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Sunday
Jan162011

Science Sunday - Hard to Change Science Trick



Science Sunday

Since we were stranded at home all of last week, I was trying to come up with more things to do than usual. Both of the kids asked for Pop Bottle Science, one of our favorite resources! The trick we found was "Hard to Change".

What you need: an index card, a pop bottle with the top removed (ours is a bottle with the top 1/3 cut off, but I bet you could any jar with a wide mouth), and a quarter

What do you do?: Put the index card on top of the pop bottle. Place a quarter on the index card.

Flick the card with your finger so the card flies out from under the quarter. The quarter should fall into the bottle (this took a little practice with my six year old).

What's going on? You are demonstrating inertia, a property of all matter, which is matter's tendency to remain at rest even when the matter is made of billions of moving molecules.

I left everything on the dining room table, and everyone has been doing the trick as they walk by this week -- I always throw out the word inertia, and I think it's burned into their brains by now!

Resource: Pop Bottle Science

It's pure bottled magic! A complete kit that ingeniously marries science and fun in the breakthrough vein of The Bug Book & Bug Bottle (1.7 million copies in print) and The Bones Book & Skeleton (1.65 million copies in print), Pop Bottle Science presents 79 easy, hands-on experiments that probe the worlds of chemistry, physics, biology, geology, weather, the human body, and even astronomy.

The Pop Bottle bottle is a perfect miniature science lab--see-through, flexible, air-tight when necessary, made out of a durable, shatter-proof plastic and designed with a removable top that doubles as a funnel. The Pop Bottle book is a lively, fully illustrated 96-page guide to astonishment. Each experiment begins with a challenge and ends with an explanation of the scientific principles involved. Kids can design a volcano and watch it erupt. Create a tornado-maker and see how twisters work. Make quicksand--is it solid or liquid? Observe photosynthesis in action. Simulate Jupiter's giant red spot, investigate buoyancy, demonstrate inertia, and discover the Bernoulli principle--which allows planes to fly. Plus, turn the bottle into a barometer, a thermometer, walkie-talkie, trombone, compass--or groovy lava lamp.

Please check out other science experiments at Adventures in Mommydom - and try a fun science experiment with your kids today!

Reader Comments (6)

That does look cool. I bet it would take me forever to get that right.

January 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterTicia

We bought Pop Bottle Science years ago, and I still pull it out, and use ideas from it - it is a good kit.

January 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAn Almost Unschooling Mom

We love our Pop Bottle Science.

Kathi Still trying to figure out http://www.time4learning.com/science.shtml" rel="nofollow">science for my 3rd grader.

January 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterFairyLover

I REALLY like the idea of leaving the project out all day/week. I might have to look into this more. thanks!!!!

Fun!

we did this with eggs and a glass. The possibility of making mess always intrigues my boys.

January 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKimberly

(forgot to say I was visiting you from the Sunday Science Link)

January 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKimberly

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