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Title: Mrs. Sumrall - Science 2nd 9 Weeks' Review


1
Science
  • 9 Weeks Review

2
9 Weeks Review
3
  • ALABAMA COURSE OF STUDY OBJECTIVES
  • 2 Define mass, volume, and density.
  • 6 - Compare effects of gravitational force on
    Earth, on the moon, and within space.

  • 6A - Identifying contributions of Newton to the
    study of gravity


  • 6B -Describing how a spring scale is used to
    measure weight



4
  • In everyday usage, we rarely distinguish between
    weight and mass. If a man says I weigh 150
    pounds he is probably talking about his mass. If
    a woman says I felt weightless when I was
    swimming she is probably talking about her
    weight.
  • This does not cause many problems in our
    day-to-day lives, BUT IT IS a major issue for
    scientists.

5
  • An objects mass is the amount of matter it
    contains. An objects mass does not depend on its
    location. If you move a bowling ball from Earth
    to the Moon, it will still contain the same
    amount of matter. The metric units for mass
    include the kilogram (kg) and the gram (g).

6
  • Unlike mass, weight is a force. Weight is the
    force of gravity pulling on an object.
  • The weight of an object (w) its mass (m)
    multiplied the gravitational acceleration (g) at
    that spot, w mg.
  • The unit of weight in the metric system is the
    same as the unit of forcethe newton (N). (Story
    about Sir Isaac Newton at end of PP)

7
  • An objects weight can be changed either by
    altering its mass or by moving it to a location
    with stronger gravity (like Jupiter) or weaker
    gravity (like the Moon or Mars).

8
In 1676, Robert Hooke discovered that the length
a spring stretches equals applied force.
9
  • Because weight is a type of force, it can be
    measured on a spring scale.
  • Examples of spring scales include bathroom scales
    and produce scales.
  • If you use a spring scale to weigh a piece of
    fruit on Earth and on the Moon, it will correctly
    show that the fruit has less weight on the Moon
    than on Earth.
  • The force of gravity pulling the fruit down is
    much weaker on the Moon.

10
  • A balance measures mass by comparing the weights
    of two objects.
  • An object placed on the pan of a balance exerts a
    downward force equal to its weight.
  • An object of equal weight placed on the other pan
    will balance the pans.

11
  • Because the pans are in the same gravitational
    field, the equal weights of the two objects imply
    their equal masses.
  • If two objects have equal mass on Earth, they
    will have equal mass on the Moon, Mars, Jupiter,
    or anywhere else.

12
  • ALABMA COURSE OF STUDY OBJECTIVE
  • 6C -Explaining how air resistance affects
    falling objects

13
  • The most surprising and misunderstood aspect of
    free fall is that..
  • light objects can fall at the same rate as much
    heavier objects.
  • In a vacuum, a feather falls as quickly as a
    hammer!

14
  • But why do objects of different weight fall at
    the same rate?
  • Galileo noted that light and heavy objects fell
    at the same rate. Why? An iron cannonball and a
    wooden ball of the same size, when dropped from
    the leaning tower of Pisa, hit the ground
    together. But the force on the cannonball--its
    weight--is larger. Why doesn't it fall any
    faster?

Italian physicist, mathematician, astronomer, and
philosopher
15
  • Newton gave the correct answer heavier objects
    also have greater inertia.
  • Inertia is the tendency of a body to resist
    acceleration the tendency of a body at rest to
    remain at rest or of a body in straight line
    motion to stay in motion in a straight line.

16
  • Not only is the cannonball pulled down with a
    force that is (say) 10 times larger, it also
    resists acceleration 10 times more strongly.
  • Newton expressed it in a mathematical
    formula--"Newton's second law of motion,"
  • Simply stated, the result is that both objects
    fall at the same rate (ignoring air resistance).

17
  • Suppose a rock is 100 times more massive than a
    pebble. It would take 100 times as much force to
    move the rock as it would take to move the
    pebble.
  • If the gravitational forces on the two objects
    were equal, the pebble would fall more quickly.
    But the force of gravity is not the same on all
    objects.

18
  • The force of gravity on an object, also called
    its weight, is proportional to the objects mass.
  • Therefore, the rock is being pulled by 100 times
    as much force as the pebble, and they will fall
    at the same rate.

19
  • In air, the motion of falling objects is opposed
    by the frictional force of air resistance.
  • Air resistance depends on the surface area of
    the falling object.
  • If two objects have the same mass, air resistance
    will slow the object with larger surface area
    more.

20
  • The faster an object is moving, the greater the
    air resistance.
  • This resistance cancels some of the gravitational
    force so the object does not speed up quite as
    much.
  • As the object goes faster and faster, air
    resistance cancels more and more of the
    gravitational force, so it speeds up less and
    less.

21
  • Two objects with the same surface area, such as a
    golf ball and a ping pong ball, experience the
    same force of air resistance.
  • But the less massive object (the ping pong ball)
    is slowed down more.
  • Massive objects, such as runaway trains, take a
    lot of force to stop!

