The state of matter that has a definite shape and volume.
What is solid?
A substance that dissolves in a solvent.
What is a solute?
The method of separating a mixture by passing it through a filter.
What is filtration?
The "thickness" or "thinness" of a fluid.
What is viscosity?
The upward force exerted by a fluid on an object immersed in it.
What is buoyant force?
The process of changing from liquid to gas.
What is evaporation?
Able to be dissolved in a particular solvent.
What is soluble?
Acronym: WHMIS
What is Workplace Hazardous Material Information System?
How quickly a fluid "runs" from one point to another.
What is flow rate?
Defined as the amount of force exerted per area (F/A).
What is pressure?
The process of changing from gas to liquid.
What is condensation?
A mixture where you can see the different parts.
What is a heterogeneous mixture?
The process of removing salt from seawater to obtain fresh water.
What is desalination?
The amount of mass in a given volume of a substance (m/v).
What is density?
The internal organ in a fish that allows them to maintain neutral buoyancy underwater.
What is a swim bladder?
The process of changing from solid to gas without passing through the liquid state.
What is sublimation?
A mixture where the particles are uniformly scattered and you can't see the different parts.
What is a homogeneous mixture?
The process of removing water to preserve food.
What is dehydration?
A system that performs tasks by exerting pressure on a liquid.
What is a hydraulic system?
The state when an object neither sinks nor floats in a fluid.
What is neutral buoyancy?
The state of matter where gases are ionized and found in stars.
A solution in which more solute can dissolve at a specific temperature.
What is an unsaturated solution?
The method used to separate crude oil into its components/parts by boiling and condensation.
What is fractional distillation?
State of matter used in pneumatic systems.
What is gas?
The principle stating that the buoyant force acting on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
What is Archimedes' Principle?