Shark Sense Simulator | Learn How Sharks Detect Prey
Shark Sense Simulator | Learn How Sharks Detect Prey
Can you feel electricity like a shark?
Arthur says: “I don’t just see or smell prey, I feel them with my snout! Sharks have special jelly-filled pores called ampullae of Lorenzini that detect electric signals. Let’s build a land-safe version to simulate this sixth sense!”
Quick safety note: A grown-up should handle the 9V battery connections. Keep wires away from mouths and tiny hands.
🔧 What You’ll Need:
- Balloon or small rubber sheet (simulates shark skin)
- Foil strips or copper tape (to create electric field)
- 9V battery
- LED or small buzzer
- Resistor (100–470 ohm range)
- Alligator clips or wires
- Piece of cardboard or foam board for mounting
🧪 Steps:
- Stretch your “shark skin” (balloon or rubber) over the cardboard base.
- Attach two foil strips about 1 inch apart. These are your artificial ampullae.
- Use wires or clips to connect the foil strips to the LED circuit. One goes to the positive end of the battery through a resistor; the other to the LED or buzzer.
- Test your circuit. When something conductive (like your finger or a metal spoon) nears the foil, the field changes and the LED may blink or the buzzer beep.
- Try detecting different objects (wet vs. dry, metal vs. plastic) and record which trigger the reaction.
📘 What You’ll Learn:
Sharks detect electricity from muscle movement, even heartbeats. By mimicking this sensitivity using electric fields and detectors, we can explore electroreception and how sharks “see” without eyes.
Pocket Fact: Some sharks can detect electric fields as weak as one-billionth of a volt per centimeter, just a crab’s heartbeat hiding under the sand.