Need Help in setting a hypothesis

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MonkSage
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2010 9:00 am
Occupation: Student: 8th grade
Project Question: Which surface has the least friction?
Project Due Date: December , 2010
Project Status: I am conducting my experiment

Need Help in setting a hypothesis

Post by MonkSage »

I have a project about which surface has the least friction. I would be using the surfaces wood, cardboard, and carpet. I would be testing for time. I don't know how to set up the hypothesis. Should I just put that I predict that smooth wood has the least amount of friction?
audreyln
Expert
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Occupation: Engineer - Chemical
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Re: Need Help in setting a hypothesis

Post by audreyln »

Sounds like a good project! Here is a good resource for writing your hypothesis.

http://www.sciencebuddies.com/science-f ... esis.shtml
MonkSage
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2010 9:00 am
Occupation: Student: 8th grade
Project Question: Which surface has the least friction?
Project Due Date: December , 2010
Project Status: I am conducting my experiment

Re: Need Help in setting a hypothesis

Post by MonkSage »

audreyln wrote:Sounds like a good project! Here is a good resource for writing your hypothesis.

http://www.sciencebuddies.com/science-f ... esis.shtml
Thanks. Do you think this is a good hypothesis?
If use a finished surface, than the amount of rolling friction would be lower than a rough surface.
deleted-71588
Former Expert
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Joined: Mon Oct 16, 2006 11:47 am

Re: Need Help in setting a hypothesis

Post by deleted-71588 »

MonkSage wrote:If use a finished surface, than the amount of rolling friction would be lower than a rough surface.
If you still plan on testing wood, cardboard, and carpet surfaces, then I'm not sure how you would define these surfaces as "finished" or "rough".

With materials that will compress and stretch when you roll an object over them, the coeficient of friction for the test sample will likely change with different pressures (normal or downward force divided by surface area) and will likely be affected by the shape of the roller.

If the cardboard is corrugated, then both your cardboard and carpet will compress and stretch significantly more than your wood sample.

This will likely make your hypothesis hard to prove because there will likely be more than one factor involved in any differences.
-Craig
MonkSage
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2010 9:00 am
Occupation: Student: 8th grade
Project Question: Which surface has the least friction?
Project Due Date: December , 2010
Project Status: I am conducting my experiment

Re: Need Help in setting a hypothesis

Post by MonkSage »

Thanks for the info. I changed my project a little bit. The surfaces I used were smooth wood, aluminum foil and paper. I used a toy car to test the hypothesis.
Will this hypothesis work for the experiment?

If I use a smooth, unwrinkled surface, then the amount of friction would be less than using a corrugated surface. Therefore, the smooth wood would have less friction than the aluminum foil and paper.
But the results contradicted my experiment. Aluminum foil had the least friction and smooth wood was the second.
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