| Collide-a-ball: discover potential and kinetic energy |
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This Project goes hand in hand with Double Helix Weird Science: Bovine batteries and pogoing people – imaginative energy futures
WARNING: This activity involves a balls flying around in random directions. Do it outside or in an open space. Do not use hard balls or any ball smaller than a tennis ball.
You will need
What to do
![]() When a ball is dropped, it will not bounce up to the original height from which it has fallen. What's happening?When the balls hit the ground, the small ball on top will, and you might need to practice this, shoot off very high. The larger ball on the bottom falls dead when it hits the ground, as though it is flat. The bottom heavier ball has transferred most of its energy to the smaller, lighter ball. The energy has been transferred to the small ball during the collision. Because the energy has left the larger ball it now only has a small amount of energy, which results in a small bounce. When you lift a ball up you are giving it energy. In this case you are giving it potential energy, which means the ball has the potential to do some work. When you drop the ball, it gains moving (kinetic) energy as it loses its potential energy. When a ball is dropped, it will not bounce up to the original height from which it has fallen, as you discovered in step 1. This is because some of the energy has been transformed to other energies when the ball collides with the ground. If all of the moving energy was kept in the ball, the ball would bounce back to the original height that it was dropped. Some energy has obviously been transformed into another form during the collision. No energy is lost, as energy cannot just disappear, but merely changed from one form to another:
Find out more about this activities: http://www.csiro.au/helix/sciencemail/activities/Collideaball.html
Refer to another related activity: A hot and steamy powered pop-pop boat
© CSIRO Article generously contributed by CSIRO Check out other activities for Kids by CSIRO: |
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 16 January 2008 ) |
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