X  LThis is a data disk, not a startup disk. X#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===2"8.QUIZHEATENERGYP -TEST.CH.16.17MP(CH18QUIZKS.TEMP`/CH18.19.20.TEST .FZS.BSBL.PLYRSP+ܾܾ/BASKETBALL.REPTy(T T-MIKE.SPEARMANMP II-CH15WP.WORKSHMP~dnn/TESTCH.TWELTHIRC \\.CH14AND15.TESTPL x@x/VID.ENERGY.OVVW{{.FUNDRAIS.FIELDP m;;/CHTESTTHREEFOUR: YY-CHSEVEIGHTESTMP, %'CH9POPQRKS.TEMPM ++,ONENINEFINALEMPT -11)CH10.TESTS.TEMP_UEE)CH10NOTESS.TEMPf ??PHYSSCIHANDOUTS' ,CHONETWOTESTEMP f;;-HANDOUTONETWOMP ;;+LABMEASDENSTEMPK ;;/METRICONVERSION;;-CHFIVESIXTESTMP# uu,TESTCHONETW0EMP. CACH 1 & 2 TEST DO NOT WRITE ON THIS SHEET SCANTRON-TEST4MATCHING: DO EACH GROUP OF FIVE BY ITSELF.../1. CELCIUS MEASURES A. LENGTH42.   !8_ ______ ______ m/l/g ______ ______ ______>VALUE ______ ______ ______ (ONE) ______ ______ ______=METER MEASURES ___________ , WITH WHAT TOOL? ___________>LITER MEASURES ___________ , WITH WHAT TOOL? ______ ____>GRAM )PHYSICAL SCIENCE: HANDOUT CH 1 & 2=DATE _________ NAME ____________________ HOUR ______>ABBR. ______ ______ ______ UNITS ______ ______ ______>NAME _____J#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===," LEM...9 A. LAW B. HYPOTHESIS C. THEORY D. CONCLUSION C22. THE FACTOR IN AN EXPERIMENT THAT IS BEING TESTED IS CALLED...8 A. VARIABLE B. HYPOTHESIS C. CONTROL D. DATAG23. THE MOST LOGICAL EXPLANATION OF EVENTS THAT OCCUR IN JH  '20. THE AMOUNT OF MATTER IS CALLED...7 A. WEIGHT B. GRAMS C. MASS D. NONE OF THESE421. THE PROBABLE ANSWER TO A SCIENTIFIC PROB0 B. WORLD WIDE C. USED BY SCIENTISTS D. ALL OF THESE219. THE FORCE OF ATTRACTION BETWEEN 2 OBJECTS...JH A. GRAVITY B. MASS C. SUBLIMATION D. DENSITY JH 316. AT WHAT METRIC TEMPERATURE DOES WATER FREEZE?* A. 100 F B. 0 F C. 32 C D. 0 C$17. LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT =0 A. AREA B. VOLUME C. MASS D. DENSITY,18. CHARACTERISTIC OF THE METRIC SYSTEM...H A. BASED ON 1CHANGES TO A LIQUID HEAT ENERGY IS...<12. DURING THE PHASE CHANGE VAPORIZATION HEAT ENERGY IS...+13. WHEN MELTING OCCURS HEAT ENERGY IS...614. AS A LIQUID CHANGES TO A SOLID HEAT ENERGY IS...*15. DURING SUBLIMATION HEAT ENERGY IS...DER410. GRAM PER MILLILITER E. THERMOMETERE___________________________________________________________________MULTICHOICE:GEFOR NUMBERS 11, 12, 13, 14 & 15 USE A.) ABSORBED B.) LOST C.) SAME611. WHEN A GAS _______________.6. CELCIUS A. RULER<7. GRAMS B. TRIPLE BEAM BALANCE?8. LITERS C. MASS DIVIDED BY VOLUME;9. METERS D. GRADUATED CYLIN GRAMS MEASURES B. TEMPERATURE03. LITERS MEASURES C. DENSITY-4. METERS MEASURES D. MASS15. GRAMS / cm3 E. VOLUMED___________________________________________________ MEASURES ___________ , TOOL? _____ _____ _________/1 kg = _____g 20 cm = _____m0150 ml = _____cl 30 dkg = _____g075 cl = _____dl 400 m = _____km8VOLUME = L x W x H DENSITY = MASS / VOLUME<FIND THE VOLUME: FIG 1 ________ A ________ B ________=CALCULATE THE DENSITY FOR A ____________ B ____________ PAGE 28PHASE ENERGY SHAPE VOLUME (Hi/Med/Lo);"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===,"OF THE DEMONSTRATION TABLE: MEASURE THE LENGTH, H WIDTH AND HEIGHT (TO THE NEAREST cm) AND RECORD YOUR DATA.F LENGTH_________cm WIDTH_________cm HEIGHT_________cm G * USE THE ABOVE INFORMATION TO COMPUTE THE T TO THEG "HUNDREDTH" OF A GRAM. (XXX.XX) F STUDENT HANDBOOK_________g PENCIL__________g F GOLFBALL_________g 100ml BEAKER_________g HSTEP 2: VOLUME R STICK CALCULATOR (OPT) DENSITY KIT G STUDENT HANDBOOK GRADUATED CYLINDER CSTEP 1: ZERO THE BALANCE AND USE IT TO CORRECTLY WEIGH THE G FOLLOWING ITEMS. YOUR WEIGHTS MUST BE WRITTEN OU__H NAME_______________ISUPPLIES NEEDED: PENCIL GOLFBALL PAPER G BALANCE BEAKERS WATER G METE0PHYSICAL SCIENCE: MEASUREMENT/DENSITY LABHDATE____________ NAME_______________HHOUR_____ NAME_____________"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===6"____________________________________>USING THE METRIC UNIT FOR TEMPERATURE, WHAT TEMPERATURE DOESWATER FREEZE? __________  WHICH SCIENTIST DEALT WITH PRESSURE? ______________1/ WHICH SCIENTIST DEALT WITH TEMPERATURE? ______________= AS A GAS HAS MORE PRESSURE APPLIED TO IT, WHAT HAPPENS ! TO THE VOLUME OF THE GAS?