Shadow Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 Hey all, My friend asked me to design a couple of simple experiments proving Newtons three laws, so I was wondering if any of you have any cool ideas. Don't consider this homework, it's just ideas I'm interested in. For the first law, I was thinking about rolling a ping pong ball on a table, and then roll it again with something blowing at it. For the second, I was thinking of some kind of motor or such pushing a light object without problem, but having trouble/not being able to push a heavier one. For the third one, I really don't know, I was thinking of showing how a ball bounces, or maybe a balloon propelled by the air expelled from it...? These experiments aren't very robust, so I was wondering if any of you have more original ideas. Cheers, Gabe
Mr Skeptic Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 For F=ma: two pairs of two weights attached to each other by a string on a frictionless table. The weight that you drop off the table should be the same (same force), but the weight that stays on the table different (different mass -> different acceleration). A special case of the above, when a=0, there is by definition no change in velocity. For F1=-F2: People on ice pushing objects.
MM6 Posted April 26, 2009 Posted April 26, 2009 Build matchstick rockets. Google it. They are a simple and excellent way to demonstrate Newton's three laws. You can design some experiments around it, if you really are trying to do experiments.
swansont Posted April 26, 2009 Posted April 26, 2009 The third law can be shown with conservation of momentum. Have one object strike an identical one which starts at rest (best if this is done on a frictionless surface, or with pendulum bobs) Also try it with different masses, if you have a way of analyzing the motion.
Shadow Posted April 26, 2009 Author Posted April 26, 2009 Thanks, all of you. I no longer need it, but I'll be sure to try out the rocket )
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