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Amazing Science Tricks with Common Household Items

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Using common objects around the house, you can demonstrate cool scientific laws. Here’s how:


Keeping Water Separate

keepingwatersep1.jpgFill two identical glasses with water. Add two tablespoons of salt to the water in one glass and stir well. Add a few drops of food coloring to the water in the other glass.

Cover the glass containing the colored water with a sheet of paper, turn it upside down and place it on top of the glass containing salt water. (Be sure to do this trick over a saucer or bowl.)

Gently pull the paper out from between the glasses. The colored water and the salt water will remain separate.

 

keepingwatersep2.jpgHow Does It Work?

Salt water is heavier than colored water, so the two stay separate as long as the boundary between them isn’t disturbed. Try turning the two glasses over, though. The heavier salt water will now be on top, so it will flow down and mix with the colored water.


A Can That Can “Walk”

walkingcanjb2.jpgPlace 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.

How Does It Work?

When you rub the balloon with a tissue, the balloon gets a negative electric charge of several thousand volts. When you put the balloon near the can, electrostatic induction affects the molecules in the metal. The outside of the can gets a positive charge, so it is drawn toward the balloon and starts rolling in that direction.


A Candle That Sucks Water

candlethatsuckswater1.jpgPlace a candle upright in the middle of a saucer. Fill the saucer with water. Light the candle. Place a glass over the candle. When the flame goes out, the water in the saucer will get sucked into the glass.

 

candlethatsuckswater2.jpgHow Does It Work?

When the candle is burning inside the glass, the heat makes the air expand, so some of the air escapes outside the glass. The candle goes out after it uses up all the oxygen, so the air inside the glass cools. As it cools, the pressure inside the glass drops. Some of the carbon dioxide formed by the flame dissolves in the water as well, decreasing the pressure even more. The water outside the glass on the saucer is forced into the glass by the higher aire pressure outside.


A Flying Trash Bag

flyingtrashbag1jb2.jpgHold the mouth of a black trash bag in one hand. Use a hair dryer to blow hot air into the bag.

Seal the mouth of the bag with tape. Tie a long piece of string around the tape so you can hold it. Take the bag out into the sun. The bag will rise slowly into the air. (It’s best to do this trick in an open area on a windless day.)

 

flyingtrashbagjb2.jpgHow Does It Work?

Since the bag is black, it absorbs heat from the sun. That heat makes the air inside the bag expand and become lighter. When the bag and the air inside are lighter than the surrounding air, the bag starts to rise.


Bending Light Through Water

bendinglight1jb2.jpgPunch a hole in a clear plastic bottle two inches from the bottom. Put your finger over the hole, fill the bottle with water and cap it to keep it from draining out.

Darken the room and cover part of a flashlight with your fingers to make the beam narrower. When you take the cap off the bottle, the water will flow out in an arc. Shine the flashlight at the stream from the side of the bottle opposite the hole. The light will bend with the arc and create a bright glow where the water hits the sink.

 

bendinglight2jb2.jpgHow Does It Work?

When the light in the stream strikes the boundary between the water and air, much of the light is reflected back into the stream. The light continues this internal reflection all along the arc formed by the falling water. The same principle is used to transmit light signals through flexible optical fibers.


Reading Through an Envelope

readingthruenv1jb2.jpgWith a black felt-tip pen, write a three-letter word in large letters on a white piece of paper. Place the paper in a brown envelope, and insert that envelope into a white envelope. The writing on the paper should now be impossible to read.

Get a piece of dark construction paper or tear out a page from a magazine that is printed on both sides. Roll up the paper into a four-inch-long tube. When you hold the tube against the envelope, you’ll be able to read the writing inside.

 

readingthruenv2jb2.jpgHow Does It Work?

Usually you can’t read the writing inside an envelope because of the light reflected off the envelope’s white surface. But the tube blocks that reflected light, so you see only the light coming through the envelope.


Egg Into Bottle

eggthrubottle1jb2.jpgFind a glass bottle that has a mouth slightly smaller in diameter than an egg. Pour some hot water into the bottle (be careful!), shake it vigorously and empty the water.

Peel a soft-boiled egg and place it on the mouth of the bottle. Leave it there for a while and it will get sucked inside.

 

eggthrubottle2jb2.jpgHow Does It Work?

The vapor from the hot water drives the air out of the bottle. Once the egg seals the top of the bottle, the air can’t get back in. As the water vapor cools, it turns back into water, causing the pressure inside the bottle to drop. The higher pressure of the outside air pushes the egg into the bottle.


