TryScience Home Page Experiment!Experiment
 
Coathanger Icon
Musical Coat Hangers

Hangers Things You'll Need Graphic
Hanger Tie Graphic
Hanger Bent Graphic
Hanger Swing Graphic
Hanger Listen Graphic
 

   Discover how sound travels and what materials make better sound conductors.
 
  
  • Wire coathanger
  • Cotton thread (or string)
 
   1. Tie a 50 cm (20 in) length of cotton thread on each end of a wire coat hanger. Wrap the other end of each thread around your forefingers. Bend over so the coat hanger can swing freely and bump it against a wall or chair. What do you hear?
2. Try it again, but this time with your forefingers in your ears!
3. Try bumping it against different objects. Bend the coat hanger into various shapes. Does this make any difference to the sound you hear?
 
   When you bump the coat hanger, it shakes or vibrates, making a noise. The noise is louder when your fingers are in your ears because the vibrations travel better through the tight cotton threads than through the air
 
   Try the experiment again with a plastic coat hanger -- which one conducts the sound better? Next time your child is in the bath, have them put one ear under the water while tapping a spoon on the side of the bath. Notice how much better the tapping noise travels through the water.