Step back in time and use some
old fashioned technology to make a string phone while learning about
sound waves with this fun science project for kids.
All you need is some string, a sharpened pencil and a few paper cups to get started.
What you'll need:
- 2 paper cups
- A sharp pencil or sewing needle to help poke holes
- String (kite string and fishing lines work well)
Instructions:
- Cut a long piece of string, you can experiment with different lengths but perhaps 20 metres (66 feet) is a good place to start.
- Poke a small hole in the bottom of each cup.
- Thread the string through each cup and tie knots at each end to stop it pulling through the cup (alternatively you can use a paper clip, washer or similar small object to hold the string in place).
- Move into position with you and a friend holding the cups at a distance that makes the string tight (making sure the string isn't touching anything else).
- One person talks into the cup while the other puts the cup to their ear and listens, can you hear each other?
What's happening?
Speaking into the cup
creates sound waves which are converted into vibrations at the bottom of
the cup. The vibrations travel along the string and are converted back
into sound waves at the other end so your friend can hear what you said.
Sound travels through the air but it travels even better through solids
such as your cup and string, allowing you to hear sounds that might be
too far away when traveling through the air.
More about phones:
Landline telephones feature
microphones that convert sound waves into electric currents that are
then sent through wires and converted back into sound waves by an
earphone inside the telephone at the other end. Modern mobile phones
use radio waves (part of the electromagnetic spectrum that includes
microwaves, infrared, visible light, X-rays and others) to communicate
with base stations located throughout telephone networks.
Phones have come a long way
since Alexander Graham Bell was awarded the first electric telephone
patent by the United States Patent and Trademark Office back in 1876.
Today’s cell phones are a marvel of modern technology, featuring not
only the ability to make phone calls but to also surf the web, play
music, view documents and much more.
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