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APES Unit 2: The Physical World

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APES Unit 2: The Physical World A little about the nature of science, chemistry, physics, soil science, atmospheric science, plate tectonics, the rock cycle and water – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: APES Unit 2: The Physical World


1
APES Unit 2 The Physical World
  • A little about the nature of science, chemistry,
    physics, soil science, atmospheric science, plate
    tectonics, the rock cycle and water

2
Chapter 3
  • Physical Science Review

3
The Nature of Science
  • Science is a pursuit of knowledge about how the
    world works
  • Scientific data is collected by making
    observations and taking measurements
  • Observations involve the five senses, and help
    answer questions or problems
  • Data can be qualitative (red, far away, hot)
  • Can be quantitative (700 nm wavelength, 300 light
    years, 120 degrees Celsius)

4
Scientific Law
  • A Scientific Law
  • A description of what we find happening in nature
    over and over again in a certain way
  • Can often be stated in one sentence or one
    equation
  • Examples
  • Law of Conservation of Matter
  • Law of Conservation of Energy
  • Law of Entropy
  • Law of Gravity (F Gm1m2/d2, Newton)
  • 2nd Law of Motion (F ma, Newton)
  • Law of Segregation (Mendel)
  • Law of Independent Assortment (Mendel)

5
Scientific Theory
  • Scientific Theory
  • More complex set of statements than a scientific
    law
  • Describes how and/or why a scientific phenomenon
    occurs
  • A hypothesis that has been supported by multiple
    scientists experiments in multiple locations
  • Consensus of scientists agree
  • Can never be proven true, can only be proven
    false
  • Examples
  • Atomic Theory
  • Germ Theory of Disease
  • Theory of Evolution (Darwin)
  • Quantum Theory (Heisenberg, et al)
  • Theory of General Relativity (Einstein)
  • Theory of Special Relativity (Einstein)

6
Scientific Law Scientific Theory
  • A theory never becomes a law
  • A law never becomes a theory
  • They serve two different purposes
  • They are equally supported and valued by the
    consensus of the scientific community

7
Reasoning
  • Inductive Reasoning
  • Uses specific observations and facts to arrive at
    a general conclusion
  • A dog breathes oxygen, a dog is an animal,
    therefore all animals breathe oxygen.
  • Deductive Reasoning
  • Uses logic to arrive at a specific conclusion
    based on a generalization
  • All birds have feathers, eagles are birds,
    therefore all eagles have feathers.

8
Models
  • A model is used to describe or represent an
    observed or predicted behavior
  • Feedback Loops
  • Positive Loop Runaway cycles
  • where a change in a certain direction
  • causes further change in the same
  • direction (compound interest,
  • exponential population growth,
  • greenhouse effect)
  • Negative Loop a change in a certain
  • direction leads to a lessening of the change
  • (thermostat, predator-prey cycles)

9
Positive Feedback Loop
  • CO2 emission levels rise
  • Surface temperatures rise
  • Polar ice melts, forms liquid water
  • Solar rays hit the ice and water
  • Ice reflects rays, water absorbs them
  • As ice decreases, more radiation is absorbed
  • More absorbed radiation leads to warmer
    temperatures
  • Warmer temperatures lead to more ice melting,
    which leads to warmer temperatures and more
    melting ice
  • Once the feedback starts, even with constant CO2
    levels, the cycle will continue

10
Synergy
  • The whole is greater than the sum of the
    individual parts
  • Two chemicals combine and interact, and have a
    greater effect than the added individual effects
    (e.g., alcohol and valium)
  • Pollutants often interact in a synergistic way,
    as do pesticides

11
Time Delay
  • Effects arent seen immediately (CFC release
    leading to ozone depletion, DDT use leading to
    thinning eggshells)
  • Some events have an immediate impact as well as a
    time delay effect (e.g., the oil spill in the
    Gulf of Mexico)

12
Basic Chemistry Review
  • Matter
  • Atoms
  • Nucleus
  • Protons Neutrons
  • Electrons
  • Atomic number
  • Atomic mass
  • Ions
  • Elements
  • Isotopes
  • Chemical reactions

