Pressure & Depth
Buoyancy & Density
Fluid Dynamics
Heat Transfer & Temperature
Laws of Thermodynamics
100

The _____ in a fluid increases with depth. 

pressure

100

This upward force on an object submerged in a fluid equals the weight of the fluid displaced.

buoyant force

100

This type of substance is incompressible, meaning total flow in has to equal total flow out.

liquid

100

Temperature is a measure of the average __________ of particles in a substance.

kinetic energy
100

This law relates pressure of a gas to its volume, temperature and number of particles.

ideal gas law

200

The weight of the air above us is responsible for _______ _______. 

atmospheric pressure

200

If an object’s density is less than that of the fluid it is submerged in, it does this.

floats

200

In a pipe that narrows, the fluid’s speed does this.

speeds up

200

This type of heat transfer happens through direct molecular contact.

conduction

200

The more collisions there are between the particles of a confined gas and its surroundings, the _____ the pressure. 

higher

300

If a fluid gets denser, what happens to the pressure acting within that fluid. 

increases

300

This principle explains why a massive steel ship can float even though steel is denser than water.

Archimedes' Principle

300

According to Bernoulli’s principle, as the speed of a fluid increases, this property decreases.

pressure

300

The Sun warms Earth primarily through this method of heat transfer.

radiation

300

Scientists prefer this temperature scale for gas law calculations because it starts at absolute zero and has no negative values.

Kelvin

400

A block is submerged in a pool. The pressure acting on the underside of the block is ______ than the pressure acting at the block's top surface.

higher

400

The buoyant force equals the _____ of the _____ _____.

weight, fluid, displaced

400

Explain why some homes lose their roofs during a hurricane or tornado.

Key ideas: High wind speeds as air rushes over the tilted rood creates low pressure region above the roof. The air pressure inside the home then pushes the roof outwards. 

400

Metals are called good thermal ________, while wood and air are examples of thermal ________.

conductors, insulators

400

The First Law of Thermodynamics states that the change in internal energy of a system equals heat added plus this quantity.

work done on the gas

500

Explain how you can drink water through a straw on Earth.

Key ideas: You remove air w/in straw to reduce pressure there, which allows atmospheric pressure to push down on water surface, forcing it up thru the straw.

500

A fully submerged object experiences a buoyant force that depends only on this property of the displaced fluid, not the object’s own weight.

its volume

500

What two things happen when the trajectory of 'flow lines' in a fluid bunch up?

the speed increases and the pressure drops

500

Explain why some surfaces in the same room can feel like they are cooler/warmer than other surfaces even when they are at the same temperature.

Key ideas: Different materials transfer the heat towards/away from your hand more/less effectively. This means metals pull energy from your hand faster than plaster walls might, resulting in the metal feeling cooler to the touch.

500

According to the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics, this quantity always increases for natural processes.

entropy