Gallery: You’ve Never Seen Science Experiments Look Quite Like This
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The LED light attached to this wooden double pendulum illustrates chaos theory: the light trail follows no predictable pattern, since each time the pendulum swings, it follows a unique path.
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Douse your hand in a solution of dish soap, lighter fluid and water before lighting it on fire.
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Batteries consist of two metals (electrodes) suspended in an acidic (electrolyte) solution. Using copper and zinc nails and the acid from lemons, Skinner converted chemical energy into electrical energy, powering an LED bulb.
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A cloud of smoke lingers, mimicking how invisible water vapor condenses into visible water droplets to make clouds. Skinner waited for a Kentucky summer day with near-100% humidity so that the smoke would linger longer.
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A bulb lit by a single laser pointer beam, demonstrating the diffusion of light.
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A tornado-like vortex formed by dish soap swirled in water.
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Mist across a sunny backyard creates a rainbow. The water from the hose acts as a transparent optical element, showing the light waves from the sun in a full color spectrum.
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A ball of ice made of tonic water, which contains quinine, fluorescent under UV light.
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A magnet moves erratically, attracted and repelled by the three magnets on the bottom edges of the pyramid, illustrating magnetic force.
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Matches wrapped in aluminum foil placed inside a glass and lit, momentarily trapping the smoke, then poured onto a mirrored surface.
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The fluorescent contents of glow sticks splattered across a bathtub to approximate glowing stars.
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Light refracts and disperses through prisms in a white box, showing the visible color spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet). The separate of white light into these colors, called dispersion, happens when light waves pass through a transparent optical element, like this prism.
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A match head, wrapped in a cylinder of aluminum foil, is launched off a bamboo skewer, sometimes traveling 10 feet. The foil acts as a small combustion chamber: when the match head burns, it builds up enough pressure to launch the rocket from the base.
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Blue dye in glasses of fresh water (left) and salt water (right), placed on a mirror outside, reflecting the sky. Since the salt water has a higher density, the dye floats on top, rather than dispersing throughout the glass.
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