Jump to main content

How Protective is Your Helmet?

Summary

Areas of Science
Difficulty
Method
Time Required
Short (2-5 days)
Cost
Very Low (under $20)
Safety

No issues

Credits
Renee Sample, PhD, Science Buddies
Science Buddies is committed to creating content authored by scientists and educators. Learn more about our process and how we use AI.
*Note: For this science project, you will need to develop your own experimental procedure. Use the information on this page as a starting place. If you would like to discuss your ideas or need help troubleshooting, use the Ask An Expert forum. Our Experts won't do the work for you, but they will make suggestions and offer guidance if you come to them with specific questions.

If you want a Project Idea with full instructions, please pick one without an asterisk (*) at the end of the title.

Abstract

Every time you hop on your bike or gear up for football or baseball practice, your helmet is your first line of defense. Whether you’re coasting downhill or tackling on the gridiron, impacts happen — and they can cause more than just bumps and bruises. Scientists tell us that forceful hits to the head can lead to concussions or even more serious brain injury over time. Correct helmet design, proper fit, and good cushioning all help reduce those risks. 

For example, bicycling is one of the sports most associated with traumatic brain injuries in the U.S., and studies show that wearing helmets can lower the chance of serious head injury by around 48-53%. In football, recent helmet designs using liquid shock absorbers have been shown in lab tests to reduce impact forces on the brain by about a third when compared to many traditional helmets.

In this project, you can perform a drop-test on different helmet samples to see how well various padding, liner materials or outer layers protect a fragile “brain” (for example a water balloon or accelerometer that measures deceleration) from impact. By measuring the height from which the helmet lets the object inside survive (or how damaged it is after the drop), you’ll explore the biomechanics of impact absorption. This helps us understand how helmet materials work to reduce force, protect the skull, and ultimately keep the brain safer during sports like biking and football.

Bibliography

icon scientific method

Ask an Expert

Do you have specific questions about your science project? Our team of volunteer scientists can help. Our Experts won't do the work for you, but they will make suggestions, offer guidance, and help you troubleshoot.

Global Goals

The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNSDGs) are a blueprint to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all.

This project explores topics key to Good Health and Well-Being: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.

Careers

If you like this project, you might enjoy exploring these related careers:

Career Profile
If you are injured in an accident, suffer a stroke, heart attack, or loss of a limb, or are born with conditions that make it difficult to move your body, then you will often be cared for by a physical therapist. Physical therapists review a patient's medical history, test and measure his or her physical condition (things like range of motion, strength, flexibility, balance, coordination, muscle function), and then develop a treatment plan to meet some physical goals. They coach, motivate, and… Read more
Career Profile
Sports injuries can be painful and debilitating. Athletic trainers help athletes, and other physically active people, avoid such injuries, while also working to improve their strength and conditioning. Should a sports injury occur, athletic trainers help to evaluate the injury, determine the treatment needed, and design a fitness regime to rehabilitate the athlete so he or she is ready to go out and compete again. Read more
Career Profile
Mechanical engineers are part of your everyday life, designing the spoon you used to eat your breakfast, your breakfast's packaging, the flip-top cap on your toothpaste tube, the zipper on your jacket, the car, bike, or bus you took to school, the chair you sat in, the door handle you grasped and the hinges it opened on, and the ballpoint pen you used to take your test. Virtually every object that you see around you has passed through the hands of a mechanical engineer. Consequently, their… Read more
Career Profile
What makes it possible to create high-technology objects like computers and sports gear? It's the materials inside those products. Materials scientists and engineers develop materials, like metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites, that other engineers need for their designs. Materials scientists and engineers think atomically (meaning they understand things at the nanoscale level), but they design microscopically (at the level of a microscope), and their materials are used macroscopically… Read more
Career Profile
Each time your heart beats, or you breathe, think, dream, smell, see, move, laugh, read, remember, write, or feel something, you are using your nervous system. The nervous system includes your brain, spinal cord, and a huge network of nerves that make electrical connections all over your body. Neurologists are the medical doctors who diagnose and treat problems with the nervous system. They work to restore health to an essential system in the body. Read more

News Feed on This Topic

 
, ,

Cite This Page

General citation information is provided here. Be sure to check the formatting, including capitalization, for the method you are using and update your citation, as needed.

MLA Style

Sample, Renee. "How Protective is Your Helmet?" Science Buddies, 16 Jan. 2026, https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project-ideas/Sports_p068/sports-science/how-protective-is-your-helmet. Accessed 4 June 2026.

APA Style

Sample, R. (2026, January 16). How Protective is Your Helmet? Retrieved from https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project-ideas/Sports_p068/sports-science/how-protective-is-your-helmet


Last edit date: 2026-01-16
Top
Free science fair projects.