Common Science. Carleton Washburne
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Fig. 34. When the paper is jerked out, the glass of water does not move.
Fig. 35. When a boy is moving rapidly, it takes force to change the direction of his motion.
Fig. 36. Why doesn't the water spill out?
Fig. 38. The horse goes forward by pushing backward on the earth with his feet.
Fig. 39. As he starts to toss the ball up, will he weigh more or less?
Fig. 43. Will the hot ball go through the ring?
Fig. 44. When the wire is cold, it is fairly tight.
Fig. 45. But notice how it sags when it is hot.
Fig. 46. The expansion of the compressed gas freezes the moisture on the tube.
Fig. 47. Why did the bottle break when the water in it turned to ice?
Fig. 50. A view of the Dead Sea.
Fig. 51. In a minute the cork will fly out.
Fig. 52. A toy balloon has been slipped over the mouth of a flask that is filled with steam.
Fig. 54. Will boiling water get hotter if you make it boil harder?
Fig. 56. The metal balls are fastened to the iron and glass rods with drops of wax.
Fig. 57. Does the heat travel faster through the iron or through the glass?
Fig. 58. Convection currents carrying the heat of the stove about the room.
Fig. 59. Diagram of a hot-water heater. What makes the water circulate?
Fig. 60. It is by radiation that we get all our heat and light from the sun.
Fig. 61. How a thermos bottle is made. Notice the double layer of glass in the broken one.
Fig. 62. The ball bounces from one boy to the other, but it does not return to the one who threw it.
Fig. 64. How should the mirror be placed?
Fig. 65. In passing through the prism the light is bent so that an object at b appears to be at c .
Fig. 66. The pencil is not bent, but the light that comes from it is.
Fig. 67. The bending of the light by the water in the glass causes the pencil to look broken.