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Science, Systems, Matter, and Energy

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Title: Science, Systems, Matter, and Energy


1
Chapter 2
  • Science, Systems, Matter, and Energy

2
Core Case Study Environmental Lesson from Easter
Island
  • Thriving society
  • 15,000 people by 1400.
  • Used resources faster than could be renewed
  • By 1600 only a few trees remained.
  • Civilization collapsed
  • By 1722 only several hundred people left.

Figure 2-1
3
Video Easter Island
Videos/easter_island.html
  • From ABC News, Environmental Science in the
    Headlines, 2005 DVD.

4
Video The Throw Away Society
  • Throw Away Society
  • Garbage Crisis In Italy

5
THE NATURE OF SCIENCE
  • What do scientists do?
  • Collect data.
  • Form hypotheses.
  • Develop theories, models and laws about how
    nature works.

Figure 2-2
6
Scientific Theories and Laws The Most Important
Results of Science
  • Scientific Theory
  • Widely tested and accepted hypothesis.
  • Scientific Law
  • What we find happening over and over again in
    nature.

Figure 2-3
7
Testing Hypotheses
  • Scientists test hypotheses using controlled
    experiments and constructing mathematical models.
  • Variables or factors influence natural processes
  • Single-variable experiments involve a control and
    an experimental group.
  • Most environmental phenomena are multivariable
    and are hard to control in an experiment.
  • Models are used to analyze interactions of
    variables.

8
Scientific Reasoning and Creativity
  • Inductive reasoning
  • Involves using specific observations and
    measurements to arrive at a general conclusion or
    hypothesis.
  • Bottom-up reasoning going from specific to
    general.
  • Deductive reasoning
  • Uses logic to arrive at a specific conclusion.
  • Top-down approach that goes from general to
    specific.

9
Frontier Science, Sound Science, and Junk Science
  • Frontier science has not been widely tested
    (starting point of peer-review).
  • Sound science consists of data, theories and laws
    that are widely accepted by experts.
  • Junk science is presented as sound science
    without going through the rigors of peer-review.

10
Limitations of Environmental Science
  • Inadequate data and scientific understanding can
    limit and make some results controversial.
  • Scientific testing is based on disproving rather
    than proving a hypothesis.
  • Based on statistical probabilities.

11
MODELS AND BEHAVIOR OF SYSTEMS
  • Usefulness of models
  • Complex systems are predicted by developing a
    model of its inputs, throughputs (flows), and
    outputs of matter, energy and information.
  • Models are simplifications of real-life.
  • Models can be used to predict if-then scenarios.

12
Feedback Loops How Systems Respond to Change
  • Outputs of matter, energy, or information fed
    back into a system can cause the system to do
    more or less of what it was doing.
  • Positive feedback loop causes a system to change
    further in the same direction (e.g. erosion)
  • Negative (corrective) feedback loop causes a
    system to change in the opposite direction (e.g.
    seeking shade from sun to reduce stress).

13
Animation Feedback Control of Temperature
Animations/dog_homeostasis.html
14
Feedback Loops
  • Negative feedback can take so long that a system
    reaches a threshold and changes.
  • Prolonged delays may prevent a negative feedback
    loop from occurring.
  • Processes and feedbacks in a system can
    (synergistically) interact to amplify the
    results.
  • E.g. smoking exacerbates the effect of asbestos
    exposure on lung cancer.

15
TYPES AND STRUCTURE OF MATTER
  • Elements and Compounds
  • Matter exists in chemical forms as elements and
    compounds.
  • Elements (represented on the periodic table) are
    the distinctive building blocks of matter.
  • Compounds two or more different elements held
    together in fixed proportions by chemical bonds.

16
Atoms
Figure 2-4
17
Animation Subatomic Particles
Animations/atomic_particles.html
18
Animation Atomic Number, Mass Number
Animations/mass_number.html
19
Ions
  • An ion is an atom or group of atoms with one or
    more net positive or negative electrical charges.
  • The number of positive or negative charges on an
    ion is shown as a superscript after the symbol
    for an atom or group of atoms
  • Hydrogen ions (H), Hydroxide ions (OH-)
  • Sodium ions (Na), Chloride ions (Cl-)

20
Animation Ionic Bonds
Animations/ionic_bond.html
21
  • The pH (potential of Hydrogen) is the
    concentration of hydrogen ions in one liter of
    solution.

