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Go to section Chapter 1 Science Skills. Go to section Section 1.1 What is Science?

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Presentation on theme: "Go to section Chapter 1 Science Skills. Go to section Section 1.1 What is Science?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Go to section Chapter 1 Science Skills

2 Go to section Section 1.1 What is Science?

3 Go to section Science From Curiosity “Necessity is the mother of invention” –Fire, tools, language, etc. Science- system of knowledge and the methods used to find that knowledge

4 Go to section Science begins with curiosity and ends with discovery. Observations –Quantitative- numerical 27°, 36.7 grams, etc. –Qualitative- descriptive Blue liquid, gas given off, etc.

5 Go to section Science and Technology Technology- the use of knowledge to solve practical problems –Telephone, cell phone, TV, medicine, etc. Science and Technology are interdependent. Advances in one lead to advances in the other. –Physics  transistor  radios, computers, space science

6 Go to section Branches of Science Figure 3

7 Go to section The Big Ideas of Physical Science Describes the basic “rules” of nature. Four major areas Space and Time –Universe is very old and very big –Universe is 13,700,000,000 years old –Universe is 700,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 meters in diameter Matter and Change –Small amount of universe is matter –Matter has volume and mass –Matter made of building blocks called atoms –Atoms made of smaller blocks called protons, neutrons, and electrons

8 Go to section Big Ideas, con’t Forces and Motion –Force causes changes in motion –World filled with motion and forces Energy –Energy exists in many forms –Moving objects have kinetic energy, nonmoving have potential energy –Matter has energy, can be changed into other forms –Energy can be transferred from one form or object to another, never destroyed

9 Go to section Section 1.2 Using A Scientific Approach

10 Go to section Scientific Methods Scientific Method- organized plan for gathering, organizing, and communicating information Goal- to solve a problem or better understand an observed event Observation- information obtained through the senses Hypothesis- proposed answer to a question –Manipulated variable- causes a change in another –Responding variable- variable that changes in response –Controlled experiment- one variable deliberately changed at a time Scientific Theory- well-tested explanation for a set of observations or experimental results

11 Go to section A Scientific Method Figure 7

12 Go to section Scientific Laws Scientific Law- statement that summarizes a pattern found in nature –Describes an observed pattern in nature without attempting to explain it (explanation provided by theory) –Generally verified over and over –Newton’s Laws of Motion, etc.

13 Go to section Scientific Models Model- representation of object or event Scientific models make it easier to understand things that might be too difficult to observe directly –Globe –Atomic models –Buildings –Prototypes of cars

14 Go to section Working Safely in Science ***Use safe procedures when carrying out investigations. ***Follow your teacher’s instructions carefully. ***Know all safety rules and procedures that have been introduced by your teacher.

15 Go to section Interest Grabber Measuring Length by the Handful The English units that we use in the United States developed over a long period of time. For example, the hand was devised in ancient times as a unit of length. It was defined as the length of a person’s hand from the little finger to the thumb. Today the height of horses is still measured in hands, but the definition of a hand is standardized at 4 inches or 10.16 centimeters. 1.Why did the hand produce unreliable measurements before it was standardized? 2.Measure the height of your desk in hands. Compare your results with other classmates. How do the results vary? Section 1.3

16 Go to section Section 1.3 Measurement

17 Go to section Using Scientific Notation Scientific notation- way of expressing very large or very small numbers –Makes them easy to work with –Expressed as a number between one and ten multiplied by a power of ten –Exponent can be a positive number (large number) or a negative number (less than one)

18 Go to section

19 Converting Numbers into Scientific Notation Large numbers: –Put a decimal point after the first number and drop the zeroes –Count the number of places from the decimal point to the end of the number (including zeroes)- this is your exponent –Ex. 123,000,000,000 would be 1.23 x 10 11 Small numbers: –Put a decimal point after the first whole number and drop the zeroes –Count the number of places from the decimal point backward to the original decimal point (including zeroes)- this is your NEGATIVE exponent –Ex. 0.0000013 would be 1.3 x 10 -6

20 Go to section Write each in standard notation: 6.52 x 10 3 4.6322 x 10 4 8.66185 x 10 4 8.71 x 10 4 7.0 x 10 -5 3.65 x 10 -6 2.17 x 10 -2 3.34 x 10 0 6520 46322 86618.5 87100 0.00007 0.00000365 0.0217 3.34

