Category Archives: Video
Check
I noticed a very important lesson in Rhett’s post July 4th and an example of work-energy: checking the answer.
Let me make some checks here. Will the acceleration be positive? Yes. The first term will always be positive and greater than g because (d+h)/d is greater than 1. What if a jumper jumps from a higher height (h). This would make the acceleration greater. What if the jumper stopped in less water, this would also make the acceleration greater. Finally, does this have the correct units? Yes.
Notice how Rhett isn’t checking the numerical answer — this is a check of the equation that leads to the numerical answer, to see if it’s reasonable. There’s a lot of power in doing this that one loses when the numbers are substituted too early in the process. While you can do the first and last checks — direction and units — the trends of what happens if a variable changes is removed. And checking the limiting behavior of an equation is a tremendously important tool as the questions, and resulting conclusions, get more complex.
Now, once you get the answer, you can check that for reasonableness, too. As I mentioned some time back, when I taught we stressed getting answers that made physical sense, else your math mistake be tagged as a conceptual error. You should not be deducing that a frog has a mass of 10^24 kg; one can check this by relating the mass to known objects (in this case, being a measurable fraction of the mass of the earth) which requires having some awareness of masses (or forces, energy, etc.) on different scales. Or can apply the long-lost art of estimating the answer from the number you put in. All numbers become 1,2 or 5 and you round aggressively — but the rounding often cancels, and you can get pretty close. At least close enough to be within a factor of 10 or less of the right answer.
And some of this is shown in sciencegeekgirl’s Teaching the gentle art of estimations which includes a simple estimation problem which was a complete disaster when asked of some teenage students.
The conclusion I draw from this? We’re doomed.
Interestingly (ironically?) the very last example has a number I question. The force of impact of an object falling under the influence of gravity is much larger than mg.
Acceleration goes as the velocity of impact divided by the time of contact. What is the time of contact? The bottom of the ball hits the ground, but the top keeps going until it gets the signal that the bottom has hit, that there’s no more room to move down, and it’s time to start moving up. That happens at the speed of sound.
And from that, a time of 10 microseconds is concluded, giving a force of 10,000 mg (i.e. an acceleration of 10,000 g’s. Wow!)
I balked at that (and commented in the post). The object doesn’t recoil that fast — that’s the limiting case for the top to know that there has been an impact. One needs to look at the spring constant of the material to know what’s going on. 10 microseconds is too short — the contact time is almost certainly much longer. How much longer, I wonder? A convenient scale with which I am becoming familiar is shutter speed. 10 microseconds wouldn’t be discernible on a high-speed camera, if I had access to one. Which I do.
This is at 420 frames/second, and since I have the advantage of being able to easily click through frame-by-frame on the original, I’ll tell you the answer: the ball is in contact for ~4 frames, or just under 10 milliseconds. IOW, almost three orders of magnitude longer than the speed-of-sound estimation.
I Didn't Check with Houston
But I was ‘go’ for launch. A couple of antacid tablets in a pill bottle with a snap-cap. A shelf glued to the inside lets the tablets stay dry until you tip it over. Launch happens after ~15-30 seconds. Not really an indoor toy, but …
One Up on the Alpha Betas
Unlike the outcome in Revenge of the Nerds, my fireball did not result in the destruction of my residence.
(The source is a spray bottle containing rubbing alcohol, rather than me spitting grain alcohol)
Toast Time
Tim Allen has apparently rewired somebody’s toaster
We Stab it with Our Steely Knives
… but we just can’t kill the beast. Until the fourth try. Fortunately the failed attempts are kinda neat, too.
My instinct to grab a pointy object to burst the bubble was misplaced, of course. The soap film isn’t a rigid object, so it was content to accommodate the intrusions, for a while.
(S)Poof!
Another video, reminiscent of the viral popcorn-popped-with-a-cellphone video I discussed a while back
And, in fact one of the response videos is with popcorn
Objections: One is electrostatic. Matt has been discussing static charge distributions recently (here and here) and it’s very important to note that he’s discussing charge distributions on conductors — the charges can easily rearrange themselves. But in these video examples, the people and the targets are not conductors. So while you might build up some static charge on a person (in a very questionable display of boys gleefully rubbing other boys with balloons. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, if that’s who you are, balloon-fetish-freaks). A discharge to another insulator just isn’t going to send the energy where you want it to. A small discharge will even out the potential difference, and you’re done. A full discharge needs to be to a conductor, preferably a grounded one.
Speaking of sending the energy, how much energy are we discussing here? I’m not sure how much energy it takes for an eggsplosion, but I’m guessing we’re talking well above a few Joules. Accounting for my slight overestimation of the water content in the earlier popcorn analysis, it probably still takes somewhere north of 10 Joules of energy to pop a single kernel. Can we get anywhere close with static charge?
The energy stored in a capacitor is 1/2 CV^2. The capacitance of the human body is a few hundred picofarads. Let’s be generous and say it’s 2,000 picofarads (pico is 10^-12). How much of a potential difference do we need for 10 Joules? Do the math — it’s 100 kV. A few kV makes for a painful spark when discharging to a doorknob. A 5 mm spark between conducting spheres happens at about 16 kV. A realistic spark leaves us at significantly less than a Joule of energy.
Spoof
Doctor Incredible
Jocks v Nerds
John Hodgman at Radio & TV Correspondents’ Dinner
That's Just Super
Maglev toy train