The spirit of the horse is recognized to be the Chinese people's ethos – making unremitting efforts to improve themselves. It is energetic, bright, warm-hearted, intelligent and able. Ancient people liked to designate an able person as 'Qianli Ma', a horse that covers a thousand li a day (one li equals 500 meters).
Science can purify religion from error and superstition. Religion can purify science from idolatry and false absolutes. Pope John Paul II
Friday, December 27
HAPPY NEW YEAR 2014
The spirit of the horse is recognized to be the Chinese people's ethos – making unremitting efforts to improve themselves. It is energetic, bright, warm-hearted, intelligent and able. Ancient people liked to designate an able person as 'Qianli Ma', a horse that covers a thousand li a day (one li equals 500 meters).
Friday, December 13
ELEMENTS, COMPOUNDS, & MIXTURES - QUIZZES
- There are 2 QUIZZES
- QUIZ #1 - Click on Highlighted Link (write score on the notebook paper)
- QUIZ #2
- Number a piece of notebook paper 1 - 10,
- Title - ELEMENT, COMPOUND, MIXTURE - QUIZ.
- You can write just the answers. Turn into drawer.
- You can use only notes in your notebook.
- DUE: 12/16
QUIZ #1 (click highlighted link)
QUIZ #2 - (Notebook paper)
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compounds
elements
mixtures
both elements and compounds
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Labels:
CHEMISTRY,
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
Wednesday, December 11
P.S. - GASES #8
Looking for a Gas
Gases can fill a container of any size or shape. It doesn't even matter how big the container is. The molecules still spread out to fill the whole space equally. That is one of their physical characteristics. Think about a balloon. No matter what shape you make the balloon, it will be evenly filled with the gas molecules. The molecules are spread equally throughout the entire balloon. Liquids can only fill the bottom of the container, while gases can fill it entirely. The shape of liquids is really dependent on the force of gravity, while gases are light enough to have a little more freedom to move.
Compressing Gases
Gases hold huge amounts of energy, and their molecules are spread out as much as possible. With very little pressure, when compared to liquids and solids, those molecules can be compressed. It happens all of the time. Combinations of pressure and decreasing temperature force gases into tubes that we use every day. You might see compressed air in a spray bottle or feel the carbon dioxide rush out of a can of soda. Those are both examples of gas forced into a smaller space than it would want, and the gas escapes the first chance it gets. The gas molecules move from an area of high pressure to one of low pressure.
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
P.S. - ENERGY TRANSFER #7
Evaporation of Liquids
You might be wondering how that can happen when the temperature is low. It turns out that all liquids can evaporate at room temperature and normal air pressure. Evaporation happens when atoms or molecules escape from the liquid and turn into a vapor. Not all of the molecules in a liquid have the same energy. When you have a puddle of water (H2O) on a windy day, the wind can cause an increased rate of evaporation even when it is cold out.
Energy Transfer
The energy you can measure with a thermometer is really the average energy of all the molecules in the system. There are always a few molecules with a lot of energy and some with barely any energy at all. There is a variety, because the molecules in a liquid can move around. The molecules can bump into each other, and when they hit... Blam! A little bit of energy moves from one molecule to another. Since that energy is transferred, one molecule will have a little bit more and the other will have a little bit less. With trillions of molecules bouncing around, sometimes individual molecules gain enough energy to break free. They build up enough power to become a gas once they reach a specific energy level. In a word, when the molecule leaves, it has evaporated.
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
Tuesday, December 10
P.S. - LIQUID BASICS #6
Liquid Basics
One characteristic of a liquid is that it will fill up the shape of a container. If you pour some water (H2O) in a cup, it will fill up the bottom of the cup first and then fill the rest. The water will also take the shape of the cup. The top part of a liquid will usually have a flat surface. That flat surface is the result of gravity pulling on the molecules. Putting an ice cube (solid) into a cup will leave you with a cube in the middle of the cup because it is a solid. The shape of the solid cube won't change until the ice becomes a liquid.
Molecules Sticking Together
A special force keeps liquids together. Those intermolecular forces make sure that the molecules of the liquid stick to each other. Solids are stuck together and you have to force them apart. Gases bounce everywhere and they try to spread themselves out. Liquids actually want to stick together. There will always be the occasional evaporation, where extra energy gets a molecule excited and the molecule leaves the system. Overall, liquids have cohesive (sticky) forces at work to hold the molecules together.
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
PHASES OF MATTER
Recall: Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy
(energy of motion) of all the molecules or atoms in a material. All
atoms are in motion to a lesser or greater extent, whether that be
atomic vibrations in a rigid solid, or straight line motions in a gas.
In the gaseous state, molecules have so much kinetic energy
that they fly off in all directions but repeatedly collide and bounce
off of other molecules.
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--- boiling temperature - condensation temperature ---
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In the liquid state, atoms or molecules have sufficient kinetic
energy to overcome the chemical bonds that held them in their crystal
lattice and move independently, yet they don't have enough energy to
separate completely from other atoms.
