Understanding different forms and sources of energy and the flow of energy through movement. The physical movement of machines is the stimulus for many creative works:
PPS2.4 Identifies various forms and sources of energy and devises systems that use energy
INVS2.7 Conducts investigations by observing, questioning, predicting, testing, collecting, recording and analysing data, and drawing conclusions
This document describes the organisation and performance of five simple, hands-on activities designed to provide an environment for students to investigate, report and discuss energy and the flow of energy through movement.
An introduction to movement, energy and technology used in these activities is included in Appendix. The following sections provide more detail about proposed methods and procedures to complete the activities themselves:
Each activity requires documentation based on the above 'Scientific paper format'.
Scientists have established the following format for “scientific papers”. A complete paper is divided into sections, in this order:
This format provides a consistent and efficient means of communicating with the scientific community. The order is logical and could apply to almost any report. Preparing a scientific paper develops the ability to organize ideas logically, to think clearly, and to express ideas accurately and concisely. Mastery of these skills is an asset. Source: http://www.instruction.greenriver.edu/mcvay/b100/general_format_for_writing_a_sci.htm
Prior knowledge: Simple series circuit using three volt Direct Current (DC) battery, LED and switch(es)
Students will perform a single task (switching a device off/on) in a variety of ways to investigate movement and energy. Core activities will be the investigation of energy in the context of light, magnetism, electricity, sound and physical movement. Students will be provided with simple, safe, electronic devices including a low voltage LED test kit
More detailed specifications and images to aid recognition of all devices/resources are included below.
Background information to a range of concepts is included with examples in separate document(s)
Use a torch and/or other light source to control a device (switch device on/off).
The torch is powered by three AAA batteries contained in a black plastic housing that slides into the body of the torch. The negative ends of the batteries should be inserted to connect with the springs in the battery housing. There is a rubber coated, press-button on/off switch on the removable screw-cap on the base of the battery. The torch circuit is normally OPEN. Pressing the button creates a CLOSED circuit and the torch is turned ON.
When the bottom cap (on/off push-button) is removed, a CLOSED circuit can be created by connecting the metal body of the torch to the base of the metal tracks on the battery holder (see images below).
Students will switch their LED test light/torch ON/OFF by using each of the following methods:
- Connect the leads as shown in image 2. below (connect alligator clips to NC & COM terminals on the reed switch)
Students will use Electromagnetic Signals to activate and control remote device(s) and activate a remote device/switch:
Students will be allocated with two remote control Bumper cars and two programmable Bee-Bots
Two of the groups will be provided with one Radio Controlled bumper car each.
Two groups will be allocated one Bee-bot each. The Bee-bots are controlled by entering data on the Bee-bot keypad - students must not push or touch the Bee-bots to move/steer them
Your mission (should you choose to accept it), is to complete one simple task (the 'headlight' task) and then drive your car/Bee-bot to the finish line. The group who takes the least amount of time will win the challenge (you must record your start and finish time(your teacher will show you the location of the “Finish Line” for your team. - you are not allowed to touch or move the car/Bee-bot except by using the controller/Bee-bot keypad)
Each group will attach a torch to their car/Bee-bot and then navigate a course with the headlight turned ON - This is referred to as 'The Headlight Task'
The magic controller (Bee-bot groups should jump straight to the 'Bee-Bot Instructions' section
Magic Switch: A reed switch is added & concealed(1,2) Magnet is glued to wand(3,4) Hold wand/magnet over handle to activate(4) |
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Magic Switch: Use the wand to activate the magic switch on controller |
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You will need to drive your Bee-bot by entering a sequence of commands via the Bee-bot keypad. You may make multiple entries any time you like - you do not have to go back to the start if you make a mistake - just carry on from where you are. You are not allowed to push or position the Bee-bot with any part of your body.
Your first task will be to set up the night-light using the black paper light shield (as per activity done yesterday).
First,test that you can drive the car using remote controller and that the night-light is ON and the night-light is shining.
Do not proceed until you have found out how to use your magic wand and that you can drive the Bumper car using remote control (remember the HINTS above):
Attach your test light/torch to the front of an RC car/Bee-bot using Blu-Tack, Plasticene, rubber band(s) or similar (so that the lED is pointing forward like a car headlight - see image)
For the nest section, you must not touch the car to move it - you must only position it using the Bee-bot keys or Bumper car radio control system (or request permission from your teacher first if you really think you need to move it manually).
