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Terra Sigillata

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Small profile avatar.jpg Abel Pharmboy is the nom de plume of a US state university educator and cancer researcher who holds a PhD in Pharmacology and Therapeutics and BS in Toxicology. He writes on natural product drugs and dietary supplements, issues of under-represented groups in the STEMM disciplines, science and medical journalism, the science and culture of North Carolina, Florida, and Colorado, making and listening to music and, with the help of his colleague, Erleichda, wine appreciation.

"Why Terra Sigillata?" will tell you more about the origin of the blog name.

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From 30Threads: What happens when you drop 50 pounds of Silly Putty from a 10-story building?

Category: AcademiaBlogging communityThe Old North State
Posted on: June 19, 2009 8:02 AM, by Abel Pharmboy

I am bursting with local pride this morning at the summer camp stunt of a NC State University materials scientist and his students.

Ginny Skalski (@30Threads, @GinnySkal, Ginny from the Blog), local media maven and founder of the Research Triangle blog distiller 30Threads, was on the scene yesterday as - well, the title says it.

For the past three years, high school students at N.C. State University's materials camp get to find out what happens when you drop Silly Putty from the roof of the D.H. Hill Library. Last year, the camp dropped 30 pounds. This year they dropped 50 pounds (organizers order it in bulk).

Big question: would it land with a thud, bounce, or shatter?

GO HERE to see the video and explanation of the results. The blob was dropped twice - amazing they had enough volunteers to pick up the pieces to do it a second time.

My only question is why they didn't drop it onto a huge sheet of color Sunday comics.

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Comments

1

Fun with non-Newtonian fluids!

They could have gotten the same data by simply pulling quickly on a normally-sized piece of Silly Putty, but where's the fun in that? :)

Might I suggest an experiment for their next attempt? Drop a 50 pound block of Silly Putty from the roof into a large vat of corn starch and water. Which shear-thickening fluid will reign supreme?

Posted by: Rick at shrimp and grits | June 19, 2009 11:03 AM

2

Cool! Can we bounce it off of Karl Roves fat noggin next?

Posted by: J-Dog | June 19, 2009 11:05 AM

3

Crash! It breaks like porcelain... it also seems to retain rigidity afterwards, at least those big chunks looked pretty solid.

Posted by: Nestor | June 19, 2009 7:19 PM

4

I wish we could get more kids involved in these types of experiences.

Posted by: Jan | June 20, 2009 10:25 AM

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