< ________________________ _____________ TO __________________=_________ ______ _____________ TO __________________=_________ ______ _____________ TO __________________4A LIQUID'S RESISTANCE TO FLOW IS _______________ . GAS LAWS:< TO PHASE (Gained/Lost)=_________ ______ _____________ TO __________________=_________ ______ _____________ TO __________________=_________ ______ _____________ TO __________________=_________ SOLID __________ ___________ _________________;LIQUID __________ ___________ _________________;GAS __________ ___________ _________________PHASE CHANGES:9NAME ENERGY PHASE >DATE _____________ NAME _____________________HOUR ______>PROBLEM: FIND THE VOLUME AND DENSITY OF THE GOLFBALL...H ( USING THE GRADUATED CYLINDER, BEAKER AND BALANCE ) G VOLUME_________mAND USING THE FOLLOWING DATA. F CUBE: MASS______g LENGTH______cm VOLUME_________cm3= DENSITY = MASS/VOLUME = _________g/cm3H BAR: MASS_____g L = ______cm W = ______cm H = VOLUME OF THE F TABLE IN CUBIC CENTIMETERS (cm3). F VOLUME = L x W x H = ____________cm HSTEP 3: COMPUTE THE DENSITY OF THE TWO PIECES OF METAL BY RECORD-B ING __________:WHAT DOES A TRIPLE BEAM BALANCE MEASURE? ______________ATHE AMOUNT OF SPACE AN OBJECT TAKES UP IS ITS _______________ .ECTHE CENTIGRADE TEMPERATURE SCALE IS BASED UPON HOW MANY DEGREES? _____0. g = _____hg .8 km = _____m 95. l = _____dl97AT WHAT METRIC TEMPERATURE DOES WATER BOIL? ________ (LABEL)8WHAT METRIC BASIC UNIT MEASURES DISTANCE? ___________DA GRADUATED CYLINDER USES WHAT METRIC UNIT OF MEASURE? 8WHAT IS THE DENSITY OF WATER (BE SURE TO LABEL YOUR ANSWER)?. ______________________________;.5 m = _____mm 3.2 kg = _____hg 33. dl = _____l;1.7 l = _____cl 400. g = _____kg 76. mm = _____m;2UNIT OF MEASURE...>1. m = _____cm 1. g = _____mg 1. l = ______dl;150.dkm = _____km 80.cg = ______g 250.cl = _____l<3. kg = _____hg 45. l = _____dkl 68. cm = _____mm WHAT IS THE DENSITY FORMULA?:RIABLE C. LAW D. DATA*30. THE CURVED SURFACE OF A LIQUID IS...D A. MENISCUS B. GRADUATED CYLINDER C. CUBIC cm D. NONE OF THESE431. AN OBJECT IN MOTION WANTS TO STAY IN MOTION...9 A. MATTER B. MASS C. INERTIA D. NONE OF THESETRUE & FALSE:(32. SOLIDS HAVE A NO DEFINITE SHAPE...&33. SOLIDS HAVE A DEFINITE VOLUME..."34. GAS HAS A DEFINITE VOLUME...(35. LIQUIDS HAVE NO DEFINITE VOLUME...H36. BOYLES'S LAW SAYS A GAS VOLUME INCREASENSION INCREASES DUE TO - A) INCREASING HEAT; B) USE OF SURFACTANTS C) WETTING PROPERTIES D) NONE OF THE ABOVE>18. RADIOACTIVE A. HYDROGEN 23. NON-METAL A. NEUTRONS=19. NO FAMILY B. NOBLE GAS 24. ISOTOPE B. BEER= B) USUALLY NEUTRAL C) CHARGED ONLY WHEN AN ION D) ALL OF THE ABOVE?16. ELECTRONS IN THE OUTER MOST ENERGY LEVEL ARE - A) VALENCE> ELECTRONS B) THE MOST NEGATIVE C) MOVE FASTER D) NONE OF THE ABOVE;17. SURFACE TE. BEST KNOWN ACTINOID ELEMENT - A) ALUMINUM B) NITROGEN C) OXYGEN D) URANIUM614. MOST COMMON ELEMENT IN THE EARTH'S ATMOSPHERE - 5 A) ALUMINUM B) NITROGEN C) OXYGEN D) URANIUM815. THE ATOM IS - A) SMALLEST BUILDING BLOCK OF MATT C) PERIOD D) GROUP<11. WHICH IS NOT A METALLIC PROPERTY? A) GIVING ELECTRONS, B) INSULATOR C) CORROSION D) DUCTILE512. MOST COMMON ELEMENT IN THE CRUST OF THE EARTH -5 A) ALUMINUM B) NITROGEN C) OXYGEN D) URANIUM<138. DETERMINES VALENCE - A) PROTON B) NEUTRON C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THE ABOVE;9. TRAVELS AT THE SPEED OF LIGHT - A) PROTON B) NEUTRON' C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THE ABOVE:10. ANOTHER NAME FOR FAMILY - A) ACTINOID B) LANTHANOIDPROTON B) NEUTRON C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THE ABOVE86. AN ION IS ANOTHER NAME FOR - A) PROTON B) NEUTRON' C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THE ABOVE<7. NEUTRALLY CHARGED - A) PROTON B) NEUTRON C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THE ABOVE= PROTON D) ALL OF THE ABOVE;3. IN THE ELECTRON CLOUD - A) ENERGY LEVEL B) ELECTRONS$ C) A & B D) NONE OF THE ABOVE=4. NEGATIVELY CHARGED - A) PROTON B) NEUTRON C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THE ABOVE=5. POSITIVELY CHARGED - A) "$%&'()* ,CHAPTER 5/6 TEST: ATOM & PERIODIC TABLE;1. A CHARGED ATOM - A) ALKALI METALS B) ACTINOID SERIES C) ION D) ELECTRONS52. THE CENTER OF THE ATOM - A) NEUTRON B) NUCLEUS$ C)"#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|==="  D41. A CRYSTALINE SOLID IS MADE OF PARTICLES ARRANGED IN A REGULAR, REPEATING PATTERN....42. THE MATTER LOWEST IN ENERGY IS PLASMA...343. GAS IS THE RAREST PHASE OF MATTER ON EARTH...