After recording your results, drive your Bumper car/Bee-bot to the Finish line and record your finishing time. Ask someone in another group to sign and print their name against your results (to verify that you have entered the correct finish time)
If you have time left over, let someone else in your group try using the magic wand and controller.
Use the Makey Makey (as a conductive switch) to play music using a range of items.
Four groups will each be allocated one of four Makey Makey devices that have been connected to desktop PC's (your teacher will direct you to your PC/Make Makey).
Your Makey Makey will already be connected to the computer allocated to you by your teacher. Do not try to connect or disconnect any device without first obtaining approval from your teacher. If you think something is wrong, then speak up.
IMPORTANT: You MUST record your results and observations on your work sheet as you go!
If all else fails, report problem to your teacher…. otherwise, continue…
IMPORTANT: You MUST record your results and observations on your work sheet as you go!
Makey Makey: Connection and operation howto. Also see http://www.makeymakey.com/ |
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If all else fails, please ask your teacher for help.
IMPORTANT: You MUST record your results and observations on your work sheet as you go! When you have your Makey Makey up and running:
If time is available, your teacher may play a music track and ask you to play along with the music using your Makey Makey, If there is time available the end of this activity, students amy use their Makey Makey instruments and play along with with the master sound track. If you play well and choose creative instruments, then your audience may even cheer and/or applaud your performance!
Results will be tabulated (very simple example)*:
Energy Type | Method | Distance from switch (Min-Max) | Benefits | Liabilities | Comments |
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Light | Torch | Up to 5 metres | Safe and 'accessable' | Batteries may be flat | Need manual option |
Light | Keychain LED | Up to 1 metre | Safe but unreliable | May not carry everywhere | May as well use manual |
Heat | Ice cubes | Up to 10mm | Water messy unsafe with electricity | May not have ice | Good refrigerator alarm |
Movement | Hand operated | Up to 600mm | Reliable | Unsafe in some situations | Most reliable |
Table 1: Comparing energy types to activate electrical switch
Sound is a disturbance of the atmosphere that human beings can hear. Such disturbances are produced by practically everything that moves, especially if it moves quickly or in a rapid and repetitive manner. If you could make the disturbance visible somehow, you would see it spreading spherically from the piston, like an expanding balloon. Because the process is so similar to what happens when you drop a stone into calm water, we call the disturbance line the wavefront.
Source: http://artsites.ucsc.edu/ems/Music/tech_background/TE-01/teces_01.html
Sound is a mechanical wave that is an oscillation of pressure transmitted through some medium (like air or water), composed of frequencies within the range of hearing. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound
Five dictionary style definitions of temperature are:
The transfer of heat is normally from a high temperature object to a lower temperature object. Heat transfer changes the internal energy of both systems involved according to the First Law of Thermodynamics. Source: http://www.physicsclassroom.com/Class/thermalP/u18l1d.cfm
Wherever there is electricity, there are also electric and magnetic fields, invisible lines of force created by the electric charges:
Q: I would like to know what the difference between a magnetic field, say from a magnet, and an electromagnetic field produced by a wire?
A: When electric current passes through a conductor, it can create
For the energy that radiates away and leaves the conductor, never to return, that field contains both electric and magnetic parts that cannot be separated - This is a radiating, or electromagnetic field: The electromagnetic field or far field, refers to a radiating field, which describes energy passing through space (not the power flowing through the wire).
The magnetic field that exists around a conductor is NOT part of the radiating field. It is storing energy, but that energy is returned to the conductor at some point. We call this the near field or just 'the magnetic field'. Similarly the 'near electric field' does not radiate and only stores energy to be returned to the conductor.
