Disclaimer: This blog does not contain full documentation of the laboratory procedures, neither does it pretend to provide a complete lab instruction. Instead, it is designed to document special moments in the physics lab. Enjoy!
Showing posts with label Gravitational. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gravitational. Show all posts
Physics and recycling
Physics and recycling don’t appear to be connected at first glance, but after a closer look, it is easy to see that physics plays an important role in looking after our planet.
Recycling is critical to our environment. Plastic bottles, paper and cardboard, aluminum and metal cans and glass jars take up so much land fill and can be easily recycled and re-used. All these materials take energy to create and produce. By manufacturing these costly materials damages our planet by releasing toxic gases into our atmosphere.
Recycling is a way that everyone can help our planet. By turning the waste into re-usable items cuts down on the amount of products that need to be produced. Paper can be made into a pulp and recycled for newspaper or cardboard. Plastic and glass can be made into new plastic and glass items. Aluminum and metal can be recycled into new cans and items. Once the recycled waste is separated into plastics, glass, metal, and paper or cardboard, then the laws of physics come into play! We use gravity, conduction, magnetism and electromagnetic waves to recycle.
- Gravity is the force that pulls everything down towards the earth. By creating a group of holes (large and small) and spinning discs makes it easy to sort through the recyclable items. This is physics in action! This incline of vibrating, spinning rubber discs acts like a giant sieve and sorts items according to weight. The heavier items, such as metal and glass will fall to the bottom and the lighter items like plastic and paper will be at the top.
- It is important to separate metals and aluminum to be melted down because steel and aluminum melt at different temperatures and have different magnetic properties. Some metals are ferromagnetic, which allows them to be pulled out with a magnet while other metals need a machine called an “eddy current separator” so we need to induce magnetism to sort the aluminum. Ferromagnetic items are steel and easily attracted to a magnet but drink cans are made from the metal aluminum, which is not ferromagnetic. The eddy current separator is the technology that uses a rotating drum lined with rows of magnets, creating magnetic fields which separate aluminum from other metals.
- All metals, aluminum and steel conduct electricity and their specific magnetic fields create the electricity inside the metal recyclable items. It is because of the physics of electromagnetic waves that we can successfully separate the materials to be recycled.
Tim
This is funny definition of gravitation
GRAVITATION, n. The tendency of all bodies to approach one another with a strength proportion to the quantity of matter they contain - the quantity of matter they contain being ascertained by the strength of their tendency to approach one another. This is a lovely and edifying illustration of how science, having made A the proof of B, makes B the proof of A.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)