Why do the tires on your bike roll better when they're all pumped up
than when they're soft? And why do your roller blades go better on smooth
pavement than on a sandy road? The answer is friction...the big rub! The
force that slows you down and gets you going; without friction, you'd be
slip slidin' away!
The ground rules are as follows:
Science Projects for All Students: Friction Activities
General Science Sites
Science and Technology for Children Curriculum
The Natural History Museum (London)
Edison National Historic Site
Endangered Species Program
Kinetic Energy: The energy of an object in motion. (Roll down
the hill, and you've turned your potential energy into kinetic energy.)
Gravity: The force that pulls things toward the Earth.
Friction: When one thing slides against another, friction slows
down the motion.
Drag: Friction between a moving object and the air around it.
Drag also slows things down.
Momentum: The "oomph" of a moving object. The more momentum something
has, the longer it can keep moving and the harder it is to stop.
National Inventors Hall of Fame
Glossary of Terms
Potential Energy: Energy that can be used later. (When you're at
the top of a hill, you have potential energy.)