It's About Time C

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Primate
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by Primate »

Chikuwa wrote:Hey! I'm new to this event, and I'm still a little confused on the test.

How do you recommend my partner and I to do the test- Should we split it in half and work on it separately? If so, how do we share the binder in an effective manner? (we had trouble on this during regionals.)

Also, how long are most people's binders? What method of organization did you find best?

If anyone has done this event more than once- do you often see random trivia based on time in tests? On our regional test, there was a question on the incubation period of H1N1, and we had no idea. If so, how do you suggest to prepare for these sorts of things?

Thanks! :) Any information at all would be great.
What I've found effective is to take all the information and categorize and paginate it. Then, I auto-generate a table of contents, and I'm all set. Thank goodness for Microsoft Word. You could try indexing it, too, but that might be more time-consuming than it's worth. I get all my information to comfortably fit in a 1.5" binder, at least for regionals. I've seen some people with massive binders, though.

Splitting the test in half and working on it separately is a great strategy. My partners and I have usually been able to share the binder pretty easily; if you need it for a question and its in use, just skip to a question you don't need it for until your partner finishes. If it's organized well, you won't need to use it for long. If you're really worried, I guess you could make two copies of everything, staple them into two packets, and then remove them from the binder once competition begins.

And yes, random trivia shows up all the time. In fact, I think we had the same question. As far as I know, the only way to prepare for it is to find all the random bits of time-related knowledge you can.
Bogoradwee wrote:
Arabesque wrote:During competitions, are the time trials generally started using three beeps or one? At Mentor this year it was only one, but all of the other competitions we've been to have been three.
They have to use three. it's part of the rules, isn't it? to use the official SO time trials? they're all available on the official site....
I don't think it's required that you use the official files--you just have to use a computer capable of timing things extremely precisely.

Finally, has anyone managed to get a pendulum with a stiff rod to oscillate for the full five minutes. Even with ball-bearings and a 7lb weight, I can only get it to last for about a minute.
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by texan92 »

Even with ball-bearings and a 7lb weight
7 lbs weight? That's a lot. How heavy is your rod? An ideal pendulum has a massless rod, so the weight of the rod might have something to do with it. Is you base secure? If you structure sways or moves when the pendulum swings, that could dampen your period over time. However, I don't think these factors have enough of an effect to cut the time of your pendulum to one minute.
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by walkingstyx »

My school uses a stiff rod and we have never had any problem going the full five minutes. You could try dropping it from a greater angle to start with, or using a longer rod. There are lots and lots of factors that go into damping, but generally, if you start off with a larger amplitude, assuming you don't have truly terrible bearings, you should be able to go the whole time.
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Nationals 2009- Picture This: 4, It's About Time: 8, Astronomy: 9
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by texan92 »

or using a longer rod
I was wondering, if you use a longer rod, wouldn't you have problems with the accuracy of the pendulum? If you increase the rod length, you do gain some accuracy because there is less drag and the pendulum is moving slower. However, how would subdivide your periods? If you have a period of say 1 sec, every half period is 0.5 sec, 1/4 the period is 0.25 sec, etc. With a longer period (say 2 sec), every half period is 1 sec, 1/4 the period is 0.5 sec, etc. With successively longer periods, every subdivision of the pendulum period becomes less and less precise and the human eye has a limit in discerning how precise 1/4 of the pendulum movement is.
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by Primate »

Yeah, it must be a problem with the bearings. I just reengineered an old trajectory, so whatever junk was used in that got transferred over to this. It's not all that long, I suppose, but I tried dropping it from 90 degrees, just for the heck of it, and it still only lasted about a minute thirty. The rod is a pretty light piece of wood, probably the lightest thing possible for the same stiffness/thickness.
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by rockhound »

texan92 wrote:
or using a longer rod
I was wondering, if you use a longer rod, wouldn't you have problems with the accuracy of the pendulum? If you increase the rod length, you do gain some accuracy because there is less drag and the pendulum is moving slower. However, how would subdivide your periods? If you have a period of say 1 sec, every half period is 0.5 sec, 1/4 the period is 0.25 sec, etc. With a longer period (say 2 sec), every half period is 1 sec, 1/4 the period is 0.5 sec, etc. With successively longer periods, every subdivision of the pendulum period becomes less and less precise and the human eye has a limit in discerning how precise 1/4 of the pendulum movement is.
Be careful with your "etc", the pattern will not continue. Whiile it might not matter, based on the precision of your device, but the halving patters stops at 1/4 of a period.
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by walkingstyx »

You have a good point, but you make some bad assumptions. The longest period you can have anyway is only 1.8 seconds, due to the size limit on the clock. Theoretically you could expand it after the event started, but I don't see why you would do this with a pendulum. You can tell 1/4 periods without any estimation at all, so you are perfect down to .4 seconds. As the size of your pendulum increases, estimation becomes easier, so you can tell it down to .1 seconds pretty easily with a little practice. As long as you practice often, even a 80 cm pendulum can be estimated accurately to 1/10 of a second. Considering that you have to calibrate it and practice for competitions, you should more than enough practice to sight .1 seconds.
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Nationals 2009- Picture This: 4, It's About Time: 8, Astronomy: 9
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by nnayar12 »

Hi everyone,]
I'm new to this event, and I was wondering specifically what types of questions you have encountered in the written test of It's About Time. I've been reading a bunch of books, but it seems there is just so much to cover on the broad subject of time! Some things I have been looking into are time-related physics, calendar conversions, and history of time-keeping. Any other important things we should cover?

Also, does anyone know of any good ways to find easy calculations to convert between calendars. I'm finding it particularly challenging to convert between solar and lunar calendars because they are just so unrelated and unpredictable, yet they were on the regional exam so apparently I need to know how to do them.

Finally, how advanced does the physics on the exam get? From your own experiences, are there many questions on relativity including things like Minkowski diagrams and Lorentz transformations? And did you need to know them just conceptually or mathematically too?

Any input would be appreciated.
Thanks!!!
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by Bogoradwee »

nnayar12 wrote:Hi everyone,]
I'm new to this event, and I was wondering specifically what types of questions you have encountered in the written test of It's About Time. I've been reading a bunch of books, but it seems there is just so much to cover on the broad subject of time! Some things I have been looking into are time-related physics, calendar conversions, and history of time-keeping. Any other important things we should cover?

Also, does anyone know of any good ways to find easy calculations to convert between calendars. I'm finding it particularly challenging to convert between solar and lunar calendars because they are just so unrelated and unpredictable, yet they were on the regional exam so apparently I need to know how to do them.

Finally, how advanced does the physics on the exam get? From your own experiences, are there many questions on relativity including things like Minkowski diagrams and Lorentz transformations? And did you need to know them just conceptually or mathematically too?

Any input would be appreciated.
Thanks!!!
look at the official It's About Time page on Soinc.org. that site's there for a reason. use it. they have really awesome links.
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Re: It's About Time C

Post by Arabesque »

Just as an update, the same guy who ran Time at the Mentor invitational, also ran it at our regional yesterday and he switched from one beep to start and one to end to three beeps to start and three beeps to signal the end. Is that typical?
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