13
Inorganic Molecules
  • All molecules not classified as organic
  • Some important environmental inorganic molecules
  • hydrogen (H2)
  • oxygen (O2)
  • water (H2O)
  • nitrogen (N2)
  • carbon dioxide (CO2)
  • nitrogen dioxide (NO2)
  • sulfur dioxide (SO2)
  • ammonia (NH3)

14
Organic Molecules
  • Molecules containing carbon atoms combined with
    each other with atoms of one or more other
    elements such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen,
    sulfur, etc.
  • Carbon has 4 valence electrons it is versatile,
    able to combine with other elements in long and
    complex molecules
  • Hydrocarbons have carbon and hydrogen only (the
    most simple is methane, CH4)
  • Chlorofluorocarbons have carbon, fluorine
    chlorine atoms
  • CO and CO2 are not organic

15
Macromolecules
  • Very large organic molecules
  • Carbohydrates
  • cellulose
  • Lipids
  • fat
  • Proteins
  • enzymes
  • Nucleic Acids
  • DNA and RNA

16
Matter Quality
  • Low quality
  • hard to extract
  • dispersed
  • coal plant emissions
  • High quality
  • easy to extract
  • concentrated
  • lump o coal

17
Law of Conservation of Matter
  • The Earth is a closed system for matter
  • In any closed system, the amount of matter stays
    the same
  • There is no away, everything must go somewhere
  • All the stuff that was ever on the earth is
    still here (a few exceptions include meteors
    hitting the earth and space probes launched from
    earth)

18
Energy
  • The ability to do work and transfer heat
  • Kinetic, potential, gravitational, electrical,
    thermal, mechanical, electromagnetic, nuclear
  • High quality energy includes electricity, nuclear
    fission and fusion, etc. that can be used for
    industrial purposes and to run electrical devices
    and motors
  • We are always interested in energy transformations

19
Nuclear Reactions
  • Change the identity of the elements involved
  • The atomic number changes
  • Nuclear fission (nuclear reactors)
  • Nuclear fusion (the sun stars, 3-4 times the
    energy as fission)

20
Laws of Thermodynamics
  • 1st Law (Conservation of Energy)
  • The Earth is an open system for energy
  • Energy is neither created nor destroyed, it
    changes form

21
Laws of Thermodynamics
  • 2nd Law (Entropy)
  • Systems move towards disorder
  • In any energy transformation, some of the energy
    usually ends up as heat ( e.g., energy lost in
    power line transmission)

22
Chapter 4, 6 16 (4.2, 4.6, 6.1, 6.2,16.1-16.4)
  • Earth Science Review

23
Earth Structure
  • Inner core
  • Outer core
  • Mantle
  • Lithosphere
  • Upper mantle
  • Crust (fossil fuels, minerals,
  • nonrenewables are found here)

24
Earth Structure
  • Biosphere - where all life is located
  • Hydrosphere - where all water is located
  • Atmosphere - compared to the size of the Earth
    (104 km), the atmosphere is a thin shell (120 km)
  • Troposphere (ground to 7 miles, weather, smog)
  • Stratosphere (7-30 miles, protective ozone)
  • Mesosphere (30-50 miles)
  • Thermosphere (50 miles and beyond, includes
    ionosphere)

25
Soil
  • Soil is a complex mixture of minerals, nutrients,
    eroded rock, air, water, decaying organic matter,
    and humus (decayed organic matter)
  • Soil provides the food for all plants (and thus
    for all humans), and when healthy, will often
    include many microorganisms and fungi
  • Healthy soil is often rich in nutrients
  • Leaching is the loss of water-soluble nutrients
    from the soil due to rain and irrigation

26
Soil Horizons
  • O horizon (organic matter, litter layer)
  • A horizon (topsoil)
  • E horizon (location of leached minerals from
    upper layers)
  • B horizon (subsoil, silt and sand)
  • C horizon
  • Bedrock (deep, underlying non-soil materials)

27
Weather Climate
  • Weather occurs in the troposphere and includes
    temperature, precipitation, barometric pressure
    and wind speed and direction
  • Climate is the general pattern of weather over a
    period of at least 30 years
  • The two most important factors in climate are
    temperature and precipitation

