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How to stand on eggs! science experiment : Fizzics Education

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How to stand on eggs!

How to stand on eggs!

Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments:

You will need:

  • Two cartons of eggs
  • One wooden board, or a large book
  • Measuring weights
  • Three chairs
  • Be aware of egg vapour allergies in your class
Written by Fizzics Education.
Reviewed by Ben Newsome CF.

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Stand on eggs science experiment - materials needed
1 Stand on eggs science experiment - materials needed

Place three chairs around the two open cartons of eggs.

2 Stand on eggs science experiment - ready to go

Sit on the middle chair and place your hands on the other two chairs.

3 Stand on eggs science experiment - pushing off the desks

Put one foot on each carton of eggs.

4 Stand on eggs science experiment - standing on eggs

Supporting your weight with the two chairs, carefully raise yourself upright so that you slowly put more weight on the eggs until you are completely standing on them without the support of the chairs!

5 A man pointing at a bicycle wheel spinning horizontally on a desk (balancing by itself)

Get the Unit of Work on Forces here!

  • Push, pull
  • Friction & spin!

From inertia to centripetal force, this unit covers many concepts about Newton’s Laws!

Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more

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6 two people conducting a Fizzics Education fireball experiment
7 Teacher showing how to do an experiment outside to a group of kids.

Online courses for teachers & parents

– Help students learn how science really works

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Why Does This Happen

Standing on Eggs

Eggshells are surprisingly strong if they are compressed. The curved shape of the eggshell allows the force of your weight to be spread horizontally and vertically throughout the entire shell, rather than focusing the pressure on a single point where it would crack.

You can think of an eggshell as being like a 360-degree arched bridge. Engineers have known about the strength of arches for thousands of years. Arches are very stable because they effectively channel weight into the ground or the supporting structure. Some structures built by the ancient Romans have survived thousands of years due to arches built into their design, proving just how much weight this shape can support!

Road safety application

The curved surfaces of a bike helmet help to distribute forces around the skull rather than directly onto one spot during a bike crash. However, it’s not just the shape that protects you; it’s also the ability of the foam within the helmet to crumple and absorb the impact energy experienced when colliding with the ground.

Curved surfaces also distribute forces in cars. Modern cars are designed with crumple zones that work in a similar way to bike helmets. These zones are engineered to deform during a crash, soaking up the massive impact forces so that the energy doesn’t reach the people inside the vehicle.

Variables to test

Find out more on variables here.

  • Efficiency
    Is there a way to arrange the eggs so that you can use fewer of them and they still survive the weight?
  • Alternative Materials
    Can this be done with balloons? What about water balloons? Does the internal pressure of the balloon change the “arch” strength?
  • Orientation
    Does it matter if the eggs are on their side or upside-down? Does the “pointy” end of the egg provide more or less stability than the wider end?

Going further

Try testing exactly how strong eggshells are with this activity! By using just the shells, you can see how the dome shape alone can support stacks of heavy books.


Painted eggshells holding up biology books on a table


A man with a glove above a liquid nitrogen vapour cloud

âś… Reviewed: April 5, 2026


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Reviewer

This resource was last reviewed for scientific accuracy on April 5, 2026.

Ben Newsome CF is the recipient of the 2023 UTS Chancellor’s Award for Excellence and a Churchill Fellow. He is a global leader in science communication and the founder of Fizzics Education.

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