$44. THERE ARE ONLY 2 "GAS LAW0. THERE ARE 3 PHASES OF MATTER...JH JH JH S AS ITS PRESSURE DECREASESH37. WHEN THE TEMPERATURE OF A GAS DECREASES ITS VOLUME ALSO DECREASES.E38. WITH A DENSITY GREATER THAN 0.5 g/cm3 AN OBJECT WILL SINK...E39. THE AMOUNT OF SPACE AN OBJECT TAKES UP IS CALLED ITS DENSITY...%4TWEEN?20. ALKALI METAL C. CHLORINE 25. METAL C. CORROSION?21. INERT D. ACTINOID 26. SYNTHETIC D. INSULATOR SERIES>22. HALOGEN E. SODIUM 27. METALLOID E. MAN-MADE28. LUSTER A. HEAT"29. MALLEABLE B. MAKE FLAT"30. CONDUCTION C. SHININESS31. ORGANIC D. WIRE32. DUCTILE E. LIFE TRUE/FALSE;33. METALS ARE ON THE LEFT SIDE OF THE PERIODIC TABLE AND BECOME NEGRAMS MEASURES B. LENGTH43. LITERS MEASURES C. TEMPERATURE04. METERS MEASURES D. DENSITY/5. GRAMS / cm3 E. MASSD____________________________________________________-/01234567 B@TEST CH 1 & 2 DO NOT WRITE ON THIS SHEET SCANTRON-TEST4MATCHING: DO EACH GROUP OF FIVE BY ITSELF.../1. CELCIUS MEASURES A. VOLUME/2. X#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===2"+DEFGHIJK=;CHAPTER 7/8 TEST: BONDING & REACTIONS DO NOT WRITE ON : THIS...3A) ION 151. COVALENT BOND0B) REPEL F#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|==="  . -ION B. METALLOID. METALS?43. LANTHANOID C. 0 VALENCE # 48. OXYGEN FAM C. COLORLESS SERIES844. HALOGENS D. DIATOMIC 49. BORON D. 2+:45. CARBON FAM E. -ION 50. NOBLE GAS E0'S.@40. THERE WERE ONLY 83 ELEMENTS ON MENDELEEV'S PERIODIC TABLE.>41. INERT GAS A. MOST REACTIVE 46. ALKALINE A. MULTIPLE? ELEMENTS EARTH METAL VALENCE #?42. ALKALI MET B. RARE EARTH EL 47. TRANSITIONS THE NUMBER OF NEUTRONS.:37. THE NUMBER OF ELECTRONS USUALLY EQUALS THE NUMBER OF PROTONS.;38. THERE ARE 8 METALLOIDS LOCATED NEAR THE ZIG ZAG LINE.>39. MENDELEEV WAS A GREEK CHEMIST WHO WORKED ON THE PERIODIC TABLE IN THE 186GATIVE IONS.=34. DEMOCRITUS GAVE US THE FIRST THEORY OF THE NEUTRON OVER 2000 YEARS AGO.:35. THE ENGLISHMAN, MOSELEY, CORRECTED THE BASIS OF THE ; PERIODIC TABLE BY USING INCREASING NUMBER OF PROTONS.636. THE ATOMIC MASS TELLS U______________<6. CELCIUS A. TRIPLE BEAM BALANCE?7. GRAMS B. MASS DIVIDED BY VOLUME;8. LITERS C. GRADUATED CYLINDER49. METERS D. THERMOMETER.10. GRAM PER MILLILITER E. RULERE___________________________________________________________________MULTICHOICE:GEFOR NUMBERS 11, 12, 13, 14 & 15 USE A.) ABSORBED B.) LOST C.) SAME811. WHEN A SOLID"GAS LAWS"...B45. PLASMA IS THE MOST COMMON PHASE OF MATTER IN THE UNIVERSE...;46. AS MATTER IS HEATED UP IT CONTRACTS (GETS SMALLER)...$47. ICE IS MORE LESS THAN WATER...)48. BOILING OCCURS INSIDE THE LIQUID...:49. IF A LIQUID LOS  D41. A CRYSTALINE SOLID IS MADE OF PARTICLES ARRANGED IN A REGULAR, REPEATING PATTERN.../42. THE MATTER HIGHEST IN ENERGY IS PLASMA...343. GAS IS THE RAREST PHASE OF MATTER ON EARTH...$44. THERE ARE ONLY 2 %40. THERE ARE 4 PHASES OF MATTER...JH JH JH NCREASES AS ITS PRESSURE INCREASESH37. WHEN THE TEMPERATURE OF A GAS DECREASES ITS VOLUME ALSO DECREASES.E38. WITH A DENSITY GREATER THAN 0.5 g/cm3 AN OBJECT WILL SINK...E39. THE AMOUNT OF SPACE AN OBJECT TAKES UP IS CALLED ITS DENSITY...TIA D. NONE OF THESETRUE & FALSE:&32. SOLIDS HAVE A DEFINITE SHAPE...)33. SOLIDS HAVE A NO DEFINITE VOLUME..."34. GAS HAS A DEFINITE VOLUME...(35. LIQUIDS HAVE NO DEFINITE VOLUME...H36. BOYLES'S LAW SAYS A GAS VOLUME I B. VARIABLE C. LAW D. DATA*30. THE CURVED SURFACE OF A LIQUID IS...D A. MENISCUS B. GRADUATED CYLINDER C. CUBIC cm D. NONE OF THESE431. AN OBJECT IN MOTION WANTS TO STAY IN MOTION...9 A. MATTER B. MASS C. INERANCES IS...? A. PHYSICS B. BIOLOGY C. CHEMISTRY D. NONE OF THESE-28. "TO TEST A HYPOTHESIS" IS THE JOB OF...= A. VARIABLE B. HYPOTHESIS C. THEORY D. EXPERIMENT-29. RECORDED OBSERVATIONS & MEASUREMENTS...0 A. THEORY ..H A. METRIC SYSTEM B. HYPOTHESIS C. SCIENTIFIC METHOD D. ALL OF THESEA26. THE SCIENCE OF FORMS OF ENERGY AND THE LAWS OF MOTION IS...? A. PHYSICS B. BIOLOGY C. CHEMISTRY D. NONE OF THESE%27. THE SCIENCE OF SUBSTCUR IN NATURE IS...6 A. VARIABLE B. LAW C. THEORY D. HYPOTHESISC24. TESTED MANY TIMES AND GENERALLY ACCEPTED AS TRUE IS CALLED...6 A. VARIABLE B. LAW C. THEORY D. HYPOTHESIS425. A SYSTEMATIC APPROACH TO PROBLEM SOLVING IS.C PROBLEM...9 A. LAW B. HYPOTHESIS C. THEORY D. CONCLUSION C22. THE FACTOR IN AN EXPERIMENT THAT IS BEING TESTED IS CALLED...8 A. VARIABLE B. HYPOTHESIS C. CONTROL D. DATAG23. THE MOST LOGICAL EXPLANATION OF EVENTS THAT OC JH  '20. THE AMOUNT OF MATTER IS CALLED...7 A. WEIGHT B. GRAMS C. MASS D. NONE OF THESE421. THE PROBABLE ANSWER TO A SCIENTIFID ON 10 B. WORLD WIDE C. USED BY SCIENTISTS D. ALL OF THESE219. THE FORCE OF ATTRACTION BETWEEN 2 OBJECTS...JH A. GRAVITY B. MASS C. SUBLIMATION D. DENSITY JH ..316. AT WHAT METRIC TEMPERATURE DOES WATER FREEZE?