Post on 25-Aug-2020
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 1/5
Home Polsky News Math Social Studies Science Language Arts
Air Has Mass
Place an empty balloon on a scale and weigh it. Take thissame ballon and inflate it. Weigh it again. What do you see?.A really clear way to show this is to make a balance with astick or coat-hanger suspended by a string in the middle.Tie an empty balloon on each side to prove they weigh thesame. Inflate one balloon and rehang it. That side of the
Air Takes Up Space
Take an empty ziploc bag, open it and pull it through the air like aparachute. Now close it, seal it and try to squish the bag. There’snothing in the bag, right? Wrong. The ziploc bag is full of air.
You can also prove this by blowing up a balloon. The balloonexpands because you are putting something into the balloon; air.This air takes up space, so the more air you put into the balloon,the more space it takes up. When you use a pump to blow up afootball, you don’t put nothing into it, you put air into it - this airtakes up space which is why the football expands.
Air Has Mass/Weight
Air Takes up Space Air Exerts Pressure
Air is Affected by Heat
Air Can Be Compressed
Air is Affected by Altitude
Try it Yourself:Tube in a Cup | Air Force | Diving Paper | Huff and Puff
Properties of Air
h"p://www.learnalberta.ca/content/se2/html/StudentResource/index.html
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 1/5
Home Polsky News Math Social Studies Science Language Arts
Air Has Mass
Place an empty balloon on a scale and weigh it. Take thissame ballon and inflate it. Weigh it again. What do you see?.A really clear way to show this is to make a balance with astick or coat-hanger suspended by a string in the middle.Tie an empty balloon on each side to prove they weigh thesame. Inflate one balloon and rehang it. That side of the
Air Takes Up Space
Take an empty ziploc bag, open it and pull it through the air like aparachute. Now close it, seal it and try to squish the bag. There’snothing in the bag, right? Wrong. The ziploc bag is full of air.
You can also prove this by blowing up a balloon. The balloonexpands because you are putting something into the balloon; air.This air takes up space, so the more air you put into the balloon,the more space it takes up. When you use a pump to blow up afootball, you don’t put nothing into it, you put air into it - this airtakes up space which is why the football expands.
Air Has Mass/Weight
Air Takes up Space Air Exerts Pressure
Air is Affected by Heat
Air Can Be Compressed
Air is Affected by Altitude
Try it Yourself:Tube in a Cup | Air Force | Diving Paper | Huff and Puff
Properties of Air
Q: Can “air” fill up a space?
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 1/5
Home Polsky News Math Social Studies Science Language Arts
Air Has Mass
Place an empty balloon on a scale and weigh it. Take thissame ballon and inflate it. Weigh it again. What do you see?.A really clear way to show this is to make a balance with astick or coat-hanger suspended by a string in the middle.Tie an empty balloon on each side to prove they weigh thesame. Inflate one balloon and rehang it. That side of the
Air Takes Up Space
Take an empty ziploc bag, open it and pull it through the air like aparachute. Now close it, seal it and try to squish the bag. There’snothing in the bag, right? Wrong. The ziploc bag is full of air.
You can also prove this by blowing up a balloon. The balloonexpands because you are putting something into the balloon; air.This air takes up space, so the more air you put into the balloon,the more space it takes up. When you use a pump to blow up afootball, you don’t put nothing into it, you put air into it - this airtakes up space which is why the football expands.
Air Has Mass/Weight
Air Takes up Space Air Exerts Pressure
Air is Affected by Heat
Air Can Be Compressed
Air is Affected by Altitude
Try it Yourself:Tube in a Cup | Air Force | Diving Paper | Huff and Puff
Properties of Air
Experiments: -‐ “Diving Paper” -‐ “Huff n’ Puff”
1.
The Thrill of Flight
1 of 2Topic 2: The Air Out There
Activity: Huff N’ Puff
Problem: Does air take up space?
