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hands-on activities
How much air do I breathe in?
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Field(s) of Science: Life Science | Physics
Approximate time needed:
< 30 minutes
Concepts:
respiration; displacement; volume; body; physiology; water; lungs; gases
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Age:
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Setting(s)
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Adult supervision is required.
Materials Needed:
- 2 people
- 2 L pop bottle filled with water (marked in 100 mL increments) - 1
- Deep tray – filled to about 3 cm deep with water
- Bendy straw
- Small piece of plastic wrap, aluminum foil, or thick card stock
- Water
Doing The Activity!
- Fill the pop bottle with water.
- Place the small piece of card stock over the top of the 2 L pop bottle.
- Invert the bottle and put it in the water tray and remove the card. Make sure no air enters the bottles at this stage.
- Thread
the short end of the straw up into the mouth of the bottle, then bend
the straw up so that the other end is out of the water (see diagram below).
- Take a
breath, then blow as much as possible into the straw, displacing the
water. You can determine your lung capacity by the amount of water you
displaced.
Investigate More!
- Try this experiment with multiple people. Compare the lung
capacity between different people: males/females, tall/short
individuals, athletes/non-athletes, swimmers/non-swimmers,
musicians/non-musicians, etc. Do these differences affect lung capacity?
- Try
this activity again, but practice breathing deeply beforehand. Compare
your lung capacity from this time to the first, "regular" way. Do you
notice a difference?
Discuss
What's Happening?
Both air and water can be measured in litres. One litre of air (gas)
is equal in volume to one litre of water (liquid). They take up exactly
the same amount of space. If the bottle is completely full of water,
then any amount of water that is displaced by the air being blown into
the bottle, is equal in volume to the water that has been displaced.
Therefore, if after blowing into the bottle, there is one litre of
space in the bottle, then your lung capacity equals one litre.
The
greater your lung capacity, the more likely you will do well in sports
that require good stamina. This is not always the case. There are other
factors that may affect your stamina. Runners, both long distance and
short distance, generally have large lung capacity, as do swimmers. Males tend to have larger volumes than females. Taller people have larger volumes than shorter people. There is even a difference in people living at high altitudes people living at low altitudes.
Why Does It Matter?
Lung capacity is really important if you do activities like singing, playing an instrument, playing a sport, running, jogging or swimming. The capacity of your lungs to take in air, and keep it in, affects how long you can play a single note, how long you can hold your breath under water or how well you can breathe while moving. It can be important to know if you are someone who does scuba or deep-sea diving, or if you travel between high and low altitudes.
Lung capacity can also be very important to people with allergies or asthma, or other health problems that affect how much air you breathe in and out.
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