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Unit 1: “Matter and Change”. Matter Matter is anything that: a) has mass, and b) takes up space Mass = a measure of the amount of “stuff” (or material)

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 1: “Matter and Change”. Matter Matter is anything that: a) has mass, and b) takes up space Mass = a measure of the amount of “stuff” (or material)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 1: “Matter and Change”

2 Matter Matter is anything that: a) has mass, and b) takes up space Mass = a measure of the amount of “stuff” (or material) the object contains (don’t confuse this with weight, a measure of gravity) Volume = a measure of the space occupied by the object

3 Properties are… Words that describe matter (adjectives) Physical Properties- a property that can be observed and measured without changing the material’s composition. Examples- color, hardness, m.p., b.p. Chemical Properties- a property that can only be observed by changing the composition of the material. Examples- ability to burn, decompose, ferment, react with, etc.

4 States of Matter Solid Liquid Gas Definite Volume? YES NO Definite Shape? YES NO Result of a TemperatureI ncrease? Small Expans. Large Expans. Will it Compress? NO YES

5 Three Main Phases

6 Physical vs. Chemical Change Physical change will change the visible appearance, without changing the composition of the material. Boil, melt, cut, bend, split, crack Is boiled water still water? Can be reversible, or irreversible Chemical change - a change where a new form of matter is formed. Rust, burn, decompose, ferment

7 Chemical Change A change in which one or more substances are converted into different substances. Heat and light are often evidence of a chemical change.

8 Recognizing Chemical Changes 1)Energy is absorbed or released (temperature changes hotter or colder) 2)Color unexpected color changes 3)Gas production (bubbling, fizzing, or odor change; smoke) 4)Formation of a precipitate - a solid that separates from solution (won’t dissolve) 5)Irreversibility - not easily reversed But, there are examples of these that are not chemical – boiling water bubbles, etc.

9 Conservation of Mass During any chemical reaction, the mass of the products is always equal to the mass of the reactants. All the mass can be accounted for: –Burning of wood results in products that appear to have less mass as ashes; where is the rest? Law of conservation of mass

10 reactants = product 43.43 g Original mass = 43.43 g Final mass

11 Measurement

12 Over time people realized there were differences in the way people made measurements

13

14 Accuracy and Precision

15 Some measurements are not very accurate. Measurements Accuracy and Precision

16 Some measurements can be very precise and accurate. Measurements Accuracy and Precision

17 Measurements can only be as precise and accurate as the instrument that produced it. Measurements Accuracy and Precision

18 How many numbers can we use for these scales? Measurements Accuracy and Precision

19 Measurement Rules

20 All non-zero digits are significant. Measurements Measurement Rules

21 Zeros between significant digits are always significant. Measurements Measurement Rules

22 Trailing zeros in a number are only significant if there is a decimal point somewhere in the number. Measurements Measurement Rules

23 Zeros in the beginning of a number are place holders and are not significant. Measurements Measurement Rules

24 Zeros following a number after a decimal are significant. Measurements Measurement Rules

25 Math operations and measurement

26 When adding or subtracting use the least number of decimal places. Measurements Math Operations

27 When multiplying or dividing use the least total number of sig. figs. to find your answer. Measurements Math Operations

28 Scientific notation is taking a number and putting it into a certain form. Measurements Math Operations


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