The first step of the scientific method.
What is a question?
A force that pulls objects towards one another.
What is Gravity?
It helps us understand matter and the forces that act on it.
What is physics?
The upward force exerted by a fluid that opposes the weight of a submerged object. It acts against gravity.
What is buoyancy?
Numerous species in the waterfowl family Anatidae which also includes swans and geese.
What is a duck?
Method of gaining knowledge and solving problems.
What is the scientific method?
This keeps the planets in orbit.
What is the Sun's gravitational force?
It measures the amount of material in an object.
What is mass?
The buoyancy of this type of fluid is greater than water.
What is saltwater?
Parts of the experiement that are kept the same.
What are the controlled variables?
An educated guess written in an "if..,then..." statement.
What is a hypothesis?
The gravitational force exerted on an object.
What is weight?
This takes up space and has mass.
What is matter?
When something is moved from its original position.
What is displacement?
Part of the experiment that is changed.
What is the independent variable?
Part where the scientist conducts an experiment and makes observations.
What is the experiment?
It is 1/6 of the gravitational force on Earth.
What is the gravitational force on the Moon?
Solids, liquids and gasses.
What are some examples of matter?
It wouldn't sink. Probably not, wait, no, yes, it would probably not sink.
What is wood?
Things that the scientist focus their observations on to see how they respond to the change made to the independent variable.
What are the dependent variables?
The five steps of a scientific method.
What are question, hypothesis, experiment, conclusion, and communication?
Both objects drop at the same speed and hit the ground at the same time.
What happens when you drop two objects with different weights?
For every action, there is an equal and oppisite reaction.
What is the third law of motion?
The weight of an object has to be less than or equal to the weight of the water it displaces in order for it to float.
What is the law of buoyancy or Archimedes' principle?
A list of the 13 BLM principles.
What are Black Women, Empathy, Transgender Affirming, Black Families, Loving Engagement, Black Villages, Collective Value, Restorative Justice, Queer Affirming, Unapologetically Black, Globalism, Diversity, Intergenerational?