cookiez69
What a stupid name, Nat.
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2012
- Messages
- 74
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2014
Hey guys,
So I have a physics assignment and part of it is me required to perform my own experiment.
Basically, what I planned to do was drop an egg from different heights and see how as height increased the force would also increase. My way of measuring the force was to observe how the egg cracked, but I realised that it's not exactly the most reliable method of showing the increasing force. I don't think I can say in my results that the egg dropped at 20cm was more cracked than the egg dropped at 5cm.
I was wondering if you guys had any better methods of measuring the force of any falling object.
Oh and one more thing. Given the formula 'f=ma', and assuming that the mass of the falling object is the same and that the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8ms^2, why is it that height causes the force to increase when the mass and acceleration are constant?
So I have a physics assignment and part of it is me required to perform my own experiment.
Basically, what I planned to do was drop an egg from different heights and see how as height increased the force would also increase. My way of measuring the force was to observe how the egg cracked, but I realised that it's not exactly the most reliable method of showing the increasing force. I don't think I can say in my results that the egg dropped at 20cm was more cracked than the egg dropped at 5cm.
I was wondering if you guys had any better methods of measuring the force of any falling object.
Oh and one more thing. Given the formula 'f=ma', and assuming that the mass of the falling object is the same and that the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8ms^2, why is it that height causes the force to increase when the mass and acceleration are constant?