* A. 100 F B. 0 F C. 32 C D. 0 C$17. LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT =0 A. AREA B. VOLUME C. MASS D. DENSITY,18. CHARACTERISTIC OF THE METRIC SYSTEM...H A. BASE CHANGES TO A LIQUID HEAT ENERGY IS...<12. DURING THE PHASE CHANGE VAPORIZATION HEAT ENERGY IS...013. WHEN CONDENSATION OCCURS HEAT ENERGY IS...614. AS A LIQUID CHANGES TO A SOLID HEAT ENERGY IS...*15. DURING SUBLIMATION HEAT ENERGY IS.ES ENOUGH HEAT ENERGY IT WILL BOIL...>50. VISCOSITY IS THE RESISTANCE OF SOLIDS TO CHANGE SHAPE...S"...B45. PLASMA IS THE MOST COMMON PHASE OF MATTER IN THE UNIVERSE...;46. AS MATTER IS HEATED UP IT CONTRACTS (GETS SMALLER)...%47. ICE IS MORE DENSE THAN WATER...)48. BOILING OCCURS INSIDE THE LIQUID...:49. IF A LIQUID LOSES ENOU/FALSE723. CHLORINE (AT.# 17) HAS 34 PROTONS IN ITS NUCLEUS. TRUE / FALSE.24. A PARTICLE THAT HAS ALMOST NO MASS (WT).< A. ELECTRON B. PROTON C. NEUTRON D. ALL OF THESE;25. MOST OF THE ATOM IS MADE UP OF. A. ELECTRON C PARTICLES. TRUE / FALSE:21. MOST OF THE MASS (WT) OF THE ATOM IS LOCATED IN THE + NUCLEUS OF THE ATOM. TRUE / FALSE<22. ISOTOPES ARE ATOMS OF THE SAME ELEMENT WITH THE SAME #= OF PROTONS BUT A DIFFERENT # OF ELECTRONS. TRUE CHEM COMBINED.; A. CHEM SYMBOL B. COEFFICIENT C. SUBSCRIPT D. FORMULA:19. BECAUSE OF WEIGHT, THE NUMBER OF ELECTRONS & PROTONS% WILL BE EQUAL. TRUE / FALSE:20. THE ATOMIC NUMBER WAS MADE UP TO MEASURE THE MASS OF+ SUBATOMICSUBSTANCE DISSOLVED IN ANOTHER SUBSTANCE.6 A. ATOM B. COMPOUND C. MIXTURE D. SOLUTION)17. TWO SUBSTANCES CHEMICALLY COMBINED.6 A. ATOM B. COMPOUND C. MIXTURE D. SOLUTION =18. REPRESENTS TWO OR MORE ELEMENTS THAT AREB. 7 C. 9 D. NONE OF THE ABOVE*14. THE SIMPLEST KIND OF PURE SUBSTANCE.9 A. ELEMENT B. COMPOUND C. MIXTURE D. SOLUTION>15. REPRESENTS AN ELEMENT. A. CHEM SYMBOL B. COEFFICIENT C. SUBSCRIPT D. FORMULA316. ONE CRIBES A CHEMICAL REACTION. TRUE / FALSE)12. THIS IS A BUILDING BLOCK OF MATTER.> A. AN ATOM B. A COMPOUND C. A MIXTURE D. A SOLUTION@>13. THE # OF ATOMS IN THIS COMPOUND Ca(NO3)2 "CALCIUM ;9 NITRATE". A. 3 / FALSE48. A SUBSCRIPT MULTIPLIES THE ELEMENTS BEHIND IT. TRUE / FALSE49. MATTER IS EITHER HOMOGENEOUS OR HETEROGENEOUS. TRUE / FALSE(10. A PURE SUBSTANCE IS HETEROGENEOUS. TRUE / FALSE811. A CHEMICAL EQUATION DESEHIND IT. TRUE / FALSE)5. MIXTURES ARE VERY EASY TO SEPARATE. TRUE / FALSE>6. HETEROGENEOUS MATTER HAS THE SAME PROPERTIES THROUGHOUT. TRUE / FALSE47. TWO OR MORE METALS COMBINE TO FORM A COMPOUND. TRUE ABLE OF ELEMENTS.; A. THOMSON B. MENDELEEV C. DEMOCRITUS D. DALTON43. THIS MAN DEVELOPED THE 1st THEORY OF THE ATOM.; A. THOMSON B. MENDELEEV C. DEMOCRITUS D. DALTON>4. A COEFFICIENT MULTIPLIES ONLY WHAT IS IMMEDIATELY B9;<=>?@ABC73 & 4 TEST D O N O T W R I T E O N T H I S(1. THE BASIC UNIT OF MEASURE OF MASS.: A. METER B. LITER C. GRAM D. NONE OF THE ABOVE<2. THIS MAN DEVELOPED THE 1st PERIODIC T`#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===," GH HEAT ENERGY IT WILL BOIL...>50. VISCOSITY IS THE RESISTANCE OF SOLIDS TO CHANGE SHAPE...LOUD4 B. ENERGY LEVELS C. NUCLEUS D. EMPTY SPACE926. FOUND IN THE CENTER OF THE ATOM. A. ENERGY LEVEL: B. ELECTRON CLOUD C. NUCLEUS D. ALL OF THE ABOVE927. WHICH IS IN THE NUCLEUS. A. PROTONS B. QUARKS% C. WEIGHT D. ALL OF THE ABOVE 28. THE WEIGHT OF A PROTON IS.< A. VERY LITTLE B. 1 AMU C. = AN ELECTRON D. NOTHING929. ASSOCIATED WITH THE ELECTRON CLOUD. A. NEUTRONS8 B. POSITIVE CHARGES C. ENERGY LEVELS D. QUARKS;30. ATOMIC TOGETHER D) NONE/ALL OF THESE>175. COEFFICIENT: A) SMALL B) BEHIND C) IN FRONT D) BELOW9176. CHEMICAL EQUATION: A) AN EXPRESSION B) "YIELDS" : C) OXIDATION D) NONE/ALL OF THESE6 1___________________________________________________>173. COMBINING ATOMS: A) IONIZATION B) REACTION C) BONDING- D) ELECTRON AFFINITY8174. E.M.F.: A) + ATTRACTS - B) HOLDS ATOMS TOGETHER= C) HOLDS BONDS7B) A + B + C ABC 169. DECOMPOSITION REACTION<C) ABC A + B + C 170. SINGLE REPLACEMENT REACTION<D) AB + C AC + B 171. DOUBLE REPLACEMENT REACTION4 172. EXOTHERMIC REACTION>_________ 165. SEA OF ELECTRONS< 166. ATOMS OF THE SAME SOLID ELEMENT! 