Student-made balloons color gray skies
Danette Goulet
CORONA DEL MAR -- Bright spots popped up in the otherwise gray skies
over Corona del Mar High School early Wednesday as students sent homemade
hot air balloons soaring.
“That was pretty fun. It’s nice and warm over there,” said Donna
Thomas, 13, with a shiver.
While the rain held off, students in Julie Oblouk’s eighth-grade
science class were able to set off tissue paper balloons they had made in
class and track the inflatable crafts’ flight.
During the previous three class sessions, students had made the
balloons by tracing patterns onto three pieces of tissue paper that they
then glued into six panels, said Aumna Igbal, 13.
A wire around the circular opening completed the aircraft, which
students made in teams of two.
“We’re supposed to be figuring out why they go up and come back down
again instead of just going up,” Aumna explained.
And so 35 students, surrounded on all sides by gym classes playing
soccer and softball, stood huddled around Oblouk and a camp stove, as
their aviation works of art were filled one by one with hot air.
“Notice the good construction of this balloon -- it filled up fast,”
Oblouk told the class.
When the tissue paper and glue creation was expanded to its fullest
capacity it was released into the gloomy sky.
Behind it trailed a couple students, one measuring the distance it
traveled before it began its descent back to the muddy field.
“I swear, one year, when the wind was blowing the other direction, we
had one go all the way to UCI,” Oblouk said. “It just took off.”
Although none of the balloons sent up Wednesday morning experienced
such success, students chased them eagerly and tracked which went the
farthest.
Students would later take the several factors they were recording and
use trigonometry to calculate the height the balloons reached and the
angle of ascent, Oblouk said.
Students also will be asked to write a report of their findings. So,
in essence, the building and the launching were the fun part, while most
of the work is yet to come.
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