Learning Lesson: How much water is in that cloud?
OBJECTIVE | Demonstrate the high water capacity of clouds. |
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OVERVIEW | Through a hands-on experiment, the students will saturate a cotton ball using water drops from an eyedropper. |
TOTAL TIME | 10-15 minutes |
SUPPLIES | One cotton ball, one eyedropper, and one small cup of water per pair of students. |
PRINTED/AV MATERIAL | None |
TEACHER PREPARATION | Put some water in the cups before class. To minimize the risk of the students spilling water, fill the cups with only about ¾" of water. |
SAFETY FOCUS | Flash flood safety rules |
The updrafts in thunderstorms can be extremely strong. The stronger the updraft, the more weight of rain and hail that can be supported. This experiment will show that cotton balls, like clouds, hold a tremendous amount of water. In nature, once the weight of the water is more than can be supported by the updraft, the water falls as rain.
- Divide the students into pairs. Distribute one cotton ball, one eyedropper, and one cup of water to each pair.
- Have one student hold the cotton ball and one the eyedropper. (For best results, the student with the cotton ball should hold it over the cup of water by pinching a small portion of the cotton ball between his/her thumb and index finger.)
- Explain the purpose is to put as many drops of water into the cotton ball as possible. The cotton ball will be full (saturated) when water begins to drip from the bottom.
- Before they begin however, ask for estimates of the number of drops they think it will take to saturate the cotton ball. Write their estimates on the chalk board.
- Have the students count every drop and stop counting when water begins to drop from the bottom of the cotton ball. During the experiment the students should not leave the eyedropper in one position but move it around to ensure they have as much water as possible in the cotton ball.
- Record their results on the chalk board.
Typically, the original estimates will be low (10-30 drops). Often, the first estimate sets the general area around where most of the remaining estimates will occur. However, some students will throw out a "wild" answer (100, 150, etc.).
The results often surprise the students when they discover the cotton ball holds much more water than they thought. When done properly, using the smallest drops possible and completely saturating the cotton ball, more than 200 drops of water will be contained within the cotton ball.
Since the results can vary widely, ask the students which answer was the "correct" one. The correct answer, of course, is that ALL results are correct. Ask the students why the results vary. The three main reasons are...
- Drop sizes were different,
- Cotton balls are not exactly alike, and
- Some students did not move the eyedropper around to saturate the cotton ball.
This is what also occurs in nature. Drop sizes are different in thunderstorms based partly upon the strength of the updraft. Although the processes involved in making a thunderstorm are similar, no two clouds are exactly the same. Also, the amount of moisture in the clouds varies. For example, thunderstorms occasionally develop over forest fires. While they may look like rain producers, the moisture is limited so much that often these clouds produce little, if any, rain. More times than not, all they do is start more fires due to lightning.
When too much rain falls too quickly, flash flooding occurs. The National Weather Service issues Flash Flood Warnings to alert you to the dangers of the rapidly rising waters.
One inch of rain over one square mile equals 17.4 million gallons of water weighing 143 million pounds (about 72,000 tons), or the weight of a train with 40 boxcars.
Mount Waialeale, Hawaii, is the rainiest place in the world, with an average of 460" (11,680 mm). Death Valley, CA is the driest place in the U.S. with an average of 1.35" (34 mm).
Cherrapunjee is situated in eastern India about 15 miles north of the India-Bangladesh border. On June 16, 1995, an astounding 62" (1,575 mm) of rain fell in just 24 hours. The year 1974 saw a total of 967" (24,560 mm), with 323" (8,200 mm) just in July. That's 10" (254 mm) a day for an entire month.
The driest place in the world is the Atacama desert near the Andes in South America. It's marked by an almost "lunar-like" landscape, nearly devoid of plants, animals and insects. The average rainfall there is less than a millimeter a year, about the thickness of most paper currency.
Flash Flood Safety Rules
- When a flash flood warning is issued for your area or the moment you first realize that a flash flood is imminent, act quickly to save yourself. You may have only seconds.
- Get out of areas subject to flooding. This includes dips, low spots, canyons, washes, etc.
- Avoid already flooded and high velocity flow areas. Do not try to cross a flowing stream on foot where water is above your knees.
- If driving, know the depth of the water in a dip before crossing. The road bed may not be intact under the water.
- If the vehicle stalls, abandon it immediately and seek higher ground. Rapidly rising water may engulf the vehicle and its occupants and sweep them away.