Teachers' Domain®
 

Organization:

Forgot Your Password?

Not yet registered?

Register now to download, share, and save resources. It's simple, safe, and free! Learn More

You are now "Test Driving" Teachers' Domain

You may view up to 7 resources in this limited trial period.

You have 6 views remaining. Register now for unlimited free access and to download, share, and save resources. Learn More

About Registration:

Registering with Teachers' Domain is free and allows you to:

  • • View as many resources as you like
  • • Save, sort, and share resources using My Folders and My Groups
  • • Download resources to your desktop
  • • See standards correlations for your state

Thank you for "Test Driving" Teachers' Domain

You have viewed all seven resources permitted in this limited trial period. You may continue to browse the site, but to view, download, share, and save resources, you must register now. Registration is simple, safe, and free.

For more information:

Learn about our online Professional Development Courses, or review our Privacy Policy.

If you still have questions, please contact us.

NSDLNSDL users sign in here

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

Resource: Triangles: Testing the Strength of a Gumdrop Dome

Media Type:
QuickTime Video

Length:
Size: 3.4 MB

or

In this video segment adapted from ZOOM, cast members construct simple structures based on the light-but-strong design of the geodesic dome using gumdrops and toothpicks. These gumdrop domes help demonstrate that some shapes, like triangles, are inherently strong while others, like squares, are comparatively weak.

Supplemental Media Available:

Triangles: Testing the Strength of a Gumdrop Dome (PDF Document)

Triangles: Testing the Strength of a Gumdrop Dome (PDF Document)

 

Teachers' Domain, Triangles: Testing the Strength of a Gumdrop Dome, published January 22, 2004, retrieved on ,
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.mfe.zgumdrop/

The gumdrop domes in this video resource are modeled after geodesic domes. Beginning in the 1950s, American architect and engineer Buckminster Fuller popularized this fresh, and in some ways better, take on the centuries-old dome. A geodesic dome is made of many similar but smaller interconnected shapes. The shapes are configured to form a rigid, almost spherical framework in which forces are evenly distributed among the dome's individual members, called struts.

Triangles are particularly stable shapes, so they are great to use in building geodesic domes as well as other structures. They don't twist, bend, or collapse easily, in contrast with rectangles and other shapes. A push on a corner of a square, for example, produces a diamond shape. You can't change the shape of a triangle without altering the length of one of its sides.

A geodesic dome is a particularly good choice if you want to build an enclosed structure with lots of open interior space that is strong, lightweight, and easy to assemble. Every strut braces every other strut, and the structure's curvature distributes weight so that all of the struts share the load. That's right, a geodesic dome's spherical shape and framework construction actually allow it to support its own weight without the need for floor-to-ceiling columns, thick walls, or other obstructions.

Although the ZOOM cast members test the strength of gumdrop domes under an externally applied load -- the weight of books -- geodesic and other domes are not designed to perform this function in the real world. Nevertheless, the activity effectively demonstrates that you can build rigid structures using a strong fundamental shape and relatively little building material.
National Science Digital Library

Teachers' Domain is proud to be a Pathways portal to the National Science Digital Library.

Source: ZOOM

Resource Produced by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Developed by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Credits

Collection Funded by:

National Science Foundation