Photo of people riding an upside-down rollercoaster

 SeaWorld Orlando

STANDARDS

NGSS:

Practice: Carrying out investigations

PS2.B: Types of interactions

Crosscutting Concept: Cause and effect

CCSS:

WRITING: Distinguish among facts, reasoned judgement based on research findings, and speculation.

Crazy Coasters!

What’s the secret behind a roller coaster’s twists and thrills? It all comes down to the simple machines they’re made of.

SIX FLAGS GREAT ADVENTURE, JACKSON, NJ

JERSEY DEVIL

SIX FLAGS GREAT ADVENTURE, Jackson Township, New Jersey

Buckle up! The Jersey Devil Coaster is the world’s tallest, fastest, and longest single-rail coaster. That means its cars run on only one rail instead of the usual two. The ride begins when the car slowly climbs an eye-popping 13 stories with the help of a pulley—a rope or cable looped over a series of wheels. Then gravity takes over. Its downward pull sends riders plummeting down the giant hill and along the 3,000-foot track at nearly 60 miles per hour. Jersey Devil’s tight turns and three flips “make the coaster more exciting and intense,” says Marc Johnson, an engineer at Rocky Mountain Construction, which created the ride.

SIX FLAGS OVER TEXAS

MAKING WAVES: Riders speed down the track at 63 miles per hour to make a huge splash!

AQUAMAN: POWER WAVE

SIX FLAGS OVER TEXAS, Arlington, Texas

Better bring a towel for this ride! The Aquaman: Power Wave will launch riders backward and forward between the coaster’s twin towers. Each tower is 150 feet tall—that's as tall as five flagpoles stacked on top of each other. Then the ride ends with a massive splashdown!

Most coasters use an inclined plane to get their power: They start at the top of a high point and let gravity do the rest of the work. “Roller coasters just move by themselves—that’s something most people don’t realize,” says Anne-Marie Pendrill, a physicist at Lund University in Lund, Sweden, who specializes in roller coasters. But the Aquaman coaster gets an extra boost from magnet-powered motors that send it shooting along even faster.

SEAWORLD ORLANDO

BIG DROP: Riders fall 110 feet—that's as tall as an 11-story building.

PIPELINE: THE SURF COASTER

SEAWORLD ORLANDO, Orlando, Florida

You don’t need to know how to surf to ride this wave! This surf-themed coaster includes a “wave curl.” This feature sends riders upside-down and is meant to mimic the feeling of riding a monster ocean wave. Special harnesses hold riders in a standing position, just like surfers. That makes the experience even more realistic.

How do roller coasters go upside down without flying off the track? That’s due to a force called inertia that keeps objects moving along their current path. But most coasters, including Pipeline, have a backup just in case: “You have wheels on the side of the track, wheels on top, and wheels below,” explains Pendrill. This safety system ensures the coaster's car won’t leave the track. That way, there are no gnarly wipeouts!

Google Quiz

Click the Google Quiz button below to share an interactive version of the "Quick Quiz" with your class. Click Download PDF for the non-interactive skills sheet.

Download PDF
Photo of people riding an upside-down rollercoaster
Ian Dagnall / Alamy Stock Photo
inertia

the tendency of motionless objects to stay still or moving objects to keep moving in the same direction and at the same speed, unless outside forces are applied to them 

Inertia is responsible for keeping roller coaster cars on a track when they travel along a loop.

Photo of people riding a rollercoaster
Gary Dobner / Alamy Stock Photo
gravity

a force that pulls an object toward another object

Gravity sends roller coaster cars flying down hills.  

Photo of people riding a rollercoaster
David Kleyn / Alamy Stock Photo
inclined plane

a simple machine that is a slanted surface, like a ramp, that makes it easier to move objects up and down 

Roller coaster cars speed down inclined planes. 

Photo of a tall rollercoaster at sunset
John Van Decker / Alamy Stock Photo
pulley

a simple machine that is made of a grooved wheel and cable

Some rides use pulleys to lift up roller coaster cars.

David Kleyn / Alamy Stock Photo
simple machines

basic devices that make it easier to do physical work

Simple machines allow roller coasters to work.

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