States of Matter
Technically Speaking
Changing States
I'm feeling Gaseous
Applying Gas Laws
100

This is a high energy gas that interacts with electricity and magnetism

Plasma

100

Why were we able to put 40-60 drops of water on a penny's surface?

Cohesion
100

This is happening to some extent at the surface of all liquids

Evaporation

100

This is the force applied by substances on an area or surface.

Pressure

100
Increasing the temperature gas inside a fixed volume causes the pressure to

Increase

200

This has a definite volume but it takes the shape of its container.

Liquid

200

A substance's resistance to flow.

Viscosity

200
When water vapor turns into liquid water

condensation

200

Increasing pressure and decreasing volume are the important ideas of this

Boyle's Law

200

If pressure increases and the volume is kept the same, what happens to the temperature?

Temperature Increases

300

This has a definite shape and volume that remain unchanged.

Solid

300

It cannot overcome the attraction between its particles.

Solid

300

Dry ice goes through this process

Sublimation

300

Increasing temperature and increasing volume are the main ideas of 

Charles Law

300
Congratulations, you hugged a balloon so hard it popped . . . why?

You decreased its volume which caused an increase in pressure. The air pressure was higher than the rubber could hold causing the balloon to pop.

400

This takes the shape and volume of its container.

Gas or Plasma

400

It can completely overcome the attraction between its particles.

Gas

400

When something is melting or boiling its temperature 

Does not change
400

Increasing Temperature and increasing pressure are the important ideas of this

Amonton's Law

400

The pressure inside a pop can decreases when it is opened. Why?

Opening the can increased the container's volume allowing the pressure to decrease.

500

What type of property is the state of matter?

Physical Property

500

A solid with a random pattern of particles.

Amorphous Solid

500

Frost is an example of this 

Deposition

500

After riding your bike 20 miles you feel your tires. They feel warm and your tires feel harder than they did when you started. Whose law explains this?

Amonton's Law

500

During a very cold night your car tires became flat. Explain how the temperature, pressure, and volume were impacted in this situation.

Temperature decrease, pressure decreased, and volume stayed fixed.