By Zach Coffman, Isaiah Eisenbeis, and Stacy Bedwell
How far will a penny go if a quarter hits it.
We think the penny will go far because the quarter has more mass than the penny.
Two rulers A quarter A penny
1. tape rulers down on desk side by side about an inch apart 2.put penny between the rulers on the 7” mark 3.put quarter between ruler at 1” 4. flick quarter at penny 5.see our results 6. repeat four times
1 st Observation- Penny went from 7’’ mark to off the desk. 2 nd Observation- Penny went from 7’’ to an inch away from the rulers 3 rd Observation- penny went from the 7” mark to the 11” mark
Test 1: Penny went to off the desk. Test 2: Penny went 1” inch away from the ruler. Test 3: Penny went to the 11” mark.
Our hypothesis was correct the penny 2 times out of 3 went out of the ruler. The penny went out of the ruler 2 times but the 3 rd time it only went to the 11 mark.
Motion and Forces- Gottlieb Joans title of handout, Austin, Texas (1996), Steck-Vaughn Laws of Motion- Gottlieb Joans title of handout, Austin, Texas (1996), Steck-Vaughn Newtons Laws of Motion- Greer, Krisen, Title of graphic organiser, 6 th grade science class (2014), Standford Kentucky, Lloyd Mcguffey 6 th grade center
The first law of motion states that an object in motion will stay in motion and at rest will stay at rest unless acted upon by an outside force. The second law of motion states that The acceleration of an object depends on the mass of the object and the amount of force applied to it. The third law of motion states that for every action there’s an equal and opposite reaction. kD6P0 kD6P0
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