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Copy of Copy of Popsicle Bridge

Published on Nov 22, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

POPSICLE BRIDGES

Julian Garcia, Francisco Zuniga, Brandon Lee

PROBLEM

  • Make a popsicle bridge that can hold a few pounds of weights.
  • Find a way to relieve some of the stress in the bridge.

QUESTIONS

  • How do engineers deal with stress?
  • What kind of bridge did our group use?
  • How much weights did our bridge hold?
  • What advice would we give to the sixth graders for the bridge?
  • If we were given 200 more popsicle sticks, what would we improve?
Photo by luluv1

ANSWERS

  • Stress is dealed, by dissipating it. It is streched out a long distance.
  • The type of bridge that my group used, was the beam bridge.
  • Our bridge held 12.5 pounds. We think that the bridge broke, because the sides were very weak.
  • The advice we would give to the 6th graders, is that, they should really reinforce their bridge.
  • We would reinforce all the sides, and redo the sides, so they would were more stronger.
Photo by Mylla

VOCABULARY

  • Elastic Deformation- structure is strained but goes back to it's original shape.
  • Plastic Deformation- structure is strained but doesn't go back to it's original shape.
  • Compressive stress- stress caused by pushing together
  • Tensil stress- stress caused by pulling apart
  • Strain- deformation

MATERIALS

  • 200 popsicle sticks
  • 1 glue bottle
  • 1 set of pliers
  • 3 smart, and motivated students

BUILDING STAGE

CONCULSION

  • We learned that stress and tension all have a part in making a bridge.
  • We also learned that we need teamwork to make the bridge great.
  • Compression is a great force that we needed to fight off.
  • A lot of time, and effort had to go into building the bridge.
  • Also, a lot of research had to be done, for the bridge to be perfect.

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