Matter & Energy
Force, Motion & Waves
Earth Systems & Weather
Earth’s Structure & Geology
Life Science & Classification
Nature of Science
Chemistry
100

The amount of matter in an object that doesn’t change, no matter where you are in the universe.

What is mass?

100

The force that pulls objects toward Earth’s center.

What is gravity?

100

This short-term condition of the atmosphere includes rain, sun, and wind.

What is weather?

100

These cracks in the Earth’s surface are where most earthquakes happen.

What are faults?

100

This jelly-like material inside cells holds the organelles in place.

What is cytoplasm?

100

A prediction you make before testing an experiment.

What is a hypothesis?

100

What is the chemical formula for water?

H2O

200

The type of energy you feel as heat and can’t see, even though it's emitted by the Sun.

What is infrared radiation?

200

This invisible force can attract or repel objects without touching them.

What is magnetism?

200

The Earth sphere that includes all the water—liquid, solid, and vapor.

What is the hydrosphere?

200

The process that breaks down rocks using wind, water, or ice.

What is weathering?

200

These tiny green structures in plant cells help them make food using sunlight.

What are chloroplasts?

200

The variable in an experiment that the scientist changes on purpose.

What is the independent variable?

200

What is the name of the table that organizes all known elements?

What is the Periodic Table?

300

This explains why a bowling ball has more mass than a beach ball, even if they’re the same size.

What is density

300

When forces on an object are equal and opposite, this is the result.

What is no motion or constant motion (balanced forces)?

300

The stage in the water cycle where liquid water turns into water vapor.

What is evaporation?

300

This type of rock forms when melted rock cools and solidifies.

What is igneous rock?

300

The three main parts of the cell theory.

What is: all living things are made of cells; cells are the basic unit of life; all cells come from other cells?

300

These help scientists test ideas, often when real-world testing isn’t possible.

What are models?

300

What is the smallest particle of an element that still has that element’s properties?

What is an atom?

400

The process where electrical energy turns into light and thermal energy in a lightbulb.

What is energy transformation (or energy conversion)?

400

The total force acting on an object when all individual forces are combined.

What is net force?

400

The type of heat transfer that moves energy through air or water currents.

What is convection?

400

The theory that explains why continents move and earthquakes occur.

What is plate tectonics?

400

The system scientists use to group living things based on shared characteristics.

What is classification (or taxonomy)?

400

An explanation supported by evidence that can change with new data.

What is a scientific theory?

400

Which part of the atom has a positive charge?

What is a proton?

500

A change that creates a new substance with different properties, unlike melting or boiling.

What is a chemical change?

500

These repeating disturbances move energy through solids, liquids, gases, or even space.

What are waves?

500

The fast-moving air current in the atmosphere that influences weather patterns.

What is the jet stream?

500

This part of Earth’s interior is made of hot, flowing rock and causes plate movement.

What is the mantle?

500

This process explains how traits that help survival become more common in a species over time.

What is natural selection?

500

This ensures that scientific results are valid and not just a one-time event.

What is replication (or repeating the experiment)?

500

What do we call a pure substance made of only one kind of atom?

What is an element?

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