Title: MATTER AND ITS CHANGES
1MATTER AND ITS CHANGES
Created by Mrs. Dismukes
2THE THREE STATES OF MATTER
3Vocabulary Words
- Matter
- Mass
- Solid
- Liquid
- Gas
4What is Matter?
5MASS
Mass is the amount of matter that something
contains. A large heavy object such as an
elephant has a lot of mass. A small, light
object such as a maple leaf
has much less mass.
6Solids
A solid is matter that has a definite shape and
takes up a definite amount of space. The
particles in a solid are close together, like
neat and even stacks of tiny balls. Each particle
moves back and forth around one point. This
arrangement of particles gives a solid its
definite shape.
7Liquid
A liquid is matter that takes the shape of its
container and takes up a definite amount of
space. When matter is a liquid, its particles
slip and slide around each other. The particles
dont keep the same neighborsthey move from
place to place. But they still stay close to
each other.
8Gas
A gas is matter that has no definite shape and
takes up no definite amount of space. Like
particles in liquids, the particles in gases are
not arranged in any pattern. Unlike particles in
liquids, however, particles in gases do not stay
close together. This is because particles in
gases are moving much faster than particles in
liquids. A gas always fills the container it is
in.
9How can a liquid be changed to a solid?
By taking away heat
10Summary
- Matter takes up space. Matter is made of
particles. Particles in solid matter stay close
together and move back and forth - around one point. Particles
- in liquid matter stay close together but move
past each other. Particles in a gas are spread - far apart.
11How can mass be measured and compared?
12Vocabulary Words
13DENSITY
OR
cereal
raisins
Which was more dense? The cup of raisins or the
cup of cereal? Why?
14The Raisins
The property of matter that compares the amount
of matter to the space taken up is called
density.
15Volume
- Matter has mass and takes up space. The amount
of space that matter takes up is called its
volume.
16How is mass measured?
Mass is measured with a pan balance.
17Measuring Volume
- Irregular Solid
- Measure ml of water
- Submerge object
- Measure ml of water again
- Subtract to find the volume
- 100ml100ccm
18Measuring Density
- Density mass ?volume
- A red ball has a mass of 100 grams and a volume
of 200 cubic centimeters. A blue ball has a mass
of 5 grams and a volume of 10 cubic centimeters.
Which ball has the greatest density? - 100?2000.5 g/ccm RED BALL
- 5?100.5 g/ccm BLUE BALL
- They have the SAME density.
19Summary
- All matter has mass and volume. Mass is the
amount of matter in an object. The space that
matter takes up in is called volume. Density
compares the amount of matter in an object to the
amount of space it takes up. You can find the
density of an object by dividing its mass by its
volume.
20What are some
useful properties
of Matter?
21Vocabulary
22Solution
- A solution is a mixture in which the particles of
different kinds of matter are mixed evenly with
each other.
23Dissolve
Which One Will Dissolve?
24The Lemonade Mix
When one material forms a solution with another
material, we say it DISSOLVES. Lemonade in water
forms a solution the marble in water does not.
25Solubility
- What is solubility?
- The measure of the amount of a material that will
dissolve in another material. - SOLU---BILITY
- The ability of one substance to dissolve in
another.
26 BUOYANCY
- BUOYANCY
- The ability of matter to float in a liquid or
gas.
27Summary
Solutions are mixtures in which the particles are
mixed evenly. Some matter dissolves in water and
some does not. Matter that is less dense than
water floats on water. Buoyancy can be
controlled by changing density.
28What are chemical and physical changes?
29What are chemical and physical changes?
- Physical changes A change in the shape size, or
state of the substance. - Chemical changes A change that produces one or
more new substances and may release energy. - Chemical reaction another term for chemical
change.
30Chemical Changes
31Physical Changes
Sugar Cubes
Powdered Sugar
Rock Candy
Table Sugar
32SUMMARY
Physical changes are changes to the size or shape
of a substance such as cutting or folding and
changes of state such as melting, freezing, and
boiling. During physical changes, no new
substances are formed. Chemical changes, or
chemical reactions, form new substances. Changes
in color or releases of energy show chemical
changes have taken place. Burning and rusting
are examples of chemical changes.
33THE END
34Resources
- WWW.BJBARTON.COM
- http//www.chem4kids.com/files/matter_states.html
- http//www.nyu.edu/pages/mathmol/textbook/whatisma
tter.html - Harcourt Science Book, 4th grade, 2002.