IMAGES

  1. The Cartesian Diver

    cartesian diver experiment with straw

  2. How To Make A Cartesian Diver

    cartesian diver experiment with straw

  3. Cool Science for Kids: How to Make a Cartesian Diver

    cartesian diver experiment with straw

  4. Straw Cartesian Diver

    cartesian diver experiment with straw

  5. Straw Cartesian Diver How-To

    cartesian diver experiment with straw

  6. Cartesian Diver Experiment using Straw and Paper Clips

    cartesian diver experiment with straw

VIDEO

  1. Cartesian Diver

  2. CARTESIAN DIVER 😲/#shorts #viral#science #short feed

  3. Cartesian Diver

  4. 6th Da Vinci

  5. Cartesian Diver Science Experiment

  6. Squidy

COMMENTS

  1. Straw Cartesian Diver

    How Does It Work. Squeezing the bottle causes the diver (the paperclip straw combo) to sink because the increased pressure forces water up into the open straw. The additional water increases the mass, and density, of the diver causing it to sink. Releasing the squeeze decreases the pressure on the air bubble at the top of the bent straw, and ...

  2. 3 Ways to Make a Cartesian Diver

    Download Article. 1. Grab a clean, empty 2 liter (0.5 US gal) soda bottle. This will be the "ocean" your diver dives in. It doesn't matter what is on the outside, so long as the inside is clean. 2. Fill the bottle completely to the top, so that it is almost overflowing. You want as much water as you can get in. 3.

  3. Dive into Science: The Cartesian Diver Experiment

    How to Perform the Cartesian Diver Experiment. Performing the Cartesian diver experiment is easy: Fill the 2-liter bottle almost to the brim with water. Add the object you are using as your diver. Optional: Add a few drops of food coloring to the water in the bottle for easier observation. Top off the bottle with water so it is completely full ...

  4. Cartesian Divers : 14 Steps

    Pressure - the amount of force on a until of area. Float - to rest or move on/near the surface of a fluid. Sink - to go below the surface of a fluid. Boyle's Law - the pressure of a gas will increase as the volume decreases, if the gas is at a constant temperature.

  5. Cartesian Diver Experiment for Kids Physics Projects

    Explore our growing list of physics experiments for kids. STEP 1: Fill the plastic water bottle almost to the top with water. Leave some space at the top to allow for displacement when the diver is inserted. STEP 2: Select a factory-sealed condiment packet to use as your Cartesian Diver. STEP 3: Gently squeeze the bottle to compress the air ...

  6. How to Make Cartesian Bottle Diver?

    Instruction. Step 1/3 - Cut out a piece of drinking straw about 5cm (It can be longer. The longer the drinking straw, the more paper clips are required), fold the straw in half, secure both ends with a paper clip. Not to seal both ends of the drinking straw. Step 2/3 - Place it in the water and see if it can barely float on the water.

  7. Science At Play: Cartesian Divers

    This should hold your straw together in an upside down V shape. Add a ball of clay to the paper clip, making sure you don't completely cover the straw holes. Water and air need to be able to get in and out of the straw. This is a good time to test your cartesian diver. Grab a container or large cup of water and place your diver into the water.

  8. Super Easy to Make Cartesian Divers

    Super Easy to Make Cartesian Divers. October 24, 2015 Liz Belasic. Cartesian Divers - test out your divers in a beaker of water and then add to the 2L Bottle. Keep all your materials on the tray to manage spills. This was the easiest, and most inexpensive way to make cartesian divers I have ever tried, and each student got to take theirs home ...

  9. Cool Science for Kids: How to Make a Cartesian Diver

    1. Cut off the finger of a plastic glove (a thin balloon would probably work too). Cut off the top of the finger so you have a sleeve. 2. Use sharp scissors to cut some legs along the bottom of your sleeve. 3. Slip it over your cartesian diver (already made from a pipette and hex nut).

  10. PDF MAKE YOUR OWN CARTESIAN DIVER

    STRAW: Use a small piece of straw, bend it and paper clip the ends together so there's air trapped in the middle. 3. Test out the buoyancy of your diver in the small container filled with water. You want it to float just below the surface. You can experiment will adding more or less air and more or less weight to adjust the buoyancy. 4.