167. NaCl>____________________________________________________________3A) AB + CD AC + BD 168. SYNTHESIS REACTIONING OF ELECTRONS9B) METALLIC BOND 161. 2 NUCLEI VERY CLOSE TOGETHER-C) COVALENT BOND 162. METAL & NONMETAL2 163. OUTER LEVELS ALL FULL; 164. OUTER LEVELS - 1 FULL, 1 EMPTY- __________________* 156. METAL & METAL2 157. TRANSFER OF ELECTRONS- 158. DIATOMIC ELEMENT0 159. NONMETAL & NONMETAL1A) IONIC BOND 160. SHAR 152. IONIC BOND;C) CRYSTAL LATTICE 153. COMMON ELECTRON CLOUD;D) POLYATOMIC ION 154. ELECTROMAGNETIC FORCE6E) SEA OF ELECTRONS 155. CHARGED PARTICLE>__________________________________________ D. KNEECAP/46. FIBULA E. CENTERLINE:* #47 - #50 TRUE/FALSE THESE EQUATIONS ARE PROPERLY8 BALANCED (ON THE OVERHEAD)ORCE D. STRONG FORCE#* #42 - #46 MATCH WITH A - E/42. PATELLA A. THIGH BONE943. FEMUR B. LIGHTWEIGHT LEG BONE444. MEDIAL C. SUPPORTS WEIGHT,45. TIBIA > A. GRAVITY B. E.M.F. C. WEAK FORCE D. STRONG FORCE)40. THIS FORCE CAUSES RADIOACTIVE DECAY> A. GRAVITY B. E.M.F. C. WEAK FORCE D. STRONG FORCE%41. CAUSED BY "POLES" OR "CHARGES".> A. GRAVITY B. E.M.F. C. WEAK F COLUMN OF SQUARES ON THE PERIODIC TABLE.8 A. FAMILY B. PERIOD C. COMPOUNDS D. ELEMENTS*38. AN IMPORTANT FORCE FOUND IN THE SUN.> A. GRAVITY B. E.M.F. C. WEAK FORCE D. STRONG FORCE#39. THE SMALLEST FORCE IN NATURE.S C. NEUTRONS D. QUARKS<35. WE DON'T KNOW EXACTLY WHERE THESE ARE (ONLY GEN. AREA)6 A. ELECTRONS B. PROTONS C. NEUTRONS D. QUARKS&36. A ROW ACROSS THE PERIODIC TABLE.8 A. FAMILY B. PERIOD C. COMPOUNDS D. ELEMENTS037. ACHARGE.6 A. ELECTRONS B. PROTONS C. NEUTRONS D. QUARKS'33. PARTICLES WITH A POSITIVE CHARGE.6 A. ELECTRONS B. PROTONS C. NEUTRONS D. QUARKS;34. ATOMIC MASS (ROUNDED) MINUS ATOMIC # = ___________6 A. ELECTRONS B. PROTON # TELLS US THE NUMBER OF THESE IN THE NUCLEUS.6 A. ELECTRONS B. PROTONS C. NEUTRONS D. QUARKS231. NUCLEAR PARTICLES ARE THOUGHT TO BE MADE OF.6 A. ELECTRONS B. PROTONS C. NEUTRONS D. QUARKS.32. IN THE NUCLEUS AND NO ELECTRICAL 77. HI ENERGY REACTANT6 178. TOP OF ENERGY HILL5 179. HI ENERGY PRODUCT5 180. LO ENERGY PRODUCT; 181. MOMENT REACTION HAPPENS6 182. LO ENERGY REACTANT4 183. EXOTHERMIC INPUT6 184. ENDOTHERMIC OUTPUT>____________________________________________________________3 S. SUSPENSION ___ 9. SUBSTANCE WITH pH VALUE OF "6"HT. SWEET U. TINCTURE ___10. % OF EARTH'S SURFACE WITH WATERDV. WATER MAY USE NUMBERS ___11. ANOTHER NAME FOR pH PAPERCANSWERS MAY BE USED MORE ___12. MIXTURE THAT K. IONIZATION THING ELSEAL. LITMUS M. PHENOLPHTHALEAN___ 6. THE pH VALUE FOR NEUTRALEN. POLAR O. SOLUTE ___ 7. SEPARATION OF IONS IS CALLED@P. SOLUTION Q. SOLVENT ___ 8. A HETEROGENEOUS MIXTUREGR. SOUR OLECULES THAT HAVE CHARGED ENDGD. BASE E. BITTER ___ 3. SOLUTION WITH SOLVENT OF WATER=F. COLLOID G. DISSOCIATION ___ 4. BLUE & RED INDICATORFH. DISSOLVES I. HYDRION PAPER ___ 5. STUFF THAT DISSOLVES IN SOME-3J. INDICATOR LNOPQRHCHAPTER 9 POP QUIZ NAME_________________"WORD" ANSWER BANK<A. METALS & MINERALS ___ 1. HOW DO ACIDS TASTE?HB. ACID C. AQUEOUS ___ 2. M"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===r"ABLE D) NONE/ALL OF THESE>199. ELECTRONS IN THE OUTER LEVEL: A) VALENCE ELECTRONS B) -7 CHARGE C) DETERMINE BONDING D) NONE/ALL OF THESE>200. BONDING: A) REACTION B) VALENCE ELECTRONS C) EXOTHERMIC$ D) NONE/ALL OF THESERGY RELEASED2 C) SYNTHESIS REACTION D) NONE/ALL OF THESE<197. REACTIONS MUST BE BALANCED BY: A) ELEMENTS B) ATOMS& C) ENERGY D) NONE/ALL OF THESE8198. METALS GIVE AWAY ELECTRONS AND BECOME: A) - IONS4 B) ATTRACTED C) STMIC IONS D) NONE/ALL OF THESE8195. LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MASS: A) MASS IS CONSTANT= B) MASS SOMETIMES IS DOUBLED C) MASS GOING IN IS MORE0 THAN MASS GOING OUT D) NONE/ALL OF THESE=196. EXOTHERMIC REACTION: A) ENERGY IN B) ENE_____________________________________________>193. " + " : A) REPELS B) "AND" C) AN ION D) NONE/ALL OF= THESE0194. COVALENT BOND: A) MOLECULES B) HALOGENS< C) POLYATORMIC REACTION8 190. INDOTHERMIC REACTION/ 191. ENERGY HILL: 192. MORE INPUT ENERGY THAN1 OUTPUT ENERGY>_______________ 185. REACTANT ENERGY6 186. SYNTHESIS REACTION: 187. DECOMPOSITION REACTION2 188. TRIGGER ENERGY7 189. EXOTHELOOKS "CLEAR" THAN ONCEHT U R N T H I S I N A N D W O R K Q U I E T L Y O N HW..HCHAPTER 9 POP QUIZ NAME_________________"WORD" ANSWER BANKEA. METALS & MINERALS ___13. % OF WATER IN THE HUMAN BODYFB. ACID C. AQUEOUS ___14. SOLUTION WITH ALCOHOL SOLVENTCD. BASE E. BITTER ___15. A HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURE THAT7F. COLLOID G. DISSOCIATION SCATTERS LIGHTBH. DISSOLVES I. HYDRD NEUTRONS ALL TRAVEL AT THE SPEED  OF LIGHT.!17. ACIDS HAVE A BITTER TASTE.:18. ACIDS, BASES AND NEUTRALS ALL HAVE A pH VALUE OF 7.