Do helicopters need more or less energy to stay in the sky than an
airplane? What pushes a rocket to leave the atmosphere? Why can
airplanes have smaller motors than helicopters?
Help your students learn the answers to these and other questions!
Written for educators, homeschoolers, parents--and kids!--this fully
illustrated book provides a fun mix of projects, discussion materials,
instructions, and subjects for deeper investigation around the basics of
homemade flying objects. With the projects in this book, you can spend
more time learning and experimenting, and less time planning and
preparing.
Complete with download links to PDF templates that expand your teaching,
this is your one-stop manual for learning about, interacting with, and
being curious about airflow, gravity, torque, power, ballistics,
pressure, and force.
In Make: Planes, Gliders, and Paper Rockets, you'll make and experiment
with:
- Paper catapult helicopter--add an LED light for night launches!
- Pull-string stick helicopter
- Rubber band airplane
- Simple sled kite
- 25-cent quick-build kite
- Air rockets with a parachute or a glider
- Foam air rocket
- Rocket stands
- Bounce rocket
- Low- and high-pressure rocket launchers