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I am doing a science project on the effects of artificail increased gravity on plants. I need a device that will spin the plant at a reasonable speed. Any ideas?

2006-10-20 11:58:26 · 5 answers · asked by CanBo 1 in Science & Mathematics Physics

No more that 5 gs. I don't have a record player.

2006-10-20 12:03:35 · update #1

5 answers

I suggest small plants.

A washing maching in spin cycle would put a few g's on them but unless you have an old washing machine to put in this service, it might be hard to get much time for your plants, and unless you are going to break something you will have to manually return the washer to spin cycle (also, I don't think washer's are designed to stay in spin cycle for 2 weeks and probably would only last a few hours or days before something broke)

You could put them inside a cut-out tire on a car with the drive wheels up on blocks but I see some problems there two with running a car like that for long (I mean, who will donate the car and gasoline)

Maybe a ceiling fan motor and some very small plants but I don't think that motor can take very much weight at all.

good luck
sounds interesting but the test set up has some engineering difficulties

2006-10-20 12:05:41 · answer #1 · answered by enginerd 6 · 0 0

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2016-11-24 20:21:20 · answer #2 · answered by alire 4 · 0 0

You could use an old record player to spin the plants and watch the plants start to grow opposite of gravity.

2006-10-20 12:02:25 · answer #3 · answered by voidedius 3 · 0 0

Recreate one of those nasa g force things, and run it on solar power, or somethin.

2006-10-20 12:00:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

how many G's ?

2006-10-20 12:00:29 · answer #5 · answered by rebel_g 2 · 0 1

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