Title: Unit 1 Test - Tuesday, October 7th
1Unit 1 Test - Tuesday, October 7th
- Safety
- Weather and Climate
- Measurement
- Density
- Lets Review Together!
2Weather Quiz
3Weather Quiz
How hot or cold something is or a measure of heat
energy.
Water that falls from the sky.
When it is greater than 32F it will rain. When
it is less than 32F it will snow, sleet, etc.
Longer photoperiod higher temperatures Short
photoperiod lower temperatures
4Weather Quiz
5HONORS Weather Quiz
6HONORS Weather Quiz
How hot or cold something is or a measure of heat
energy.
When it is greater than 32F it will rain. When
it is less than 32F it will snow, sleet, etc.
The amount of daylight in a 24 hour period.
7HONORS Weather Quiz
Longer photoperiod higher temperatures Short
photoperiod lower temperatures
8Measurement Quiz
9Measurement Quiz
10Measurement Quiz
kilo -
h
d
deci -
milli -
11Measurement Quiz
590
0.76
890
0.0025055
K
H
D
D
C
M
12Measurement Quiz
74mL 50mL
24mL
2
13Unit 1 Study Guide
14Part 1. Safety
- 1. Review your lab safety rules on the reverse of
your lab safety assessment (the poster/video
project.) They are also located on your
teachers website and YOUR copy of the lab safety
contract.
15Weather and Climate ( Study your Five Factors
that Affect Climate, Globe Activity, What is
Weather and your Weather and Climate Quiz)
162. What are the five factors that affect climate?
List them 1 to 5 and explain how each influences
the climate of an area.
- A. latitude as latitude increase, average
annual temperature decreases - B. closeness to a large body of water water
moderates the temperature, cooler summers, warmer
winters - C. Orographic effect wind blows off of the
ocean toward mountain ocean side is rainy, other
side is dry - D. elevation as elevation increases, average
annual temperature decreases - E. ocean currents warmer current, warmer
climate colder current, cooler climate
173. What is the difference between weather and
climate?
Climate is the general pattern of weather that we
expect in an area over a long period of time.
Weather is the specific day-to-day conditions in
the atmosphere. Climate is what you expect,
weather is what you get. Climate tells you what
clothes to buy, weather tells you what clothes to
wear.
184. How does temperature affect precipitation? Be
SPECIFIC.
- Precipitation is affected by temperature. If the
temperature is below 32F, the precipitation will
be in the form of snow, ice, etc. If the
temperature is above 32F, the precipitation will
be in the form of rain.
19Measurement (Study your Measurement notes,
Mini Metric Olympics data sheet, Metric
Conversion HW and your Metric Practice Group
class worksheet)
205. What do we use a triple beam balance or
electronic balance to measure?
- Mass. (The amount of MATTER in an object.)
- Base unit of mass is GRAMS.
216. What tool do we use to measure length?
- A metric ruler, a meter stick, or a measuring
tape. Base unit of length is METERS (centimeters
usually.)
227. What tool do we use to measure liquid volume?
- A graduated cylinder. Base unit for liquid volume
is LITERS (milliliters usually.) - 1 mL1cm3
238. Circle the units that would work best for
measuring each object.
249. Complete the following metric conversions
2510. What tool do we use to measure volume of
regular rectangular solid? What units do we
measure in? What is the formula to determine the
volume?
- We use a centimeter/metric ruler to measure the
volume of a regular rectangular solid. - Base unit for volume of a solid is cm3.
- We find volume of regular solids by multiplying
length x width x height.
2611. What is the proper procedure for using a
graduated cylinder? Include ALL steps.
- Place the cylinder on a level surface. Get down
to eye level with the liquid. Look for the curve
of the liquid in the cylinder (meniscus). Read
the bottom of the meniscus.
2712. What is water displacement? Why is it used?
- Water displacement is a method to measure the
volume of an irregular solid. First you put an
amount of liquid in the graduated cylinder.
Measure that volume. Then, drop the object in
the cylinder. Measure the new volume of the
liquid. The difference in the volume is equal to
the amount of space the object is taking up (its
volume)
2813. What is the standard system of measurement
called? What is its abbreviation?
- International System of Units. It is abbreviated
SI.
29Density (Study your Density Demos worksheet
and your Phases/Changes Quiz)
3014. Why do objects sink or float? (Make sure to
include the word density in your answer!)
- Objects sink or float depending on their density.
For example, if an object has a greater density
than water, it will sink when placed in water.
However, an object with a lower density than
water, will float when placed in water.
3115. What causes some objects to be more dense
than others? (Think about how much stuff is in a
certain volume).
- When more matter (stuff) is packed into a certain
space (volume), an object has a greater density.
When less matter (stuff) is packed into a certain
space (volume), an object has a lower density.
3216. For the Super Stacker density column demo we
did in class, explain how and why the substances
separated into layers (make sure to include the
word density in your answer).
- The three liquids separated into layers because
they had different densities. The corn syrup had
the highest density, so it sank to the bottom.
The oil had the lowest density, so it floated to
the top.
3317. Explain the Rainbow Demo. (Why did the
colors mix in one set-up and stay the same in the
other?)
3417. Explain the Rainbow Demo. (Why did the
colors mix in one set-up and stay the same in the
other?)
- In the rainbow demo, the set-up on the left had
cold water on the bottom and hot water on top.
The molecules were already happy because the
cooler, more dense molecules were on the bottom
and the warmer, less dense molecules were on top.
However, in the set-up on the right, the colors
mixed. The warmer, less dense molecules were on
the bottom and the cooler, more dense molecules
were on the top. This difference in density
caused the colors to mix as the less dense
molecules rose and the more dense molecules sank.
3518. For the hot air balloon demo, discuss A.
Where the air molecules went when heat energy was
added, B. Why the particles go there, C. What
the air molecules were doing before heat energy
was added.
3618. For the hot air balloon demo, discuss A.
Where the air molecules went when heat energy was
added, B. Why the particles go there, C. What
the air molecules were doing before heat energy
was added.
- A. The addition of heat energy caused the air
molecules to spread out and rise. - B. These warmer air particles became less dense
than the surrounding air particles and thus rose. - C.The air molecules were staying the same before
the addition of heat energy because they had the
same density, so therefore, did not rise or sink,
relative to each other.
3719. How can multiple objects, which are exactly
the same size and shape, have a different mass?
- Objects of the exact same volume (size and shape)
can have a different mass because they may have
different amounts of STUFF (mass) packed into
their space. This makes them more or less DENSE.
3820. What is the formula for calculating density?
Density is calculated by mass divided by volume.
3921. Calculate the density