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TE Activity: Build an Anemometer Contributed by: Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder
Learning Objectives (Return to Contents) After this activity, students should be able to:
Materials List (Return to Contents) Each group needs:
Introduction/Motivation (Return to Contents)
How can we tell the difference between a windy day and a really windy day? We measure the speed of the wind. Wind over land is sometimes measured in kilometers (or miles) per hour. Wind over water is sometimes measured in units called knots. How do we measure wind speed? We use a special instrument called an anemometer. Wind speeds are usually measured using a cup anemometer. A cup anemometer has a vertical pole with three cups that capture the wind. The number of times the cups spin around per minute is counted electronically. This type of anemometer is commonly seen on weather stations and is often used in our weather reports on the news. Do you know what a wind vane is? Sometimes it is shaped like a rooster and is located on a barn's roof? It is also called a weather vane. It spins in the wind, and shows us the direction from which the wind is coming. Well, typically an anemometer is also fitted with a wind vane to indicate the wind direction. Engineers design anemometers to measure wind speed for many situations other than for weather measurements. For example, anemometers are used to determine the how much airflow is entering or exiting mines, to make certain that miners have adequate ventilation and have enough air to breathe in the underground caves. Engineers also design other anemometers that use lasers to detect changes in light waves reflected from the air molecules in wind. Engineers have created hot wire anemometers that detect the wind speed through very tiny temperature differences between wires placed in the wind and in the wind shadow. All of these non-mechanical anemometers can be much more accurate, but also more expensive than a simple cup anemometer. The advantage of non-mechanical anemometers may be that they are less sensitive to icing, so they are able to make measurements in all weather, even winter. Cup anemometers are sometimes heated so they can work in cold weather.
Where would you locate a wind farm? Anemometers are also important instruments for determining the best locations for wind power generators, or wind turbines, especially since the direction and strength of the wind is very dependent on local terrain. Wind turbines are machines that convert the moving energy of wind into mechanical/electrical energy for us to use, like a windmill. Also, wind speed changes with height, so engineers use anemometers to determine the best height to place the turbine. Wind turbines need a constant, average wind speed of about 23 kilometers (14 miles) per hour before the wind turbines can generate electricity. It is very important that these wind speed measurements be very accurate because any error in wind speed will be greatly magnified. For example, if your anemometer overestimates the wind speed by 10%, you overestimate the power by roughly 133%, or one third too much. Today, we are going to become engineers and build our own simple anemometers. With these instruments, we can figure out the best place around our school to place a wind turbine. Vocabulary/Definitions (Return to Contents)
Procedure (Return to Contents) Before the Activity
With the Students
Safety Issues (Return to Contents)
Troubleshooting Tips (Return to Contents) Make sure students position the cardboard into a cross with legs exactly the same length. Make sure the axis of the anemometer is placed precisely at the center of the cardboard cross. Some students may require assistance in determining the exact center of the cardboard cross. Assessment (Return to Contents) Pre-Activity Assessment Brainstorming: In small groups, have the students engage in open discussion to think of locations where it can be really windy and locations where it is not usually windy. Remind them that no idea or suggestion is "silly." All ideas should be respectfully heard. Have one student from each team write their ideas on the board to share with the class. Prediction: Have the students suggest areas around the outside of the school where it might be the windy and list them on the board. Have students predict which locations might be the windiest and record predictions on the board. Activity Embedded Assessment Worksheet: Have the students record their measurements and complete the Anemometer Worksheet as a team. Review their answers to gauge their mastery of the subject. Post-Activity Assessment Engineering Your Playground: Use the class data to determine the wind patterns of the playground (or area that you used in this activity). Have students draw a map of this area and write the wind speeds for the different locations on it. Have a student draw a wind turbine in the best location on this map and explain why s/he chose that spot. Toss-a-Question: Provide students with a list of questions (see below). Students work in groups and toss a ball or wad of paper back and forth. The student with the ball asks a question and then tosses the ball to someone to answer. If a student does not know the answer, s/he tosses the ball onward until someone gets it. The person who gets the answer correct gets to start the next question. Review the answers at the end. Possible questions/answers:
Activity Extensions (Return to Contents) Have students use their anemometers to determine the speed of the air current produced by a fan at low and high speeds. Have students keep a record of the wind speed during a weekend. Have them measure the speed in the morning, the afternoon and the evening. Compare the students' measurements. Does wind speed vary much over the course of a day? Does wind speed vary much from place to place? What effects do structures have on the wind speed? Have students build different wind gauges and wind vanes. See more information at the Franklin Institute Online, Make Your Own Weather Vane, http://sln.fi.edu/weather/todo/vane.html and Wind Vane, http://www.fi.edu/tfi/units/energy/vane.html Activity Scaling (Return to Contents)
References (Return to Contents) Dictionary.com. Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. Accessed December 19, 2005. (Source of some vocabulary definitions, with some adaptation) http://www.dictionary.com Make an Anemometer. Science Projects, California Energy Commission. Accessed October 19, 2005. (Source of activity) http://www.energyquest.ca.gov/projects/anemometer.html Contributors Xochitl Zamora-Thompson, Sabre Duren, Natalie Mach, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, Denise CarlsonCopyright © 2005 by Regents of the University of Colorado.The contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government. Supporting Program (Return to Contents) Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at BoulderLast Modified: September 26, 2008
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