Matter & Particles
States of Matter & Properties
Heat and Thermal Expansion
Density and Buoyancy
Phase Changes and Air
100

What is matter?

This is anything that has mass and takes up space.

100

What is volume?

Volume describes how much space the matter takes up.

100

What is melting point?

The temperature at which a solid becomes a liquid is called this.

100

What is density?

Property of matter measures how tightly packed particles are in a substance

100

What is melting?

Solid to liquid change

200

What are particles?

These tiny pieces make up all matter, including atoms and molecules.

200

What are two main characteristics of a solid?

This state of matter has a definite shape, definite volume, and tightly packed particles that vibrate in place.

200

What is freezing point?

The temperature at which a liquid becomes a solid is called this

200

What is Buoyancy?

Buoyancy is the ability of an object to float in a fluid (liquid or gas).

200

What is condensation?

Gas to liquid change.

300

How does heat affect particles?

As heat is applied, particles move faster and spread out possibly changing states.

300

What are two characteristics of a liquid?

This state of matter has no definite shape, takes the shape of its container, but has a definite volume.

300

What is thermal expansion?

When matter is heated, particles move faster and spread apart expand. 

300

What does it mean when an object is positively buoyant?

Objects less dense than the fluid so it floats.

300

What is sublimation?

Solid to gas change

400

What is the inter molecular force of particles? How strong is it in each state of matter?

Particles are attracted to each other. Strong attraction → solid, medium → liquid, weak → gas.

400

What are two characteristics of a gas?

This state of matter has no definite shape or volume, and its particles move freely far apart.

400

What is the principle of conservation of mass?

This is the principle that mass stays the same even when matter changes form or state.

400

What does it mean when an object is negatively buoyant ?

Objects denser than the fluid, meaning it sinks.

400

What are 3 gases air is made up of?

  • Nitrogen ~78%

  • Oxygen ~21%

  • Carbon Dioxide

  • Water vapour

  • Argon

500

What is the Particle Theory of Matter?

This theory explains that all matter is made of particles that are always moving and have spaces between them.

500

What is compressibility?

How much matter can be squeezed or squished

500

How does heat affect materials in construction and why is this important when choosing materials?

Heat causes expansion, cold causes contraction; engineers must choose materials that handle temperature changes safely and avoid cracks or damage.

500

What does it mean when something is neutrally buoyant? Give an example we talked about in class.

Objects with density equal to the fluid. Ex. watermelon, or scuba diving.

500

What are 3 properties of air?

  • Air cannot be felt unless it is moving

  • Air cannot see clean air

  • Air has no colour unless it is dirty
  • We cannot smell air unless it is polluted
  • Air is fluid
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