1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

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Chapter 9 Lesson 2 Measurement Pages 236-241

Transcript of 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

Page 1: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

Chapter 9Lesson 2

Measurement

Pages 236-241

Page 2: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of

measurement.

Page 3: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

2. A system of measurement that is based on units of 10 is

the metric system.

Page 4: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

3. An object’s width is the number of units that fit across.

Page 5: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

4. Any measurement made in square units, such as square

centimeters, is a measurement of area.

Page 6: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

5. The comparison of an object’s mass to its volume describes

density.

Page 7: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

6. To find the density of an object divide its mass by its

volume.

Page 8: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

7. An object floats when its density is less than the density of the liquid or gas into which it

is placed.

Page 9: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

8. Heated air becomes less dense; cooler, denser air forces it

upward.

Page 10: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

9. The density of water is 1 g/cm³ while the density of cork

is 0.24 g/cm³.

Page 11: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

10. The density of an object affects its buoyancy.

Page 12: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

11. The measure of the pull of gravity from a planet on the

mass of an object describes an object’s weight.

Page 13: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

12. Ounces and pounds are the English units for weight, and the newton (N) is the metric unit for

weight.

Page 14: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

13. An object’s weight changes with gravity, but its mass stays

the same.300 pounds on Earth!

50 pounds on the moon!

Page 15: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

14. Do you think that if a marshmallow and a marble are the same size, they would have

the same mass, density, buoyancy, or volume?

Page 16: 1. An inch, a mile, a pound and a gallon are standard units of measurement.

14. I think they would have the same volume. If they’re the same size, they take up the same space. The marble has more mass and more density than the marshmallow. Also, I know a marble does not have

buoyancy.