Title: Class X Science
1Class XScience
2I.MEASUREMENTS VERNIER CALIPER AND SCREW GAUGE
3SCREW GAUGEPlay the video no. 2
4measurement of length
micrometer screw gauge
Micrometers measure small diameters or
thicknesses.
accuracy 0.01 mm / 0.001 cm
5measurement of length
micrometer screw gauge
reading on sleeve 4.5 mm reading on thimble
0.12 mm actual reading of object 4.5
0.12 4.62 mm
6measurement of length
micrometer screw gauge
When the anvil and spindle of the micrometer
touch each other, the scales should read zero.
If not, there is a zero error in the
micrometer.
7measurement of length
micrometer screw gauge
If the anvil and spindle touch each other, but
the scales do not read zero as shown below, the
zero error is positive.
supposing observed reading is 2.37 mm, then
corrected reading observed reading zero
error 2.37 (0.02)
2.35 mm
8measurement of length
micrometer screw gauge
If the anvil and spindle touch each other, but
the scales do not read zero as shown below, the
zero error is negative.
3 divisions
supposing observed reading is 2.87 mm, then
corrected reading observed reading zero
error 2.87 (-0.03)
2.90 mm
9measurement of time
time
Time can be measured by using the following
All timing devices make use of some regular
process.
10measurement of time
the period of a simple pendulum
Time can also be measured by using the following
simple pendulum.
pendulum bob tied to one end of a thread
- oscillations are regularly repeating motions
- the period is time in which 1 oscillation occurs
B
A
O
11measurement of time
watch
wrist watch
12II.Newtons Laws of Motion
- I. Law of Inertia
- II. Fma
- III. Action-Reaction
132nd Law
F m x a
142nd Law
- The net force of an object is equal to the
product of its mass and acceleration, or Fma.
152nd Law
- When mass is in kilograms and acceleration is in
m/s/s, the unit of force is in newtons (N). - One newton is equal to the force required to
accelerate one kilogram of mass at one
meter/second/second.
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
183rd Law
- For every action, there is an equal and opposite
reaction.
193rd Law
Flying gracefully through the air, birds depend
on Newtons third law of motion. As the birds
push down on the air with their wings, the air
pushes their wings up and gives them lift.
20III.Temperature is a measure of
- The total amount of energy in an object
- The total amount of thermal energy in an object
- How much heat something gives off
- How fast the molecules in an object are moving
21Heat is
- Energy given off or absorbed by an object
- A measure of the motion of the molecules in an
object - The total amount of molecular energy in an object
22How do we measure temperature?
- Think about using a thermometer
23How does the thermometer know how hot the
substance is?
24Temperature is a measure of
- The total amount of energy in an object
- The total amount of thermal energy in an object
- How much heat something gives off
- How fast the molecules in an object are moving
25Heat is
- Energy given off or absorbed by an object
- A measure of the motion of the molecules in an
object - The total amount of molecular energy in an object
26Put this bottle with the coin on top in the
freezer for a half hour.
What happens when you take it out and put it on a
table at room temperature?
27Gases do not necessarily expand when you heat them
Gases do not necessarily contract when you cool
them
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32The heat balance of the Earth
33IV. Sound
34The Ear
- Sound is carried to our ears through vibrating
air molecules. - Our ears take in sound waves turn them into
signals that go to our brains. - Sound waves move through 3 parts of the ear
outer ear, middle ear, inner ear.
Middle Ear
35Sonar
- An instrument that uses reflected sound waves to
find underwater objects - For example,
Humans use sonar to locate or map objects
Animals use sonar or echo location to find their
prey these sounds have such a high pitch or
frequency that the human ear cannot hear
36Sound and Instruments
- Instruments can be played at different pitches by
changing lengths of different parts. - For example,
- Another way to make different pitches is to
change the thickness of the material that
vibrates. - For example,
A trombones mute absorbs some of the sound waves
produced, thus producing a softer note when
played.
37Play the video No.3
38V.Optics
39Curved mirrors
- What if the mirror isnt flat?
- light still follows the same rules, with local
surface normal - Parabolic mirrors have exact focus
- used in telescopes, backyard satellite dishes,
etc. - also forms virtual image
40For a real object between f and the mirror, a
virtual image is formed behind the mirror. The
image is upright and larger than the object.
