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Galileo's Falling Bodies — Race a Ball Down a Ramp
A hands-on school project: drop two different weights to see them land together, then roll a ball down a ramp and time it to discover that distance grows as the square of the time. A Python cell checks your ramp measurements, and a compendium explains why a feather and a hammer fall together on the airless Moon.
初心者
30 minutes
手順
1
1
Do heavy things fall faster?
Do heavy things fall faster?
Aristotle said heavier objects fall faster; around 1600 Galileo said they fall together. Test it: hold a heavy ball and a light one at the same height and drop them at the same instant. They land together (as long as neither is fluffy enough for air to slow it). Heaviness does not win the race.
2
2
Build a ramp to slow gravity down
Build a ramp to slow gravity down
Free fall is too fast to time by hand, so do what Galileo did: prop up a smooth board as a gentle ramp and roll a ball down it. The ball follows the same speeding-up pattern as a fall, only slower. Mark distances along the ramp with a tape measure — say 10, 20, 30, 40 cm from the start.
このステップの材料:
Red Alder Board1 個
Ball Bearing1 個必要な工具:
Measuring Tape 3m3
3
Time the ball to each mark
Time the ball to each mark
Release the ball from the top and time how long it takes to reach each mark. Repeat a few times and average — timing rolling balls by hand is tricky, so several tries help. Write down each time and distance. You should find the ball covers far more than double the distance when you double the time.
必要な工具:
Stopwatch4
4
Check the time-squared law
Check the time-squared law
Loading Jupyter Notebook...
必要な工具:
Desktop Computer
Calculator5
5
Compendium: the law of falling
Compendium: the law of falling
What your ramp reveals. (1) Distance grows as time SQUARED (d = one-half g t-squared), so in equal seconds a falling object covers distances in the ratio 1, 3, 5, 7 — Galileo's famous odd-number rule, and the odd numbers add to the perfect squares. (2) The MASS never enters the formula, so without air everything falls at the same rate — the astronaut David Scott proved it on the airless Moon in 1971 by dropping a hammer and a feather together. (3) A steeper ramp accelerates faster; a vertical 'ramp' is just free fall, with acceleration g about 9.8 metres per second every second. (4) This single law, wrung from a rolling ball, was the first piece of the mechanics Newton would complete, and it still describes every dropped object, thrown ball and launched rocket.
材料
2- プレースホルダー
- 1 個プレースホルダー
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Ball Bearing, try:
Linear Bearing Set (LM8UU, 4-Pack) - Instead of Paper, try:
Mulberry Bark Paper
Yoshino Filtering Paper (Fine Grade)
Tissue Paper (acid-free) - Instead of Measuring Tape 3m, try:
Barrier Tape
Bias Tape
Plumber's Tape (PTFE)
Measuring Tape (30m)
Flagging Tape
Adhesive Sealing Tape - Instead of Desktop Computer, try:
Path Planning Computer - Instead of Graphite Pencil Set, try:
Notebook and Pencil
Recommended for this build
Products makers often use with builds like this one.
Cardstock Assorted Pack (50 Sheets)Used together and in similar builds
ProtractorFrequently used with this build's materials
Calligraphy Pen SetFrequently used with this build's materials
Paper TowelFrequently used with this build's materials
India InkFrequently used with this build's materials
Steel Ruler (30cm)Used together and in similar builds
Sharp ScissorsUsed together and in similar builds
Cotton Kitchen StringUsed together and in similar builds関連ブループリント
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CC0 パブリックドメイン
このブループリントはCC0で公開されています。許可を求めずに、自由にコピー、修正、配布、あらゆる目的で使用できます。
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