Title: What A Drag BALLOON JET ACTIVITY
1What A Drag!BALLOON JET ACTIVITY
- MAGNET STUDENT PROJECT
- Johnson STEM Elementary
- Cathleen Post
- Third Grade
2Objective This activity creates a balloon jet,
and also demonstrates the effect of drag.
Content Area Science, Technology, and
MathematicsStandards Measurement Geometry
1.1 Statistics, Data Analysis, Probability1.2,
1.3, 1.4 Mathematical Reasoning 2.3 Number
Sense 1.1, 2.1 Physical Science
1d Investigation Experimentation 5a-e
3What A DragPre-show
- Students are in small groups of 4
- Each group came up with a name for their Balloon
Jet. - Each group made a prediction on how far they
thought their Jet would go without drag and with
drag. - One person in the group drew a diagram of their
Balloon Jet.
4What A DragProcedures
- Each group created one Balloon Jet
- Threaded their string through a straw and
attached the straw to their Balloon Jet. - Two designated string holders held the ends of
the string and went far apart to tighten the
string until it was taut. - One designated Pilot blew up the Balloon Jet
using 3 large blows. - On signal the pilot let the balloon go.
- All team members observed the jet fly and land,
one member marked the landing. - Each group repeated the flight twice, keeping the
balloon the same size.
5What A DragProcedures continued
- 8. The groups repeated steps 3-7, but this
time each pilot attached a paper plate to the
front of their Jet. The paper plate represented
a jet with drag. - Then the students observed and measured the
distance the Balloon Jet traveled and recorded it
on their Group Data Sheet. - After all the groups completed the activity and
Group Data Sheet, we compared the results.
6What A DragDiscussion Questions
- Which jet went a shorter distance? Why?
- The class came to the conclusion that Balloon
Jets with drag went a shorter distance because
drag slowed the jet down. They believe drag is
necessary when an aircraft need to land.
7What A DragDiscussion Questions
- Why is it important for an aircraft to have less
drag? - The class discussed that it is important for an
aircraft to have less drag so it can go farther
and use less energy to get there. - How are aircrafts designed to overcome drag?
- They are designed so that there is very little
drag. The students connected this to race car
designs.
8What A DragCulminating Activity Pixie
9Did You Know
- The Lockheed Martin SR-71 Blackbird, which was
retired in 1995, is still the highest flying and
fastest jet ever developed. On July 28, 1976,
the SR-71 set absolute world records for speed
(2,193 miles per hour) and altitude (more than
85,000 ft.). The SR-71s wing configuration and
airflow devices in the engine minimized drag and
contributed to the aircrafts ability to reach
speeds in excess of March 3.