Electricity you can wear, Project #5, Educational corner – Elenco Snaptricity&reg User Manual

Page 15

Advertising
background image

Project #5

Find some clothes that cling
together in the dryer, and try to
uncling them.

Educational Corner:

Did you ever wonder why clothes cling together when
they come out of the dryer? Did you ever hear a
crackling sound when you take off a sweater? (If the
room is dark you might even see sparks.) Did you ever
feel a “zap” when you touch someone wearing a
sweater on a dry day? These effects are caused by
electricity. We call this

static electricity

because the

electrical charges are not moving, although pulling
clothes apart sounds like static on a radio. When
electricity is moving (usually through wires) to do
something in another place, we call it an

electric

current

.

Electricity

is an attraction and repulsion of particles in

a material. All materials are made up of

atoms

, which

are really, really tiny. Atoms have a nucleus (which has
positive electrical charges), which is surrounded by tiny

electrons

(negative electrical charges). When you rub

a material, electrons can move on or off the atoms,
giving them an electrical charge.

Electricity exists everywhere, but is so well balanced,
that you seldom notice it. But, sometimes differences
in electrical charges build up between materials, and
sparks can fly. Lightning is the same effect as the
sparks between clothes, but on a much greater scale.
A cloud holds static electricity just like a sweater.

Photo courtesy of: NOAA Photo Library, NOAA Central Library;
OAR/ERL/National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) [via pingnews].

Why do

you often “see”

lightning before

you “hear” it? It is

because light

travels faster than

sound.

Note: This project works best on a
cold dry day. If the weather is
humid, the water vapor in the air
allows the static electric charge to
dissipate, and this project may not
work.

-14-

+

+ +

+

+

Electrons

Nucleus

This diagram shows the
structure of an atom, except
that the nucleus and
electrons are actually much
farther apart.

The crackling noise you hear when
taking off a sweater is static
electricity. You may see sparks
when taking one off in a dark room.

Electricity You Can Wear

Snappy says: clothes

can cling together

because electricity is

all around us.

Rub a sweater (wool is best) and
see how it clings to other clothes.

Advertising