1 / 16

States of Matter

States of Matter. Planning and conducting simple investigations . What am I?. I am one thing But I can be three! Sometimes a liquid But when I’m cold I’m a solid And when I’m hot I’m a gas! What am I?. Water!. Three States of matter. Solids. Liquids. Gases. Solids.

eljah
Télécharger la présentation

States of Matter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. States of Matter Planning and conducting simple investigations

  2. What am I? • I am one thing • But I can be three! • Sometimes a liquid • But when I’m cold I’m a solid • And when I’m hot I’m a gas! • What am I? Water!

  3. Three States of matter Solids Liquids Gases

  4. Solids • Hold their own shape • Contains • Length • Width • Depth • Is not able to be hollow • Can only change shape by being broken or crushed. Microsoft Clip Art

  5. Liquids • Takes shape of container • Flows • Not easily compressible Darkpatator. “Zan Water.” February 19, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution.

  6. Gases • Also referred to as vapor • Has mass • Does not have a shape • Compressible • Flows easily Spacepleb. “An absinthe of light.” October 19, 2006 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution

  7. Experiment #1 • Pair up • Gather the following materials • One of each of the glass containers • A pitcher of water • What container do you believe holds the most? • Explain why you think that.

  8. Fill one of the containers with water. • Pour that container into the next container. • Did it fill it all the way? Was there some water left over? • Repeat the previous step with the last container. • Record your findings. ?

  9. Where your predictions correct? Why or why not?

  10. Recap • Visual illusions make containers appear larger or smaller. • Liquid take the shape of container. Microsoft Clip Art Microsoft Clip Art

  11. Experiment #2 • With your partner gather the following materials • Graduated flask • Bucket • Pan to catch the water from the bucket • A pop bottle full of water. Microsoft Clip Art

  12. Fill the bucket all the way up with water. • Put the pan under the bucket. • Gently place the pop bottle in the bucket of water. • Carefully remove the bucket from the pan. • Measure the water in the pan.

  13. Overview • The amount of water that spilled out is the volume of the pop bottle. • Example: 250 ml of water means the pop bottle contained 250 ml of mass. Microsoft Clip Art

  14. Experiment #3 • Hold your hand in front of your mouth • Breathe through your mouth on to your hand. • This is a state of matter! • What state of matter is it? Gas!

  15. Scavenger hunt • Find within the school • Three different solids • Two different liquids • One gas

  16. Overview • What did you find? Solids Liquids Gases

More Related