker and cover with acid (I don't remember which acid, probably sulfuric). After a while the acid will have 'eaten' away the other metal, leaving only the copper shell. This shell (you did wash away all the acid, of course) looks indistinguishable from an ordinary penny. Watch the students' faces as you throw the penny into a glass of water and it floats - then pick it off the surface of the water and crunch it into a little ball with your mighty fingers :)

    --
    Caveat Emptor is not a business model.
  292. Tripod is overloaded by Hans+Hochwald · · Score: 1
  293. Isopropanol, not methanol by blach · · Score: 1

    Methanol is commonly referred to as "Wood Alcohol," while "Rubbing Alcohol" is Isopropanol.

    Regards,
    James

  294. Ice, pressure, glacier by effigy · · Score: 1

    There is a experiment which shows how heavy objects move through ice but it takes a little bit of time for the demonstration to finish. Equipment: a 5 gallon bucket, a bar of ice, a thin cable and two heavy objects. Put a bar of ice across the 5 gallon bucket, tie or hook two heavy objects to each end of a thin cable then place the cable over the ice. The pressure of the cable on the ice will cause it to melt and the cable will move down through the ice. The ice will reform after the cable has passed. Eventullay a loud thud will be heard as the cable passes completely through the ice and the objects fall to the bottom of the bucket but the bar of ice will still be present across the bucket. Experiment with different weights and ice thicknesses to get the experiment to complete within your required time limit.

  295. Julius Sumner Miller by dont_drink_the_water · · Score: 1

    Just watch Julius Sumner Miller. He dipped his hand in lead, and boy did it sting...

  296. Cheap Entertainment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've always been easy to entertain, but this experiment is pretty darn cool. I used a hard drive magnet and a 10' copper pipe I found at work. Drop the magnet down the pipe vertically and wait for it to appear at them bottom....Amazing. The folks at wondermagnet have a large assortment of neodymium magnets to choose from if you want something a little different than what the HD manufactures use.

  297. Lindsay is a good place for books by bluGill · · Score: 2

    Lindsay books is a good place to look for books on this line. (Get the catalog, it has more than the website lists) Several books contain interesting science experiments that you can try. Along with many other fun projects that Geeks will love.

  298. Camphor boat by fattybob · · Score: 1

    I recall a slower paced but interesting reaction using a small camphor pelet tied on the back of a balsa wood boat with an elastic band. The reaction powered the boat nicely around a bath of water - sodium and phosphorous were near by, tiny bits of Sodium skidding around on the water surface. Of cousre, in thise days (early 70's) we all peered over the bowls and had goes ourselves, but the pieces were tiny and handled by tweezers!

    1. Re:Camphor boat by fattybob · · Score: 1

      ok, I found a recipe/supporting info -
      http://users.bigpond.net.au/mechtoys/camphor.htm l

  299. You mean the whole wheel? by HuguesT · · Score: 1


    Not just the rubber tire, right?

    1. Re:You mean the whole wheel? by wheany · · Score: 1

      Yes.

  300. Electric Pickle gets'em every time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure you must have seen this at some point. Just connect a pickle across the a battery and turn off the lights.

  301. digression... by lain-of-the-weird · · Score: 1
    We didn't need to develope A-Bomb or H-bomb...just get everyone to read and make the various recipes on /. It's much more effective when they are performed simultaneously across the country. :)

    On dipping hands in molten lead...scientists have always had a knack for doing weird things for the sake of logic. I mean after all, alchemists used to believe that drinking gold and mercury will bring longevity because their properties are stable. While that particular reason seemed logical at the time, I don't think we need to recount the aftermaths of these people...

    --
    Welcome to castle Anthrax...
  302. The Mad Professor by trasgu · · Score: 1

    You can get tapes of Julius Sumner Miller doing fun physics experiments from PBS and other sources. Great Fun.

    Trasgu

  303. Re:Mosbauer Effect is the Most Surprising I've See by g.a.g · · Score: 1

    As an aside, Mössbauer [sic] once told us how to get an effect named after you: call it something long and not acronym-friendly yourself first. He called his effect "Rückstossfreie Resonanzabsorption", or recoil-free resonance absorption. So quit shortly, people referred to it as Mössbauer effect instead...

    --
    Hurricane Application Group, Dept of Meteorology Control, Ministry of Proactive Defense
  304. Mike 'n Ikes? by mmol_6453 · · Score: 2

    Not sure, but I think I had the same reaction when I dropped a couple of Mike 'n Ike's into a can of Coke.

    Only happened once, though. :/

    --
    What's this Submit thingy do?
  305. Be careful about the lead demo... by mmol_6453 · · Score: 2

    My high-school AP Physics book had an article in it written by the author. There were a couple of demos he did frequently.

    First was dipping his hand (wet!!!) into molten lead. He stopped that one when the lead got caught under his fingernails.

    Second was putting liquid N2 in his mouth. He could blow clouds of fog for five or six feet. He stopped that one when the N2 contacted (and contracted) his front teeth. (His dentist convinced him to drop that one.)

    Third was firewalking. He reasoned that his sweat would protect him from the coals...It worked until he was too comfortable with the idea to produce enough sweat.