For a real object between f and the mirror, a
virtual image is formed behind the mirror. The
position of the image is found by tracing the
reflected rays back behind the mirror to where
they meet. The image is upright and larger than
the object.
41For a real object between f and the mirror, a
virtual image is formed behind the mirror. The
position of the image is found by tracing the
reflected rays back behind the mirror to where
they meet. The image is upright and larger than
the object.
For a real object close to the mirror but outside
of the center of curvature, the real image is
formed between C and f. The image is inverted and
smaller than the object.
For a real object between C and f, a real image
is formed outside of C. The image is inverted and
larger than the object.
For a real object between C and f, a real image
is formed outside of C. The image is inverted and
larger than the object.
42For a real object between f and the mirror, a
virtual image is formed behind the mirror. The
position of the image is found by tracing the
reflected rays back behind the mirror to where
they meet. The image is upright and larger than
the object.
For a real object close to the mirror but outside
of the center of curvature, the real image is
formed between C and f. The image is inverted and
smaller than the object.
For a real object between C and f, a real image
is formed outside of C. The image is inverted and
larger than the object.
For a real object at C, the real image is formed
at C. The image is inverted and the same size as
the object.
For a real object at C, the real image is formed
at C. The image is inverted and the same size as
the object.
43For a real object between f and the mirror, a
virtual image is formed behind the mirror. The
position of the image is found by tracing the
reflected rays back behind the mirror to where
they meet. The image is upright and larger than
the object.
For a real object close to the mirror but outside
of the center of curvature, the real image is
formed between C and f. The image is inverted and
smaller than the object.
For a real object close to the mirror but outside
of the center of curvature, the real image is
formed between C and f. The image is inverted and
smaller than the object.
44For a real object at f, no image is formed. The
reflected rays are parallel and never
converge.
What size image is formed if the real object is
placed at the focal point f?
For a real object at f, no image is formed. The
reflected rays are parallel and never converge.
45Convex Mirrors
- Curves outward
- Reduces images
- Virtual images
- Use Rear view mirrors, store security
CAUTION! Objects are closer than they appear!
46Refraction
- Light also goes through some things
- glass, water, eyeball, air
47Convex Lenses
- Thicker in the center than edges.
- Lens that converges (brings together) light rays.
- Forms real images and virtual images depending on
position of the object
The Magnifier
48Concave Lenses
- Lenses that are thicker at the edges and thinner
in the center. - Diverges light rays
- All images areerect and reduced.
The De-Magnifier
49How You See
- Near Sighted Eyeball is too long and image
focuses in front of the retina - Near Sightedness Concave lenses expand focal
length - Far Sighted Eyeball is too short so image is
focused behind the retina. - Far Sightedness Convex lense shortens the focal
length.
50VI. CHEMICAL BONDSPLAY THE VIDEO NO. 5
51VII.CHEMICAL BONDSPLAY THE VIDEO NO. 6
52VIII. Basic Mendelian Principles
- Mendels big ideas
- --Particulate inheritance the determinants
of inherited traits are discrete units that are
passed between generations unaltered, not blended
together.
53Experimental Organism
- Mendel worked with peas.
- --The male gametepollen grain.
- --The female gameteovule.
- Pea plants have both sexes on the same plant, and
they can be self-pollinated pollen from one
plant is used to fertilize ovules from the same
plant.
54Mendel's Traits
55Monohybrid Cross
- when plants with different traits are crossed.
- Purple flowers vs. white flowers. The original
parental lines are pure-breeding.
56First Cross
- True-breeding purple x true-breeding white. All
offspring are purple. The parent lines are the P
generation the offspring are the F1 (first
filial) generation. - All the F1's are purple regardless of which
parent (father or mother) was purple and which
was white.
57Selfing the F1
- Self-pollinate the F1 plants to get the F2
(second filial) generation. - The F2 appear in a ratio of 3/4 purple to 1/4
white.
58Selfing the F2
- Each F2 plant is selfed to produce a group of F3
offspring. - The F3 offspring of the white F2's are all
white-true-breeding. - Some of the F2 purples have all purple F3 -true
breeding. - Other F2 purples give purple and white F3's in a
ratio of 3/4 purple to 1/4 white. This is the
same behavior as the F1's had.
