Educational Toys Come Out from the Cold
My son Jack and I took some time out from playing with the
educational toys he received for Christmas and went to a hockey
game over the holidays. Like most 7 year olds, his favorite part
is when the Zamboni comes out to clean the ice. We had seen this
a thousand times so I was stymied when Jack said, "Why is there
smoke coming out of the back?" It's steam I told Jack, they use
hot water because it freezes faster. I could see the wheels
turning now and knew I was getting in over my head. "But ice is
cold, shouldn't they use cold water, Dad". Well, there was only
one period to go and a thousand questions, most of which I
didn't have the answers to, so I told Jack that when we got home
we would do our own science experiment to see whether hot or
cold water froze faster. To get the most out of this I thought
we should treat it as a science project. I looked through some
of the science toys Jack had and found a science kit that showed
how to do some experiments. Jack and I made a plan and a list of
all the things we'd need. We also searched the internet to see
if there were any educational toys that might help us. We didn't
find any educational toys, but we did find some very interesting
facts. It turns out there are at least 3 physical processes that
would explain why hot water freezes faster. First, hot water
contains less dissolved air, this is why fish can die in very
warm water, a lack of oxygen. Liquids conduct heat much better
than gas so hot water would cool much more rapidly. Secondly, in
a pool of warm water, the water at the surface would be hotter
than the water below, hot water rises. This would create a
larger temperature difference with the air and cool the water
faster. Third, the warm water would initially melt the ice on
the ground, forming a better bond that would cool the water
faster. This also prevents layers of ice from chipping away. So
we filled up a jug with hot tap water and a second jug with cold
water. We took 2 plastic cups and a short 2x4 outside. We filled
each cup half full, the red one with hot water and the blue one
with cold water and set them on the walk. Then we found a patch
of ice on the driveway, laid the 2x4 in the center, and poured
hot water on one side and cold water on the other side. It was
18 F so we went in to warm up. We came back out an hour later.
The 2 cups were mostly water. The red one had some ice above the
water line and the blue one had some ice on the outer edge of
the water surface. On the driveway, both sides of the 2x4 had
turned to ice. When we touched the ice we could see our
fingerprint on the cold water side. The hot water side was
frozen solid. We weren't sure what we just proved but we rushed
back inside, wrote down our observations, drew a few pictures
and had some hot chocolate before bedtime. I knew Jack was going
to be excited when he explained his science experiment to his
class on Monday. So next time you see that steam rising behind
the Zamboni you'll know why. As for my backyard ice rink, if I
can only wrap the garden hose around the barbeque ...
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