Have you ever played under a parachute at
school?
You and your friends hold on the edge, flip
it up toward the sky, and then slip inside
and watch it slowly float down on top of you.
Or maybe you’ve seen a skydiver jump out
of an airplane!
After he jumps, he falls through the air,
and then...he opens up his parachute!
The parachute slows the skydiver down, so
he falls gently towards the ground and can
make a safe landing.
But have you ever thought about how parachutes
work?
Well, in the end, parachutes work because
of … air!
That’s right!
The stuff that’s all around us!
You’re breathing it right now!
And, air, like everything else that you
can feel, or that takes up space, is made
of matter.
That’s what scientists call, just, stuff!
Everything is made of matter!
The parachute, the air, the ocean, you, me, everything.
And since air is made up of matter, when you
walk through the air, you’re actually
pushing matter out of the way, with every
move you make!
But here’s the thing … that matter is
pushing back on you, too!
You probably don’t feel it when you’re
just walking around.
But when you start running, you might feel
it a little bit.
And when you start to go even faster, like
when you’re speeding around on your bike
Whoa!
That feeling is the air pushing against you!
And this force has a name: It’s called drag.
Drag is the force of the air pushing back
on you, or on anything, when it moves.
And the faster something is moving, the more
drag it feels.
So, you don’t really feel the force of the
air as you walk around.
But have you ever held your hand outside the
window of a moving car?
That’s some serious drag!
You can feel the air pushing against your
hand, and it can be hard to even keep it still!
But, have you noticed that it’s easier to
hold your hand flat, like this, than it
is to hold your hand so your thumb’s pointing
up, like this?
Why do you think that might be?
It’s because when you hold your hand straight
up like this, more air is bumping into your hand.
That’s means more drag!
But when you put your hand flat, like this,
only a small part of your hand is pushing
the air out of the way.
There’s less of your hand for the air to
run up against, which means less drag, so
your can glide through the air more smoothly.
So, what if you’re a skydiver, and you’re
jumping out of an airplane?
How do you slow yourself down so you can land
safely?
You’d want to do something that would make
more air bump into you.
And that’s how a parachute helps; it makes
more space for the air to run into.
So it creates more drag!
There’s so much drag on the parachute, so much air pushing against it, that it slows
down your fall, so you can land safely.
Now, a lot of other things experience drag,
too!
When a boat moves through the ocean, the water
that pushes back against it is also making drag.
And cars and trucks experience drag when they’re
driving down a highway.
A little car feels less drag than a big truck,
because it has less space for air to push
against it.
So, drag is the force that you feel when you’re
moving through something, like the air, and
that something pushes back.
It may slow you down.
But it’s what makes lots of things, from
skydiving to playtime with parachutes, possible!
Thanks for joining us on SciShow Kids!
Do you have a question about parachutes, force, or anything else at all?
Ask a grownup for help, and leave us a comment
down below, or send us an email to kids@thescishow.com!
And we'll see you next time!
