Drag • Downforce • DRAfting - NASCAR Acceleration Nation
Transcription
Drag • Downforce • DRAfting - NASCAR Acceleration Nation
GRADES 5–7 Drag • Downforce • DRAfting An Aerodynamics STEM Learning Guide There’s more online! You can go to accelerationnation.com to create a custom profile, earn badges, and learn more about the Three Ds of Speed! The 3D s of Speed During a NASCAR race, race cars can reach speeds of more than 200 miles per hour! Races are won—and lost—by just fractions of a second. To be the first across the finish line, drivers rely on three key aerodynamic features: drag, downforce, and drafting. DraG As a race car zips along the track, it experiences drag, or air resistance. Air pushing against the car as it moves causes it to lose speed. To fight this slowing force, designers work to create cars that are more streamlined so air flows easily around them. Downforce Race car drivers rely on downforce to help their cars firmly grip the track. Downforce occurs as air moves under the car faster than it does over the top. The slower air on top creates an area of higher pressure above the car that pushes it downward. This provides more traction to its tires and gives the driver better control while steering. Drafting During a race, drivers can get a speed boost by lining up their race cars. This is a formation called drafting. When cars draft, the leading car blocks the movement of air, creating low pressure behind it. High-pressure air moves forward to fill the space between cars, tugging the trailing car forward while reducing the leading car’s drag. As a result, both cars reach higher speeds. Drag Explore the science of aerodynamics. downforce slow-moving air: high pressure fast-moving air: low pressurE DRAG 94 DRAG ACTIVITY Drop a flat sheet of paper from a height of about 3 feet while a friend times how long it takes to hit the floor. Now crumple a sheet of paper into a ball and repeat the experiment. Did you notice how the object’s shape affected how it moved through the air? The flat sheet of paper met resistance and moved slowly. Crumpling it into a ball reduced its surface area, so the second sheet dropped to the ground faster than the first. drafting Learn how NASCar drivers use drafting to race ahead of the pack. Drafting Stage 1: 94 94 62 62 Low pressure between the cars pulls the trailing car forward slow-moving air: high pressure fast-moving air: low pressurE Drafting Stage 2: 94 94 Both cars go faster 62 62 NASCAR drivers try to strategically improve the performance of their vehicles using the Three D’s of Speed. One technique they use is called drafting - where race cars closely line up one behind the other to gain a boost in speed on the track. When race cars draft, the leading car blocks the air, creating an area of low pressure behind it. At the same time, low pressure also pulls the trailing car forward toward the leading car. This pushes the highpressure air over the lead car’s spoiler, reducing its drag. The result allows both cars to go a few miles per hour faster. Try this quick trick to visualize drafting: take two marbles to your kitchen sink. Run the water from the tap. Hold one marble under the running water - and then hold the second marble under the first. See how the second marble gets less wet because more water is blocked by the first? Imagine that the water is air and you’re on your way to understanding drafting in NASCAR racing. downforce DISCOVER THE SIMILARITIES BETWEEN RACING AND FLIGHT THROUGH AERODYNAMICS. NASCAR race cars rely on a key element of aerodynamics – air pressure – to stick to the track. Air pressure is a force caused by the weight of air molecules pushing against an object’s surface. The shape of a plane’s wing, also called an airfoil, works with the opposite combination of high and low air pressure. The splitter on top of a NASCAR race car forces fast-moving air underneath the car and the skirting prevents slow-moving air from slipping underneath the sides of the car. Fast-moving air causes low air pressure and slow-moving air creates high air pressure. The combination of high pressure above and low pressure below pushes the car down so it stays on the track. ACTIVITY Hold the short end of a sheet of paper with your hands pointing up. Blow forcefully over the curve of the paper. Check it out: faster-moving air over the top of the paper creates lower pressure above and higher pressure below. That creates lift, causing the paper to rise. ext, fold a 1-inch flap along the short edges of the N paper.Turn the paper over and fold another 1-inch flap on each edge. Sit the paper on a tabletop so that there is a tunnel you can blow through. Blow forcefully through the gap. Faster-moving air below the paper creates an area of low pressure below and high pressure above. This creates downforce, causing the paper to sag. discovering drafting Winning a NASCAR race requires more than a super-speedy car. Drivers also use a strategy called drafting to get ahead on the track. Read the