Title: Matter
1Matter
2Matter
- Makes up all of the objects and living organisms
in the universe - Anything that has mass AND takes up space
- Light and sound are NOT matterwhy?
- Matter is made of particles called atomsmatter
IS atoms. - Atoms have mass
- Air is made of atoms
- Sound and light waves traveling through air do
not have mass OR take up space
3Three (of five) forms of Matter
- Solid matter - has a fixed volume and shape of
the object or substance. - Liquid matter - has a definite volume but not a
definite shape. - Gas matter - does not have a definite shape and
volume.
4Mass
- A physical property of matter
- Measure of how much matter an object contains
- Standard unit Kilogram (kg)
- 1 kg 1000 grams (g)
- Ex grapefruit 500 g, penny 2-3 g
- Measure mass using a triple-beam balance
5Mass vs Weight
Mass is a measurement of the amount of matter something contains Weight is the measurement of the pull of gravity on an object.
Mass is measured by using a balance comparing a known amount of matter to an unknown amount of matter. Weight is measured on a scale.
The Mass of an object doesn't change when an object's location changes. Weight does change with location.
6- A triple beam balance compares a known mass to an
unknown mass, so it is unaffected by gravity. - A scale measures weight, the triple beam balance
gives a true measure of mass. - On the moon the mass on the left side of the
balance may 'exert less force', but then less
force will be needed to balance it.
7Weight and Gravity
- Recall
- Gravity is the force that pulls two masses toward
each other - Standard unit Newton (N)
- Common unit Pound (lb)
- Force mass acceleration (Fma)
- Newton kilogrammeter/second2 (N kg m/s2)
- Weight is a force!
- Mass is amount of matter of an object, weight is
how strongly gravity is pulling on that matter
8F GM m/r2
- What will cause the force of attraction to
increase or decrease? - If either mass increases the force of attraction
increases proportionally. Since the moon has 1/6
the mass of earth, it would exert a force on an
object that is 1/6 that on earth. - Why is the 1/r2 factor so important?
- This is an inverse square relationship which
seems to show up a lot in physics. How does it
affect the force? - When r1 the value 1/r 2 is 1.0, but at r10 it
deceases to 1/100. That means gravity gets weak
'quick' as we move away from the earth.
9Compute Mass and Weight
- If a cube has a mass of 90.91 kilograms and a
weight of 200 pounds on Earth, what will its mass
and weight be on another planet? - The Moon has a gravity that is 0.165 of Earth's.
- The cube will have a weight of
- ________________ pounds
- and a mass of
- _______________ kilograms
- Jupiter has a gravity that is 2.34 times greater
than Earth'sweight? Mass?
10Compute Mass and Weight
- On the moon
- Weight 33 lb
- Mass still 90.91 kg!
- On Jupiter
- Weight 468 lb
- Mass 90.91 kg
11Volume
- Volume is the amount of space an object occupies.
- The volume of an object can be calculated
geometrically using mathematical equations or by
measuring liquid displacement. - Measure the volume of a cube using the formula
V(side)x(side)x(side) (length times width times
height) and by using a graduated cylinder to
measure liquid displacement.
12- Volume L x W x H (cm3 or in3 etc.)
- The side of the cube is approximately 3.1
centimeters. How many inches does this convert to
(use 2.54 cm. 1 inch)?
13Measure Volume by Displacement
- What was the amount of water displaced by the
object? (1 ml 1cm3)
Before
After
14Density
- Each box has the same volume.
- If each ball has the same mass, which box would
weigh more? Why?
15Density
- The box that has more balls has more mass per
unit of volume. D m/V - The density of a material helps to distinguish it
from other materials. - Mass grams (g) or kilograms (kg)
- Volume cubic centimeters (cm3) or cubic meters
(m3) - Density grams/cubic centimeter (g/cm3) or
kilograms/cubic meter (kg/m3)
Periodic Table masses One gram is about
600,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 amu (a 6 followed
by 23 zeros) 6 x 1023 amu.
16Density of a Liquid
- Problem You are given two unknown liquids. Find
the density of each. Materials 100ml graduated
cylinder, triple beam balance, calculator, 2
unknown liquids. - Procedure
- 1) Find the mass of the empty graduated cylinder.
- 2) Pour unknown liquid 1 into the graduated
cylinder to the 50 ml. level. - 3) Find the mass of the graduated cylinder with
50ml of unknown liquid 1. - 4) Repeat steps 1-3 for unknown liquid 2.
17Density of a Liquid
- Liquid 1
- Given Mass of empty graduated cylinder 78
grams - Mass of graduated cylinder with unknown liquid
1 128 grams. - Find
- a) Mass of just the liquid ____ b) Volume of
liquid_____c) Density of liquid 1 ____
- Liquid 2
- Given Mass of empty graduated cylinder 78
grams - Mass of graduated cylinder with unknown liquid
2 117.5 grams. - Find
- a) Mass of just the liquid ____ b) Volume of
liquid _____c) Density of liquid 2____
18What is the Liquid?
Substance Density (gm/cu.cm)
Water 1.00
Cooking oil 0.92
Sea Water 1.025
Carbon tetrachloride 1.58
Benzene 0.87
Glycerin 1.26
Methanol 0.79
- What is each liquid? Using the table below it is
now possible for you to determine what each
liquid is. - Densities for some common liquids are
19(No Transcript)
20Extension Air Pressure
- Air pressure is the force exerted by the weight
of a column of air above a particular location. - Imagine a sealed container full of air
21- Change the pressure
- Increase the density of the air by either putting
more air molecules into the container or reducing
the volume of the container. - Therefore, changes in air pressure can come about
by changes in air density
22- Atmospheric pressure is defined as the force per
unit area exerted against a surface by the weight
of the air above that surface.
- If the number of air molecules above a surface
increases, there are more molecules to exert a
force on that surface and consequently, the
pressure increases. - The opposite is also true, where a reduction in
the number of air molecules above a surface will
result in a decrease in pressure.
23Air Pressure Altitude
- Air pressure decreases as one moves upward
through the atmosphere because the length of the
column of air shortens and hence there is less
mass above a given location.
- Because air is highly compressible, the air is
closely packed together near the surface (high
density) and less densely packed aloft