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Teens snap away!


Here's a challenge: Look around your school or town for a physical-science principle at work (anything from moving matter to colorful chemistry). Sure, you can check your textbook or back issues of Science World for ideas. But as the photos on these pages show, you shouldn't have to look far. All were snapped by teens who entered their best shots in a High School Physics Photo Contest (see contest info, p. 16). Maybe their photos will inspire you to check out the physics in your world, point your camera, and click away!

Scary Hair

What's making this girl's hair stand on end? Static electricity (the buildup build·up also build-up  
n.
1. The act or process of amassing or increasing: a military buildup; a buildup of tension during the strike.

2.
 of electric charges) in her hair! The girl has her hands on a Van de Graaff Noun 1. Van de Graaff - United States physicist (1901-1967)
Robert Jemison Van de Graaff, Robert Van de Graaff
 generator, a machine that gives off electrons (negatively charged Adj. 1. negatively charged - having a negative charge; "electrons are negative"
electronegative, negative

charged - of a particle or body or system; having a net amount of positive or negative electric charge; "charged particles"; "a charged battery"
 particles). The moving path of electrons, or current, flows through her hands, up her arms, and through the tips of her hair! Hair normally has a balance of positive and negative charges. But with extra negative charges picked up from the machine, each negatively charged hair repels the others for a hair-raising experience!

Floating Metal Ball

The camera and photographer Heather Ford Heather Ford is a South African who has worked in the fields of Internet policy, law and management in South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States. She is the Executive Director of iCommons, a UK private charitable corporation.  actually appear in this picture. The shiny metal ball reflects their images as light rays strike the mirrored surface and bounce off. Their images appear distorted, though, because the convex Convex

Curved, as in the shape of the outside of a circle. Usually referring to the price/required yield relationship for option-free bonds.
 (outward curved) surface of the mirror makes the reflected light rays spread out, instead of traveling in a straight line to your eye. That gives you a wide-angle view of the scene. (Where else have you seen mirrors like this?) There's also a physics mystery here, says Heather. If her left hand is holding the camera and her right hand is sticking out Adj. 1. sticking out - extending out above or beyond a surface or boundary; "the jutting limb of a tree"; "massive projected buttresses"; "his protruding ribs"; "a pile of boards sticking over the end of his truck"  behind the ball, how is the ball "floating" in midair?

Rubbery Rose?

If you covered the left-side of this photo, could you identify the petals of this rose? Probably not. That's because the light rays reflecting off the rose slow down as they travel through dense substances like glass and water. The slowdown bends, or refracts, the light rays as they travel to your eye, giving the rose petals a warped look.

Beetle beetle, common name for insects of the order Coleoptera, which, with more than 300,000 described species, is the largest of the insect orders. Beetles have chewing mouthparts and well-developed antennae.  Mania

To soar into the air, this click beetle click beetle, common name for members of the widespread beetle family Elateridae. Also called elater beetle, the click beetle has a hinge across the front of the body that allows it to flex, and a spine-and-groove arrangement on the underside of the body that  bends backward and inserts a spike on the back of its head into a socket on its back. That action stores up energy in the beetle's body, similar to the way a spring stores energy when you compress it. When the beetle's head pops out of the socket, the released energy makes the bug spring off the table. Adam Seeger captured the insect's in-flight positions on a single piece of film. in a darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 room, he kept the shutter (1) An opaque window that is moved in one direction to let light in and in another to close off the light. In fixed-lens cameras, one shutter often suffices for aperture and speed.  (or "eye") of his camera open, and flashed a strobe light strobe light
n.
A flash lamp that produces high-intensity short-duration light pulses by electric discharge in a gas.



strobe light 
 on the bug. Each time the light flashed on (about 15 times per second), it exposed the film and captured the beetle's position at that instant.

Bridge Basics

The triangular pattern created by the cross beams of this bridge gives the bridge its strength. When a train crosses the bridge, it puts tremendous stress on the beams. The triangular trusses (rows of triangles) transfer the weight of the train to the long support beams and ends of the bridge. Result: The train, cargo, and passengers cross safely. Why triangles? Try this activity: Form a rectangle with your index fingers and thumbs and have a friend push down on your fingers. What happens to the rectangle? Now use the same fingers to form a triangle and have your friend push down on the top point with the same force. Notice a difference?

Sticky Spoon

You could say this girl has a nose for physics. To make this nifty trick work, she wiped the dirt and oil off her nose and the spoon. Then she breathed lightly into the bowl of the spoon and stuck it to her nose. The water droplets in her breath help the spoon stick because there's a force of attraction between the water, the metal surface of the spoon, and the girl's nose. Scientists call this force of attraction between different substances adhesion. Of course, you still have to get the spoon to balance or gravity will pull it to the ground. Try it yourself at mealtime (but don't say we told you to!).
COPYRIGHT 1996 Scholastic, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:photographs illustrating physics principles are taken by teens
Author:Freiman, Chana
Publication:Science World
Date:Jan 12, 1996
Words:715
Previous Article:Our place in space. (human space travel)
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