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Nomenclature
Chemical Equilibrium in the Gas Phase
Electronic Structure of Atoms
Ionic Bonding
Some Notes on Covalent Bonding
Thermochemistry
Extra Notes on Thermochemistry
Entropy and Gibbs Energy
Types of Equations
Acids & Bases
Acid-Base Equilibria
Acid-Base Equilibria (.pdf)
Kinetics
Introduction to Organic Chemistry
Introduction to Spectroscopy (.pdf)
Quantum Numbers
Significant Digits
Oxidation Numbers and REDOX Reactions
Net Ionic Reactions ...
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Atomization Research
Simulations shown below were conducted with a series of codes based on Boundary Element Methods (BEMs) and homogeneous flow modeling. The boundary element methodology permits solution of incompressible, inviscid free-surface problems by placing a series of nodes only on the boundary of the domain. The free-surface in the models is resolved to full 4th-order spatial and temporal accuracy. More recently, dense spray simulations are under development using a Lagrangian d ...
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C-ship: Relativistic ray traced images
Welcome aboard C-ship, exploring flight near the speed of light! C-ship helps you understand Einstein's theory of Special Relativity intuitively through the medium of computer-synthesised images. To view the images in this document, you need a graphics-oriented Web browser.
We'll be looking at lots of pictures on our journey. Sending large pictures across the Internet consumes precious network bandwidth and can take a long time. So, I'll show smal ...
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Big Bang
Theory Density
Temperature
& Density Using
Characteristic
Properties
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MATTER IS THE STUFF AROUND YOU
Matter is everything around you. Matter is everything made of atoms and molecules. Matter is anything that has a mass. Matter is also related to light and electromagnetic radiation. Even though matter can be found all over the universe, you usually find it in just a few forms. As of 1995, scientists have identified five states of matter. They may discover one more by the time you get old.
You should know about solids, liquids, gases, plasmas, and a new ...
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CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF MATTER
GROCERY STORE CHEMICALS
What to get and where
TYPES OF CHEMICALS
Elements and Compounds
Indicators (acid/base)
Properties of acids
Acid-base reactions
Concentration of acid/base solutions
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
Some chemical reactions
Chemical reactions of metals
Rusting
Producing oxygen
Producing hydrogen Part 1
Producing hydrogen Part 2
Producing carbon dioxide Part 1
Producing carbon dioxide Part 2
Exploding bubbles
Flaming rag
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[HOME] [HEURISTICS] [NUMBERS AND MATH] [UNITS AND MEASURES] [ATOMIC STRUCTURE] [ELEMENTS] [PERIODIC TABLE] [STATES OF MATTER] [COMPOUNDS] [REACTIONS] [MOLS, PERCENTS, AND STOICHIOMETRY] [REDOX AND ELECTROPLATING] [GASES] [SOLUTIONS] [ACIDS AND BASES] [KINETICS] [THERMOCHEMISTRY]
STATES OF MATTER
The view from above.
Kinetic theory of matter.
Solids.
Liquids.
Gases.
A walk up the phase change graph.
The 'heat curve' or phase chang ...
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Classification of Matter
8/22/99
Click here to start
Table of Contents
Classification of Matter
Pure Substances
Compounds vs. Elements
Mixtures
Symbols of Elements
The Atomic Symbol
Formulas
Molecular Representations
Atomic Theory of Matter
Dalton’s Atomic Theory
New Evidence for Dalton
Law of Multiple Proportions
Chemical Equations
Energy and Its Units
Uses of Energy Units
Kinetic-Molecular Theory of Matter
Kinetic vs. Potential Energy
Converting Potential to Kinet ...
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Go To The Amusment Park
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in All Infoplease Almanacs • General • Entertainment • Sports Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
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Basic Properties of Matter
DEWEY B. LARSON
Volume II of a revised and enlarged edition of
THE STRUCTURE OF THE PHYSICAL UNIVERSE
Preface
1. Solid Cohesion
2. Inter–atomic Distances
3. Distances in Compounds
4. Compressibility
5. Heat
6. Specific Heat Patterns
7. Temperature Relations
8. Thermal Expansion
9. Electric Currents
10. Electrical Resistance
11. Thermoelectric Properties
12. Scalar Motion
13. Electric Charges
14. The Basic Forces 15. Electrical Storage
16. Induction of Charges
17. Ionization
18. The Retreat From Reality
19. Magnetostatics
20. Magnetic Quantities and Units
21. Electromagnetism
22. Charges in Motion
23. Magnetic Materials
24. Isotopes
25. Radioactivity
26. Atom Building
27. Mass and Energy
References
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The Exploratorium
Science Snacks
Snacks about Fluids
Snack name Description
Bernoulli Levitator Suspend an object in air by blowing down on it.
Bubble Suspension Soap bubbles float on a cushion of carbon dioxide gas.
Condiment Diver Squeezing a plastic bottle filled with water and a condiment packet makes the packet sink. Letting go of the bottle makes the packet rise.
Convection Currents Make your own heat waves in an aquarium.
