Spin an egg and make it stand on end. Amaze your friends!
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What
Do I Need?
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a hard-cooked egg (
Click
here
for instructions on how to hard cook an egg, which
is part of our
Deviled Eggs
recipe
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a raw egg (for comparison purposes)
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a kitchen table (or other smooth, hard surface)
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What
Do I Do?
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1.
Get
both eggs spinning on the kitchen table.
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2.
Stop both eggs, then release them. Watch what
happens.
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3.
The hard-cooked egg will remain stationary,
but the raw egg will start spinning again. Thats because
the liquid inside didnt stop moving when you stopped
the shell. The moving liquid starts the shell moving again.
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4.
Set the raw egg aside. Spin the hard-cooked
egg again. Get it spinning very, very fast. Once its
going fast enough, the spinning egg will spontaneously rise
up on end and spin like a top.
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5.
If
you dont get the egg to stand on end the first time,
try again. To stand on end, the egg must be spinning faster
than about 10 revolutions per second. It took us a few tries
to get the egg spinning fast enough.
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What
s
Going On?
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The short answer is: Friction between the eggshell and
the tabletop pushes the spinning egg up.
This
trick astounds people because the egg appears to be defying
gravity. Rather than lying down comfortably (as many of us
prefer), the egg spontaneously stands on end.
Keith
Moffatt and Yutaka Shimomura, the mathematicians who spent
six months (and many equations) working on this problem, explain
that friction destabilizes the eggs spin and causes
it to shift position. Some of the energy of the eggs
spin (kinetic energy) is converted to potential energy, the
energy thats stored in an object that has a distance
to fall. When standing on end, the egg has more potential
energy and less kinetic energyat least for a few seconds.
To
learn more about spinning eggs, check out some of the
articles
written on the problem.
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What
Else Can I Try?
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See if you can find other egg-shaped objects that will
stand on end when you spin them. To learn about one persons
experiments, check out this letters column from New
Scientist magazine.
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