    He did find a demo that worked. One easy way to demonstrate the Liedenfrost effect was to heat up a frying pan to well, well beyond water's boiling temperature. If it's hot enough, individual drops of water will float on a tiny bed of steam, and dance around the pan for several minutes.

    (I'd be careful about that one at home...Fires have been started from the pan's heat radiation. Don't leave it unattended. Keep a fire extinguisher handy.)

    --
    What's this Submit thingy do?
    1. Re:Be careful about the lead demo... by KjetilK · · Score: 2

      Third was firewalking. He reasoned that his sweat would protect him from the coals...It worked until he was too comfortable with the idea to produce enough sweat.

      He was wrong, the sweat has nothing to do with it. OK, it can have a minor effect, but it also makes things stick a little easier. I have also done firewalking with both dry and wet feet. Actually, I'm writing a paper about that, but it is going to take a long time to finish...

      BTW, when you're demonstrating the Leidenfrost effect by drops on a hot plate, touch the plate! The Leidenfrost effect also protects your hand. It demonstrate the counter-intuitive things that I like so much: Your intuition screams "don't do that!", yet it is quite cool for as long as it says "fssssst".

      I'm not saying this is risk free but if you compare the damages and the risk by e.g. driving to work every day, well, I think you would find your life very boring if you never took risks higher than this. I've had hundreds of people firewalking, including kids down to the age of five. It is very, very rare to get blisters that are not gone the following day. It has happened once on all my walks. What he did wrong was pretty obvious, he stepped in some mud before walking, and got coals sticking. Unfortunately, he was also a journalist, and his article wasn't very favorable... :-)

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    2. Re:Be careful about the lead demo... by mmol_6453 · · Score: 2

      Interesting...I presume my hand needs to be wet before I touch the pan?

      --
      What's this Submit thingy do?
    3. Re:Be careful about the lead demo... by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      Right!

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  306. Re:I know one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone should make a Mozilla version, the effect is totally lost with "Open unrequested windows" disabled. Also, bgsound doesn't work. :/

  307. Three experiments: by Jungle+Boy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Here are three experiments that I've seen/done that I've thought were very impressive.

    1. Take an empty gallon paint can. Drill a 3/8" hole in the center of the lid, and in the side about 1/2" from the bottom. With the lid on, purge the inside with natural gas. Now set it on the floor and light the top hole. This will produce a steady flame 2 or 3" in height. Now you have to do some acting. Make it seem like something cool is going to happen and get the viewers to watch intently. After a minute or two they will start to get bored as all that will happen is the flame will slowly appear to die. After a certain point, tell the viewers that something went wrong with the expermient and you'll have to try again once the flame has died out. As time progresses, the flame will grow smaller and will actually disappear from sight as it drops below the hole. Fairly shortly after it does this, the ratio of oxygen to gas in the paint can will reach the appropriate mixture and will explode launching the lid of the paint can about 8 ft' straight up, and startling everyone who has forgotten abot it. Obviously, this needs to be done well away from the audience.

    2. This requires two large bricks of dry ice (about 12" square, 4-5" thick), some magnesium shavings and a blowtorch. Take the bricks of dry ice, and hollow out a small area so that you can stack them trapping a small pocket. Put the magnesium shavings in the pocket, and light them with the torch. Put the other brick on top sealing the thing in. Because magnesium can use carbon dioxide as it's oxygen source, it will continue to burn inside the dry ice. It produces a really incredible glowing effect from the ice. After burning for a while, the glow will reduce and will actually begin to pulse.

    3. Finally there's Peryoxyacetone (sp?). I don't remember exactly how to make it, but you can find it in Chemical Demonstrations: A Handbook for Teachers in Chemistry by B. Z. Shakashiri. The books are excellent as a whole, the the peryoxyacetone, is escpecially impressive. It's a white powder that burns in a nice big fireball. It burns quickly enough (and at a fairly low temperature) though that it can be used to demonstrate the leidenfrost effect. Placing a small pile on the open palm of your hand you can light it, which creates an impressive looking fireball that you can't even feel. I'd suggest trying this on a piece of paper the first time. If you've got the right stuff, there won't even be a scorch mark on the paper.

  308. Simple balloon demo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    My favorite simple demo for elementary students is to build a two pan balance with a meter stick hung from the ceiling by thread. Hang a balloon (uninflated) at each end of the stick with thread and paperclips so that they balance. Then blow up on of the balloons, and take a vote of whether the inflated balloon will be lighter or heavier than the uninflated balloon. Everyone is always surprised by the outcome.