59F2 Behavior
- The purple F2 plants come in 2 types some are
true breeding and only give purple offspring.
Others are hybrids and give 3/4 purple 1/4
white offspring. They can be distinguished by
the offspring they produce, but not by their
physical appearance.
60F2
- In summary, 1/4 of the F2 genotypes are PP, 1/2
are Pp, and 1/4 are pp. - Since P (purple) is dominant, both PP and Pp
plants are purple. Thus, 3/4 of the phenotypes
are purple, and 1/4 are white. - Mendel found that this rule worked for all 7 of
his traits, to within what he considered
reasonable accuracy.
61Mendel Monohybrid Results
62Law of Segregation
- Mendel's first law of genetics
- The two members of a gene pair segregate randomly
and equally into the gametes, which then combine
at random to form the next generation.
63Dihybrid Cross
- A dihybrid cross examines 2 different genes. We
will use yellow vs. green pods, and round vs.
wrinkled seeds. - Yellow (Y) is dominant to green (y).
- Round (R) is dominant to wrinkled (r).
- Initial cross YY rr x yy RR (yellow wrinkled x
green round). The YY rr plant makes Yr gametes (
one copy of each gene) and the yy RR plant makes
yR gametes. - These combine to make F1 plants that are Yy Rr,
yellow round. Note that neither parent has this
phenotype.
64F1 -gt F2 Dihybrid
- When the Yy Rr plant is mated, it makes 4 kinds
of gamete. Each gamete gets 1 copy of each gene,
so 1/2 are Y and 1/2 are y. Independently, 1/2
are R and 1/2 are r. Thus, 1/4 of the gametes
are YR, 1/4 are Yr, 1/4 are yR, and 1/4 are yr.
This happens for both male and female gametes. - The gametes combine randomly. The combinations
are shown in a 16 cell Punnett square.
65F2 dihybrid results are the combination of 2
monohybrid crosses
- If you just look at the individual genes
separately, you find the same 3/4 1/4 ratio
seen in the monohybrid cross. - Thus, 9/16 are yellow round and 3/16 are yellow
wrinkled. This adds up to 12/16 3/4 yellow.
And, 3/16 are green round and 1/16 are green
wrinkled, which adds up to 4/16 1/4 green. - Same is true for round vs. wrinkled.
66Law of Independent Assortment
- Mendel's second law.
- For unlinked genes, the alleles from each gene
segregate into the gametes independently of one
another. - Some genes are linked, which means that they
don't segregate independently of each other and
thus don't give the 9331 ratio of F2 offspring.
67REAL TIME(videos click from video file 1, 2)
- CELL DIVISION OCCURS IN VERY FEW SECONDS AS YOU
SEE IN THE VISUAL. DONT MISS THE DIFFERENT
STAGES OF MITOSIS THAT OCCURS IN ROOT TIP OF
ONION, VERY FASTLY.
68XI. MEIOSIS
- Meiosis reduces the number of chromosomes by
half. - Daughter cells differ from parent, and each
other. - Meiosis involves two divisions, Mitosis only one.
- Meiosis I involves
- Synapsis homologous chromosomes pair up.
Chiasmata form (crossing over of non-sister
chromatids). - In Metaphase I, homologous pairs line up at
metaphase plate. - In Anaphase I, sister chromatids do NOT separate.
- Overall, separation of homologous pairs of
chromosomes, rather than sister chromatids of
individual chromosome.
69(No Transcript)
70(No Transcript)
71(No Transcript)
72(No Transcript)
73Meiosis 1
- First division of meiosis
- Prophase 1 Each chromosome duplicates and
remains closely associated. These are called
sister chromatids. Crossing-over can occur during
the latter part of this stage. - Metaphase 1 Homologous chromosomes align at the
equatorial plate. - Anaphase 1 Homologous pairs separate with sister
chromatids remaining together. - Telophase 1 Two daughter cells are formed with
each daughter containing only one chromosome of
the homologous pair.
74Meiosis II
- Second division of meiosis Gamete formation
- Prophase 2 DNA does not replicate.
- Metaphase 2 Chromosomes align at the equatorial
plate. - Anaphase 2 Centromeres divide and sister
chromatids migrate separately to each pole. - Telophase 2 Cell division is complete. Four
haploid daughter cells are obtained.