Toothpick Torpedo

toothpicktorpedo1jb2.jpgDab a little shampoo on the blunt end of a wooden toothpick.

Drop the toothpick in a pan of water. The toothpick will start moving in the direction of the sharp end.

 

toothpicktorpedo2jb2.jpgHow Does It Work?

Shampoo contains agents that reduce the surface tension of liquids. As the shampoo on the end of the toothpick dissolves, it reduces the water’s surface tension around it, thus releasing the water’s hold on that end of the toothpick. The water around the other end of the toothpick still has surface tension, so it pulls the toothpick in that direction.


To learn more amazing science tricks, check out the book “Amazing Science Tricks” by Michio Goto

50 Comments on Amazing Science Tricks with Common Household Items

  1. thanx for the tricks.it was a great help for my physix experiment in our school.

  2. thank you very much for this site! It really helps me in our group project!

  3. the tooth pick tornado stinks!!!!!!!!!!

  4. Nice experiments! But sadly, I can’t perform some of them for our Science Trick in school. But, totally cool!

  5. heheh>>. please add more tricks!! its fun reading the tricks

  6. cool

  7. these are cool sicience projects

  8. nice to see a wonder struck classroom!!

  9. amazing…..it helped me alot in mah project

  10. onLi gRrLL.. // June 30, 2008 at 6:23 am // Reply

    nice…but not enough for a 10th graders sci. project…

  11. Please give more science tricks. Need it for my school project. =)

  12. this is sooo kwl!!!! man last term i got 4 science needs attention but this term i got and A+ n i passed it… lol now all i need 2 do this term is try n pass RE… LOL

  13. TARAJI BOY^^ // June 11, 2008 at 7:58 am // Reply

    please give more tricks, want many to try for science project:-)

  14. wow!these experiments are really great!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  15. yes i tried the trick of “seperate the water”. it really worked. it was an amazing trick.

  16. I tried the toothpic one but it doesn’t work

  17. this was an interesting experience.This very informative also.

  18. dont m3ss wh1t m3 // May 3, 2008 at 8:40 pm // Reply

    IM TRYING TO A SCIENCE PROJECT WITH THE HOT WATER,EGG,AND BOTTLE.IT DOESNT WORK!

  19. wow great i love it !!!

  20. this stuff is horible // March 18, 2008 at 6:19 pm // Reply

    all this stuff is for beginners and it is really bad to simple and not much happens i have seen more amazing stuff from kinder garnder students

  21. its amazing tricks

  22. jazz III-diamond // March 8, 2008 at 9:41 pm // Reply

    it is very nice because i have learned many things in this tricks and i proved that science is alwals in our lives

  23. Drama Queen // March 6, 2008 at 8:43 pm // Reply

    I think its intersting about poking a hole through a balloon without popping it!

  24. the drawings were good. I liked the way the tricks are presented.

  25. the tricks are really good and very educational as well. nice to know things…. and it is really amazing!

  26. wow those tricks were totally amazing 🙂

  27. IV-mars BCSAT // February 23, 2008 at 2:52 am // Reply

    nice tricks….

  28. ahhhhhhhhhh those tricks are scary

  29. bac'S BCSAT-MARS // February 20, 2008 at 7:51 am // Reply

    nice its so nice the tricks was so cool and amazing… i want more so i can try it…

    (:- 🙂 <-:

  30. wow it works

  31. science is great!!!

  32. it is nice i hope you add some more

  33. I’ve seen cooler…

  34. _…..just make more amazing tricks………

  35. They’re really great! Science is amazing and fun!

  36. it was fun

  37. they are awesome! please do more.

  38. Using the water to “bend” the light is much the same principles that fiber optics cables work upon.

  39. futurelegend // January 16, 2008 at 4:37 pm // Reply

    Great, the tricks were Amazing just as you said ,but were also fun and very intresting.

    Thank you

  40. cool…….. I ……..like …..it ………a …..lot………..! 🙂

  41. please add more science tricks

  42. Crazy Funk28 // January 11, 2008 at 5:52 am // Reply

    wow…. The TRICKS was so great…….. All your Tricks worked…. It so amazing

  43. its too nice……i want more for my project

  44. gisele bundchen // January 7, 2008 at 6:17 am // Reply

    it’s great and awesome those tricks amazed me…………….cool!!!!!!

  45. it’s good

  46. it is very good

  47. I liked it, it’s very nice

  48. it is domb

  49. it is domb

  50. nice tricks… love it… it really helps me a lot enx…

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