Hypothesis/Prediction:
Diagram:
Materials:� • deflated balloon� • plastic pop bottle with narrow neck�
Procedure:� 1.�Push the deflated balloon into the bottle and stretch the� � open end of the balloon back over the bottle’s mouth.� 2.�Without removing the balloon from the bottle, try and� � �blow it up.
Observations:
Inference/Conclusions:
©1997 Edmonton Public Schools/Resource Development Services
balloon
plastic pop bottle
Problem: Does air take up space?
Hypothesis/Prediction:________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Materials:- sheet of scrap paper- glass- clear bowl filled with water
Variables:! ! Controlled: !! ! Independent/Manipulated: !! ! Dependent/Resulting: !! ! !
Procedure:1. Crumple up the piece of paper and push it into the bottom of the glass.2. Turn the glass over and push it straight down into the bowl of water.3. Discuss: Does the paper get wet? How can you explain what happens.
Observations:! !! !! !! !! !! !
Inference/Conclusions:! !! !! !! !
Activity: Diving Paper
paper
bowl
water
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 1/5
Home Polsky News Math Social Studies Science Language Arts
Air Has Mass
Place an empty balloon on a scale and weigh it. Take thissame ballon and inflate it. Weigh it again. What do you see?.A really clear way to show this is to make a balance with astick or coat-hanger suspended by a string in the middle.Tie an empty balloon on each side to prove they weigh thesame. Inflate one balloon and rehang it. That side of the
Air Takes Up Space
Take an empty ziploc bag, open it and pull it through the air like aparachute. Now close it, seal it and try to squish the bag. There’snothing in the bag, right? Wrong. The ziploc bag is full of air.
You can also prove this by blowing up a balloon. The balloonexpands because you are putting something into the balloon; air.This air takes up space, so the more air you put into the balloon,the more space it takes up. When you use a pump to blow up afootball, you don’t put nothing into it, you put air into it - this airtakes up space which is why the football expands.
Air Has Mass/Weight
Air Takes up Space Air Exerts Pressure
Air is Affected by Heat
Air Can Be Compressed
Air is Affected by Altitude
Try it Yourself:Tube in a Cup | Air Force | Diving Paper | Huff and Puff
Properties of Air
2. 4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 2/5
balance will be heavier. If air had no mass, there would’vebeen no change.
Air is really quite heavy. It is just that it has always beenthere for you and me so we do not notice. Asking a human ifair is heavy is like asking a fish if water is heavy.
Every square inch of surface on the earth has about 15pounds of air sitting on it. (Air is piled about 100 miles highon each square inch.) Just for fun, calculate the number ofsquare inches on the top of your head and multiply it by 15.Wow... you are holding all that up!?!? Try it Yourself:
Balancing Act | Feel the Force
Air Exerts Pressure
Take a metre stick and lay it on a table. Unfold a full page of anewspaper and lay it flat over the metre stick. Push down onthe other end of the metre stick. What happens? Why can’tyou lift a super-light piece of paper? Air exerts pressure (inall directions).
The air above the paper pushes down on it (pressure). Thispressure is what makes the paper lay flat on the table - it’sbeing pushed down. Even though they’re too tiny to see, allthe molecules of air in the atmosphere above your headweigh something. And the combined weight of thesemolecules causes a pressure pressing down on your body of10,000 kg per square metre (10,000 kg = 22,000 lbs). Thismeans that the mass of the air above the 0.1 square metrecross section of your body is 1,000 kg, or a tonne.
If you tried to lift a small car, you’d definitely notice it, so whydon’t we notice that there’s a tonne of air pressing down onus? Well, the air exerts this force in all directions, so aswell as pushing down on us, it also pushes up and balancesout the force on our bodies so that we don’t collapse.
Try it Yourself:Feel the Force | Test Your Strength | Unspillable Water
Video ExplanationAir Pressure
-‐ Experiment: “Balancing Act!”
The Thrill of Flight
1 of 1Topic 2: The Air Out There
Activity: A Balancing Act
Problem: How can you demonstrate that air has weight?