passage below to learn about the technique’s accidental discovery. Then answer the questions on the right. The Discovery of Drafting hat was the central idea of the text? 1 W In 1960, racecar driver Junior Johnson was gearing up for the second ever Daytona 500 race. But he realized he had a problem. His car was much slower than those of the top contenders in the race. A During a practice run, Johnson noticed that when he pulled up close behind a faster car his vehicle sped up, too. By the final lap of his run, he’d built up enough speed to overtake the other car. Johnson had discovered drafting. D Drafting occurs when a car lines up right behind the car in front of it, with just inches between their bumpers. Leading cars block the flow of air, creating an area of low pressure behind them. This area acts like a vacuum, sucking the trailing cars forward. The trailing cars push high-pressure air over the leading cars’ spoilers, reducing their drag and also giving them a boost. The more cars that are grouped in a drafting formation, the faster they all will go. B C Drafting is a common strategy used in NASCAR races. Drafting was first used by accident. By driving close behind other cars, racecars can move faster. A car doesn’t have to be the fastest to win a race. he purpose of the third paragraph is to: 2 T A B C D explain the science of how drafting works describe the first time that drafting was used in NASCAR detail how drafting has changed in the last 40 years list the pros and cons of drafting hat is a synonym for the word tactic? 3 W A B ability formation C D idea strategy Using the drafting tactic, Johnson won the Daytona 500 even though his car wasn’t the fastest on the track. Today, drafting is a common strategy in NASCAR races. 1. D, 2.A, 3. D ANSWEsS: Kn Test your KnowlEDGE hat does the science of aerodynamics 1 W study? A The weight of objects he speed and flight of objects T The movement of air The sound of air B hat are three key aerodynamics 2 W C principles? Drag, height, and acceleration Drag, downforce, and drafting Acceleration, downforce, and motion Acceleration, height, and motion hat word describes a force that slows 3 W D he goal of adaptations to NASCAR 9 T racecars is: A an object when air pushes against it? B A B C rag D Downforce C D Drafting Deceleration hat aerodynamics force is used to 4 W create both lift and downforce? A B ir speed A Air pressure C D Both A and B N either A nor B rue or false? Downforce is caused by 5 T D E hy is the science of aerodynamics 10 W important to racing? the combination of high air pressure pushing against the top of an object and low air pressure beneath an object. A A B True B False rue or false? Downforce is the opposite 6 T of lift. A True B False C rue or false? Drafting is a driving 7 T strategy that improves speed. A True B False prevent racecars from flipping over To or lifting. To provide more downforce to improve tire traction. T o force high-pressure air over the car to make sure it “sticks” to the track. To create more contact between the tires and the tracks. All of the above D ecause aerodynamics helps improve B the safety of the racecars, keeping them on the track. Because aerodynamics helps enhance the speed of the racecars, helping drivers zoom past the competition. Because aerodynamics helps improve the performance of the cars, keeping them running smoothly and consistently. All of the above You can go to accelerationnation.com to find out more! ANSWEsS: A B C D wo or more racecars accelerate T next to each other with inches between them. Two or more racecars line up, one behind the other, with inches between them. Two or more racecars tap the bumpers of the cars in front of them. None of the above 1. C; 2. B; 3. A; 4. B; 5. A; 6. A; 7. B; 8. B; 9. E; 10. D A B C D rafting happens when: 8 D RACECAR ADAPTATIONS Each racing season, NASCAR sets rules that determine the shape and weight of its cars. Check out some NASCAR racecar principals and learn how they influence safety, speed, and racing aerodynamics. 1 Spoiler This device traps high- pressure air, creating downforce to provide more rear-tire traction. It also increases drag to prevent racecars from traveling at unsafe speeds. Strips 2 Roof These thin rails run along the roof edges to disrupt airflow and cut down on unwanted lift. Flaps 3 Roof These spring open if the car starts to slide or spin. They disturb air moving over the car, reducing lift so the car doesn’t go airborne. 4 Skirting Edging around the bottom of the car prevents highpressure air from moving under the vehicle and creating unwanted lift. If the car starts to slide sideways, the skirting lessens the chance of the car spinning or flying off the track. 5 TIRES Treadless tires make more contact with the ground, increasing traction. 6 SPLITTER This flat strip runs parallel to the ground underneath the front bumper. Air accelerates more quickly under the splitter, leading to a low-pressure area that helps suck the car downward toward the track.