(Systeme International)

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(Systeme International)

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(Systeme International). Branches of Earth Science. Geology Study of the origin, history, and structure of the earth Meteorology Study atmosphere, especially weather & weather conditions. Oceanography Study of the ocean and its phenomena 4. Astronomy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of (Systeme International)

Page 1: (Systeme International)

(Systeme International)

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Branches of Earth Science

1. GeologyStudy of the origin, history,

and structure of the earth

2. MeteorologyStudy atmosphere,

especially weather

& weather conditions

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3. OceanographyStudy of the ocean and its phenomena

4. Astronomy

Study of the

position, composition

of stars, planets & other objects

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Earth’s 4 Spheres

Geosphere/

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Metric System (SI System)

• The Universal language of measurement• Easily communicated to others

• Decimal system based on the number 10

Used to measure length, volume, mass, weight, density

and temperature

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METRIC VS CUSTOMARY

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Only 3 countries do NOT use the metric system

United States, Burma & Liberia

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KILO HECTO DECA BASE DECI CENTI MILLI“King Henry Died By drinking chocolate milk”

Prefix Abbrev. DefinitionMega 1,000,000 x basic unit

Kilo k x basic unit

h 100 x basic unit

Deka 10 x basic unit

BASEBASE m, g, or L 1 x basic unit

Deci d of the basic unit

c 1/100 of the basic unit

Milli m of the basic unit

µ 1/1,000,000 of the basic unit

MM10001000

HectoHecto

D D (sometimes da)(sometimes da)

1/101/10

CentiCenti

MicrMicroo

1/10001/1000

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KILO HECTO DECA BASE DECI CENTI MILLI 1000X 100X 10X 1X 1/10X 1/100X 1000X

K mcdg, m, LDH

“King Henry Died By drinking chocolate milk”

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Length: Measurement of distance between two points.• basic unit is the meter

• Kilometer –

• Millimeter –

• Megameter –

• Centimeter –

1000m1/1000m

1,000,000m

1/100m

K H D B d c m# is LARGER

# is SMALLER

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Why did I get a speeding ticket in Canada?

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MASSMASS: : the amount of matter in an object.

Basic unit is the gram (g)– Nickel = 5 g– Person 52 kg

What is the difference between What is the difference between mass and weight?mass and weight?

Weight is the force which a given mass Weight is the force which a given mass feels due to the gravity at its place.feels due to the gravity at its place.

(F = m x a)

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• Basic unit is the Liter (L)

• 1 can of coke is 355 mL

• 1 large Nalgene bottle is 1L

VOLUMEVOLUME: : Measure of the amount of liquid material

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DENSITYDENSITY: : used to compare substances based on mass and volume.

• Basic unit is g/mL• Density = mass/volume (D=M/V)

Example an unknown sample:

Mass = 1g and Volume = 1 mL

D = 1g/1mL = 1g/mL

FYI: 1 mL = 1cm3

WATER!

SA

ME

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RE

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VO

LUM

ES

! WH

AT

HA

PP

EN

ED

TO

TH

E D

EN

SIT

Y?

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TEMPERATURE• Average kinetic energy in atoms.

• Measured in degrees Celsius or Kelvin• C K K = C + 273• K C C = K – 273• C= 5/9 (F-32)• F= 9/5 C +32

• Water boils at 100C• Water freezes at 0C• Body Temp 37C

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METRIC MEASURMENTS

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TIME TO DRAW A….

SCIENTIST!!!

PLEASE GET OUT A BLANK SHEET OF PAPER….

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How many of your drawings portrayed a scientist that…

1. Is male?2. Is female?

3. Is wearing glasses?4. Is wearing a lab coat?

5. Has crazy hair?6. Is holding lab equipment?

7. Is holding/around animals?8. Is white?9. Asian?

10. African-American?

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Any that look like this???

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Albert EinsteinTheoretical Physicist

Best known for…E=MC2

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Charles DarwinNaturalist

Best known for…The voyage of the

BeagleThe Origin of Species

Natural Selection

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Nikola TeslaInventor and

Electrical Engineer

Known for… Birth of commercial

electricity (electricity and

magnetism)

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Marie CuriePhysicist, Chemist

Known for….Pioneer work in

Radioactivity

Discovered Polonium and Radium

2 Nobel Prizes

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George Washington

CarverBotanist, Inventor

Known for…Crop rotation- revolutionized

southern farming (peanuts & sweet

potatoes).

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Dr. Charles Drew

Physician & Researcher

Known for…Developing blood banks

early in WWII

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Rachel Carson

Marine Biologist helped advance the

environmental movement.

Best Known For….

Silent Spring

Led to the formation of the EPA.

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Rosalind FranklinBiophysicist

X-ray Crystallographer

Known for….X-ray images of

DNA.

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Jane GoodallPrimatologist

EthologistAnthropolgist

Known for…. 45 year study of

chimpanzee social and family interactions

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One more….

YOU!!!

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Methods of Science

To answer questions, scientists use many approaches, but they all use common steps – SCIENTIFIC METHOD

1. Problem/Question

Develop a question or problem that can be solved through experimentation

2. Observation/Research

Make observations and research your topic of interest.

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3. Hypothesis Possible explanation for the problem. - Must be testable!- Example: If soil temperatures rise, then plant growth will increase.

