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8 th Grade Science Review

8 th Grade Science Review. What We Have Learned This Year. Standard 1 Motion. The velocity of an object is the rate of change of its position. Standard 1 Motion. To determine if motion is occurring compare the object to a reference point. Speed= distance time

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8 th Grade Science Review

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  1. 8th Grade Science Review What We Have Learned This Year

  2. Standard 1Motion The velocity of an object is the rate of change of its position.

  3. Standard 1Motion • To determine if motion is occurring compare the object to a reference point. • Speed= distance time • Velocity shows speed and direction. • Acceleration is a change in velocity (speed or direction).

  4. Graph showing Speed

  5. Question 1 An athlete can run 9 kilometers in 1 hour. If the athlete runs at that same average speed for 30 minutes, how far will the athlete travel? a. 18 kilometers b. 9 kilometers c. 4.5 kilometers d. 3.3 kilometers

  6. Question 2 How much time is required for a bicycle to travel a distance of 100m at an average speed of 2 m/s? a. 0.02 s b. 50 s c. 100 s d. 200 s

  7. Question 3 Which of the following represents the velocity of a moving object? a. 40 b. 40 m north c. 40 m/s d. 40 m/s north

  8. Question 4 The graph shows the speed of a vehicle over time. How far did the vehicle travel during the first two seconds? a. 0.2 b. 5 m c. 10 m d. 20 m

  9. Question 5 The graph shows how the position of an object changes over time. What is the speed of the object during the time interval from 4 seconds to 10 seconds? a. 2 m/s b. 3 m/s c. 8 m/s d. 16 m/s

  10. Standard 2Forces Unbalanced forces cause changes in velocity.

  11. Standard 2Forces • A push or pull • A force has magnitude and direction. • When forces are unbalanced, the object will move. • When forces are balanced an object will not move. • The greater the mass of an object, the more force will be needed to move it.

  12. Standard 2Forces

  13. Question 1 A force is acting on each of the objects. What can be concluded about these forces? a. They are the same because they point toward the objects. b. They are the same because they have the same magnitude. c. They are different because they have different magnitudes. d. They are different because they have different directions.

  14. Question 2 The students are pushing a cart as shown. The cart will move as if it were acted on by a single force with a magnitude of a. 50 N b. 150 N c. 200 N d. 350 N

  15. Question 3 A ball is dropped from the top of a tall building. As the ball falls, the upward force of air resistance becomes equal to the downward pull of gravity. When these two forces become equal in magnitude, the ball will a. flatten due to the forces. b. fall at a constant speed. c. continue to speed up. d. slow to a stop.

  16. Question 4 Four forces are acting on a box as shown. This box will increase in speed a. downward and to the left. b. downward and to the right. c. upward and to the left. d. upward and to the right.

  17. Question 5 A force of 5 N is required to increase the speed of a box to a rate of 1.0 m/s to 3.0 m/s within 5 s along a level surface. What change would most likely require additional force to produce the same results? a. reduce the mass of the box b. increase the mass of the box c. make the surfaces of the box smooth d. make the surfaces of the floor smooth

  18. Standard 8Density and Buoyancy All objects experience a buoyant force when immersed in liquid.

  19. Standard 8Density and Buoyancy • Density = mass volume • The buoyant force on an object in a fluid is an upward force equal to the weight of the fluid it has displaced.

  20. Standard 8Density and Buoyancy • Know how to measure mass and volume to calculate density. • An object will float in water if the density is less than 1.0 g/ml.

  21. Standard 8Density and Buoyancy

  22. Question 1 What is the density of a 64 g iron cube that displaces 8 ml of water? a. 512 g/ml b. 32 g/ml c. 8 g/ml d. 4 g/ml

  23. Question 2 A piece of pine wood floats on the surface of a lake because the water exerts a. an upward force equal to the weight of the wood. b. a downward force equal to the weight of the wood. c. an upward force equal to the weight of the displacement water. d. a downward force equal to the weight of the displacement water.

  24. Question 3 The following table shows properties of four different sample materials. One of these materials is cork, a type of wood that floats in water. Given that the density of water is 1 g/ml, which of the samples is most likely cork? a. 1 b. 2 c. 3 d. 4

  25. Question 4 The densities of four different woods are shown. Which wood will sink when placed in a fluid with a density of 1.14 g/cm3 a. African teakwood b. balsa c. cedar d. ironwood

  26. Standard 9Investigation and Experimentation Scientific progress is made by asking meaningful questions and conducting careful investigations.

  27. Standard 9Investigation and Experimentation Step of the Scientific Method • Step 1 – State the problem • Step 2 – Gather Information • Step 3 – Form a hypothesis • Step 4 – Conduct an experiment • Step 5 – Form a conclusion • Step 6 – Share results

  28. Standard 9Investigation and Experimentation

  29. Question 1 The graph below shows the movement of an object at several points in time. What is the average speed of the object? a. 0.5 meters/minute b. 2 meters/minute c. 25 meters/minute d. 50 meters/minute

  30. Question 2 Data from an experiment are presented. The slope of the graph represents what characteristic of an object? a. displacement b. force c. speed d. inertia

  31. Question 3 A spring scale is pulled downward and readings are recorded. If the spring scale is pulled 3.5 cm, the spring scale should read a. 12 N. b. 13 N. c. 14 N. d. 15 N.

  32. Question 4 A student records the mass and volume of a lump of clay, x. Next, a second lumps of clay, y, is added to lump x, and the combined (x + y) mass and volume are recorded. Finally, a third lump of clay, z, is added to the combined (x + y) mixture and the final (x + y + z) mass and volume are recorded, as shown. What is the most logical conclusion about the clay used in this investigation? a. Lump z has the greatest mass. b. Lump z has the lowest density. c. Lump y has the lowest density. d. Lump y has the greatest mass.

  33. Question 5 Red-clay bricks have a density of approximately 200 kg/m3. Air has a density of 1 kg/m3. Which of the following has the lowest mass? a. 2 m3 of bricks b. 4 m3 of bricks c. 6000 m3 of air d. 10,000 m3 of air

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