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Science Activity -- "Floating Eggs!"

Materials needed:

1 clear glass or jar
1 cup sugar
Food coloring (any color -- it is not necessary for the experiment but it does help to understand the last part of the experiment).


Instructions

Step 1

Fill a clear glass or jar about three-fourths of the way up with water. Then gently put a raw egg (don't crack it) into the jar.You may want to tilt the glass slightly so that the egg won't crash into the bottom and break.

What happened? You should have found that the egg sunk to the bottom.

Step 1

Step 2

Now gently stir sugar into the water. You may need to stir for a minute or two until the sugar dissolves completely into the water. Keep adding sugar and mixing until the egg floats. Depending on the size of your glass, it may take as much as one cup of sugar.

Note: if you are having trouble stirring with the egg in, you can take it out, stir, and put it back in.

 

Step 2

Step 3

Before we explain why the egg floats, let's do one more experiment. Take another cup and put some water with food coloring in it. Now gently pour it over a spoon into the floating egg glass. The reason for the spoon is to keep the colored water from mixing with the sugar water in the glass.

Step 3

why

How does it work?
A regular egg is more dense than water and that is why it sinks. As a simple explanation, density is the amount of matter (stuff) in an object compared with its size. For example, a balloon may be the exact same size as a bowling ball, but it is a lot less dense (it is the same size but much lighter).

When we mix sugar into the water, this causes the density of the water to increase because there is now more "stuff" in it. Now, the sugar water is more dense than the egg, so the egg floats.

Digging deeper.
So what happened when we poured regular water on top? Remember, when you added sugar to the water it became more dense. So when the less dense (regular) water was carefully poured on top of the more dense sugar water, it floated on top. Since it was colored first, you could easily see the less dense water on top of the sugar water.


line

Try this:
What would happen if you tried the above experiment with salt? Would the results be the same? Would this experiment work with anything that dissolves in water? Try some experiments with different substances to come up with your conclusions.


try this
 
 
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