  309. Belousov - Zhabotinsky by m_frankie_h · · Score: 1
  310. Re:This is a troll how could you mods fall for it by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
    You sure as fuck cannot buy it at "any pool store

    Yes, you pretty much can. It's found under the name muriatic acid. Google before you speak.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  311. Science demos by hdatltw · · Score: 1

    I regularly peform science demos for children (about once a week) and sometimes get to do them on "The Tonight show with Jay Leno", feel free to use any described at http://www.pitt.edu/~dwilley/hdatltwmenu.html hope this helps, cheers, David

  312. Mini Wind Turbine by funky_moose · · Score: 1

    Check out the educational windmill kit at: http://www.picoturbine.com I'm in the process of setting up the deluxe model.. -- Le MoOsE

  313. Some interesting Experiments by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

    When i was in high school my advanced physics class prepared a set of experiments that could teach scientific principles to elementary children. the ones i remember most fondly we're 1) laying a bed of nails a volunteer has a concrete brick placed on their stomach that is broken by a sledge hammer to the brink. -- this demonstrates the distribution of force 2) one team used an ethanol cannon ( bottle with spikes and ethanol in it .. set off with a tesla coil) to shoot a cork at a paper monkey ( weighted down by a few pennies suspended from the ceiling by paperclips and string. The strings put into the bottle and held in place with the cork in such a way that when the cork left the bottle it would let the paper drop. -- demonstrates that objects of different mass always fall at the same rate ( because the cork will always hit the monkey if it was aiming at it before the explosion 3) there was the ever popular timing or clock reaction " where a set of chemicals, once mixed goes through several color changes at regular intervals that can be measured with a watch" -- i don't remember what principle they where trying to demonstrate with that one. 4) i used "dust" explosions to demonstrate the scientific method. I had several kinds of "dust" lychapodium powder ( I have no idea how to spell that word. I guessed it is a fungal spore), flour, corn starch. We started with research, formed a "hypothesis" as to which of these would explode most violently and then did experimentation. THE EXPERIMENT: take a coffee can and suspend it on a ring stand. Knock a whole in the bottom of the coffee can and place a piece of rubber hose with a funnel attached to it through the hole. Put a cotton ball in the funnel and a candle in the can. Place powder in the funnel. Light the candle and put the cover ( i had a metal one , i think plastic might burn) then blow lightly to make the dust circulate in the can. the lid will be blown off the can with a smoke and flame and loud pop. Don't make the mistake of blowing on the cotton ball to put it out if it happens to be on fire in the can when you are done. My science teacher went eyebrow less for a while because of that mistake. for those of you who don't know dust explosions are a chain reaction that occurs when a normally inert substance ( like flower or grain dust ) get enough air between the particles that a small spark causes an explosive chain reaction. This was more relevant to the kids I was demoing for also because we were in rural Minnesota and this is what is responsible for the occasional violent explosion of grain elevators due to static electric spark and poor ventilation of grain dust. ( which has been known to kill people that work in grain elevators) since many of the children lived on farms and there parents would take produce to the elevator.

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
  314. Air Pressure by DaracMarjal · · Score: 1

    I've seen some nice experiements that demonstrate Air pressure.

    The first is the classic double-hemisphere. Take two cast-iron hemispheres (I assume you'd need to buy these somewhere). Show that the rims are not sticky, magnetic and do not lock in any way. Now evacuate them and see if anyone can pull them apart. I believe the original experiment failed to pull them apart even with a team or four strong horses.

    The second is simpler. Lie a wooden ruler over the edge of a bench so a good few inches overhang. Now place a single sheet of broadsheet newspaper on the bench, covering the ruler. Which is stronger, the paper or the ruler? The ruler, right? Whack the free end of the ruler with a hammer and watch the amazed faces.

  315. Re:This is a troll how could you mods fall for it by Breakerofthings · · Score: 1

    Hydrochloric Acid == Muriatic Acid
    (even says it on the page you linked to)
    and it most certainly is commonly available at pool supply stores; is used to adjust the ph in pools.

    I know because I have purchased it.

    No comment on any "alternative uses" I might have had for it ;)

  316. Experiments that makes you think by fredrikv · · Score: 1
    Why is it that most /.-writers suggest violent and explosive chemistry experiements?

    I have visited (and performed in) several science demonstrations where the kids in the audience where frightened of explosions and fire. Scaring off you audience is a bad performance...

    I honestly don't think that the kids that like explosions the most will be the best scientists later on! And it is rather obvious that the kids that DON'T like explosions might be the very ones that need to be reminded of the fun-ness of science.

    Furthermore, the original question is about a workshop and not a demonstration/lecture. So I recomend:

    * Do experiments that are easy to relate to for the kids.

    * Do experiments with everyday things

    * Do at least some experiments that are possible to fully understand for the kids (molecules and chemical reactivie are usually not part of kids view of the world)

    Some suggestions:

    * Battery from a lemon

    * Eggs float in salt water but not in sweet

    * Use BTB or other pH-indicator indicators to check the pH in various foods

    * Paper chromatograpy on colour pencils

    * Various kind of magnets (U-shaped, straight and stick-a-note-on-the-fridge type) and their effect on iron dust. Are all metals magnetic? Try coins, cans, keys etc.

    * Catalysis - does sugar burn? How can you set fire to a sugar-cube? I bet my fellow /.-ers don't know the answer? Go find out! (and bring the contents of your local ashtray to experiment with...)

  317. Orange Peel Flame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Squeezing an orange peel at a lit match will cause it to flare up quite vividly.

    See video and pics here: http://vividpicture.com/aleks/orangeflame/index.ht ml

    NB: Orange side of rind towards flame :)