The 'near field' and 'far field' of the magnetic energy are not really separate, they are parts of the same overall magnetic field. We just call them different things to distinguish between the energy that does not radiate away and the energy that does radiate away. Source: http://www.electro-tech-online.com/general-electronics-chat/99403-electromagnetic-vs-magnetic-field.html
The strength of both electric and magnetic fields decrease as one moves away from the source of these fields. Source: http://in.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080710215215AA3TS4j
James Clerk Maxwell demonstrated that the light is made of electric and magnetic fields that change very rapidly. Source: http://science-edu.larc.nasa.gov/EDDOCS/electric.html
Characteristic | Light | Electric Current | Sound |
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Elementary particle | Photon | Electron | None |
Speed (in vacuum) | 299,792,458 m/s | Close to speed of light | Approx 343 m/s |
Elementary particles interract | No | Yes (Magnetism) | None |
Superposition possible | Yes | Minimal (different frequencies reqd.) | Different frequencies reqd. |
Saving elementary particle | Indirect: Photons cannot be saved directly | Direct (e.g. in capacitors) + Indirect (e.g. on magnetic tape) | Indirect |
Table 1: Light in Contrast to Electric Current - Source: http://130.75.63.115/upload/lv/wisem0708/SeminarIT-Trends/html/tr/right/2.%20Light%20versus%20Electric%20Current.htm
Each group will have access to their own night-light. The night-light will be shielded by a paper tube to simulate dark/low light so that the night-light is normally ON.
Each group will be supplied with a minimum of two test leads for use with the LED and Makey Makey activities
The CLA - 0.2W Natural Light LED Night Light is a professional and adaptive light solution designed to provide automatic illumination at night when used in a bedroom or hallway. Features: LED 0.2W, Voltage: 240V 50Hz AC, Natural white, Rotates 360 DEG, No batteries required,Durable construction
Magnetic Reed Switch NO\NC - Jaycar LA-5070 |
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Reed Switch Magnet Assemblies are commonly used to secure an alarm circuit on a door or window.
Sold as a pair, one has a magnet inside, the other a reed switch. The LA-5070 has a powerful magnet and two types of contacts (Normally Open (N.O.) and Normally Closed (N.C.)) per pair., so you will always have the correct one!
Switch contacts are open when the device is mounted horizontally. Contact closes when tilted towards end where leads attached. Robust plastic housing and mounting tab - can screwed down or use self adhesive strip. Dimensions: 33 (L) x 8(W) x 8.5(D)mm with 30cm leads attached: Cost $3.50 - $4.50 retail.
High speed bumper vehicles designed for thrilling head to head RC battles. Activate the eject seat of the opposing rider by making contact with one of the bumper tabs located on both sides. Includes two battery operated vehicles & two wireless remote controls to match. Controls provide Omni-directional operation.
Uses TXM TX-2B chipset - Circuit diagram: http://www.circuitstoday.com/5-channel-radio-remote-control
Bee-Bots are programmable robots that movs in 6” steps and 90º turns. Compact size and durable materials make Bee-Bot child- and classroom-friendly. Bee-Bot is powered by a built-in rechargeable battery. Recharging is done via a standard USB recharger or USB computer port. A USB re-charger cable comes with each Bee-Bot or power by 3 AA batteries.
Device method to test and compare conductivity of items including:
* Includes MaKey MaKey, Red USB Cable, 7 Alligator Clips, 6 Connector Wires
Compare with USB keyboard AS-2368 (next item below here). What are the similarities and differences?
Soundplant - http://soundplant.org/Soundplant39_documentation.htm is a digital audio performance tool that turns the computer keyboard into a versatile, low latency sound trigger and playable instrument. Via drag-and-drop, easily assign sound files of any format and unlimited size onto 72 keyboard keys. Soundplant is used for live music and sound effects, as a drum pad, as a unique electronic instrument, as an educational aid, and just for fun - in radio, television, podcasting, presentations, theaters, studios, classrooms, arenas, clubs, museums, and churches and more: http://soundplant.org/
Description: Function: Normally Open Contact: 18 Keys - 1 zero, USB interface Electrical Specification: Insulation resistance: 100M Ohm at 100VDC, Contact Bounce: 5ms max, Operating Voltage: +5VDC +/- 10% Operating Current: 250mA max. at + 5VDC.
Compare with Makey Makey (see above). What are the similarities and differences?
Specification: Sensor Range: 3-6M (Light or Infrared Sensor), saying “Hello, Welcome” in 8 languages including English, Arabic, French, Russian, Italian, Korean, Portugal, Spain and other 36 Multi-Melody for options. Use 3 “AA” Battery or external power supply transformer of DC “4.5 V, 300mA”. Volume is adjustable (toggle: high, medium or low) Widely used in restaurants, hotels, cafes, bars, etc.