4. ExperimentDevelop a procedure to test your hypothesis. Must be measurable (quantifiable).

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5. Collect & Analyze Results/Data- Data is information obtained from

an experiment- Can disprove or prove a hypothesis- Include tables, graphs & photographs- Numbers, descriptors

6. Conclusion- Statement that accepts or rejects the hypothesis

- Make recommendations for further study

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Experimental Variables

1. Independent Variable– On the X axis– Intentionally manipulated variable– Ex: John is going to use 25 g, 50g, 100g and

250g of sugar in his experiment

2. Dependent Variable– On the Y axis– Factor that may change as a result of

changes made in the independent variable– Ex: Size of the loaf of bread based on amount

of sugar used.

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Control & Experimental Groups

• Control Group– Serves as the standard of comparison– No treatment given- control group is exposed

to the same conditions as the experimental group (except for the variable being tested).

• Experimental Group– Independent variable is changed– Ex: temperature or water given to a plant

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SCIENTIFIC METHOD

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Scientific Method PracticeWork on the scientific method pages in your

packet.

When you finish, work on the review page.

TEST ________TEST ________REVIEW SHEET & REVIEW SHEET &

PACKET are DUE PACKET are DUE

at the TESTat the TEST

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SCIENTIFIC METHOD LAB

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Representing DataRepresenting Data

Graphing- A visual representation of data collected in an experiment

1. Line

Shows trends

easily

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2. Bar

Shows counts.

3. Pie

Shows percent

of a whole.

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4. Pictographuses images to

depict information

If I wanted to make a graph of how much rainfall occurred in each month, how

should I plot my data for a bar graph?

(What should be put on the X and Y axis?)

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ALWAYS USE…

L I N TL I N T

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GRAPHS

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Work on the graphing pages in your packet

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UNIT ONE TEST IS ON _______

–PACKET IS DUE AT THE TEST

–REVIEW PAGE IS DUE FOR A QUIZ GRADE AT THE TEST

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OLD NOTES beyond this point….

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METRIC SYSTEM CONVERSIONS

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KILO1000Units

HECTO100

Units

DEKA10

UnitsDECI

0.1Unit

CENTI0.01Unit

MILLI0.001Unit

MetersLitersGrams

Ladder Method

How do you use the “ladder” method?

1st – Determine your starting point.

2nd – Count the “jumps” to your ending point.

3rd – Move the decimal the same number of jumps in the same direction.

4 km = _________ m

12

3

How many jumps does it take?

Starting Point Ending Point

4.1

__.2

__.3

__. = 4000 m

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Try these conversions using the ladder method.

a. 1cm = _______ m b. 1m = _______ km c. 10gm = _______ mg

d. 112 mL= _______ L e. 14.7 g = _______ kg

Conversion Practice

0.01

0.01470.112

0.001 10,000

f. 1000 mg = _______ g g. 1 L = _______ mL h. 160 cm = _______ mm

i. 14 km = _______ m j. 109 g = _______ kg k. 250 m = _______ km

1

0.10914,000

1000 1600

0.25

Try MORE conversions using the ladder method.

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Work on Metric Work on Metric Conversions In your Conversions In your

PacketPacketWhat you don’t finish in class

today becomes HOMEWORK

QUIZ on METRIC

CONVERSIONS in 2 Days!

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Write the correct abbreviation for each metric unit.

1) Kilogram _____ 3) Centigram _____ 5) Milimeter _____ 2) Meter _____ 4) Dekaliter _____ 6) Hectoliter _____

Try these conversions, using the ladder method.

7) 55 mm= _______ m 12) 0.075 m = _______ cm 17) 2,355,000mm = _______km

8) 7000 cm= _______ hm 13) 3456kg= __________mg 18) 0.042 hm= ________ km

9) 275 mm= _______ cm 14) 3500 km= _________ m 19) 1355 km= _________ m

10) 1000 ml= _______ L 15) 3500 km= _________ m 20) 6435 ml= _________ kl

11) 25 cm= _______ Dm 16) 1355m = _________km 21) 3.5kg = ___________mg

22) 1 g = _________ kg

Metric Conversion Challenge

Kg

m

cg

DL

mm

HL

0.055

0.7

27.5

1.0

0.025

7.5

3.456 X 109

3,500,000

0.039

1.355

2.355

0.0042

1,355,000

0.006435

3,500,000

0.001

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Temperature Problems

23. 100 °C = _________ °F

24. -40 °F = _________ °C

25. 180 °F = ________ °C = ________°K

26. -28.7 °C = _________ °F

212

- 40

82.2 355.2

-19.66

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DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS• Mathematically converting from one

unit of measurement into another.

• Uses ratios to convert units

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DIMENSIONAL ANALYSISDimensional Analysis: Mathematically

converting one unit of measurement to another

1 cm = _________m

1 dm = _________km

10 g = _________mg

112 mL= _________dL

14.7g = _________g

1 cm

1 00 cm

1 m= 0.01m

0.01m

1dm 1m

10dm

1Km

1000m= 0.0001Km

0.0001

10,000

0.0112

14.7

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English/Metric ConversionsEnglish/Metric Conversions• Similar process as metric to metric

conversion.• Convert 12 inches into centimeters.

1. Lookup conversion rate (2.54cm=1in.)2. Setup. 3. Solve!

12 in. ? cm 1 in.

12 in. 2.54cm 1 in.

multiply across the top and divide

by the bottom

= 30.48 cm

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SI English PracticeWork on Page 7 in

your packet.

When you are done, check your answers and move onto SI-English Conversion Practice half sheet.

QUIZ TOMORROW QUIZ TOMORROW ON METRIC ON METRIC

CONVERSIONSCONVERSIONS

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GRAPHING ECOLOGY

Do 2 of the 4 graphs outlined on page 8 on a separate piece

of graph paper.

Must have LINT & BE NEAT (use a ruler) !!!!