Name That Change
Atoms in Action
Mass Mysteries
Properties & Evidence
In the Real World
100

Ice melting into water — physical or chemical?

Physical Change?

100

What are all substances made of?

Atoms

100

The total mass before and after a reaction stays the same — what is this called?

The Law of Conservation of Mass/Matter

100

Name one kind of evidence that a chemical reaction occurred.

Gas, color change, temperature change, new substance, or odor.

100

What causes the fizzing in a bath bomb?

A chemical reaction producing gas (CO₂).

200

Baking soda and vinegar create bubbles — what kind of change is that?

Chemical Change

200

In a chemical reaction, what happens to atoms?

They rearrange to form new molecules.

200

You mix 10 g of baking soda with 20 g of vinegar. The total gas produced has a mass of 2 g. What should the remaining liquid and container weigh?

28 g (30 g total minus 2 g gas)

200

Why is color change alone not always proof of a chemical reaction?

It could just be a physical mixture or dilution.

200

What happens when hydrogen peroxide breaks down in elephant’s toothpaste?

It decomposes into water and oxygen gas — chemical reaction.

300

Salt dissolves in water. Is that a chemical reaction? Explain.

No — it’s a physical change because no new substance forms.

300

Describe what happens to atoms in this reaction: H₂ + O₂ → H₂O

Hydrogen and oxygen atoms rearrange to form water molecules.

300

Why might a reaction appear to lose mass?

Gas escaped into the air.

300

A white powder and clear liquid are mixed — bubbles form. What does this tell you?

A gas formed → chemical reaction occurred.

300

Why does the Taj Mahal change color over time?

Acid rain reacts chemically with the marble (chemical weathering).

400

Burning paper leaves ash and smoke. What evidence tells you this is a chemical reaction?

New substances form (ash, gas), color change, odor change, energy release.

400

True or False: Atoms can be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction.

What Law is this?

False — they’re conserved.

Law of Conservation of Mass/Matter

400

How could you design an experiment to prove that mass is conserved?

Measure reactants and products in a closed system (no gas escape).

400

If two liquids mix and the temperature drops, what does that suggest?

A chemical reaction that releases energy (exothermic).

400

Cooking food often produces new smells and colors — why?

Chemical reactions form new substances.

500

Steel wool rusts in air over time. Why is this NOT a physical change?

Iron reacts with oxygen to form a new substance (iron oxide).

500

If you start with 6 carbon atoms and 12 oxygen atoms, how many of each must be in the products?

6 carbon and 12 oxygen atoms — atoms are conserved.

500

If a chemical reaction in a sealed container produces bubbles, how does the total mass change?

It doesn’t change — gas is trapped, so mass stays constant.

500

When measuring properties to identify substances, what kind of properties should you look for?

Characteristic (intrinsic) properties like density, melting point, boiling point.

500

In a glow stick, two liquids mix and emit light — what kind of reaction is this?

A chemical reaction that releases energy as light (chemiluminescence).