Work
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Mr. Sludge, president of Robocorp,
accuses robot lifter-upper Mary Murray of being the laziest worker in the
company. Very loudly.
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Mary's co-worker, Joe Shmo, is always
sweaty and smelly. Mary is never sweaty or smelly, so Joe must work harder
than she does, Mr. Sludge says.
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Mary is demoted to work in the deep,
dark Pit. All Mary can do now is try to prove her case in Science
Court.
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In Science Court, attorney Doug
Savage says Mary must be a lazy worker. Not only is Mary not as smelly
as Joe, but she reads while she's at work!
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Alison Krempel argues that, scientifically speaking, Mary does just the
same amount of work as Joe Shmo.
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Is Mary really the laziest worker
at Robocorp? Or can Professor Parsons show that she has found an easier
way to do her job?
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Science Court challenge
question:
Scientifically speaking, which is more
work, reading a 300 page book or pushing against a wall that won't
move?
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Before you
answer... try these simple
experiments.
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Jumping Coins
You'll need
- ruler
- pencil
- two large coins
What to Do
- Place the pencil under the middle of the ruler and
put a coin on one end.
- Drop the second coin from a height of about one
foot so it hits the other end of the ruler at about the three inch mark.
Observe what happens.
- Next, from the same height, drop the second coin
again at the very end of the ruler.
- Notice that the closer to the end of the ruler the
dropped coin falls, the higher the other coin jumps. The greater the
distance, the more force is exerted.
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Ask
Professor
Parsons
Click Professor Parsons for a scientific explanation of work.
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Roll Out the Barrow
You'll Need
- plastic bag
- short pencil
- thread spool
- tape
- small stones
- shoe box
- two equal lengths of wood, or two
rulers
What to Do
- Put the stones in the plastic bag and lift them.
Observe the amount of force, or effort, you must exert to lift the
stones.
- Tape the two pieces of wood or two rulers to the
bottom of the box, one on either side. Leave the ends sticking out, like
wheelbarrow handles.
- Make a wheel by sticking the pencil through the
spool.
- Tape the pencil crosswise to the ends of the
wood.
- Put the bag of stones in the barrow, close the the
wheel. Try lifting it. It's easier to lift the stones when they are in the
wheelbarrow than it was to lift them without the wheelbarrow. The
wheelbarrow acts as a lever. When you use a lever, your hands move farther
than the distance the load moves. The amount of force you need to use to
lift the stones is less, but it is spread out over the longer distance
created by the lever.
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So, which do you think is more
work?
Reading a
book
Pushing a
wall
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© 1997 Science Court, Inc. All rights reserved.