Vocabulary
Air
3 States of Matter
Properties
100

What is evidence?

Something that proves that something is true.

100

Explain using evidence from one of our investigations how you know that air takes up space.

(Balloon filling up with air, air taking up space in a straw and causing other objects to move, etc).


100

What are the three states of matter?

Solid, liquid gas.

100

What is a property

What something feels, sounds, tastes, looks, and smells like. Also, the size, shape, and mass of an object?

200

What does it mean to make an observation of something?


To notice or observe something.

200

What is air resistance?

When air pushes against an object and slows it down.

200

Who am I?

I am the easiest to hold. My size and shape always stays the same, unless something forces them to change. My mass (how much matter I am made of) stays the same, as well.

Solid.

200

Describe a property of object A.

Answers may vary.

300

What is matter?

Anything that takes up space.

300

Explain using evidence from one of our investigations how you know that air takes up space.

(Balloon filling up with air, air taking up space in a straw and causing other objects to move, etc).

300

Who am I?

Even though I am easy to see, I am hard to hold. My size (how much space I take up) never changes, even though my shape changes wherever you put me. Like my two friends, my mass (how much matter I am made of) always stays the same.

Liquid.

300

Describe a property of object B.

Answers may vary.

400

What is air resistance? 

When air pushes against an object and slows it down.

400

True or false.

If you dropped a bowling ball and a feather the same distance from the ground, the bowling ball would hit the ground at a faster rate because it is heavier than the feather.

False.

Weight has nothing to do with how fast an object falls to the ground. Air resistance is the force that causes an object to be slowed down.

400

Who am I?

Unlike my friends, I am hard to see and to hold. The atoms in me move around freely and spread out in the space I am in. My size and shape changes everywhere I go. However, my mass (how much matter I am made of) always stays the same.

Gas.

400

Think back to the materials we observed last week.

What words did you use to describe how one of the materials felt like? Say what material it was.

Answers will vary.

500

What is a property?

What something feels, sounds, tastes, looks, or smells like. Also the size, shape and mass of something.

500

Describe what caused the feather to hit the ground at a slower rate than the ball?

Air resistance acted as a force on the shape of the feather and slowed it down.

500

Describe the difference between a liquid and a gas.

In a liquid, the atoms have space between them, however they are not free flowing like a gas. The shape of a liquid changes, while its size and mass always stays the same.

In a gas, the atoms are so spread apart that they move as freely as the space they are in. The size and the shape of a gas always changes, while the mass (how much matter is in an object) stays the same.

500

Which of these properties are observable (can observe with your senses) and which ones are measurable (measure with tools)

Sight, touch, sound, smell, taste, size, shape, and mass.

Observable:

Sight, touch, sound, smell, taste

Measurable: 

Size, shape, and mass.


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