What's the Matter?
So Much Energy
Moving All the Time?
Let's Mix It Up
Even More Energy
100

Density, buoyancy, luster, plasticity, and ductility  are all examples of 

What are properties of matter?

100

This type of energy must have matter to vibrate 

What is sound?
100

This holds back or resists motion between two surfaces

What is friction?


100

The temperature at which point an element or a compound changes to a solid.

What is a freezing point.

100

For every action there is an equal an opposite reaction.

What is Newton's third law of motion?

200

Contains electrons, protons, and neutrons

What is an atom?

200

Three main types are kinetic, potential, and gravitional.

What is energy?

200

Law that states something at rest perfers to stay at rest and something in motion prefers to stays in motions.

What is inertia (Newton's first law of motion)?

200

A bond formed between two or more atoms with a charge.

What is an ionic bond?
200

Travels as a wave comprised of photons.

What is light?

300

The three main states of matter

What are solid, liquid, and gas.

300

This states that energy and matter cannot be created or destroyed. E=mc^2

What is the First Law of Thermodynamics? 

300
A mixture that is evenly distributed at the molecular level.
What is a homogeneous mixture?
300

Changes the speed and bend of light.

What is refraction?

400

A field around items that are stationarily charged.

What is an electrical field?

400

These are in the outermost shell of an atom and determine how it interacts with other atoms

What is a valence electron?

400

Two or more substances interact and change into a new substance.

What is a chemical reaction?

400

States that energy is protected and perserved.

What is the law of conservation of energy?

500

Long chains of repeating molecules, found in plastics.

What is a polymer?

500

A closed, continuous loop or pathway that directs the eletrical field and usually comprises a voltage source, conductors, a load, and a switch.

What is a circuit?

500

Acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on it and inversely proportional to its mass.
F=ma (net force equals mass times acceleration)

What is Newton's second law of motion?

500

This forms when a compound with unequal sharing of electrons interacts with another molecule's partial charges

What is a polar bond?

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