  11. How to Make a Cartesian Diver Science Project for Kids

    Fill the container with water, leaving some room at the top for the diver to move up and down. Fill the plastic eye dropper, medicine dropper or pipette with air by squeezing it and then placing it in the water with the open end facing down.*. Slide a metal nut or a paper clip around the open end of the eye dropper.

  12. PDF STEM @ HOME GUIDE: Cartesian Diver

    Make sure to perform the experiment as a team (parent and student). Parent: Cut the straw into section 2-3 inches long Student: fold the straw section in half and stick one side of the paper clip into each half Student: Add a second paper clip to one of the diver's and add two paper clips to the other.

  13. Cartesian Diver

    Cartesian Diver. This experiment demonstrates the property of buoyancy. Materials. 2-liter soda bottle and its cap or some other 'squeezable' clear plastic bottle; ... Put a small amount of modeling clay on the bottom end of the straw and, like the medicine dropper, just get it to barely float on the surface of the water in the water glass. ...

  14. Cartesian diver

    Small packets of ketchup or soy sauce from a restaurant can work. If the packet sinks, you can make it float by increasing the density of the water. Do this by dissolving salt in it. You can also make a diver out of a pen cap. Make it stand upright and just barely float by attaching a lump of mounting putty to the cap's tongue. Squeeze the ...

  15. Exciting Scout Crafts

    Make a diver by cutting a piece of straw about 2" long, fold it in half, and insert a paper clip in the straw to hold the two ends together. Hold the diver by the straw and place it into the water in the bottle. Squeeze the straw until about a third of the air bubbles out. Now release the diver. Some water will be sucked into the straw.

  16. PDF Cartesian Diver

    The Cartesian Diver experiment demonstrates principles of buoyancy and pressure. When you squeeze the bottle, the increased pressure compresses the air bubble inside the straw, making it denser and causing it to sink. Releasing the pressure allows the air bubble to expand, decreasing the diver's density and causing it to rise. This simple setup

  17. PDF Investigating Scientifically

    What to do: • Cut off a piece of straw about 6-8cm long (it doesn't have to be exact) • Add a glob of plasticine to the ends of straw, making sure the holes of the straw are sealed (see photo for an example). • Test your straw diver by placing it in a beaker of water. You want the diver floating near the top with the majority of it ...

  18. CARTESIAN DIVER: How to make!

    MATERIALS:-Bendy Straw-Scissors-Paper Clips-Cup of Water-Bottle-Eye Dropper-Plasticine-Balloon

  19. How it works: Cartesian diver experiment

    A Cartesian diver is an experiment used to demonstrate the relationship between density and buoyancy. Density describes how much matter is in a certain volume. Imagine filling two measuring cups, one with vegetable oil and the other with water. Now imagine placing those cups on a kitchen scale. You would find that one cup of vegetable oil has a ...

  20. Cartesian diver

    A Cartesian diver or Cartesian devil is a classic science experiment which demonstrates the principle of buoyancy ... The trapped air in the straw makes the diver slightly buoyant, and it thus floats. ... the diver's density increases and it sinks. The experiment requires a large water-filled bottle, inside which is a "diver": a small, rigid ...

  21. A Cartesian diver

    Procedure. Screw the hex nut onto the base of the pipette until it is held tightly in place. Cut off all but 1 cm of the pipette stem. (This is the diver.) Place the diver in a beaker of water. Squeeze the bulb of the pipette to force air out and release to allow water up into the diver. Repeat this until the diver is about half full of water.

  22. Cartesian Divers Project

    Cartesian Divers Project. The Cartesian Diver demonstrates the principles of buoyancy, pressure, and forces. Like a submarine, the diver changes its density to enable it to float. Instead of tanks of compressed air, the cartesian diver uses the incompressibility of water to create an object that will sink when the pressure around it is ...

  23. Diving Ketchup

    Once you have a floating ketchup packet, fold the packet in half lengthwise (like a hotdog bun) and carefully push it into the soda bottle. Do not open the packet. Just carefully push it into the bottle without tearing the edges. Fill the bottle to the brim with water and screw on the cap. Squeeze the sides of the bottle and hold the squeeze to ...