Look at card 1. What state of matter are these particles in?
Solid
The base unit of all matter
Atom
Thermal energy can also refer to the most common adjective to describe summer.
Heat
Melting Point
Can be observed without changing the substance
Physical Properties
Look at card 2. What state of matter are these particles in?
Liquid
What an element is represented by
If you add enough thermal energy, it will do this.
Change its state of Matter.
Often used as a way to say someone turned to dust, but really it is when a Liquid turns to Gas
Vaporization
Can only be observed by changing the substance.
Chemical Properties
Look at card 3. What state of matter are these particles in?
Gas
A Force of attraction between 2 or more atoms.
Chemical Bond
The measurement for the average amount of kinetic energy.
Temperature
The scientific name for fog.
Evaporation
Flamability and reactivity are examples is this type of change.
Chemical Change.
An ionized gas with a high degree of energy, where electrons are stripped from atoms
Plasma
Molecule/Compund
What do thermometers measure in the particles?
The amount of thermal energy.
What you see on the outside of a nice, cold drink.
Condensation
Color, Density, Boiling Point, Melting Point, Malleability, Conductivity are all this property.
Physical Property
Occurs at extremely low temperatures, close to absolute zero.
Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC)
2 or more substances combined into one.
Mixture
Thermal energy is mesured with these units
Total kinetic and potential energy
This term is used to describe when a substance changes from a Solid to a Gas.
Sublimation
This is the rule for all Masses.
Law of Conservation of Mass.