States of Matter
Changing States of Matter
Heat Transfer
Vocabulary
Behavior of Molecules
100
Tightly packed and vibrates in place
What is a solid
100
A change of state from a solid to a liquid
What is melting
100

Your hot cocoa cools on the table. Where does the heat go?

Heat is transferred from molecules of the cocoa to molecules of the mug to molecules of the air in the room.

100
Anything that has volume and takes up space
What is Matter?
100

Volume changes when a liquid is heated.

What is thermal expansion

200
Particles can slide past each other
What is a liquid
200
Boiling water becomes a
What is gas
200

Heat is transferred from molecule to molecule by collision.

What is conduction.

200
Solid, Liquid, and Gas are all three types of
What is States of Matter
200

The molecules slow down and thermal contraction occurs in a substance when...


.... thermal energy (or heat) is transferred away from substance.

300
Particles take the shape of the container that it is in
What is liquid
300

The change of a liquid to a gas using heat.

What is evaporation

300

Heat is transferred primarily this way in our atmosphere.

What is convection.

300

A physical change when matter changes from one state to another.

What is a phase change.

300
That point when all motion stops in molecules.

What is absolute zero.

400
Fastest moving particles of all the states of matter
What is gas
400
A change from a gas to a liquid
What is condensation
400

When the temperature of your cocoa cools so that it is the same temperature as the room, you have....

thermal equilibrium (when both temperatures will be the same.)

400

The average kinetic energy of molecules.

What is temperature

400

What is true about the average kinetic energy of your metal water bottle and your binder reminder.

What is they are all have the same average kinetic energy

500

When you add energy to a liquid, what happens to the particles?

What is they move faster and spread out!

500
Changing from a solid directly to a gas
What is sublimation
500

Thinking about temperatures, cities that are located next to large bodies of water...

What is they have a smaller range in temperatures over the year.

500

Compare the thermal energy of a giant iceberg with a hot cup of coffee.

The iceberg is made of so many molecules, all moving slowly. If you were to add the movement of all those molecules, you will find the iceberg has much more thermal energy than that coffee.

500

You notice the red liquid in your thermometer going down. (thinking about the motion of those molecules in the red liquid)

What is thermal contraction.