My 9-year-old son's first science unit this year is
electricity. While it's usually a struggle to get him to tell me about his
school day, the reports about what he's learning in science roll off his tongue
easily. No nagging required.
In summary, he's loving it.
To take his school lessons further at home, I snagged an
amazing book by Laurie Carlson. Thomas
Edison for Kids: His Life and Ideas has everything from a timeline to detailed biographical
info and my favorite - 21 activities.
Making an electromagnet is one of them. Here's what we used and how we did it.
2-3 feet of ball wire (copper wire with a plastic
insulated sheathing)
Large nail
Tape (optional)
C or D battery
small metal objects (paper clips, thumbtacks, etc.)
Scissors (or a wire stripping tool)
Wrap the wire around the nail making a coil, leaving four
to six inches of wire extending from each end. Do your best to wrap it as
tightly as you can.
Trim about 1/2 inch of the plastic covering from each end
of the wire. If you have a wire stripping tool, use it (we did) or score with a
pair of scissors and using your fingernails pull the plastic coating from the
wire.
Now, if you've got tape handy, cut a long strip and use
it to secure the battery to the table.
Hold the nail wrapped wire and pinch the ends of the wire
so they touch both metal ends of the battery. DON'T TOUCH THE EXPOSED WIRE; as
electric current passes through it, these ends will become hot.
Now take your small metal objects (we used safety pins)
and see if the electricity in the battery has made the ends of the nail magnetic.
What happens if the wire's connection with the battery is broken? Is the nail
still a magnet? (Nope.)
Electromagnets played a significant role in Thomas
Edison's inventions. He used them to separate premium iron from low-grade unusable
iron ore, that was collected from the New Jersey mines he owned. His discovery of the electromagnetic wave lead to the
invention of the radio in the 1890s.
Today, electromagnets are still
at work in coin-operated vending machines!
Want another great book to read? We liked National Geographic Kids Level 2 reader Thomas Edison by Barbara Kramer.
Thank you for sharing. We've been doing a lot of science experiments and I'll add this to our to do list. I'm going to look up that book right now!
ReplyDeleteThis is a great post! I would love it if you would link up at the Geeky Educational Link Up!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.morethanacouponqueen.com/search/label/Geeky%20Educational%20Link%20Up
This is neat!! Thanks for sharing at the Geeky Educational Link Up!
ReplyDeleteWOW. That is awesome. I'm going to test one before I show the nieces and nephews. ..
ReplyDeleteUncle Mike
The instructions state that you need "small metal objects (paper clips, thumbtacks, etc.)" Note that the small objects must contain IRON. Otherwise, they won't be attracted to the magnet. For example, a piece of aluminium won't work. It must contain IRON. Steel paper clips and pins contain iron. That's why they work.
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