Key Stage4 – Jet
Suck-squeeze-bang-blow
Notes for teachers
At a glance
In this activity, students learn how the jet engine works. Through so doing they explore – or revise – ideas about forces, gases, work, and efficiency.
Students take the role of airline workers, planning a presentation to help petrified passengers become fearless flyers. They plan how to explain the functions of the four main components of a jet engine, and consider how to incorporate reassuring messages about its safety.
This activity is best tackled once students have studied forces, energy and gases, perhaps as a revision activity, showing how different areas of physics link together. It is also suitable as a stretch and challenge activity for higher attaining students at any stage of their physics course.
Learning Outcome
- Students consider the forces acting on an aeroplane
- Students consider the behaviour of gases in jet engines
- Students calculate the efficiency of a jet engine
- Students explain how scientists and engineers make jet engines safe
Each group of four students will need
- 1 or 2 copies of the pupil worksheet
- 1 copy of the peer assessment sheet
- 1 copy each of briefing sheets 1, 2, 3 and 4
- Access to poster-making equipment, or PowerPoint
- Access to the Internet (optional)
- Access to:
- A balloon
- An electric or battery-powered fan
- A plastic syringe (without a needle)
- A candle and box of matches
- A child’s small seaside windmill (see photo on briefing sheet 4)
Possible Lesson Activities
- Starter activity
- Show the animation ‘Jet plight’ to the class.
- Repeat the viewing, focusing on the section from 0:44 to 1:22, which describes and explains the functions and features of the four stages of a jet engine.
- Main activity
- Divide students in groups of four, and give each group one or two copies of the pupil worksheet.
- Students tackle the three parts of task 1. These cover the basic forces involved in aeroplane flight.
- Student groups allocate tasks to group members, as described in task 2. Briefing sheets 2 and 3 are suited to those with well-developed mathematical skills. Briefing sheets 1 and 4 are a little less intellectually demanding.
- Within their groups, individuals read one briefing sheet. As well as information to read, there are calculations to test understanding, and a simple practical activity to illustrate the theory.
- Still in their groups, students take turns to teach each other what they have learnt. It is best to tackle this part of the task in this order: fan, compressor, combustor, turbine. The four stages of a jet engine are known colloquially as suck-squeeze-bang-blow.
- Group members work together to plan their presentation for nervous flyers. It is suggested that they give a brief outline of the operation of a jet engine, and then focus on the safety and testing of each component, as described on the briefing sheets.
- Plenary
- Students present their presentations to another group.
- Groups use the peer assessment sheet to guide them in assessing each others’ work.
- Allow time for groups to study the assessment sheet for their own work.
- If you wish, show the animation again.
Further suggestions
Students could explore the relevant sections of the Rolls Royce web site Exploring a jet engine to help them find out more about their components. The web site includes a simulated journey through a jet engine, as well as a light-hearted engineering suitability test:
Answer diagram for Task 1
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