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--- melting temperature - crystallization temperature ---
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In the solid state, chemical bonds are stronger than the kinetic
energy of the atoms. The atoms are locked into their crystal lattice
positions.
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REVIEW States or PhasesMatter usually exists in one of three states or phases: solid, liquid, or gas. The chair you are sitting on is a solid, the water you drink is liquid, and the air you breathe is a gas. Changing State The atoms and molecules don't change, but the way they move about does. Water, for example, is always made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. However, it can take the state of liquid, solid (ice), and gas (steam). Matter changes state when more energy gets added to it. Energy is often added in the form of heat or pressure. Water Solid water is called ice. This is water with the lowest energy and temperature. When solid, the molecules in water are held tightly together and don't move easily. Liquid water is just called water. As ice heats up it will change phases to liquid water. Liquid molecules are looser and can move about easily. Gas water is called steam or vapor. When water boils it will turn to vapor. These molecules are hotter, looser, and moving faster than the liquid molecules. They are more spread apart and can be compressed or squished. The three states of Water More States There are actually two more states or phases that matter can take, but we don't see them much in our everyday life. One is called plasma. Plasma occurs at very high temperatures and can be found in stars and lightning bolts. Plasma is like gas, but the molecules have lost some electrons and become ions. Another state has the fancy name Bose-Einstein condensates. This state can occur at super low temperatures. Fun Facts about Solids, Liquids, Gases
STATES OF MATTER |
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
P.S. - SOLID BASICS #5
Solid Basics
Granite is a mixture you might find when you are hiking around a park. Granite is made up of little pieces of quartz, mica, and other particles. Because all of the little pieces are spread through the rock in an uneven way, scientists call it a heterogeneous mixture. This is important because there are different concentrations of specific particles in different parts of the rock. In one place there might be a lot of quartz and very little feldspar, but only a few inches away those amounts might flip.
Crystals
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
P.S. - CHEMICAL VS. PHYSICAL CHANGES #4
Chemical vs. Physical Changes
When you step on a can and crush it, you have forced a physical change. The shape of the object has changed. It wasn't a change in the state of matter, because the energy in the can did not change. When you melt an ice cube (H2O), you have also forced a physical phase change by adding energy. That example caused a change in the state of matter. You can cause physical changes with forces like motion, temperature, and pressure.
Looking at Molecules
Some chemical changes are extremely small. They happen over a series of steps. The result might have the same number of atoms, but it will have a different structure or combination of atoms. The sugars glucose, galactose, and fructose all have six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms, and six oxygen atoms (C6H12O6). Even though they are made of the same atoms, they have very different shapes and are called structural isomers. Those isomers have atoms bonded in different orders. Also, each of the sugars goes through different chemical reactions because of the differences in their molecular structure. Scientists say that the arrangement of atoms allows for a high degree of specificity, especially in the molecules you find in living
things.
A physical property is an aspect of matter that can be observed or measured without changing it.
- Examples of physical properties include color, molecular weight and volume.
A chemical property may only be observed by changing the chemical identity of a substance. This property measures the potential for undergoing a chemical change.
- Examples of chemical properties include reactivity, flammability and oxidation states.
Physical changes involve states of matter and energy.
- No new substance is created during a physical change, although the matter takes a different form.
- The size, shape, and color of matter may change.
- Also, physical changes occur when substances are mixed, but don't chemically react. One way to identify a physical change is that such a changes may be reversible, especially phase changes. For example, if you freeze an ice cube, you can melt it into water again.
This is a list of 10 examples of physical changes.
- crushing a can
- melting an ice cube
- boiling water
- mixing sand and water
- breaking a glass
- dissolving sugar and water
- shredding paper
- chopping wood
- mixing red and green marbles
- sublimating dry ice
Chemical changes involve chemical reactions and the creation of new products. Typically, a chemical change is irreversible.
This is a list of 10 examples of chemical changes.
- rusting of iron
- combustion (burning) of wood
- metabolism of food in the body
- mixing an acid and a base, such as hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH)
- cooking an egg
- digesting sugar with the amylase in saliva
- mixing baking soda and vinegar to produce carbon dioxide gas
- baking a cake
- electroplating a metal
- using a chemical battery
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
Monday, December 9
P.S. - CHANGING STATES OF MATTER #3
Changing States of Matter
Phase changes happen when certain points are reached. Sometimes a liquid wants to become a solid. Scientists use something called a freezing point to measure the temperature at which a liquid turns into a solid. There are physical effects that can change the freezing point. Pressure is one of those effects. When the pressure surrounding a substance goes up, the freezing point and other special points also go up. That means it's easier to keep things solid at higher pressures. Just remember that there are some exceptions. Water (H2O) is special on many levels. It has more space between its molecules when it is frozen. There's a whole expanding effect when the molecules organize into a solid state. Generally, when temperatures get colder, solids shrink in size. They become more dense.