Figure 2-5
22
Animation pH Scale
Animations/ph_meter.html
23
Compounds and Chemical Formulas
  • Chemical formulas are shorthand ways to show the
    atoms and ions in a chemical compound.
  • Combining Hydrogen ions (H) and Hydroxide ions
    (OH-) makes the compound H2O (dihydrogen oxide,
    a.k.a. water).
  • Combining Sodium ions (Na) and Chloride ions
    (Cl-) makes the compound NaCl (sodium chloride
    a.k.a. salt).

24
Organic Compounds Carbon Rules
  • Organic compounds contain carbon atoms combined
    with one another and with various other atoms
    such as H, N, or Cl-.
  • Contain at least two carbon atoms combined with
    each other and with atoms.
  • Methane (CH4) is the only exception.
  • All other compounds are inorganic.

25
Animation Carbon Bonds
Animations/carbon_bonding.html
26
Organic Compounds Carbon Rules
  • Hydrocarbons compounds of carbon and hydrogen
    atoms (e.g. methane (CH4)).
  • Chlorinated hydrocarbons compounds of carbon,
    hydrogen, and chlorine atoms (e.g. DDT
    (C14H9Cl5)).
  • Simple carbohydrates certain types of compounds
    of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (e.g. glucose
    (C6H12O6)).

27
Cells The Fundamental Units of Life
  • Cells are the basic structural and functional
    units of all forms of life.
  • Prokaryotic cells (bacteria) lack a distinct
    nucleus.
  • Eukaryotic cells (plants and animals) have a
    distinct nucleus.

Figure 2-6
28
Animation Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells
Animations/cell_features_v2.html
29
Macromolecules, DNA, Genes and Chromosomes
  • Large, complex organic molecules (macromolecules)
    make up the basic molecular units found in living
    organisms.
  • Complex carbohydrates
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic acids
  • Lipids

Figure 2-7
30
States of Matter
  • The atoms, ions, and molecules that make up
    matter are found in three physical states
  • solid, liquid, gaseous.
  • A fourth state, plasma, is a high energy mixture
    of positively charged ions and negatively charged
    electrons.
  • The sun and stars consist mostly of plasma.
  • Scientists have made artificial plasma (used in
    TV screens, gas discharge lasers, florescent
    light).

31
Matter Quality
  • Matter can be classified as having high or low
    quality depending on how useful it is to us as a
    resource.
  • High quality matter is concentrated and easily
    extracted.
  • low quality matter is more widely dispersed and
    more difficult to extract.

Figure 2-8
32
CHANGES IN MATTER
  • Matter can change from one physical form to
    another or change its chemical composition.
  • When a physical or chemical change occurs, no
    atoms are created or destroyed.
  • Law of conservation of matter.
  • Physical change maintains original chemical
    composition.
  • Chemical change involves a chemical reaction
    which changes the arrangement of the elements or
    compounds involved.
  • Chemical equations are used to represent the
    reaction.

33
Chemical Change
  • Energy is given off during the reaction as a
    product.

34
Types of Pollutants
  • Factors that determine the severity of a
    pollutants effects chemical nature,
    concentration, and persistence.
  • Pollutants are classified based on their
    persistence
  • Degradable pollutants
  • Biodegradable pollutants
  • Slowly degradable pollutants
  • Nondegradable pollutants

35
Nuclear Changes Radioactive Decay
  • Natural radioactive decay unstable isotopes
    spontaneously emit fast moving chunks of matter
    (alpha or beta particles), high-energy radiation
    (gamma rays), or both at a fixed rate.
  • Radiation is commonly used in energy production
    and medical applications.
  • The rate of decay is expressed as a half-life
    (the time needed for one-half of the nuclei to
    decay to form a different isotope).