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Ocean Currents
37
Ocean Currents and Winds
  • Influence climate by redistributing solar energy
    (heat) from one place to another
  • Winds can impact aquatic as well as terrestrial
    life
  • Wind blowing along steep western coasts on some
    continents pushes water away from land
  • This outgoing surface water is replaced by an
    upwelling of cold nutrient-rich bottom water
  • These nutrients support many diverse life forms

38
Weather
  • Weather patterns can vary on a large scale
    without being a change in climate
  • El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a periodic
    fluctuation (every 3-8 years) in the Pacific and
    Indian Oceans surface waters temperature
  • A change in the direction of winds warms coastal
    surface waters, suppresses upwellings and alters
    much of the Earths weather
  • Causes warmer temperatures and drought in the
    western Pacific and rain in the east
  • La Nina is the reverse of this effect, when the
    Pacific and Indian Ocean surface waters cool
  • Causes wetter and cooler winters in the Pacific

39
Earth Processes
  • Continental Drift
  • The movement of large plates of rock on the
    earths surface
  • The motion of tectonic plates accounts for most
    of the earthquakes, mountain formations,
    earths volcanic activity

40
Earth Processes
  • Vulcanism
  • Process of bringing material from the deep
    interior of a planet and spilling it forth on the
    surface
  • Generally caused by subduction
  • When two sections of the earth's crust collide,
    one slab of crust is forced back down into the
    deeper earth regions

41
Earth Processes
  • Weathering erosion affects all types of rock
  • The rock cycle
  • metamorphic rock gt melting and cooling gt igneous
    rock gt erosion and weathering gt sedimentary rock
    gt heat and pressure gt metamorphic rock

42
Chapter 15
  • Water

43
Water
  • Unique qualities that impact the environment
  • High specific heat
  • Takes a lot of energy exchange to cause a change
    in temperature, changes temperature slowly (water
    1.0cal/g Celsius, aluminum 0.22cal/g Celsius)
  • Keeps coastal areas moderate in temperature
  • The North Atlantic Current provides warm water
    for Europe and North America

44
Water
  • Expands as it freezes
  • Ice floats, life continues in the winter in
    northern lakes
  • Universal solvent (ppm, ppb, ppt)
  • Dissolves and transports nutrients (upwelling is
    the movement of cool nutrient-rich water from the
    bottom to the surface)
  • Filters UV light
  • Sticky (adhesive and cohesive)

45
Water Issues Availability
46
Water Use
  • Approximately 1 of the water on the planet is
    available for use by humans.
  • A lot of water is necessary for agriculture,
    industry, energy production and transportation.
  • Personal and home use accounts for the smallest
    percentage, but it is still important to
    conserve.

47
Home Water Use
  • Some experts estimate that 50 of the landscaping
    water goes to waste due to over-watering and
    runoff
  • Leaky faucets that drip at the rate of one drip
    per second can waste more than 3,000 gallons of
    water each year

48
Water Waste
  • Why water is wasted
  • The responsibility for water resource management
    of a single watershed is often divided among
    many state and local governments
  • Irrigation systems lose water to runoff,
    evaporation and seepage
  • Removing vegetation causes flooding and erosion
  • Water prices are artificially low

49
Water Issues Availability
  • The most economically and environmentally sound
    choice for conserving water is to increase the
    efficiency of the way we use water.
  • Desalination is sometimes suggested, but it is
    very expensive and inefficient.
  • The Jubail Desalination
  • Plant in Saudi Arabia is
  • the largest in the world
  • and produces 800
  • million gallons of fresh
  • water per day

50
Water Sustainability
  • Sustainable use of water involves
  • Participatory decision making
  • Preservation of ecological integrity of water
    supply systems
  • Integrated governance of water pollution
  • Education about water issues
  • Implementation of water conservation systems in
    business, industry, agriculture and personal use
    (rainwater harvesting, gray water use)

51
Water Issues Who Gets It?
  • Farmers
  • Fishers
  • Energy
  • Hydroelectric Nuclear
  • Businesses
  • Native peoples
  • City dwellers
  • Non-human species
  • Natural ecosystems
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