Descartes' Diver To paraphrase the French ...
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Library Dictionary
Author List Search
Abbott, Edwin
Adams, John Quincy
Aesop
Alcott, Louisa May
Andersen, Hans Christian
Anderson, Sherwood
Appleton, Victor
Aristotle
Austen, Jane
Bacon, Sir Francis
de Balzac, Honore
Barrie, James Matthew
Baum, L. Frank
Bierce, Ambrose
Bronte, Anne
Bronte, Charlotte
Bronte, Emily
Burnett, Frances Hodgson
Burroughs, Edgar Rice
Carroll, Lewis
Casson, Herbert N.
Cather, Willa
Cervantes, Miguel
Chesterton, Gilbert K.
Chopin, Kate ...
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Library Dictionary
Author List Search
Abbott, Edwin
Adams, John Quincy
Aesop
Alcott, Louisa May
Andersen, Hans Christian
Anderson, Sherwood
Appleton, Victor
Aristotle
Austen, Jane
Bacon, Sir Francis
de Balzac, Honore
Barrie, James Matthew
Baum, L. Frank
Bierce, Ambrose
Bronte, Anne
Bronte, Charlotte
Bronte, Emily
Burnett, Frances Hodgson
Burroughs, Edgar Rice
Carroll, Lewis
Casson, Herbert N.
Cather, Willa
Cervantes, Miguel
Chesterton, Gilbert K.
Chopin, Kate ...
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PHYSICAL SCIENCE
CHAPTER 2, FUNDEMENTALS PROPERTIES OF MATTER
SECTION 1 MATTER
OBJECTIVES: Describe the ways matter can be classified. Distinguish between elements and compounds. Propose a method of separating the components of a mixture. List and give examples of the four states of matter. Define and distinguish among the following terms: Atom, Element, Pure Substance, Compound, and Mixture. Begin to understand how to read and interpret the Periodic Table of Elements.
1. M ...
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Gases, Liquids, and Solids
Gases, liquids and solids are all made up of atoms, molecules, and/or ions, but the behaviors of these particles differ in the three phases. The following figure illustrates the microscopic differences.
Microscopic view of a gas.Microscopic view of a liquid.Microscopic view of a solid.
Note that:
Particles in a:
gas are well separated with no regular arrangement.
liquid are close together with no regular arrangement.
solid are tightly packed, usually i ...
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1001-periodic-table-quiz-questions.com
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Home
Introduction to Computational Fluid Dynamics
What is fluid flow?
What is CFD?
How old is CFD?
What use is CFD?
How does CFD make predictions?
Can CFD be trusted?
What CFD can and can NOT do
How does one become a CFD User?
Where do CHAM, and PHOENICS, fit in?
The PHOENICS computer-code family
What is fluid flow?
Fluid flow is:
breathing, drinking, digesting, washing, swimming, smoking;
laundering clothes, and hanging them out to dry;
heating or venti ...
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Next: Deformation of Solids Up: Solids and Fluids Previous: Solids and Fluids
Introduction: Three States of Matter
Matter comes in three states that are distinguished by the strength of the bonds holding the molecules of the matter together. The three states of matter are:
Solids: The strong bonds between molecules make solids rigid and very difficult to deform.
Liquids: The relatively weak bonds between molecules allow liquids to be deformed without effort. Liquids have a fixed volu ...
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Kinematics (ver 0.81)
This applet requires
a JAVA-enabled browser.
This applet will help you visualize the equations that describe motion with constant-acceleration in a straight-line.
position(t) = [x0] + [v0]*t + (1/2)*[a0]*t2
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acceleration(t) = [a0]
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Liquid Crystals - Fascinating State of Matter or "Soft is beautiful"
R.Macdonald
Optical Institute of the Technical University of Berlin
Straße des 17. Juni 135, 10623 Berlin, Germany
Since school we destinguish mainly three states of matter: solids, liquids, and gases. But it was already at the late nineteenth century, that some scientists were in doubt of that classification. Solids, namely crystals, are highly ordered, the constituting atoms or molecules possess ...
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Making Matter
The atomic structure of materials
Index © M. Hewat 1998-2000 Help
These pages illustrate the 3D structures of inorganic materials in the ILL's ICSD-for-WWW database; they were featured in Science (USA) 12 March 1999 and La Recherche (France) October 1999, where they were described as "pedagogique et passionnant". And here they are translated into Russian !! They were originally produced by Marcus Hewat 's 3D VRML structure drawing appl ...
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matter, anything that has mass. Because of its mass, all matter has weight (if it is in a gravitational field) and inertia. In physics, the three common states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas; scientists also recognize a fourth, plasma. Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity showed that matter could be converted to energy according to the equation E=mc2 , where m is the mass and c is the speed of light. All matter is composed of elementary particles.
The states of matter are forms of matt ...
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SEARCH OCAIW: Artists Works Museums and Galleries Saturday, 10 June 2006
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O N L I N E S I N C E 1 9 9 7
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SEARCH OCAIW: Artists Works Museums and Galleries Saturday, 10 June 2006
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Saturday, June 10, 2006
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Retired Site
The "Newton's Apple" site has been retired from pbs.org.
