Title: Measuring items using the Metric System.
1(No Transcript)
2General Properties of Matter
- Volume the amount of space occupied by a
substance/object. - Mass amount of matter in a substance/object.
- Weight measurement of the pulling force of
gravity on a substance/object. - Matter anything that occupies space and has
mass. - 1. All matter has both volume and mass.
- 2. Matter is made up of molecules, molecules are
made of atoms, atoms are made of subatomic
particles protons, neutrons, electrons
33 STATES OF MATTER
- Density mass divided by volume (mass/volume)
- 1. Density of an object/substance tells us how
much matter is in that particular area. - 2. The closer molecules are to each other or
compacted, the denser the substance/object.
GAS
LIQUID
SOLID
4Measuring items using the Metric System.
- METRIC SYSTEM - based on units of ten (power of
ten) - Distance in meters (m)
- Weight in grams (g)
- Liquid is liters (l)
- Temperature in celsius (C)
5Mnemonic Sentence
6A Mnemonic
7Measuring linear objects (distance)
- LINEAR - measuring in a straight, one dimensional
line - MICROMETER (µm) 1000um1mm
- MILLIMETER (mm)- one thousandth of a meter.
1000mm1m - CENTIMETER (cm)- one hundredth of a meter .3937
inch. 100cm1m - DECIMETER (dm) - one-tenth of a meter. 10dm1m
- METER (m) standard unit. 1m1m
- DEKAMETER (dam) 10 meters
- HECTOMETER 100 meters
- KILOMETER (km) 1000 meters
8Measuring using Centimeter/Millimeter
- Meter stick. The simplest way to measure length
is to use an ordinary meter stick. In the
laboratory, our meter sticks are carefully
calibrated in centimeters with a millimeter least
count. That is, the millimeter is the smallest
subdivision on the meter stick, which can be seen
in Figure 1. This means the millimeter is the
unit of the smallest reading that can be made
without estimating.
9Did you know that
- a blue whale is 33.6 m long?a giant squid is 17
m long?the eucalyptus plant can reach 132 m in
height?the tallest man is 2.72 m in
height?the deepest roots reach 120 m into the
soil?
10Measuring Area of a object
- The area of simple square or rectangular objects
is obtained by multiplying the length of the
object times its width. - AL x W
11Measuring Volume of regular-shaped objects
- Multiply length x width x height. The length,
width and height are measured in centimeters (in
this example). The volume is measured in cm3
(cubic centimeters). - VL x W x H
12Measuring things you can not see.
- A microscope can be used not only to see very
small things, but also to measure them. Things
seen in microscopes are so small that centimeters
or even millimeters are too big. As a result,
micrometers (or microns) are used. A
micrometer, also written µm, is one thousandth of
a millimeter - it's 10-6m. - .000001 µm 1m
13Microscope Eyepiece
- a micrometer eyepiece is used in place of the
standard eyepiece of the microscope. This has a
series of numbered lines inside of it which make
it look like a ruler. - Cells are supposed to be between 10 and 30µm,
14Measuring irregular-shaped objects
- For solids that have an irregular shape, the
displacement method must be used to determine
their volume. - Choose a graduated cylinder large enough to hold
the object. Fill the cylinder half-way with water
15Measuring irregular-shaped objects
- Note the exact volume of the water. Add the
object to the water in the cylinder, taking care
not to splash the water out of the cylinder. Note
the new volume in the graduated cylinder. Then
subtract the beginning volume from the ending
volume and you have the volume of the object
1ml of water is equal to 1 cubic centimeter of
water, the volume of the object is equal to the
new volume in the graduated cylinder minus the
original volume of water. (1ml 1cm3)
16Meniscus Madness
- When measuring liquid volume it is important to
read the graduated cylinder correctly. Your eye
should be level with the top of the liquid and
you should read the bottom of the - meniscus.
17Mass (weight)
- Mass is the amount of matter that makes up an
object. - Gram (g) is a metric unit used to measure the
mass of small objects. - Kilogram (kg) is equal to 1,000 grams, so it is
used to measure the mass of larger objects.
18(No Transcript)
19Measuring Mass (weight)
- Kilogram (kg) is 1000 grams. 1kg1000g
- Hectogram (hg) is 100 grams. 1hg100g
- dekagram (dag) is 10 grams. 1dag10g
- gram (g) is the basic unit of mass. 1g1g
- decigram (dg) is 1/10 gram. 10dg1g
- centigram (cg) is 1/100 gram. 100cg1g
- milligram (mg) is 1/1000 gram. 1000mg1g
A Balance Scale is used to measure mass in most
laboratories
20 Triple beam balance
Used to measure mass in a laboratory
21Liters- measure volume of a liquid
- You can use the same prefixes as we did in mass
and length, but mainly - Milliliter (mL)
- Liter (L)
- 1000mL1L
2 liter pop (2L)
22Lab Equipment that is used to measure liquid
volume
graduated-cylinder
Beaker
23(No Transcript)
24Measuring liquid volume using a Pipette and
vacuum bulb.
- A pipette is designed to deliver a specific
volume of a liquid. - Much like using a eye dropper
25Converting in the metric (SI) system
- S L (converting from smaller to larger)
- L S (converting from larger to smaller)
- Always move the decimal in the direction of the
arrow. - Examples
- Convert 1cm to mm (L S decimal moves 1 place
to right 1.0cm 10mm) - Convert 10mg to cg (S L decimal moves 1 place
to left. 10mg 1.0cg)
26 1.
- Steve puts 100 g of turkey into each turkey
sandwich. How many kilograms of turkey does he
need for 20 sandwiches?
27 2.
- A penny has a mass of about 3 g. About what is
the mass of a roll of 50 pennies?
28 3.
- Each apple pie that Nicole makes has a mass of
600 g. She makes 10 pies. Is this more or less
than 5 kilograms?
29 4.
- A large salad makes 3 servings. Each serving is
80 grams. How many grams does a large salad make?
30 5.
- A garbage can can hold 100 kg. Phil has 85 kg of
trash and 9000 g of cans. Can he pack them all
into the garbage can?
31Answers to Mass Problems