Education Through Entertainment

How to Make a Ping Pong Ball Levitate | Fun Science Experiment

Posted on Wed, Aug 17, 2016

Perform the impossible when you make an ordinary ping pong ball float in mid-air!  Learn how to do this super cool science feat in just a few minutes.

Watch this video and follow the step-by-step instructions to get started!


Check out this short video to learn how to make a ping pong ball float:


Step 1: What You'll Need

You only need two things to perform this science experiment.

  • Ping pong ball

  • Drinking straw (preferably a bendy straw)

All you need is a ping pong ball and a bendy straw

Step 2: Bend the Straw

For the best results, use a bendy straw instead of a regular straight straw.  Bend the neck 90 degrees so it points straight up.
Bend the bendy straw so it points straight up

Step 3: Position the Ball

Get into position!  While holding the straw with one hand, hold the ping pong ball over the end.

Position the Ping Pong Ball over the Straw

Got a feel for it?  Good!  Now, get ready to make it float.

Step 4: Levitation!

Take a deep breath!  You're going to need all the "lung power" you can muster to keep your ping pong ball airborne.

Blow a constant breath of air into the straw under the ping pong ball.  If the air pressure is strong enough, it will lift the ball off the tip of the straw!

Check it out!  A floating ping pong ball!

You may need to try again, blowing even harder next time!  Make sure you take breaks between attempts - you don't want to get light-headed!  The ball should be able to float at least one inch off the straw.

Learn how to levitate a ping pong ball

How Does it Work?

This amazing trick works because of air pressure.  The air coming from the straw is moving faster than the air around it, and this means that it also has a lower air pressure than the air around it.  So the ball is kept within the column of lower air pressure because of the higher-pressure air surrounding it.


Pretty cool, huh?  Try doing this trick with a friend, brother, or sister and see if you can play "keep it up", passing the ping pong ball between yourselves.

Check back again for even more do-it-yourself science experiments from Mobile Ed's Building Up STEAM series!  

If you like DIY experiments like these, then you should take a look at the kinds of spectacular demonstrations we bring to schools with our live school assembly presentations!  Take a look at STEAM Museum, Kidz Science Safari, Forces and Motion and Air: The Invisible Wonder, each full of awesome interactive demonstrations that kids love.

See Our Programs


 

If you enjoyed making your Water Cycle in a Bag, try our other Building Up STEAM activities and experiments!

Colors and Chemicals Science Project

Colors and Chemicals

If you have curious little ones running around the house, or are looking for a fun activity for your lower elementary kids, this is a great way to spend an afternoon they'll ask to do again and again.  It's a simple "baking soda and vinegar" experiment, but with an artistic twist!

Homemade Hovercraft DIY project

Homemade Hovercraft

With just a few common items, in under a half-hour you could have a desktop-sized hovercraft zipping all over the place! It's great for a science project, a classroom demonstration, or a rainy day.

Pencil Poke Science Trick

Pencil Poke Trick

Learn how you can run a sharpened pencil all the way through a plastic bag filled with water without spilling a drop.  All you need are some sharpened pencils, a plastic bag filled with water, and our secret technique!

Make a Water Density Rainbow

Water Density Rainbow

Visually learn about water density with this easy-to-do experiment with beautiful results.  By "stacking" sugar water of varying densities in a test tube you can create a stunning display of science in action.

Do It Yourself Ice Cream -  How to make your own ice cream at home

DIY Ice Cream

With just a few ingredients and our technique, you'll be scooping up your own frosty treats in no time.  Science never tasted so good!

How to make a water cycle in a bag

Water Cycle in a Bag

Our most popular experiment!  Do your kids ask you why it rains?  Or maybe how clouds happen?  Spend an afternoon teaching them with this easy to do science experiment where you and your kids will make a water cycle in a bag!

About Mobile Ed Productions:

Mobile Ed Productions, Inc. has been in business since 1979, producing educational, entertaining school assemblies and hands-on workshops.  Based out of Michigan, the company creates, designs, markets and distributes innovative ways to make learning fun in the form of live presentations and interactive exhibits.

Learn more

Topics: science fair projects, science enrichment, Teaching Science, Hands On Science, making science exciting, DIY, Building Up STEAM, science experiments, air pressure, Air: The Invisible Wonder