Bottle Rocket Thrust for Elementary Numeracy?

In summary, the conversation discusses a numeracy exercise involving constructing bottle rockets and calculating their thrust and height using triangulation. The individual's students are high school students in a program for "disconnected school refusers" and the goal is to make the exercise engaging and applicable to their current math skills. Suggestions are made for categories in a potential competition and considerations for the design and construction of the rockets. The overall goal is to make numeracy more exciting and engaging for the students.
  • #1
narrator
228
12
Hi,

I'm wanting to do a fun numeracy exercise for my students. I'm planning to have them construct bottle rockets, take measurements and then calculate/graph how high their rockets get using simple triangulation. From that, I was hoping to get them to calculate what the thrust was of their individual rockets. It could turn into a competition for 3 categories: best made, highest launch, and greatest thrust.

What I need, is a formula to work out what the thrust is, from the height achieved, nozzle diameter and perhaps an average weight (from start to finish of the flight). Can anyone suggest a useable formula? And if anyone wants to suggest of a better way of approaching this, I'd love to hear.

As a bit of background, I teach/train numeracy to upper level HS students in a program for "disconnected school refusers" (15 to 18yo's). The program has 3 levels - foundation, intermediate and senior, but the senior level would be like year 10 mathematics, with the most difficult level being algebra (There is no trig' prescribed). (For those at foundation level, many don't have any higher than year 6.. but that's a whole other discussion.) As we have all levels generally in the one class, I hope to tailor the handouts to each of the levels.

Thanks for your consideration. :)

edit: As prompted by one of the answers so far, the bottle rocket type I was planning to use is like the one in this link.
 
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  • #2
I suppose you could use kinematics to calculate the initial velocity, and use conservation of momentum to find the force, then go from there.
Of course, the issue is finding the time that the force is applied over.
 
  • #3
Could someone with only algebra and no trig do kinematics for this though?

Geometry to do the triangulation to get the height is straightforward enough, but, without approaching limits, etc, and no trig, getting an accurate thrust over time, etc, might be overreaching their tools.

It might be better to have them calculate thrust for the rocket by weighing it full of propellant and empty, timing the launch/flight time to apex...and triangulating the height of the apex.

That would give factors that would be translatable with their current tool set I think.

It would give an average at least...but if a team was to mark the times at the different heights...they could plot the flight trajectory...giving a time to distance plot which would give more data points, its speed for each segment, etc.

I'm not sure if bottle rocket means the kind full of pressurized water, or the Roman Candle types...full/empty weighing is of course easier for a water filled rocket.
 
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  • #4
Tea Jay said:
I'm not sure if bottle rocket means the kind full of pressurized water, or the Roman Candle types...full/empty weighing is of course easier for a water filled rocket.
Thanks for your reply, Tea Jay. The kind I was thinking of "helping" them to make is like the one in this link. There's a few other designs on the web.
 
  • #5
narrator said:
Thanks for your reply, Tea Jay. The kind I was thinking of "helping" them to make is like the one in this link. There's a few other designs on the web.

OK, that's what I was thinking along the lines of as well.

Maybe add "Lightest" and/or "highest altitude per gram of weight" and/or "straightest flight" as a category?

"Best Made" sounds highly subjective/open ended. That makes it harder to work towards.

When working with kids, if trying to encourage them, I like to have more categories so more people can win something...ideally everyone gets a pat on the back at least, etc. ;)The industry that this would correlate with stresses the power to weight ratios, precision, etc...so, a student can PLAN things with a vision of these concepts as driving forces, rather than how "cool it looks" and other things that a HS kid might be otherwise more focused on. The thickness of the paint, how much glue, using bracing bands to allow more psi in the bottle vs the weight added to overcome, the shape and diameter of the nozzles, etc...are challenges.
 
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  • #6
Tea Jay said:
OK, that's what I was thinking along the lines of as well.

Maybe add "Lightest" and/or "highest altitude per gram of weight" and/or "straightest flight" as a category?

"Best Made" sounds highly subjective/open ended. That makes it harder to work towards.
Good ideas. You're right of course. Cheers! :)
 
  • #7
Tea Jay said:
When working with kids, if trying to encourage them, I like to have more categories so more people can win something...ideally everyone gets a pat on the back at least, etc. ;)

The industry that this would correlate with stresses the power to weight ratios, precision, etc...so, a student can PLAN things with a vision of these concepts as driving forces, rather than how "cool it looks" and other things that a HS kid might be otherwise more focused on. The thickness of the paint, how much glue, using bracing bands to allow more psi in the bottle vs the weight added to overcome, the shape and diameter of the nozzles, etc...are challenges.
Just read your edit..

Part of my reason for doing this is to take numeracy away from dry text and paper and into something that might develop an element of passion - even if only of the fun variety. And yes, I agree, have them all get something encouraging out of it, and not just the launch phase but the building phase too. And as you say, they'll probably focus on the cosmetic aspects, which prompts me to think that maybe a quick Q&A on what they think might work best would make a good way to start.

Cheers and thanks again, Tea Jay.
 
  • #8
Hope y'all have a blast!
 

1. What is the definition of bottle rocket thrust?

Bottle rocket thrust is the force that propels a bottle rocket into the air. It is created by the gas escaping from the bottle rocket's nozzle.

2. How does bottle rocket thrust relate to elementary numeracy?

Bottle rocket thrust can be used as a real-life example to teach elementary numeracy concepts such as measurement, force, and trajectory. Students can measure the distance the bottle rocket travels and calculate the force needed to launch it.

3. What factors affect bottle rocket thrust?

The amount of water and air inside the bottle, the design of the nozzle, and the pressure created by the air pump all affect the amount of thrust produced by a bottle rocket.

4. Can bottle rocket thrust be increased?

Yes, bottle rocket thrust can be increased by adding more water and air to the bottle, using a longer and narrower nozzle, and increasing the air pressure before launch.

5. Is there a mathematical formula for calculating bottle rocket thrust?

Yes, the formula for calculating bottle rocket thrust is: F = P x A, where F is the thrust force, P is the pressure, and A is the area of the nozzle's opening.

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