What We Learned by Crumpling Paper
While we were doing our experiments, we tried to guess why some of the
crackles were so much louder than others. This kind of scientific guessing is
called making hypotheses.
Big Sounds from Little Areas
One of our hypotheses was that big crackles would need to involve big
areas of the paper jumping in and out.
Here's a picture of a flattened piece of crumpled paper. Notice the
creases: some are long, some short. It seemed a good guess that big noises would happen
when long creases were made, or when big areas between long creases would jump!
We tested this in two ways. First, we tried seeing if the sounds were louder
when we first started crumpling.
Experiment: are early creases bigger?
Get a fresh sheet of paper, and try crumpling it just a little. About how long are the
creases? Then really crumple it into a small ball. Are the creases shorter?
Our hypothesis was that the crackles would be quieter at the end of each crumpling,
when the creases got shorter. When we tested this, we hardly could tell the difference!
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