🌟 This Topic is About...
- 🎵 I will find out how sounds are made by things that vibrate.
- 👂 I will practise observing and spotting sound patterns carefully.
- 🧪 I will plan and carry out fair tests to see how sound travels through different materials.
- 📏 I will measure, record and describe what I notice in tables and results.
- 💭 I will use what I know about particles to explain how sound moves.
Let’s explore how sound travels and makes music! 🥁🎶
🌟 Key Words
- control variable
- dependent variable
- independent variable
- pluck
- vibrate
- vibration
📖 Tap to Learn the Meanings!
- ⚙️ control variable: The part of an experiment that is kept the same so it’s a fair test.
- 📊 dependent variable: What you measure or observe in an experiment.
- 🔬 independent variable: The one thing you change to see what happens.
- 🎸 pluck: To pull and release something, like a string, to make it move or sound.
- 🎶 vibrate: To move quickly back and forth.
- 💫 vibration: The shaking or movement caused when something vibrates.
Awesome! You’re learning the language of science 🎉
🔍 Think like a Scientist 1 — Investigate How Sounds Are Made
🧰 You will need: plastic wrap, elastic bands, rice grains, an empty glass jar, a metal baking tray, a wooden spoon, a pencil
🧪 Steps to follow:
- Put the plastic wrap over the jar. Keep the plastic wrap in place with an elastic band.
- Sprinkle a few rice grains over the plastic wrap.
- Hit the jar with the pencil. What happens to the rice?
- Hold the tin tray close to the jar and bang it with a spoon. What happens to the rice?
- Predict what will happen if you clap your hands next to the jar. Try it out.
- Was your prediction correct?
💡 Key Idea: Sound travels because vibrations travel.
❓ Why did the rice grains move?
- The jar vibrates when I hit it.
- The vibrations travel through the jar to the plastic wrap.
- The plastic wrap vibrates. The rice grains vibrate and move.
- I can see the rice grains move!
🌟 Tap to See What’s Happening
- When you hit the jar, it vibrates and makes the plastic wrap shake. 🎶
- The shaking makes the rice grains move — that’s how you can see the vibrations! 👀
- Sound is really just vibrations moving through materials. 🌬️
Excellent observing! You just proved that sound travels through vibrations. 👏🔊
🔍 Think like a Scientist — Sound Investigation
❓ Questions:
- Did you hear a sound when you hit the jar? Why?
- Fill in the missing words in these sentences to explain why the rice grains jumped when you hit the tin tray.
🔤 Use words from this box:
- travel
- vibrations
- air
- plastic wrap
- rice grains
- vibrates
📝 Complete the sentences:
The ______________ travel from the tin tray to the ______________. The air ______________ and makes the ______________ vibrate. The vibrations ______________ from the plastic wrap to the rice grains. We see the ______________ jump.
🙂 How am I doing?
Did this investigation help you to convince that sound travels from a source in vibrations? Choose one of these faces:
🌟 Tap to See Answers
- 1: Yes, the rice jumped because the vibrations moved through the jar and plastic wrap. 🎶
- 2: The correct words are: travel, vibrations, air, plastic wrap, rice grains, vibrates. 📚
Awesome work! You’re really getting the hang of sound and vibrations! 👏🎉
💡 Vibrations Cause Sounds
First paragraph of explanatory text: Sounds are made when things vibrate. A vibration is a very quick movement back and forth. You often cannot see vibrations, but you can feel them. Hold your hand on your throat and hum a tune. You will feel the vibrations and hear the sound.
You can see these guitar strings vibrate when you pluck them.
💡 How Sound Travels Through Different Materials
You have seen that sound vibrations can travel through air and glass and plastic wrap. Does sound travel better through some materials than through others? Let's find out.