A little more than five years ago my friend Emmy, who moved to Alabama, and I met up for a week at space camp. It was actually really a lot of fun and we got to try all these cool simulataions. We got to ride on hover crafts, experience what it feels like to walk on the moon, take tours of space crafts, perform missions, rock climb and eat space food! haha. One of the rides that I really enjoyed was the G-Force which is that spinny ride we talked a lot about in class where it spins so fast, that the centrifugal force pushes you up against the circular wall. Another ride that I liked was the Sapceshot (in the picture). I guess it's kind of like the Tower of Terror and Disneyworld except it goes like a million times faster. As we were dropping down, the seats we were secured in were dropping faster than our bodies would at freefall. So because we weren't strapped in so tight to the seats that we couldn't move, it felt like we were being lifted off the seats. But actually our bodies were just dropping at a slower speed than the ride. haha it was so thrilling! So much fun. Oh yeah and I'm the one on the left.
Sunday, December 9, 2007
Sunday, November 18, 2007
A while ago, my friends (Shantha and Lauren) and I got the opportunity to swing on swings! We hadn't done that in a long time so we pretty excited and we got our other friend, Kelsey, to take pictures. haha yeah. So swinging on swings could be an example of many physics problems, especially energy, in the form of a pendulum. When we first sat on the swing, we had zero kinetic energy and zero potential energy. As we swung and "pumped" our legs to get higher, we gained both kinetic and potential but at different times in the pendulum. At the peaks of the motion, we would have a high potential energy but zero kinetic energy. As we accelerated towards the ground, our kinetic energy would increase as the potential energy decreased.
Monday, November 12, 2007
collisions
Sooo last weekend I forgot to make an entry so I'm doing 2 tonight. Over the summer my friends and I went to Bayfest at the Marine Corp Base the night Three Days Grace was playing. And because it was Three Dyas Grace, there was a mosh pit...which consists of momentum and collisions! In the mosh pit people were running into us and getting thrown and shoved into us. These collisions were bouncy collisions; sometimes the other person and I were both in motion going towards eachother when we collided and other times, I was standing still when someone collided into me. I didn't get a picture of the actual mosh pit because that wouldn't be safe for my camera but here's a picture of us when we were standing in the crowd waiting for Three Days Grace to come on.
About a week ago my friends and I ended up staying late after school and we really didn't want to do homework so we went around taking pictures. My friend, Kelsey, wanted me to get an action shot of her jumping out of a tree. I held up the camera concentrating on when to click it so that I caught her while she was in the air. I snapped the picture and I was still focusing on my camera to see how it came out when less than a second later I heard hug BOOM. I looked down and Kelsey was on the ground cracking up and grabbing her feet in pain. I didn't excatly see what happened but apparently when she jumped to the metal bench below the tree, there was not enough friction between the bench and her feet so she slid off and gravity brought her to the ground. I'm glad she was ok because it was soooo funny. Unfortunately, lacking in photo skills, I didn't really get a good picture.
Sunday, October 28, 2007
End of 1st Quarter
As a follow up to my last reflection, I was right about physics turning out ok even though I knew it was going to be challenging. I'm happy with the grade I finished the quarter with, though I will still try my best to improve it for this quarter. My test grades are a little lower than I like but the good thing is that the grades have been consistent and hopefully I'll be able to do better in that area this quarter. Free body diagrams on ramps still confuse me but the chapter we are learning about now is so far my favorite. I feel I have adjusted to this class and it's requirements in the past quarter and I'm ready for this next one. (ahh i know this is 3 days late already but i don't have a picture right now....but i WILL put one up later!)...haha good picture, yes?
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Yesterday when i cam home from the beach i was SO hungry and all i wanted was something to eat and i was like "ooh! we have taquitos!" Our freezer is right across from our counter where a glass of water happened to be resting at the very edge. I reached to the bottom of the freezer, grabbed the box of taquitos turned around while holding them out to put them on the counter and before I realized what happened the glass of water went flying through the air and shattered across the kitchen floor. So following Newton's law, the glass was happily sitting in place until a big net force came and caused it to be pushed off the counter. So instead of sitting down and enjoying my food, I had to get the broom and the vacuum and clean up all the broken glass. Thank you, physics!