Hypothesis/Prediction:
Diagram:
Materials:� •�a cupboard or ledge to tie a string to� •�two ballons, exactly the same size� •�a metre stick� •�one metre of string� •�two pieces of tape, each exactly 5 cm
Procedure:� 1.�Tightly tie the string around the metre stick.� 2.�Tie the other end of the string to a cupboard handle so� � the stick swings freeely.� 3.�Move the string along the metre stick until it is balanced.� 4.�Tape a deflated ballooon to one end of the metre stick.� 5.�Blow a large amount of air into the other balloon and tie� � it shut and tape it to the other end of the metre stick.� 6.� See what happens to the balance.
Observations:
Inference/Conclusions:
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 2/5
balance will be heavier. If air had no mass, there would’vebeen no change.
Air is really quite heavy. It is just that it has always beenthere for you and me so we do not notice. Asking a human ifair is heavy is like asking a fish if water is heavy.
Every square inch of surface on the earth has about 15pounds of air sitting on it. (Air is piled about 100 miles highon each square inch.) Just for fun, calculate the number ofsquare inches on the top of your head and multiply it by 15.Wow... you are holding all that up!?!? Try it Yourself:
Balancing Act | Feel the Force
Air Exerts Pressure
Take a metre stick and lay it on a table. Unfold a full page of anewspaper and lay it flat over the metre stick. Push down onthe other end of the metre stick. What happens? Why can’tyou lift a super-light piece of paper? Air exerts pressure (inall directions).
The air above the paper pushes down on it (pressure). Thispressure is what makes the paper lay flat on the table - it’sbeing pushed down. Even though they’re too tiny to see, allthe molecules of air in the atmosphere above your headweigh something. And the combined weight of thesemolecules causes a pressure pressing down on your body of10,000 kg per square metre (10,000 kg = 22,000 lbs). Thismeans that the mass of the air above the 0.1 square metrecross section of your body is 1,000 kg, or a tonne.
If you tried to lift a small car, you’d definitely notice it, so whydon’t we notice that there’s a tonne of air pressing down onus? Well, the air exerts this force in all directions, so aswell as pushing down on us, it also pushes up and balancesout the force on our bodies so that we don’t collapse.
Try it Yourself:Feel the Force | Test Your Strength | Unspillable Water
Video ExplanationAir Pressure
3.
h"p://howthingsfly.si.edu/media/air-‐pressure
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 2/5
balance will be heavier. If air had no mass, there would’vebeen no change.
Air is really quite heavy. It is just that it has always beenthere for you and me so we do not notice. Asking a human ifair is heavy is like asking a fish if water is heavy.
Every square inch of surface on the earth has about 15pounds of air sitting on it. (Air is piled about 100 miles highon each square inch.) Just for fun, calculate the number ofsquare inches on the top of your head and multiply it by 15.Wow... you are holding all that up!?!? Try it Yourself:
Balancing Act | Feel the Force
Air Exerts Pressure
Take a metre stick and lay it on a table. Unfold a full page of anewspaper and lay it flat over the metre stick. Push down onthe other end of the metre stick. What happens? Why can’tyou lift a super-light piece of paper? Air exerts pressure (inall directions).
The air above the paper pushes down on it (pressure). Thispressure is what makes the paper lay flat on the table - it’sbeing pushed down. Even though they’re too tiny to see, allthe molecules of air in the atmosphere above your headweigh something. And the combined weight of thesemolecules causes a pressure pressing down on your body of10,000 kg per square metre (10,000 kg = 22,000 lbs). Thismeans that the mass of the air above the 0.1 square metrecross section of your body is 1,000 kg, or a tonne.
If you tried to lift a small car, you’d definitely notice it, so whydon’t we notice that there’s a tonne of air pressing down onus? Well, the air exerts this force in all directions, so aswell as pushing down on us, it also pushes up and balancesout the force on our bodies so that we don’t collapse.
Try it Yourself:Feel the Force | Test Your Strength | Unspillable Water
Video ExplanationAir Pressure
Experiments: -‐ “Unspillable water” -‐ “Feel the Force!”