<19. PROTONS LOCATED IN THE NUCLEUS HAVE A NEUTRAL CHARGE./20. ACIDS ARE CALLED THE UNIVERSA__________________________________________ TRUE/FALSE$13. ICE IS MORE DENSE THAN WATER.914. METALS ARE ON THE LEFT SIDE OF THE PERIODIC TABLE.=15. THERE ARE 12 METALLOIDS LOCATED NEAR THE ZIG-ZAG LINE.?16. ELECTRONS, PROTONS AN_______________________________________________610. IONIC BOND A. METAL & METAL<11. COVALENT BOND B. NONMETAL & NONMETAL912. METALLIC BOND C. METAL & NONMETALB______________________6. GRAMS B. TRIPLE BEAM BALANCE37. LITERS C. CENTERLINE48. METERS D. THERMOMETER;9. MEDIAL E. GRADUATED CYLINDERB_________________URE B. TEMPERATURE-3. LITERS MEASURE C. MASS/4. METERS MEASURE D. VOLUMEB________________________________________________________________.5. CELCIUS A. RULER<SUVWXYZ[\]A?FIRST SEMESTER FINAL: Chapters 1-9 DO NOT WRITE ON THIS SCAN,MATCHING: DO EACH GROUP BY ITSELF.../1. CELCIUS MEASURES A. LENGTH42. GRAMS MEASB#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===" U I E T L Y O N HW..R BASEFANSWERS MAY BE USED MORE ___23. SUBSTANCE THAT IS SLIPPERY TO2THAN ONCE THE TOUCHF ___24. AN INDICATOR THAT TURNS CLEARHT U R N T H I S I N A N D W O R K Q NTAP. SOLUTION Q. SOLVENT ___20. WHAT DOES "SOLUBLE" MEAN9R. SOUR S. SUSPENSION ___21. A CLOUDY MIXTUREHT. SWEET U. TINCTURE ___22. CHEMICAL THAT CHANGES COLOR FOR:V. WATER MAY USE NUMBERS AN ACID OION PAPER ___16. THE CAUSE OF "HARD WATER"GJ. INDICATOR K. IONIZATION ___17. STUFF THAT DOES THE DISSOLVINGDL. LITMUS M. PHENOLPHTHALEAN___18. FORMATION OF IONS IS CALLEDFN. POLAR O. SOLUTE ___19. WHAT IS THE UNIVERSAL SOLVEL SOLVENTS.?21. HETEROGENEOUS MATTER HAS THE SAME PROPERTIES THROUGHOUT.B________________________________________________________________422. AT WHAT METRIC TEMPERATURE DOES WATER FREEZE?+ A) 100 F B) 0 F C) 32 F D) 0 C>23. CHARACTERISTIC OF THE METRIC SYSTEM... A) BASED ON 10> B) WORLD WIDE C) USED BY SCIENTISTS D) ALL OF THESE@24. THE FORCE OF ATTRACTION BETWEEN 2 OBJECTS... A) GRAVITY, B) MASS C) SUBLIMATION D) DENSITYB25. THE FACT^`abcdpqrstuvw HCHAPTER 10 TEST D O N O T W R I T E O N T H I SG1. ORGANIC COMPOUNDS 10. "HEPTENE" HAS HOW MANY CARBONS?A A) ALWAYS FROM LIVING THINGS A) TWO B)f#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===*#0 MARK ANSWER "A"49.50.NCTURE144. SOLUTION WITH ALCOHOL AS ITS SOLVENT IS...> A) AQUEOUS B) BASE C) PHENOLPHTHALEAN D) TINCTURE145. SUBSTANCE THAT DOES THE DISSOLVING IS A...6 A) BASE B) SOLVENT C) COLLOID D) SOLUTION46. 47. 48.ETERMINE BONDING D) ALL OR NONE OF THESE.42. MOLECULES THAT HAVE CHARGED ENDS ARE...4 A) ACID B) POLAR C) COLLOID D) TINCTURE/43. SOLUTION WITH WATER AS ITS SOLVENT IS...> A) AQUEOUS B) BASE C) PHENOLPHTHALEAN D) TITHESIS REACTION D) ALL OR NONE OF THESE:40. METALS GIVE AWAY ELECTRONS AND BECOME... A) - IONS7 B) NEUTRAL C) + IONS D) ALL OR NONE OF THESEA41. ELECTRONS IN THE OUTER LEVEL ARE... A) VALENCE ELECTRONSB B) - CHARGE C) DE LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MASS STATES: A) MASS IS CONSTANT> B) MASS SOMETIMES IS DOUBLED C) MASS GOING IN IS MORE4 THAN MASS GOING OUT D) ALL OR NONE OF THESE>39. EXOTHERMIC REACTION: A) ENERGY IN B) ENERGY RELEASED6 C) SYNWHAT HAS NO ELECTRICAL CHARGE (NEUTRAL)...> A) PROTON B) NEUTRON C) ELECTRON D) NONE OF THESEA37. WHAT KIND OF REACTION IS THIS? ABC ---- A + B + CB A) SYNTHESIS B) DECOMPOSITION C) SINGLE REPL D) DOUBLE REPLB38. TH B) E.M.F. C) WEAK FORCE D) STRONG FORCEB34. A CHARGED ATOM IS... A) ALKALI METALS B) ACTINOID SERIES C) ION D) ELECTRONS#35. THE CENTER OF THE ATOM IS...< A) NEUTRAL B) NUCLEUS C) PROTON D) ALL OF THESE136. @ A) SUBSCRIPT B) COEFFICIENT C) CHEM. SYMBOL D) FORMULA=32. IS ASSOCIATED WITH THE ELECTRON CLOUD... A) NEUTRONS9 B) POSITIVE CHARGES C) ENERGY LEVELS D) QUARKS)33. THE SMALLEST FORCE IN NATURE IS...? A) GRAVITY 1st THEORY OF THE ATOM...< A) THOMSON B) MENDELEEV C) DEMOCRITUS D) DALTON730. THIS IS THE SMALLEST BUILDING BLOCK OF MATTER...7 A) SOLUTION B) MIXTURE C) COMPOUND D) ATOM031. THIS REPRESENTS THE NAME OF AN ELEMENT... SCIENCE OF SUBSTANCES IS...