Sunday, September 30, 2007
A few months ago my friends and I went paintballing! It was the first time I went so I didn't know what I was in for. Paintballing encompasses a lot of physics concepts. One example is a projectile. After the paintballs are shot at a high velocity from the gun, the only force acting upon them is gravity. This causes the paintballs to accelerate at negative 9.8 meters per second squared. Because the paintballs are shot at high velocity, it hurts sooo bad when you get hit (especially when you aren't wearing the proper hardcore paintballing gear). Another the physics concept which I happened to perform was the law of inertia: an object at motion stays at motion unless a net force acts upon it. I was running at a constant speed from one big inflatable shield thing to the next not really paying attention to where I was going (because I was watching for any paintballs that might come flying at me) and I ran straight into my friend. She was the net force that caused me (the object in motion) to stop. We both felt pretty stupid after that. Paintballing was a lot of fun but I got some pretty mean battle wounds. (This picture was taken before we got covered in paint, mud, and bruises).
Sunday, September 23, 2007
dart guns.
This afternoon my little brother brought some of his friends over and pretty much everything they did had to do with physics: riding bikes, skateboarding, playing basketball and playing with their dart guns. Every time a dart was shot from the gun, it was an example of a projectile. If they held the gun horizantally, the dart would shoot straight out and then drop due to gravity unless it got stuck to the window. If they angled the gun when they shot the dart, the dart would stay in the air longer because it had a higher initial vertical velocity.
Sunday, September 16, 2007
waterpolo
This weekend I went to my little brother's intermediate waterpolo game against Le Jardin...which btw our Iolani team won by a lot. Like any other sport that involves balls, waterpolo consists of non-stop projectiles. Whether the ball is being passed to another player or shot to score a goal, when the ball is thrown, it performs a projectile. A projectile anything thrown or shot through the air with only the force of gravity acting upon it. Because gravity is the only force affecting the ball, the waterpolo ball was always accelerating at a rate of negative 9.8 m/s squared (not accounting for air resistance). The motion of a waterpolo ball (a projectile) can be broken down into two motions: horizantal and veritical. Although in terms of the vertical motion the ball is accelerating at a constant rate of negative 9.8 m/s squared, the horizantal dimension has a constant velocity--no acceleration.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Evaluation So Far..
I'd have to agree with a few other students who already posted their journal: physics is so far my favorite science class out of all the ones we've taken. Although it is pretty challenging, I like it because we do a lot of labs and they are all physical and hands on. For me the hardest part as of right now is translating motions to paper to create graphs; this made the test pretty tricky. The homework load is do-able and despite the complaints I had previously made about the on-line text book, I like it because that's one less heavy book I have to carry around. The simulations are also helpful even though they don't always work on my computer. This course is going to be challenging but I'm willing to put the hard work into it. So basically I'm a little nervous about this course but because I am enjoying it so far, I'm hopeful that it will turn out ok.
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Distance and Displacement
Ever since I got my drivers' license this summer, I have been driving my friends everywhere. Last night my friend and I (we both live in Kaneohe) slept over at our friend's house in Hawaii Kai. This morning after we woke I drove my friend and me back to Kaneohe; however our distance travelled was MUCH greater than our displacement. First of all instead of getting on the freeway and going through town to take the Likelike exit, we went the opposite direction (the less direct route) on the Kalanianiole highway through Waimanalo and Kailua. We knew it was the longer way but we decided it would be worth because of all the scenery. Then once we got into Kailua instead of turning left onto the Pali to take us to Kaneohe, we decided that we wanted Lanikai Juice, so we turned in the opposite (negative) direction to go in to Kailua Town. Once we got our smoothies, we turned around to continue in the positive direction. I passed my house to drop off my friend since she lives past me, finally I turned back around (causing me to go in the negative direction) and drove home. I realized that even though I drove so much, my displacement would have been the same if I just took the shorter, more direct route without making so many detours. I also probably wasted a lot of gas...but it was fun!
Sunday, September 2, 2007
This past summer my family and I went to Six Flags in New Jersey. My dad and I rode the Kingda Ka which supposedly is the fastest, tallest roller coaster in the world. While we were waiting in line, there were signs that told us that in the first 3.5 seconds of the ride, we'd accelerate from 0 mph to 128mph. I calculated this to an acceleration of 16.35 m/s squared. The tallest point of this roller coaster is 456 feet and the whole ride lasted less than a minute. I experienced positive acceleration first, then negative acceleration when we were shot vertically into the air (because we slowed down while going in a positive direction) and then negative acceleration again when dropped straight down (speeding up while going in the negative direction). This ride was craziest thing ever and I was speechless/couldn't move afterwards but I'm glad I decided to ride it.
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