36
Animation Positron-Emission Tomography
Animations/pet_scan.html
37
Animation Half-Life
Animations/half_life.html
38
Nuclear Changes Fission
  • Nuclear fission nuclei of certain isotopes with
    large mass numbers are split apart into lighter
    nuclei when struck by neutrons.

Figure 2-9
39
Stepped Art
Fig. 2-6, p. 28
40
Video Isotopes
Videos/isotopes.html
41
Nuclear Changes Fusion
  • Nuclear fusion two isotopes of light elements
    are forced together at extremely high
    temperatures until they fuse to form a heavier
    nucleus.

Figure 2-10
42
Video Nuclear Energy
Videos/nuclear_energy.html
  • From ABC News, Environmental Science in the
    Headlines, 2005 DVD.

43
ENERGY
  • Energy is the ability to do work and transfer
    heat.
  • Kinetic energy energy in motion
  • heat, electromagnetic radiation
  • Potential energy stored for possible use
  • batteries, glucose molecules

Animations/martian_working.html
44
Electromagnetic Spectrum
  • Many different forms of electromagnetic radiation
    exist, each having a different wavelength and
    energy content.

Figure 2-11
45
Electromagnetic Spectrum
  • Organisms vary in their ability to sense
    different parts of the spectrum.

Figure 2-12
46
Animation Visible Light
Animations/light_wavelength.html
47
Relative Energy Quality (usefulness)
Source of Energy
Energy Tasks
Electricity Very high temperature heat (greater
than 2,500C) Nuclear fission (uranium) Nuclear
fusion (deuterium) Concentrated
sunlight High-velocity wind
Very high-temperature heat (greater than 2,500C)
for industrial processes and producing
electricity to run electrical devices (lights,
motors)
High-temperature heat (1,0002,500C) Hydroge
n gas Natural gas Gasoline Coal Food
Mechanical motion to move vehicles and other
things) High-temperature heat (1,0002,500C)
for industrial processes and producing
electricity
Normal sunlight Moderate-velocity
wind High-velocity water flow Concentrated
geothermal energy Moderate-temperature
heat (1001,000C) Wood and crop wastes
Moderate-temperature heat (1001,000C) for
industrial processes, cooking, producing steam,
electricity, and hot water
Dispersed geothermal energy Low-temperature heat
(100C or lower)
Low-temperature heat (100C or less) for
space heating
Fig. 2-13, p. 44
48
ENERGY LAWS TWO RULES WE CANNOT BREAK
  • The first law of thermodynamics we cannot create
    or destroy energy.
  • We can change energy from one form to another.
  • The second law of thermodynamics energy quality
    always decreases.
  • When energy changes from one form to another, it
    is always degraded to a more dispersed form.
  • Energy efficiency is a measure of how much useful
    work is accomplished before it changes to its
    next form.

49
Animation Total Energy Remains Constant
Animations/energy_constant.html
50
Mechanicalenergy(moving,thinking,living)
Chemical energy (photosynthesis)
Chemical energy (food)
Solar energy
Waste Heat
Waste Heat
Waste Heat
Waste Heat
Fig. 2-14, p. 45
51
Animation Energy Flow
Animations/energy_flow.html
52
SUSTAINABILITY AND MATTER AND ENERGY LAWS
  • Unsustainable High-Throughput Economies Working
    in Straight Lines
  • Converts resources to goods in a manner that
    promotes waste and pollution.

Figure 2-15
53
Sustainable Low-Throughput Economies Learning
from Nature
  • Matter-Recycling-and-Reuse Economies Working in
    Circles
  • Mimics nature by recycling and reusing, thus
    reducing pollutants and waste.
  • It is not sustainable for growing populations.

54
Inputs (from environment)
System Throughputs
Outputs (into environment)
Energy conservation
Low-quality Energy (heat)
Energy
Sustainable low-waste economy
Waste and pollution
Waste and pollution
Pollution control
Matter
Recycle and reuse
Matter Feedback
Energy Feedback
Fig. 2-16, p. 47
55
Animation Economic Types
Animations/hi_low-throughput.html
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