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 2/5
balance will be heavier. If air had no mass, there would’vebeen no change.
Air is really quite heavy. It is just that it has always beenthere for you and me so we do not notice. Asking a human ifair is heavy is like asking a fish if water is heavy.
Every square inch of surface on the earth has about 15pounds of air sitting on it. (Air is piled about 100 miles highon each square inch.) Just for fun, calculate the number ofsquare inches on the top of your head and multiply it by 15.Wow... you are holding all that up!?!? Try it Yourself:
Balancing Act | Feel the Force
Air Exerts Pressure
Take a metre stick and lay it on a table. Unfold a full page of anewspaper and lay it flat over the metre stick. Push down onthe other end of the metre stick. What happens? Why can’tyou lift a super-light piece of paper? Air exerts pressure (inall directions).
The air above the paper pushes down on it (pressure). Thispressure is what makes the paper lay flat on the table - it’sbeing pushed down. Even though they’re too tiny to see, allthe molecules of air in the atmosphere above your headweigh something. And the combined weight of thesemolecules causes a pressure pressing down on your body of10,000 kg per square metre (10,000 kg = 22,000 lbs). Thismeans that the mass of the air above the 0.1 square metrecross section of your body is 1,000 kg, or a tonne.
If you tried to lift a small car, you’d definitely notice it, so whydon’t we notice that there’s a tonne of air pressing down onus? Well, the air exerts this force in all directions, so aswell as pushing down on us, it also pushes up and balancesout the force on our bodies so that we don’t collapse.
Try it Yourself:Feel the Force | Test Your Strength | Unspillable Water
Video ExplanationAir Pressure
!Problem: What are the similaritiesbetween air movement and watermovement?
Hypothesis/Prediction:_______________________________________________________________________________________________
Materials:- water tap- two spoons
Variables:! ! Controlled: !! ! Independent/Manipulated: !! ! Dependent: !! ! !
Procedure:1. Turn on a tap and hold two spoons loosely between the fingers of each
hand.2. Hold a spoon at either edge of the water stream.3. Observe what happens as the water flows over the back of the spoons.4. Now, move the handles away from each other and observe what happens.
Observations:! !! !! !! !! !
Inference/Conclusions:! !! !! !! !
Activity: Feel the Force
4/1/2016 Science | Properties of Air
http://projects.cbe.ab.ca/fishcreek/Grade6/Science-Properties_of_Air.html 2/5
balance will be heavier. If air had no mass, there would’vebeen no change.
Air is really quite heavy. It is just that it has always beenthere for you and me so we do not notice. Asking a human ifair is heavy is like asking a fish if water is heavy.
Every square inch of surface on the earth has about 15pounds of air sitting on it. (Air is piled about 100 miles highon each square inch.) Just for fun, calculate the number ofsquare inches on the top of your head and multiply it by 15.Wow... you are holding all that up!?!? Try it Yourself:
Balancing Act | Feel the Force
Air Exerts Pressure
Take a metre stick and lay it on a table. Unfold a full page of anewspaper and lay it flat over the metre stick. Push down onthe other end of the metre stick. What happens? Why can’tyou lift a super-light piece of paper? Air exerts pressure (inall directions).
The air above the paper pushes down on it (pressure). Thispressure is what makes the paper lay flat on the table - it’sbeing pushed down. Even though they’re too tiny to see, allthe molecules of air in the atmosphere above your headweigh something. And the combined weight of thesemolecules causes a pressure pressing down on your body of10,000 kg per square metre (10,000 kg = 22,000 lbs). Thismeans that the mass of the air above the 0.1 square metrecross section of your body is 1,000 kg, or a tonne.
If you tried to lift a small car, you’d definitely notice it, so whydon’t we notice that there’s a tonne of air pressing down onus? Well, the air exerts this force in all directions, so aswell as pushing down on us, it also pushes up and balancesout the force on our bodies so that we don’t collapse.
Try it Yourself:Feel the Force | Test Your Strength | Unspillable Water
Video ExplanationAir Pressure