22
  • This explains why the golf ball falls more
    quickly than the soccer ball without a parachute
    but more slowly with a parachute.
  • Without a parachute, the soccer ball has much
    greater air resistance than the golf ball, so it
    is slowed more than the golf ball.
  • With a parachute, the air resistance of each ball
    is about the same. The golf ball, which is
    lighter, is slowed down more.

23
http//www.apprenticezone.com/davinci/games/main/g
ames.html
24
Current Events Connection Unit Confusion
  • A dizzying variety of units have been used to
    describe the mass or weight of objects pounds,
    ounces, tons, stones, grains, drams, carats,
    pennyweights, scruples, talents, shekels,
    newtons, kilogramsthe list goes on and on.
  • Until fairly recently, little or no distinction
    was made between units of mass and units of
    weight.

25
  • To avoid confusion, scientists use System
    Internationale (SI) units.
  • This system, also known as the metric system, is
    convenient to use because it is easy to convert
    from one unit to another.
  • There are 100 centimeters in a meter, and 1000
    meters in a kilometer. Compare this to 12 inches
    in a foot and 5,280 feet in a mile!

26
  • The United States is one of the few countries in
    the world that has not adopted the metric system
    for everyday use. Occasionally this leads to
    serious problems. Perhaps the most notorious case
    of unit confusion occurred in 1999. NASA
    scientists were collaborating with engineers from
    Lockheed Martin to control the flight of the Mars
    Climate Orbiter. While the NASA group calculated
    forces in newtons, the engineers assumed that the
    numbers were given in units of pounds-force. The
    resulting miscalculation sent the 25 million
    probe hurtling into the Martian atmosphere at a
    steep angle, where it burned up.

27
  • ALABAMA COURSE OF STUDY OBJECTIVES
  • 2 Define mass, volume, and density.
  • 2C  Relating density to the sinking or
    floating of an object in a liquid

28
  • Density refers to the mass found in a given
    volume of a substance. It is calculated by
    dividing the mass of a substance by its volume D
    m / V.
  • A density of 2 g/mL means that a single
    milliliter of a substance has a mass of 2 grams.
  •  
  • In general, dense objects can be thought of as
    being more tightly packed than objects with low
    densities. Sand in a jar is more tightly packed,
    or dense, than pop tabs in the same size jar.

29
  • Because density does not depend on the amount of
    substance, it can be used to identify substances.
    Each milliliter of water has a mass of one gram,
    so water has a density of 1.0 g/mL. Gold has a
    density of 19.3 g/mL, and silver has a density of
    10.5 g/mL. (Note A milliliter, 1 mL, is
    equivalent to one cubic centimeter, 1 cm3 or 1
    cc.)

30
  • Place a can of soda and diet soda of the same
    brand in a tank of water. The diet soda will
    float while the regular soda will sink. What
    could the differences could be.?
  • (The regular soda has approximately 10
    tablespoons more sugar, giving it more mass and
    making it denser than diet soda.)

31
Historical Connection
  • There is a legend about Archimedes, an ancient
    philosopher and mathematician, which takes place
    in the third century B.C.
  • The king of Syracuse, Hiero, had given a jeweler
    a brick of pure gold to make into a crown. When
    the crown was completed, the king was suspicious
    that the jeweler had substituted a less precious
    metal for the gold, so he asked Archimedes to
    demonstrate whether the crown was pure gold or
    not.

32
  • At that time, there were no tools to measure
    irregular shapes, so it became quite a perplexing
    problem for Archimedes. He knew the crown was the
    same mass as the original bar of gold. Archimedes
    determined that if the crown had more volume than
    the original bar, it would be less dense and
    therefore not made of pure gold.

33
  • The problem was that Archimedes did not know how
    to find the volume of the crown. One day he
    accidentally filled his bathtub to the top. As he
    stepped into the tub, the water overflowed.

He realized that if he collected the water that
had overflowed, he would know the volume of his
body. Archimedes was so excited by his discovery
he jumped out of the tub and ran naked down the
street, all the while yelling, Eureka! I have
found it!
34
  • Archimedes used a balance to measure a block of
    gold with a mass equal to the crown. He placed
    the block of gold and the crown into a tank of
    water. Sure enough, the crown displaced more
    water than the gold, proving the crown was less
    dense than pure gold (and was therefore a fake!).

35
Sir Isaac Newton
  • Newton, an Apple,
  • and You by Jeanette CainHave you ever
    wondered why things fall down and not fall up? If
    you've heard of Sir Isaac Newton, then someone
    has probably told you that an apple fell on his
    head causing him to think of this very same idea!
    Thank goodness the apple didn't fall on his head,
    but only close enough for him to start thinking
    about things falling down, rathern than not
    falling up. Do you think he was the first person
    to ever see an apple fall to the ground? Probably
    not, but he was the first to decide that he
    wanted to know "Why?"

36
  • Isaac Newton was born on Christmas Day in 1642.
    His father died only a few weeks before he was
    born and his mother was very poor.
  • No one really expected that a genius would be
    born into a family lacking riches or money, but
    Newton proved them wrong. He was a small, sickly
    child and could not play games with the other
    children.

