Magic of Science
Magic of Science
Magic of Science
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
Place an empty aluminum can on its side on the floor. Blow up a balloon and tie a
knot in the end. Rub a tissue back and forth on the balloon.
When you put the balloon near the can, the can will start rolling toward the balloon.
What to do
1. Do this activity somewhere you can make a watery mess, such as a sink or
outside.
2. Make a small hole about 10 cm up the side of the plastic bottle. The hole should
be about the size of the straw's diameter. This is a little tricky, so ask an adult to
help. We carefully used the point of a pair of scissors, gently rotating it on the plastic
until a hole broke through.
3. Place the straw into this hole so it is half inside the bottle and half out. Angle it so
the outside end points upwards.
4. Press adhesive putty around the straw on the outside of the bottle to minimise
leakage from the hole. Try and make a good seal.
5. Fill the bottle halfway with water and add a drop of food colouring.
6. Does the water come out the straw?
7. Blow up the balloon. Keep the air inside the balloon while you stretch the balloon
ends over the top of the bottle.
8. Hold the balloon in place, then release the air into the bottle. Watch what
happens as the balloon deflates.
What's happening?
All around us, everything on Earth is being squeezed by the atmosphere above. Air
pressure pushes equally in all directions, and is pushing on you now as you read
this.
A similar thing is happening inside your fountain. The water in the bottle is squeezed
by the height of water on top of it. The same happens with the water in the straw.
The air inside a balloon is under pressure as it is squeezed by the rubber. When you
place the inflated balloon on top of the bottle, the air pressure on top of the bottle
becomes higher. That pushes down on the water in the bottle, pushing it through the
straw and making the fountain stronger.
Materials
1/2 cup of vinegar
1/2 tsp of baking soda
balloons
water/pop bottle
Tools
funnel
Instructions
Pour 1/2 cup of vinegar into an old water or pop bottle.
put 1/2 tbsp of baking soda into a balloon.
Carefully, put the opening of the balloon over the water bottle.
Empty the baking soda into the bottle, and into the vinegar and watch the reaction.
What’s Happening
The secret lies with vinegar and baking soda, two household staples that, when
combined, create carbonic acid. Carbonic acid breaks down into water and carbon
dioxide.
This experiment uses the carbon dioxide to fill the balloon, giving the illusion that the
balloon is self inflating.
4. Dancing Milk Colors Experiment
Supplies:
Plate
Milk
Food Coloring
Dish Soap
Q-tip
5. Magic Lens
6. Dripping Ice
Science Behind
In this experiment, the baby oil is less dense than the vegetable oil, so it floats on
top. Water is more dense than the vegetable oil, so it sinks to the bottom. In ice
form, the cube is more dense than the baby oil, so it sinks through that layer, but less
dense than the vegetable oil, so it floats between the two. But, when the cube melts
into a liquid, the water drops are more dense than the vegetable oil , so the drops
sink all the way to the bottom.
7. Glass Lifting Balloon
Materials Required
Balloon – 1
Glass – 1
Matchbox – 1
Paper – 1
Water
Steps To Follow
Inflate the balloon and tie the end.
Keep the inflated balloon pressed on top of the glass kept on a table, and try to lift
the balloon.
Does the glass lift up along with the balloon? No! Now, let’s try this in a different way.
Dip the end of the balloon in some water.
Light a piece of the paper and put it inside the glass.
It is advisable to have adult supervision when you perform this step, to avoid any
mishaps.
Cover the mouth of the glass with the balloon, immediately.
What do you observe? Some fumes escape around the sides of the glass and the
balloon gets sucked inside the glass a little.
Try lifting the balloon now, a little carefully. Do you notice that the glass seems glued
to the balloon? The balloon has indeed lifted the glass.
When the piece of lighted paper is put inside the glass, it heats up the surrounding
air. The air becomes lighter and it tends to move up.
Science Behind
When the mouth of glass gets covered by the balloon, this hot air tries to escape
through the gaps around the balloon. This creates a slightly lower pressure inside
the glass, and the balloon gets sucked inside. The gaps around the edge of the glass
are sealed tight. So, your balloon can easily lift the glass which is much heavier than
itself.