April Fool’s Day can be more than whoopee cushions and corny jokes – build up your science, engineering, tech, and math skills while amazing and surprising others.
April 1, 2021April Fool’s Day can be more than whoopee cushions and corny jokes – build up your science, engineering, tech, and math skills while amazing and surprising others. This April Fool’s Day, fool your friends and family into believing you’re a magician with our STEM activities for students, many of which were provided by the Department's Office of Nuclear Energy.
Disappearing Color
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Guaranteed to fool your friends or your money back! Ok, no, there’s no money exchanged here, but we do want you to try this and see if your eyes deceive you. Make sure not to drink any of this and to pour it out as soon as you’re done with the experiment.
Eat an Aquifer
Sprinkles, candy, soda, food coloring, ice cream, cookies, a clear cup, and a straw? Yes, this sounds like the makings of an excellent science project. Monique Warren, Environmental Engineer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, walks you through how to create an example aquifer – an underground storage of water – you can actually eat. Watch this video from Monique for the details.
Make Rainbow Milk
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Scoop Up This Energy Trick
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Make Some Heat
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You can feel the changes in heat energy when molecules in rubber align themselves in different ways in this experiment.
Take a thick rubber band and stretch it out two or three times with your fingers. Next, place the rubber band next to your forehead. Follow the tips in the graphic above to discover how heat and tension change.
Exploding Toothpaste
Chemistry, surface tension, catalysts and reaction – you get it all when you make exploding toothpaste. With a few magic ingredients, you can make a foamy “toothpaste” that shoots up in the air, using liquid dish soap, hydrogen peroxide, food coloring, safety supplies, and a few other objects. Get the details from Scientific American’s website.
See this experiment done on stage at the Fun With Science Show at our Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory on their website here.
April Fool’s! It’s not magic, it’s science! Have a happy April Fool's Day and keep learning about science, technology, engineering, and math – there's more STEM activities at www.energy.gov/STEM.
AnneMarie Horowitz
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AnneMarie Horowitz is the Chief of Staff for the Arctic Energy Office. She joined the Arctic Energy Office in May 2023. AnneMarie has been with the Energy Department since 2010, and was previously on the digital team of the Office of Public Affairs, where she managed digital projects and internal employee communications efforts. AnneMarie was the Digital Communications Manager from March 2023 - September 2023 for the Department of Health and Human Affairs' Public Education Campaign, We Can Do This, to share information about the COVID vaccine.
From 2015 - 2017 she served as the Special Advisor on workforce issues for Deputy Secretary of Energy Dr. Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall. She has also previously worked in the Under Secretary for Management and Performance and in the Office of Minority Economic Impact.
AnneMarie has a BA in Political Science from the University of Portland and a Masters of Government from Johns Hopkins University.