21 Go to section Write each in scientific notation: 0.07882 0.00000272338 118000 87200 0.00002786 0.000000664 450 74171.7 770 0.0000085 7.882 x 10 -2 2.72338 x 10 -6 1.18 x 10 5 8.72 x 10 4 2.786 x 10 -5 6.64 x 10 -7 4.5 x 10 2 7.41717 x 10 4 7.7 x 10 2 8.5 x 10 -6

22 Go to section Using Scientific Notation Section 1.3

23 Go to section Complete the following: (3.76 x 10 4 ) + (5.5 x 10 2 ) (4.8 x 10 5 ) - (9.7 x 10 4 ) (7.25 x 10 3 ) x (3.2 x 10 2 ) 5.5 x 10 3 / 1.1 x 10 2 change 5.5 x 10 2 to 0.055 x10 4 3.76 + 0.055 = 3.815 x 10 4 change 9.7 x 10 4 to 0.97 x 10 5 4.8 - 0.97 = 3.83 x 10 5 7.25 x 3.2 = 23.2 and 10 3+2 = 10 5 2.32 x 10 6 5.5/1.1 = 5.0 and 10 3-2 = 10 1 5.0 x 10 1

24 Go to section SI Units of Measurements International System of Units (Systeme International de Unites) –Revised metric system (1791 in France) Base Units –Seven units system is based on

25 Go to section SI Units con’t Derived Units- made by combining base units –Density (g/cm 3 ), Area (m 2 ), Volume (m 3 ), Pressure (kg/m·s 2 ), Energy (kg·m 2 /s 2 ) Metric Prefixes –Prefixes put in front of a unit to make it stand for larger or smaller units Conversions –Using a ratio to switch from one unit to another

26 Go to section A List of the Metric Prefixes Multiplier PrefixSymbolNumericalExponential gigaG1,000,000,00010 9 megaM1,000,00010 6 kilok1,00010 3 hectoh10010 2 decada1010 1 no prefix means:110 0 decid0.110¯ 1 centic0.0110¯ 2 millim0.00110¯ 3 micro  0.00000110¯ 6 nanon0.00000000110¯ 9 picop0.00000000000110¯ 12

27 Go to section Limits of Measurement Precision- how exact a measurement is –Limited by least precise measurement used in a calculation Accuracy- how close a value is to the accepted

28 Go to section Measuring Temperature Thermometer- measures temperature Scales: –Celsius (°C) scale –kelvin (K) temperature scale. kelvins, NOT degrees kelvin, not capitalized, symbol (capital K) stands alone with no degree symbol. –Fahrenheit (°F) non-metric temperature scale

29 Go to section

30 Significant Figures Shows the precision of a measured value Rules: –1. Non-zero digits are always significant. –2. Any zeros between two significant digits are significant. –3. A final zero or trailing zeros in the decimal portion ONLY are significant. –How many significant figures are in the following; 5.40 210 1000 1000.

31 Go to section Interest Grabber Creating and Interpreting Graphs Many people have pets. One survey of pet owners showed the following breakdown of the type of pets owned: 35% dogs; 35% cats; 10% birds; 5% hamsters, gerbils, mice, rats; 5% reptiles; and 10% other. 1.Copy the incomplete circle graph below on your paper. Complete the graph using the survey data. Estimate the angle of each section of your completed circle graph. Give your graph a title and label what each section of the graph represents. 2.Explain how viewing the graph conveys information to the reader more quickly than reading the list of data. Section 1.4

32 Go to section Section 1.4 Presenting Scientific Data

33 Go to section Organizing Data Data Tables –Two variables- manipulated and responding Line Graphs –Shows changes in related variables –Slope-ratio of changes (rise/run) –May be direct proportion (two are constant) or inverse proportion (product of two is a constant) Bar Graph –Compare sets of measurements Circle Graph –Relate part to whole

34 Go to section Data Table

35 Go to section Line Graph

36 Go to section Bar Graph

37 Go to section Circle Graph Per Capita US Consumption of Milk, 1975-95 Graph A Graph B Graph C

38 Go to section Communicating Data Communication is essential! –Scientific Journals –Speaking at Conferences –Conversations –E-mail –Web sites Peer review –Scientists review each others’ work –Comments, suggestions, criticism, find errors

39 Go to section Scientific Notation WS 7.882 x 10 -2 2.72338 x 10 -6 1.18 x 10 5 8.72 x 10 4 2.786 x 10 -5 6.64 x 10 -7 4.5 x 10 2 7.41717 x 10 4 7.7 x 10 2 8.5 x 10 -6 0.0000003443 0.000000775763 0.00000058 1525000 65815700 0.00051821 0.000000121 0.00000052314 0.00007141 5256000


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