For information about this series, including online activity guides, and how to order the home videos and additional educational materials for classroom use, please visit http://www.tpt.org/newtons/.
To find related content on pbs.org, try a keyword search, visit a related topic a ...
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Introduction
Hello, you have either intentionally or unintentially stumbled upon The Golf Course's Physics Section. By now, you know that The Golf Course is a web site designed to promote the game of golf, and as an educational resourse to show that golf can be seen in a variety of avenues of our lives. This particular section (the Physics Section) shows how golf is interwoven into physics. (For those students out there ... I bet you thought that physics was useless!) An ...
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PROPERTIES OF MATTER
CHEMISTRY/PHYSICAL SCIENCE
MINI LESSON 1
Vocabulary:
matter
density
solid
liquid
gas
plasma
physical property
chemical property
viscosity
crystals
LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MATTER
Matter cannot be created nor destroyed,
it can only be changed from one form to another.
matter and energy are interchangeable according to E=mc2
(E=amount of ...
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by Ron Hipschman.
What is so fascinating about bubbles? The precise spherical shape, the incredibly fragile nature of the microscopically thin soap film, the beautiful colors that swirl and shimmer, or most likely, a combination of all these phenomena? Why does a bubble form a sphere at all? Why not a cube, tetrahedron, or other geometrical figure? Let's look at the forces that mold bubbles.
Contents
Sticky Water
The Shape of Bubbles
When Bubble Meets Bubble
Soap
Bubble Colors
Additional material
Bubble Formulae
Bubbliography
Internet Resources
Copyright 1995, Ron Hipschman
All Photos copyright, Exploratorium
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Solids and Liquids and Gases, Oh Why?
Ok, so Judy Garland didn't exactly ask that in the heartwarming "Mister Wizard of Oz." It's still an interesting question. Why are there three states of matter anyway? As a small child you learned it as a fact, but now we ask, why so?
Of course, there are all manner of answers possible, such as stories of magic beans or the long ago Three Brothers and their Gifts, or whatever. Three is always a popular number. (There's an exercise: write a just-so story ...
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States of Matter
David Young
Cytoclonal Pharmaceutics Inc.
At the beginning of their first chemistry class, students are taught that there are three 'states' of matter; solid, liquid and gas. From that point on, additional 'states' of matter are introduced at regular intervals. Many of these states are well defined and have interesting properties, while others seem to be intermediate between commonly found substances and difficult to define or recognize. The following is a listing of the var ...
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Succeed in Physical Science
The knowledge of Physical Science is important for the development of the products we use. It is also an interesting and exciting subject of value in many walks of life.
There is a great need for people who understand scientific principles and know how to think logically. Your knowledge and skills in these areas can help you excel in school, advance your career or improve your business.
The purpose of these free online lessons is to give you a start at impr ...
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The Java Virtual Wind Tunnel
A Two Dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulation
Version 1.0Beta1
(There should be an applet above this line. If there is not, you may be using a browser which does not support applets.)
Introduction
To understand why airplanes fly, you have to understand fluid mechanics.
But it turns out that fluid mechanics is a tough class to teach. Part of it involves teaching people to solve large and complex systems of equations. That's hard enough in i ...
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< Back | Home | Teacher's Guide
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Solids
Liquids
Gases
State Changes
The Supercritical State
The Liquid Crystalline State
The Glassy and Rubbery States
Solid, liquid, gas...solid, liquid, gas...solid, liquid, gas... You've probably heard these three words together so many times that they sound like some sort of meditative chant. But don't slip into a blissful trance just yet, because we're going to review just what these three states of matter are, and then we're going to ...
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Making Hydrogen from Water
Early balloons, that didn't depend on hot air, used the gas hydrogen for lift. Later on hydrogen was replaced by helium as the gas of choice. Hydrogen gave good lift and was cheap to get, but was also very explosive. Hydrogen is the most plentiful element in the universe and can be made by splitting a molecule of water apart into two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. Here's how you can do it at home.
STEP 1: Get two pieces of wire about six inches in length ...
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This page should redirect you to the new address for this Lesson in a moment.
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MATTER AND ENERGY
The two basic ideas in physics are matter and energy. In the past, physicists believed that matter and energy were "two separate ideas". Today, physicists have shown that "matter can be changed into energy and energy into matter".
We can explain this transformation by saying: "when a body releases energy it loses part of it's mass, when a body absorbs energy, it gains mass".
Other terms associated with matter and energy are inertia and friction.
Please click on ...
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Why is the sky blue?
What is lightning?
What are the states of matter?
Does hot water freeze faster than cold?
Why does a can of Coke sink while a can of Diet Coke floats?
Why do you close your eyes when you sneeze?
Why do mosquitoes bite me more than my friends?
Why do your feet stink?
How does gravity work?
How fast does the space shuttle move in orbit?
What is escape velocity?
What would happen if you turned on your headlights while moving at the spee ...
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