Explaining the speed of light to
school children By MUNGAI KIHANYA
The Sunday Nation
Nairobi,
22 March 2015
Words cannot express the feeling you get when you explain something new
to a child and he or she looks back at you with eyes full amazement at
the discovery of the new knowledge. That’s exactly what I felt early
this week when I gave a talk to standard eight pupils at the
Nairobi Primary School. The topic was “The Speed
of Light”.
It sounds like a dead topic! After all, what more can one say about the
speed of something other than simply state its value? Well, there is
more than meets the eye…
We started off by agreeing that speed is the distance travelled divided
by the time taken. Surprisingly, this simple idea confuses a lot of
people. Many are the times that I have had to explain that a small car
doing 60km/h travels at the same speed as a big bus also doing 60km/h!
Any way; I started my talk by asking a question: if a car took 2 minutes
to travel one kilometre, what would its speed be? The answer is simple:
one kilometre divided by 2 minutes, equals 0.5km/min.
That answer left some of the pupils a little confused because they are
not accustomed to such units. So, we extended the calculation by asking
this: how many kilometres would this car cover in one hour if it
maintained that speed?
There are 60 minutes in one hour and the car covers 0.5km per minute;
so, in one hour it will travel 60 x 0.5 = 30km. In other words, its
speed can also be stated as 30km/h.
Next, we asked: what if the car was doing 60km/h, how long would it take
to travel one kilometre? Of course, now the speed has doubled so the
time taken halves; that is, it will take one minute.
What if the speed doubled again to 120km/h, how long would it take to
travel 1km? The answer is half a minute, or 30 seconds. We continued
increasing the speed in steps up to 1,200km/h – of course no car can
move that fast so, we had migrated to aeroplanes by that point. At
1,200km/h, an aeroplane would take just 3s to cover one kilometre!
By now, the logic was clear: the faster you travel the shorter the time
you take to cover a given distance. Then I posed an interesting
question: is it possible to travel so fast that the time taken is zero?
You should have seen their faces! Obviously, the answer is no. No matter
how fast you travel, you will take some time to cover the distance.
At that point, I then explained the stroke of genius that was suggested
by Albert Einstein. That is, there is a minimum time period that must
elapse when travelling from one point to another, no matter how fast you
travel. Put in another way, there is a maximum speed that cannot be
exceeded no matter how hard you try. This maximum speed is the speed of
light and it is 1,079,252,848.8km/h exactly.
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