Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Family Science Night: Juice Box Jetpack!

Each month, Pow!Science! offers free, fun Family Science Nights.

At our Wakefield location, they're on the Wednesday of the third week of the month and in Providence they're the last Wednesday of each month.

When you attend a Family Science Night, you and your child or children sit down together and perform 3 fun & easy yet engaging Experiments. All materials are provided by your Pow!Science! professional, who also sticks around throughout the evening to help you out if you get stuck.


If you'd like to know when exactly our Family Science Nights are happening, check out the Online Events Calendar. You can also check out the full list of upcoming activities, workshops & more while you're there.

Registration for Family Science Night is Free, but because we can only fit 10 kids in per session (and because the price is right), they tend to fill up fast. If you can't make it to FSN, we can bring a bit of FSN to you. Keep reading to check out the procedure for the "Juice Box Jetpack" Experiment that we'll be performing in Providence's April 28th FSN and at Wakefield's next FSN in May.


To register for a Family Science Night, call your location of choice:
Providence: (401) 432-7040 Wakefield: (401) 788-1024

As the title implies, you'll need an empty juice box, so this is a great experiment to perform after a snack!

Juice Box Jetpack!

Objective: To observe Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion (Action/Reaction) in cool new way!

Materials:

  • Empty Juice Box
  • String
  • Water
  • Something Pointy
  • Something Sharp

Procedure:

  1. Drink your juice.
  2. Fold the flap on the top of the box up. You may have to pry up the corner flaps also. Using something sharp, cut open the top of the juice box and open it right up like a milk carton.
  3. Using something pointy, poke holes in the top flaps of the juice box (see diagram).
  4. Using something pointy, poke a hole in the lower right corner of the front AND in the lower right corner of the back of the juice box. In the diagram, you can see the hole in the lower right corner.
  5. Pass the string through both top-holes and knot the string so that the box is hanging from the string—the top of the box should still be open.
  6. Bring water and your juice box-on-a-string and stand over a sink, outside, or over a container--somewhere you don't care about getting wet.
  7. THE TRICKY PART: TEAMWORK REQUIRED! One person holds the water in one hand and the hanging juice box (hold by the string) over the large container on the floor. The other person locates the two little holes in the bottom right corners of your juice box and covers them with their fingers.
  8. The person holding the water pours the water into the top of the juice box.
  9. The person covering the holes lets go!

What happens? Water should shoot out of the holes and cause the juice box to spin until the water runs out.

What’s Going On?

When you let go of the holes in the juice box, the water rushes out—that is a force. As the water leaves the carton, it pushes back on the carton with a second, equal force, just as the fuel burning out of a rocket propels it forward.

Think and Talk About This:

Look carefully at where the holes in the bottom of the box are located. Are they on the same side? Opposite sides? Would this experiment work differently if both holes were on the same side of the box?

Thursday, April 8, 2010

The Pumponator. Summertime Fun is Back.


The Pumponator. It's a portable, easy to use Inflation Station. Pump it up and it'll hold pressure while you fill lots of balloons before you need to pump again. The coolest aspect, however, is the fact that you can fill the chamber with water, pressurize that, and fill water-balloon after water-balloon without getting squirted by a hose and without splitting the neck of the balloon on a spigot that's just a little bit too big.

The thing comes with 500 Balloons and strings for tying them off, which you can do while it hangs there on the nozzle. No batteries, no electrically powered compressor. Kids want to pump it for you. It's just an all around win. It's almost as if someone sent it back from the future to find you...

The Pumponator:
MSRP: $19.99
Pow!Science! Website Special Price: $18.39 (you must buy online to get this price)
Pow!Science! Website Price + Shipping: $26.38
Click to Read More, to see it in action or to buy. Locals, select "Pick Up at the Store" as your shipping option. We'll hold your Pumponator aside for you.

Friday, April 2, 2010

CPSIA Survivor: Complex 39 Shuttle Launch Adventure Set: It's Back!


Action Products, the Manufacturer of the Space Voyagers® line, got hit very hard by the changes in the CPSIA regulations on Toy Safety. It's not that we don't all see a need for safe toys--that's a no-brainer; but it doesn't seem quite fair that companies like Action got stuck with thousands of units of toys that were already imported legally under the (then)current safety standards and were quite literally made illegal overnight because previously imported toys were not protected when the new standards went into effect. Medium sized companies like Action were among the hardest hit.

Now owned by BSW Toys, Action Products and the Space Voyagers Adventure series are back! After being backordered forever, one of their most popular products, the Complex 39 Shuttle Launch Adventure Set is finally back in stock, and we've got it for you. Retailing at $29.99, we're lowering that to $25.25 because it's a bear to ship (big!).

See it here in all of its glory, read more about it or purchase one if you like!

Now that BSW seems to have regained its momentum, we're hoping that they'll bring back other enormously popular Action Products toys like the Crazy for Cupcakes line as well as the rest of the Space Voyagers (including re-sculpted, re-vamped Astro-Squad Action Figures).

Eric Bulmer
Pow!Science!
Program Director & Co-Owner
www.powscience.com
www.powsciencetoys.com