Sound Experiments
Try some of these sound experiments - they are fun!
Coke Bottle
Scales
Collect eight glass softdrink bottles. Fill the bottles with
different amounts of water, from full to empty. You can make
different sounds by blowing across the top of the bottles or by
hitting them with a spoon. Can you play a tune on your
bottles?
Speed of
Sound
Go out to the back field. Using a cymbal or a metal lid or any large
object that will make sound when struck. Get the person making the
noise to stand a long way from everyone else, and note the time delay
between what you see and what you hear. The delay gets bigger the
further you move away.
Vibrating
Rulers
Place a ruler on a desk or table so that part of it hangs over the
edge. Push down on the overhanging end of the ruler and release
quickly. Listen for the sound. By adjusting the amount of overhang,
the pitch is changed. By increasing and decreasing the pressure,
volume or loudness is changed.
Tuning Fork
Tricks
Using a tuning fork and a sound box, desk top, or table top, show the
relationship between vibrations and sound. Strike the tuning fork on
the palm of the hand and place it on the sound box or desk top. Ask
children to place their hands on the surface and feel the vibrations.
As an alternative, the tuning fork can be struck and placed in a
container of water.