CHEMISTRY TERM | PHASE CHANGE |
Fusion (melting) Freezing Vaporization (boiling) Condensation Sublimation Deposition | Solid to Liquid Liquid to Solid Liquid to Gas Gas to Liquid Solid to Gas Gas to Solid |
Solid to Liquid and Back to Solid
Solid to Gas and Back to Solid
You are used to solids melting and becoming liquids. Some of you may have also seen a solid become a gas. It's a process called sublimation. The easiest example of sublimation might be dry ice. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide (CO2). Amazingly, when you leave dry ice out, it just turns into a gas. Have you ever heard of liquid carbon dioxide? It can be made, but not in normal situations. Can you go from a gas to a solid? Sure. It's called deposition when a gas becomes a solid without going through the liquid state of matter. Those of you who live near the equator may not have seen it, but closer to the poles we see frost on winter mornings. Those little frost crystals on plants build up when water vapor becomes a solid.Liquid to Gas and Back to Liquid
When you are a liquid and want to become a gas, you need to find a lot of energy. Once you can start to pump that energy into your molecules, they will start to vibrate. If they vibrate enough, they can escape the limitations of the liquid environment and become a gas. When you reach your boiling point, the molecules in your system have enough energy to become a gas.The reverse is true if you are a gas. You need to lose some energy from your very excited gas atoms. The easy answer is to lower the surrounding temperature. When the temperature drops, energy will be transferred out of your gas atoms into the colder environment. When you reach the temperature of the condensation point, you become a liquid. If you were steam over a boiling pot of water and you hit a wall, the wall would be so cool that you would quickly become a liquid. The wall absorbed some of your extra energy.
Gas to Plasma and Back to Gas
Plasma can be made from a gas if a lot of energy is pushed into the gas. In the case of neon, it is electrical energy that pulls the electrons off. When it comes time to become a gas again, just flip the neon light switch off. Without the electricity to energize the atoms, the neon plasma returns to its gaseous state. We have a special world here on Earth. We have an environment where you don't find a lot of everyday plasma. Once you leave the planet and travel through the Universe, you will find plasma everywhere. It's in stars and all of the space in between.
MELTING & BOILING POINTS - ACTIVITY
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
P.S. - STATES OF MATTER #2
States of Matter
There are five main states of matter. Solids, liquids, gases, plasmas, and Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC) are all different states of matter. Each of these states is also known as a phase. Elements and compounds can move from one phase to another when specific physical conditions are present. One example is temperature. When the temperature of a system goes up, the matter in the system becomes more excited and active. Scientists say that it moves to a higher energy state. Generally, as the temperature rises, matter moves to a more active state.Think about it this way. Remember that glass of water (H2O) we talked about? When the temperature of the water goes up, the molecules get more excited and bounce a lot more. If you give a liquid water molecule enough energy, it escapes the liquid phase and becomes a gas. Have you ever noticed that you can smell a turkey dinner after it starts to heat up? As the energy of the molecules inside the turkey heat up, they escape as a gas. You are able to smell those volatile gas molecules.
A "phase" describes a physical state of matter. The key word to notice is physical. Things only move from one phase to another by physical means. If energy is added (like increasing the temperature) or if energy is taken away (like freezing something), you have created a physical change.
A compound or element can move from one phase to another, but still be the same substance. You can see water vapor, in the form of steam, over a boiling pot of water. That vapor (or gas) can condense and become a drop of water. If you put that drop in the freezer, it would become a solid piece of ice. No matter what phase it was in, it was always water. It always had the same chemical properties. On the other hand, a chemical change would change the way the water acted, eventually making it not water, but something completely different. If you added a carbon (C) atom to a water molecule, you would have formaldehyde (H2CO), and that is nothing like water.
STATES OF MATTER
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
P.S. - INTRO - MATTER #1
Matter is the Stuff Around You
Five States of Matter
You should know about solids, liquids, gases, plasmas, and one state called the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). Scientists have always known about solids, liquids, and gases. Plasma was a new idea when it was noticed by William Crookes in 1879. The scientists who worked with the Bose-Einstein condensate received a Nobel Prize for their work in 1995. But what makes a state of matter? It's about the physical state of the molecules and atoms. Think about solids. They are often hard and brittle. Liquids are all fluidy at room temperature. Gases are there, but you usually smell them before you can see them. You don't see them because their molecules are really far apart. The BEC is all about molecules that are really close to each other (even closer than atoms in a solid).Changing States of Matter
So you're asking, "What is a chemical change?" Let's start with a glass of pure water. If the formula of water were to change, that would be a chemical change. If you could just add a second oxygen atom, you would have hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The molecules in your glass would not be water anymore. A chemical change happens when the atoms in a molecule are moved around or when atoms are added or taken away. Chemical changes happen when bonds between atoms are created or destroyed. Changing physical states of matter is about changing densities, pressures, temperatures, and other physical properties. The basic chemical structure does not change when there is a physical change.
Labels:
PHYSICAL SCIENCE
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