Features: Installed where there is ipermanet light at the entrance: face the device towards guests enter/exit. Digital frequency code avoids interferences between similar products. Cost $3 each for 1k purchase - $12.95 retail
Questions/Experiments: Devise an experiment/method to discover what what type of sensor (sound,light, IR or other), is used. Store and analyse the experimental data.
Another way to send data to Raspberry Pi via Bluetooth.
Capacitive touch sensor data sheet
This AT42QT1070 breakout board is the simplest way to create a project with mutiple capacitive touch sensors. No microcontroller is required here – just power with 1.8 to 5.5VDC and connect up to 5 conductive pads to the 5 left-hand pins.
When a capacitive load is detected (e.g. a person touches one of the conductive contacts) the corresponding LED on the right lights up and the output pin goes low. You can use this to update an existing normal-button project where buttons connect to ground when pressed. Cost US$6 - $8 each plus shipping. http://www.adafruit.com/blog/2013/05/10/new-product-standalone-5-pad-capacitive-touch-sensor-breakout-at42qt1070/
Wide range, low power temperature sensor outputs an analog voltage that is proportional to the ambient temperature. To use, connect pin 1 (left) to power (between 2.7 and 5.5V), pin 3 (right) to ground, and pin 2 to analog in on your micro-controller. The voltage out is 0V at -50°C and 1.75V at 125°C. You can easily calculate the temperature from the voltage in millivolts: Temp °C = 100*(reading in V) - 50
Cost US$1.50 - $2.50 each plus shipping
http://www.adafruit.com/products/165
In 'Line Tracing Mode', robot will automatically detect and use sensors to follow a black line. In 'Program Mode', program a sequence of manouvres and upload to the robot using Drag and Drop commands. Navigates relatively complex courses.
Worksheets Include:
For details: http://www.artec-educational.com/pc-programmable-tracing-robot/
MCP3008 - 8-Channel 10-Bit ADC With SPI Interface - This chip will add 8 channels of 10-bit analog input to your microcontroller or microcomputer project. It's super easy to use, and uses SPI so only 4 pins are required. We chose this chip as a great accompaniment to the Raspberry Pi computer, because its fun to have analog inputs but the Pi does not have an ADC.
Cost US$3 - $4 each plus shipping
This simple, two-wheel drive chassis has a rack-and-pinion style steering mechanism so it turns like a car, not like a tank. Also, the drive motor is geared-down to the live axle in the back and provides plenty of speed and torque for driving on relatively flat terrain.
Use MakeyMakey, WII and many other interfaces to drive RC car:
Fast, mini RC car designed for thrills and spills. The two protection rings act as a roll cage to help make the car roll over freely and keep on going even after crash landing. Supplied with a user friendly remote control and a launch pad for stunt jumps. Recharge the car via the battery powered charger pack.
Variety of breadboards - From US $5 (half-size) and upwards
* It is also possible to send data to The Internet Of Things (COSM):
MakeyMakey HOWTO: http://www.makeymakey.com/howto.php
DrumPads Keyboard control is designed to let you play the drums two-handed on keyboard:
Drumpads | MakeyMakey |
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WASDFG | |
Up Dn Lt Rt Space, LClick | |
QWER - TYUI | |
ASDF - GHJK | |
ZXCV - BNM> |
Figure: See https://www.sparkfun.com/tutorials/378
MakeyMakey keyboard: top side, the MaKey MaKey has 6-inputs: the up/down/left/right arrow keys, as well as the space bar and mouse left click. On the reversethere are 12 more keys: W, A, S, D, F, and G on the keyboard side, and up/down/left/right mouse movement and left/right clicks on the mouse side. The bottom header has six ground (aka Earth) outputs, while the top header is an expansion/output header. LEDs on the back to indicate whether you're pressing a mouse or keyboard key.
Use ice (detected by heat sensor) to activate/monitor a device (switch on/off & monitor)
Investigate and control 'things' via Internet/web browser.
Use sound (hand clap detected via microphone) to control a device (switch on/off)
A word match puzzle is one where the user has to match a word (or phrase) to its corresponding phrase. Some common examples are: teaching a foreign language, link concepts together, link a word to its definition: http://www.armoredpenguin.com/wordmatch/
To create a jigsaw overlay on an image: GIMP: Filters → Render → Pattern → Jigsaw or use Gimp to create a text layer with drop-shadow: Filters → Linght_and_shadow → Drop_shadow