37
  • Sounds a little like Rudolph the Red-Nosed
    Reindeer, doesn't it? He also enjoyed doing
    things by himself, so he made up games that he
    could play by himself. When he was not making up
    games, he was reading. At the age of ten Newton
    went to a public school, but he had to room with
    a druggist whom he did not know. Although Newton
    was sickly, he enjoyed playing tricks on the
    druggist and was most often in more than just a
    little trouble with the druggist.

38
  • When he decided to use his time through positive
    actions, he made little windmills that worked and
    kites that flew.
  • He would make clocks that could run on water
    power, write poetry, and much to his mother's
    amazement he would draw charcoal sketches on the
    wall of his bedroom! Obviously, Newton's mom
    didn't have Mr. Clean!

39
  • His mother sent for his return home when he was
    14, because she needed him to run the farm.
    Newton enjoyed learning so much that he could be
    found behind the bushes studying from his books.
    It was his uncle who realized that Newton would
    never make a farmer and made the suggestion that
    Newton be sent to college.

40
  • He attended Trinity College in Cambridge and
    became well-known for his mathematic skills. It
    is said that he knew more than his professors!

41
  • In 1665, England faced a great plague which
    caused the college to close. At 23 years old,
    Newton had to return home to his mother's farm
    once more. Now this is where the story of Newton
    and the apple had its beginnings. He thought
    about gravity and sometimes in the morning hours
    he would sit on the edge of his bed (only
    half-dressed) and think about gravity until
    dinner time.

42
  • He had bought prisms at a county fair for a few
    pennies. He experimented with these penny prisms
    and showed that a beam of sunlight is composed of
    the six colors of the rainbow.

Those colors are red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, and violet. He even ground lenses and
mirrors to make a new type of microscope. Newton
also invented a new type of mathematics called
calculus. Each time he finished one of these
experiment, he returned to his ideas about
gravity.
43
  • Newton said that the moon is caught between two
    forces (1) gravity, which pulls it toward the
    earth and (2) centrifugal force, caused by its
    rotating, which pulls it outward. Since the moon
    is held by these two forces it cannot fly toward
    the earth and it cannot fly away from the earth.
    So, the moon does the next best thing-it moves in
    a curved path around the earth!

44
  • You can try your own experiment with these two
    forces at work by tying a string on a ball and
    whirl it in the air around you.
  • Ask an adult for help. You can feel it pulling
    away, but your grip on the string is like the
    force of gravity. It will hold the ball so that
    it moves in a circle around you.
  • You, like Newton have found and proved that the
    Earth's gravity has a tendency to pull all
    objects toward its center.

45
  • Newton then reasoned that if gravity explained
    the curved path of the moon, then couldn't it
    also explain the curved path of all the planets
    and heavenly bodies in the solar system? Newton
    said that just as the earth holds the moon, the
    sun would hold the earth and all the other
    planets.

Even the comets would be held with the sun's
gravitational pull. This is called the Universal
Law of Gravitation. The sun's force of gravity
will hold all the planets in their orbits.
46
  • This law also explains why a space ship can orbit
    the earth. It is the whirling motion that forces
    the space ship away from the earth, but it is
    gravity that pulls the space ship back toward the
    earth.
  • These two forces balance one another and will
    allow a spacecraft to travel in an orbit. Not
    everyone understood this at first, but at that
    time these were new ideas and very strange and
    different from what people had believed.

47
  • From a sickly and poor start in life, Isaac
    Newton made many discoveries. His book Principia
    was published in 1687. Some people say that this
    was one of the greatest single achievements of
    the human mind.

48
  • He was president of the Royal Society for 24
    years and was knighted by Queen Anne.

49
  • When Newton died on March 20, 1727, at the age of
    85, he was buried in Westminster Abbey.

50
  • Sir Isaac Newton

51
Selected Web Resources
  • Your weight on other worlds http//www.explorator
    ium.edu/ronh/weight/
  • Weight on other planets http//www.teachervision.
    fen.com/planets/lesson-plan/353.html
  • Make a balance http//www.raft.net/ideas/Measurin
    g20Mass.pdf
  • Measuring matter http//www.dmturner.org/Teacher/
    Library/4thText/MatPart2.html
  • Types of force http//www.physicsclassroom.com/Cl
    ass/newtlaws/U2L2b.html
  • Weight and mass http//ourworld.compuserve.com/ho
    mepages/Gene_Nygaard/weight.htm
  • Metric units in the US http//www.unc.edu/rowlet
    t/units/usmetric.html
  • Mars probe http//www.space.com/missionlaunches/l
    aunches/orbiter_errorupd_093099.htm
  • The story of Archimedes http//www.cde.state.co.u
    s/cdeadult/IGLA/pdf/ScienceSink.pdf
  • Activities to explore density http//www.teachers
    .net/lessons/posts/116.html
  • Related activities http//pzweb.harvard.edu/ucp/c
    urriculum/density/index.htm
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