@ A) PHYSICS B) BIOLOGY C) CHEMISTRY D) NONE OF THESE?28. THIS MAN DEVELOPED THE 1st PERIODIC TABLE OF ELEMENTS...< A) THOMSON B) MENDELEEV C) DEMOCRITUS D) DALTON729. THIS MAN DEVELOPED THEOR IN AN EXPERIMENT THAT IS BEING TESTED IS CALLED.5 A) VARIABLE B) HYPOTHESIS C) THEORY D) DATAB26. THE SCIENCE OF FORMS OF ENERGY AND THE LAWS OF MOTION IS...@ A) PHYSICS B) BIOLOGY C) CHEMISTRY D) NONE OF THESE&27. THE FIVE C) SIX? B) INCLUDE ALL CARBON COMPOUNDS D) SEVEN E) EIGHT C) MUST CONTAIN CARBON> D) MUST CONTAIN OXYGEN 11. MANY ORGANIC COMPOUNDSF A) HAVE ONLY CARBON & HYDROGEN<2. CHELENTLY BONDS WITH ITSELFB * CARBON TO CARBON BONDS - SINGLE, DOUBLE, & TRIPLE COVALENT- * CARBON BONDS WITH MANY OTHER ELEMENTS5 * SAME ATOMS MAY BOND IN DIFFERENT ARRANGEMENTS"ORGANIC COMPOUNDS - PROPERTIES * COVALENT BONDSeghijklmno DBORGANIC COMPOUNDS - (MOST) CARBON CONTAINING COMPOUNDS, USUALLY EXIST) IN LIVING ORGANISMS4WHY SO MANY CARBON COMPOUNDS? (ABOUT 3 MILLION)2 * CARBON EASILY COVA#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===" A) HAVE CHLORINE, FLUORINE OR2 BROMINE@7. FREON, DICHLORODIFLUOROMETHANE, B) HAVE A CARBOXYL GROUP> HAS THE FORMULA C) ARE CALLED ALCOHOLSD A) CCl4 B) C2H2CSTERS B) ORGANIC ACIDSA A) HAVE A CARBOXYL GROUP C) ALCOHOLS D) BENZENESI B) ARE AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS ; C) HAVE A HYDROXYL GROUP 17. HALOGEN DERIVATIVESE D) ARE ESTERS C) LESS REACTIVE THAN ALKENES D) AT LEAST ONE DOUBLE BONDI D) HAVE FORMULA CnHn F 16. TRUE OF A HYDROXYL GROUP (-OH)D6. ACETIC ACID & FORMIC ACIC BOTH A) E / 15. ALKENES85. ALKYNES A) ARE SATURATEDG A) ARE SATURATED B) MAY BE SATURATED/UNSATURATEDA B) AT LEAST ONE TRIPLE BOND C) ARE ALWAYS RING SHAPEDC RATED 14. NATURAL GAS ( CH4 ) IS CALLED?@ B) ALL ARE UNSATURATED A) METHANE B) BUTANE A C) ALL HAVE CARBON, HYDROGEN C) PROPANE D) ACETYLENEI D) ALL HAVE 3 CARBON ATOMS YS STRAIGHT-CHAIN H.C.C C) UNSATURATED HYDROCARBONSA4. WHAT DO PROPANE, PROPENE & D) SATURATED HYDROCARBONSI PROPYNE HAVE IN COMMON? H A) ALL ARE SATU DOUBLE OR TRIPLE BONDS8 D) CHEM FORMULA SHOW SHAPE D) CONTAIN WATER33. WHICH IS AN ALKANE 13. ALKANES AREE A) BENZENE B) PHENOL A) ALWAYS CYCLIC HYDROCARBONSE C) METHANE D) ACETYLENE B) ALWA > B) CHEM FORMULA SHOW ELEMENTS 12. SATURATED HYDROCARBONSA & NUMBER OF ATOMS & SHAPE A) HAVE ONLY SINGLE BONDSF C) STRUC FORMULA SHOW ELEMENTS B) HAVE SINGLE OR DOUBLE BONDSF & NUMBER OF ATOMS & SHAPE C) HAVEMICAL FORMULA & STRUCTURAL B) DISSOLVE IN WATERD FORMULA ARE DIFFERENT IN THAT C) DISSOLVE EASILY IN POLARS> A) CHEM FORMULA SHOW ALL VALENCE D) ARE POLAR MOLECULESI ELECTRONS B * NONPOLAR - (MOST INSOLUBLE), WILL DISSOLVE IN NONPOLARGE * GASES, LIQUIDS (STRONG ODORS, LOW B.P., NONELECTROLYTE), SOLIDS# (LOW MELTING & INSOLUBLE)@>STRUCTURAL FORMULA - SHOWS 1) ELEMENTS 2) # OF ATOMS 3) ARRANGEMENT:CHEMICAL FORMULA - SHOWS 1) ELEMENTS 2) # OF ATOMSF"ISOMERS" - SAME CHEMICAL FORMULA BUT DIFFERENT STRUCTURAL FORMULAGEHYDROCARBONS - ORGANIC COMPOUNDS WITH ONLY HYDROGEN & CARBON (USED AS FUELS)G SATURL GROUP CALLEDC AMINO ACIDS - THERE ARE 22), (C , H , O , N , AND SOMETIMES MAYBE S AND/OR P )7 MADE FROM LINKING 100's OF AMINO ACIDS TOGETHER? ESSENTIAL PROTEINS - MEAT, FISH, MILK PRODUCTS, SOYBEANS  BUILD AND REP , H , O), LARGE AND COMPLEX ESTERS, (TWICE ASF MUCH ENERGY THAN CARBOHYDRATES) BUT UNUSED F & O ARE STORED ON/ THE BODY AS FAT AND CAUSE HEART DISEASE" "ANIMAL FAT" = SATURATED FATA(C) PROTEINS - ORGANIC ACIDS (MADE UP OF A SMALDRATE - GLUCOSE (C6H1206)1 GLUCOSE AND FRUCTOSE ARE ISOMERSDB GLUCOSE + FRUCTOSE -- SUCROSE (SUGAR CANE OR TABLE SUGAR) + H2OC C6H12O6 + C6H12O6 -- C12H22O11 + H2OF(B) FATS & OILS - (C FFDLIFE CHEMISTRY - NUTRIENTS - FUEL BODY, BUILD/REPAIR BODY, FROM FOODH(A) CARBOHYDRATES - (C , H , O), RATIO OF 2 HYDROGEN ATOMS FOR EVERY6 ONE OXYGEN ATOM, BODY'S MAIN SOURCE OF ENERGYB (1) SUGARS - SIMPLEST CARBOHY Cl Cl* FG FREON Cl - C - Cl (AIRCONDITIONING &D (DICHLORODIFLUOROMETHANE) REFRIGERATION)* HB METHYL CHLORIDE H - C - Cl (REFRIGERANT)* H+ Cl ClB TETRACHLOROETHANE H - C - C - H (DRYCLEANING)+ CITRIC ACID (FRUITS) FROM PROPANEE(3) ESTER - (ALCOHOL + ORGANIC ACID), NICE AROMA AND NICE FLAVOR, ICE CREAMA(4) HALOGEN DERIVATIVES - (SUBSTITUTION OF A HYDROGEN ATOM BY A HALOGEN)* DROGEN ATOMS ARE REPLACED9(1) ALCOHOLS - (-OH , HYDROXYL