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Build A Bubble Powered Rocket!

Make a Pop Rocket
http://spaceplace.jpl.nasa.gov/rocket.htm

Build a Bubble-Powered Rocket!
Build your own rocket using paper and fizzing
tablets! Watch it lift off. How high does your
rocket go? Print this page for the instructions.
Suggestion: Find a grown-up to do this activity with you.
Materials:
Paper, regular 8-1/2- by 11-inch paper, such as computer printer paper or even
notebook paper.
Plastic 35-mm film canister (see hints below)
Cellophane tape
Scissors
Effervescing (fizzing) antacid tablet (the kind used to settle an upset stomach)
Paper towels
Water
Eye protection (like eye glasses, sun glasses, or safety glasses)
Hints:
The film canister MUST be one with a cap that fits INSIDE the rim
instead of over the outside of the rim. Sometimes photography shops have
extras of these and will be happy to donate some for such a worthy cause.
Keep in mind: Just like with real rockets, the less your rocket weighs and

the less air resistance (drag) it has, the higher it will go.
Making the Rocket
You must first decide how to cut your paper. You may cut it the short way or the long
way to make the body of the rocket. There is no one right way to make a paper rocket.
Try a long, skinny rocket or a short, fat rocket. Try a sharp nosecone or a blunt nosecone.
Try it with fins or without fins. Experiment!
Here's just one idea for how you might cut your whole rocket from one piece of paper:
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Make a Pop Rocket
http://spaceplace.jpl.nasa.gov/rocket.htm
Here are the basic steps:
1. Cut out all the pieces for your rocket.
2. Wrap and tape a tube of paper around the film canister. Hint:
Tape the canister to the end of the paper before you start
wrapping.
Important! Place the lid end of the canister down.
3. Tape fins to your rocket body, if you want.
4. Roll the circle (with a wedge cut out) into a cone and tape it to the rocket's top.
Blasting Off
1. Put on your eye protection.
2. Turn the rocket upside down and remove the canister's lid.
3. Fill the canister one-third full of water.
Now work quickly on the next steps!
1. Drop one-half of an effervescing antacid tablet into the canister.
2. Snap the lid on tight.
3. Stand your rocket on a launch platform, such as your sidewalk or driveway.
4. Stand back and wait. Your rocket will blast off!
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Make a Pop Rocket
http://spaceplace.jpl.nasa.gov/rocket.htm
So, Dr. Marc, how does the pop-rocket
work?

When the fizzy tablet is placed in water, many little
bubbles of gas escape. The bubbles go up, instead of down,
because they weigh less than water. When the bubbles get
to the surface of the water, they break open. All that gas that has escaped from the
bubbles pushes on the sides of the canister.
Now when you blow up a balloon, the air makes the balloon stretch bigger and bigger.
But the little film canister doesn't stretch and all this gas has to go somewhere!
Eventually, something has to give! So the canister pops its top (which is really its
bottom, since it's upside down). All the water and gas rush down and out, pushing the
canister up and up, along with the rocket attached to it.
Real rockets work kind of the same way. But instead of using tablets that fizz in
water, they use rocket fuel.
Delta rocket similar to the one that launched the Deep
Space 1 spacecraft from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in
October 1998.

The rocket that launched Deep Space 1 on October 24, 1998, had four different
kinds of engines. Some pushed the rocket off the ground. Then some helped it
continue its climb into space. Others gave the Deep Space 1 spacecraft its final push
away from Earth. But all of them forced a gas to shoot out of the rocket, thus
pushing the rocket the other way.
We call this wonderful and useful fact the law of action and reaction. The action is
the gas rushing out of the rocket. The reaction is the rocket taking off in the other
direction. In other words, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
The rocket goes in the opposite direction from the gas, and the faster the gas
leaves the rocket, the faster the rocket gets pushed the other way.
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