Title: 4th Grade Physical Science: Electricity and Magnetism
14th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
- Electricity
- How to design and build a series and parallel
circuit - A series circuit only has one path for moving
charges when the path is broken, the energy
cant flow. - A parallel circuit has two or more paths for
moving charges.
24th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
- Electricity
- Electrical energy can be converted to heat,
light, and motion - The heat given off when something is plugged in
- Flashlights
- Fans
34th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
- Electricity
- Electrically charged objects attract or repel
each other - 2 balloons rubbed with a piece of wool will have
the same (like) electrical charge. - The balloons will move away from each other
because like charges repel each other
44th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
- Magnetism
- The space near a magnet where magnetic forces act
is called the magnetic field - Magnets have opposite poles at each end, and
unlike poles attract like poles repel
54th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
- Magnetism
- How to create a simple compass and how to use it.
- A needle or some other wire-like piece of steel
(a straight paper clip, for example) -
- Something small that floats (a piece of cork, the
bottom of a Styrofoam coffee cup, a piece of
plastic or a milk jug cap) - A dish, like a pie plate, 9 to 12 in diameter,
with about an inch of water in it
- The first step is to turn the needle into a
magnet. The easiest - way to do this is with another magnet -- stroke
the magnet along - the needle 10 or 20 times.
64th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
Place your float in the middle of your dish of
water as shown below. The "float on water"
technique is an easy way to create a nearly
frictionless bearing. Center your magnetic needle
on the float. It very slowly will point toward
north. You have created a compass!
74th Grade Physical Science Electricity and
Magnetism
- Magnetism
- Electromagnetism
- Wires carrying an electric current become
magnets. - An electromagnet is a core wrapped with wires
that carry current. - The ends of the electromagnet are magnetic only
when there is current in the wire. - Generators use electromagnets to produce current
(electricity) from motion. - Motors use electromagnets to convert electricity
to motion.