Abstract
This project presents an interesting puzzle. A disk of wood will float face-up, that is, with its circular cross-section parallel to the surface of the water. A long log of wood, however, floats with the circular cross-section perpendicular to the surface of the water. If you think about it, disks and logs are both cylinders. Is there some intermediate length of cylinder that floats with the circular cross-section at a tilted angle? Do an experiment to find out!Objective
The goal of this project is to measure how the tilt angle of cylinders floating in water depends on the aspect ratio (length/diameter) of the cylinder.
Introduction
If you place a wooden disk in water, it floats 'face up,' i.e., with the circular cross-section parallel to the surface of the water. However, if you place a long wooden cylinder in water, it floats with the circular cross-section perpendicular to the surface of the water (see Figure 1).
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| Figure 1. Illustration of a floating disk (A) and a floating cylinder (B). |
If you think about it, a disk is a cylinder, too. A disk is just a very short cylinder, and 'disk' is just a special name for this type of cylinder. How short does a cylinder need to be before we call it a disk, or is there something more to it? A coaster for a hot cup of coffee certainly fits our concept of a disk. A ceramic coaster might be almost a centimeter tall and ten centimeters in diameter. However, we wouldn't call a one-centimeter length of pencil lead a disk, we'd call it a cylinder. That's because the diameter of the pencil lead is only 0.05 cm (0.5 mm). So apparently we consider both the length and the diameter of a cylinder when we're deciding whether or not it's a disk.
A handy way to consider both numbers at once is to use a ratio. For example, if we can use the ratio:
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The coaster has an aspect ratio of 1/10, and the pencil lead has an aspect ratio of 1/0.05 or 20. So perhaps what we mean by a disk is a cylinder with an aspect ratio < 1.
Does the way a cylinder floats also depend on its aspect ratio? Since the disk floats face-up, but a longer cylinder floats with the circular faces perpendicular to the surface, does that mean that there are cylinders with intermediate aspect ratios that would float at intermediate angles? Do an experiment to find out!
Terms, Concepts and Questions to Start Background Research
To do this project, you should do research that enables you to understand the following terms and concepts:
More advanced students should also study:
Questions
Bibliography
Materials and Equipment
To do this experiment you will need the following materials and equipment:
Experimental Procedure
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| Figure 2. Measuring the tilt angle of the dyed dowel. |
| Length (cm) |
Diameter (cm) |
Aspect Ratio (length/diameter) |
Tilt Angle (°) |
Variations
Credits
Andrew Olson, Ph.D., Science Buddies
Sources
Last edit date: 2007-02-14 09:45:00
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