Behavior & Changes of Liquids
Behavior & Changes of Solids
Changes of States
Behavior of Gases
BONUS
100

What is a liquid?

Matter with a definite volume but no definite shape.

100

What is a solid?

Matter that has a definite shape and a definite volume.

100

What is temperature?

A measure of the average kinetic energy of all the particles in an object.
100

What is a gas?

Matter that has no definite shape or volume.

100

What was the example of viscosity in the textbook?

Honey, which has viscosity because of how thick it is.

200
What is viscosity?

A measurement of a liquid’s resistance to flow.

200

What does melting do?

It changes matter from a solid into a liquid by increasing the thermal energy and temperature of an object. When the melting point is reached, temperature stops increasing.

200

What is thermal energy?

The total potential and kinetic energy of an object.

200

What is vapor?

The gas state of a substance that is normally a solid or a liquid at room temp.
200

What was the example of surface tension used in the textbook?

The spider walking across water because of the surface tension.

300

What is surface tension?

The uneven forces acting on the particles on the surface of a liquid.

300

What is freezing?

It is the opposite of melting. When matter hits a temperature that changes its state from a solid to a liquid, that is its freezing point.

300

What is sublimation?

The change of state from a solid to a gas WITHOUT going through the liquid state. (Opposite of deposition.)

300

What is pressure?

The amount of force applied per unit of area, like gas in a cylinder.

300

What are the two forms of vaporization?

Boiling and evaporation.

400

What is the change in state of a liquid into a gas?

Vaporization

400

Where can the particles that make up a solid vibrate?

Only in place, since there are strong forces among them.

400

What substance is the only one that exists naturally as a solid?

Water

400

What is the kinetic molecular theory and what are some of its ideas?

An explanation of how particles in matter behave. Some ideas are that small particles make up all matter, these particles are in constant motion, and they collide with each other, other objects, and the walls of their containers.

400

What is an example of deposition?

Frost, when you wake up in the winter time, or even autumn, and there is frost on the grass. That is when water vapor loses thermal energy, and it becomes frost.

500

How do evaporation, condensation, and boiling relate?

Condensation is the change of state from a gas to a liquid. Evaporation and boiling are the opposite of condensation.

500

How are two types of solids (a diamond and a charcoal) different?

Diamonds have particles arranged in a specific, repeating order. Charcoal is an amorphous solid, meaning it has particles arranged randomly. These different particle arrangements give the materials different properties.

500
How are the processes of vaporization and melting similar and how are the processes of freezing and condensation similar?

When solids melt, they add thermal energy, and when liquids vaporize, they add thermal energy. 

When liquids freeze, they remove thermal energy. When gases condensate, they also remove thermal energy.

500

Where could we possibly see Boyle’s Law in action, according to the textbook?

When you travel in an airplane, air pressure inside your middle ear doesn’t decrease. The trapped air in your middle ear does not decrease.

500

What is the difference between Boyle‘s Law and Charles’s Law?

Boyle’s Law states that pressure of a gas increases if the volume decreases and pressure of a gas decreases if the volume increases, when temperature is constant.

Charles’s Law states the volume of a gas increases with increasing temperature, if the pressure is constant.