Hanging Nails Challenge
Guided-Inquiry Kit
Materials Included In Kit
Nails, 3", 96
Wood block with hole, 8
Additional Materials Required
Hammer* Resealable plastic bags*
*for Prelab Preparation
Prelab Preparation
- Place the tip of a nail into the hole in the center of a wood block. Hammer this “support nail” straight into the block until it is secure. Note: Make sure the nail is driven in vertically. The nail head must be level.
- Repeat with each of the wood blocks.
- Place sets of 10 nails into resealable bags for distribution to the student groups.
Safety Precautions
The nails are sharp. Use care when handling. Wear safety glasses. Remind students to wash their hands thoroughly with soap and water before leaving the laboratory.
Disposal
All materials may be stored for future use.
Teacher Tips
- This is a fun activity to develop and reinforce critical thinking and problem-solving skills as well as cooperative learning. It may also be used as part of a physical science unit on forces.
- In general, guided-inquiry activities are most successful if students understand that the activity replaces the lecture. Students are more likely to take responsibility for learning when they are actively engaged in the process of “constructing knowledge.” Guided-inquiry activities simulate the scientific method—students make observations, search for patterns or relationships, and try to identify guiding principles that will explain the results.
- Encourage student groups to share ideas rather than view this activity as a competition.
- Allow two groups to join together and see if they can balance two systems of ten nails each on one support nail.
- If time permits, allow students to investigate their questions.
- To demonstrate the difference between balancing and hanging, use the Balancing Bird and the Fascinating Finger Balance, both available from Flinn Scientific (Catalog Nos. AP9301 and AP6640, respectively). The Balancing Bird balances on its base of support and the Finger Balance hangs from its base of support.
Correlation to Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)†
Science & Engineering Practices
Asking questions and defining problems Planning and carrying out investigations Constructing explanations and designing solutions
Disciplinary Core Ideas
MS-PS2.A: Forces and Motion HS-PS2.A: Forces and Motion
Crosscutting Concepts
Patterns Structure and function Stability and change
Answers to Prelab Questions
- Look at the figures of the two gymnasts. Which one is balanced? Which one is hanging in balance? How do you know?
{12773_PreLab_Figure_1}
The gymnast in Figure B is balanced because his center of gravity is above his support (the rings). The gymnast in Figure A is hanging because his center of gravity is below his support.
- What clues are given in the Background and Activity Overview sections to help you solve the “hanging nails” challenge?
The nails will be hanging, not balancing, so the center of gravity of the nail system must be below the head of the support nail. In order for the nails to be in equilibrium, the center of gravity of the total system must be in line with the support nail.
- If you were to balance a nail horizontally on your finger, would you expect the center of gravity to be in the exact middle of the nail, closer to the head of the nail, or closer to the point? Explain your answer, and then try it!
Since the head of the nail has more mass than the point, the center of gravity would be closer to the head of the nail.
Sample Data
Part I. Hanging Nails Challenge Draw the system of nails once all ten are hanging in balance on the support nail.
{12773_Data_Figure_2}
Part II. Exploring the Hanging Nails System Draw or describe the position of the nails after one nail is removed.
{12773_Data_Figure_3}
Answers to Questions
Part I. Hanging Nails Challenge
- Describe or use arrows to show the directions of the opposing forces acting on the nails and why they are in equilibrium.
The support nail is pushing up on the bottom horizontal nail and vice versa. The heads of the nails are pushing from opposite directions on the top horizontal nail, keeping it in place. As gravity pulls the hanging nails down, their shafts push in opposite directions against the bottom horizontal nail, keeping it in place. All the forces acting on the nails cancel each other and the center of gravity of the system is in line with the support nail, so the system hangs in equilibrium.
- When the 10-nail system is in equilibrium, is its center of gravity above or below the head of the support nail? How can you tell?
The center of gravity is below the head of the support nail because most of the mass of the nail system is below this point.
- Why is the title, “Hanging Nails Challenge,” more appropriate for this activity than “Balancing Nails Challenge”?
Since the center of gravity of the nail system is below its point of support, the nails are hanging. They would be balancing if the center of gravity were above the point of support.
Part II. Exploring the Hanging Nails System
- How is the position of the nails when nine are in equilibrium different than with 10?
The shafts of the nails are more aligned when nine are in equilibrium. The four nails on one side hang down more vertically than the three on the other side. When ten are in equilibrium, their shafts are more spread out in a fan shape, with the outermost nails on opposite sides hanging at the same angle; the next two toward the center hang at the same angle, etc.
- What effect does the stepwise removal of one nail at a time have on the way the nail system hangs? Describe and explain any patterns you observe.
Each time a nail is removed the center of gravity shifts slightly upward and the system becomes less stable. When an even number of nails are hanging, the two outer nail heads push in opposite directions on the ends of horizontal nails. This causes the horizontal nails to rotate somewhat and the hanging nails spread out in a fan shape. When an odd number of nails are hanging, the two outer nail heads are pushing in the same direction on the top horizontal nail. Their shafts are pushing on the same side of the bottom horizontal nail, in the opposite direction as the force on the top nail. These forces keep the horizontal nails aligned. The side with the greater number of nails hangs lower than the side with the fewer nails.
- Excluding balancing just one nail, what is the minimum number of nails necessary for the system to remain in equilibrium? Why do you think this is so?
Five total nails, two horizontal and three hanging, was the minimum number we were able to use and keep the system in equilibrium. With fewer nails, there was not enough opposing force to keep the horizontal nails from rotating. Note to teacher: Balancing five nails is very difficult. The center hanging nail must be exactly over the support nail and the other two closer to the ends of the horizontal nails. Balancing six nails is a little easier if the two pairs of hanging nails are away from the center support.
- List three other questions related to the Hanging Nails Challenge that could be answered by experimentation. Choose one and describe how you would investigate that question.
Does the size of the nails affect the stability of the system? What effect does the number of nails have on the angle at which they hang? Do the heads of the nails need to alternate, or will different arrangements also work? Does the placement of the hanging nails on the horizontal nail affect the angle at which they hang?
References
The Experimentals, http://www.abc.net.au/science/experimentals/experiments/ (Accessed March 2009).
|
|