GROUP), "-ol" ENDINGF(2) ORGANIC ACIDS - (-COOH , CARBOXYL GROUP), "-oic acid" ENDING5 METHANE + COOH = METHANOIC ACID = FORMIC ACID! ACETIC ACID FROM ETHANE+  - BRNCH H O N "-yne" - TRIPLE "-OH" - ALCOHOLF CHAIN D (HYDROXYL GROUP) "CYCLO-" - RINGECSUBSTITUTED HYDROCARBONS - IMPORTANT ORGANIC COMPOUNDS; ONE OR MORE! HYD-ON ENDINGF (3 SHAPES) (# OF C's) (TYPE C to C BOND) ("H" SUBSTITUTE)GE nothing - STR M E P "-ane" - SINGLE "-COOH" OIC ACIDH CHAIN B P H "-ene" - DOUBLE (CARBOXYL GROUP)B@ "ISO-"IGAROMATIC HYDROCARBONS - ODORS USUALLY GOOD, RING, 6 CARBONS, SINGLE &' DOUBLE ALTERNATING C TO C BONDSCMETHOD OF GOING FROM STRUCTURAL FORMULA TO NAME (OR N. TO S.F.)DB (1)PRE PREFIX (2)PREFIX (3)ENDING (4)ADENT C TO C BOND, UNSATURATED, CnH2nGALKYNE SERIES - ("-YNE"), AT LEAST ONE TRIPLE COVALENT C TO C BOND,= UNSATURATED, LEAST STABLE - MOST REACTIVE, CnH2n-2GCYCLOALKANES - HYDROCARBON RING, SATURATED (SINGLE COVALENT C TO C)ALENCE # OF CARBON - 4+PREFIXES - M, E, P, B, P, H, H, O, N, DEALKANE SERIES - ("-ANE"), STRAIGHT CHAIN/BRANCH CHAIN, SATURATED,; SINGLE COVALENT C TO C BOND, MOST STABLE, CnH2n+2GALKENE SERIES - ("-ENE"), AT LEAST ONE DOUBLE COVALATED - HOLDS AS MUCH HYDROGEN AS POSSIBLE, ONLY SINGLE C-C' BONDS, "ALKANES" (-ANE ENDING)CA UNSATURATED - CAN'T HOLD AS MUCH H, AT LEAST ONE DOUBLE OR TRIPLEF C TO C BOND, "ALKENES" (-ENE ENDING), "ALKYNES" (-YNE ENDING)VAIR BODYl4 D) ARE ORGANIC ACIDS% C) C2H2F4 D) CCl2F2: 18. FRUCTOSE & GLUCOSE78. FATS & OILS A) ARE POLYMERSA A) ARE ORGANIC ACIDS B) BOTH ARE C6H12HAVE LOW MELTING POINTS7EXTRA CREDIT #3. HOW DO BUTANE AND ISOBUTANE DIFFER?2A) BUTANE IS STRAIGHT CHAIN, ISOBUTANE IS A RING:B) BUTANE IS BRANCHED CHAIN, ISOBUTANE IS STRAIGHT CHAIN:C) BUTANE IS STRAIGHT CHAIN, ISOBUTANE IS BRANCHED CHAIN=LENT BONDSC) FORM IONIC BONDS(D) FORM EITHER COVALENT OR IONIC BONDS=EXTRA CREDIT #2. WHICH IS A PROPERTY OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS?A) NEVER EXIST AS GASES"B) LIQUIDS ARE GOOD ELECTROLYTES%C) LIQUIDS HAVE HIGH BOILING POINTS#D) SOLIDS URATED HYDROCARBONS.850. THE BODY'S MAIN SOURCE OF ENERGY IS CARBOHYDRATES.B@BELOW NUMBER 50 ON YOUR SCANTRON WRITE NUMBERS 1,2 & 3 FOR EX. CREDIT EXTRA CREDIT #1. CARBON ATOMS'A) NEVER BOND WITH OTHER CARBON ATOMSB) FORM COVA IS AN EXAMPLE OF A STRUCTURAL FORMULA.$46. THE 4-CARBON ALKANE IS BUTANE.B47. ISOMERS ARE COMPOUNDS WITH THE SAME ATOMS BUT HAVE DIFFERENT ARRANGEMENTS.248. HYDROCARBONS CONTAIN ONLY CARBON & HYDROGEN.049. CYCLOALKANES ARE UNSATNT STRUCTURES.F43. A SIX-CARBON RING WITH BOTH SINGLE AND DOUBLE BONDS IS THE BASIC$ STRUCTURE OF THE CYCLOALKANES.E44. THE STRUCTURAL FORMULA TELLS THE ELEMENTS & THE NUMBER OF ATOMS% & THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE ATOMS.545. C3H8R MORE HYDROGEN  ATOMS ARE REPLACED..40. CARBON ATOMS ALWAYS FORM COVALENT BONDS.941. LIQUID ORGANIC COMPOUNDS TEND TO HAVE STRONG ODORS.A42. POLYMERS ARE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS THAT HAVE THE SAME MOLECULAR' FORMULA BUT DIFFEREEX ESTERS WITH 37. C5H11OH# WITH HIGH ENERGY CONTENT ARE?. 38. "-oic"'27. AMINO ACIDS LINK TOGETHER TO FORM!TRUE/FALSE NUMBERS 39-50JH39. A SUBSTITUTED HYDROCARBON IS FORMED WHEN ONE O B) ORGANIC ACID124. 22 AMINO ACIDS MAKE UP WHAT? 35. CH3COOHH C) HALOGEN DERIVATIVE225. SUGAR AND STARCH ARE WHAT? 36. CF2Cl2326. LARGE, COMPL 2 OF HYDROGEN TO OXYGEN IS 2:1 32. C2H5OH423. GIANT MOLECULES MADE FROM 33. C3H7COOH= SMALL MOLECULES LINKED A) ALCOHOL. TOGETHER 34. CHI3B ) FATS & OILS D) POLYMERS 31. MORE REACTIVE THAN ALKANESD E) MONOMERS BECAUSE DOUBLE BOND BREAKSH EASILY A)ALKANE B)ALKENE C)ALKYNEI22. COMPOUNDS THAT HAVE A RATIO HOLS B) ESTERSH D) 8 E) NONE OF THESE C) ORGANIC ACIDS D) AROMATIC HCH22. - 27. MATCH WITH A-E 30. HAS SINGLE BONDS BETWEEN CARBONSEC A) CARBOHYDRATES B) PROTEINS A) ALKYNE B) ALKENE C) ALKANEF CTALLIC B) IONIC A) NEGATIVE END B) POSITIVE ENDH C) COVALENT D) NONE OF THESE C) - AND + END D) ARE NONPOLARD21. VALENCE NUMBER OF CARBON 29. GIVE FLAVOR & AROMA TO FOODS? A) 2 B) 4 C) 6 A) ALCO. ORGANIC COMPOUNDS CONTAIN A) CARBOXYL GROUP B) ESTERSH A) CARBON B) HYDROGEN C) HYDROXYL GROUP D) AMINO ACID! C) OXYGEN D) ALL OF THESE?20. WHAT BONDS DOES CARBON FORM? 28. ORGANIC MOLECULES HAVE:H A) MEO6E B) ARE ESTERS C) ARE FATS D) ARE PROTEINSI C) LESS ENERGY THAN CARBOHYDRATES ( D) HAVE LONG CHAINS OF AMINO ACIDS8 19. ALCOHOLS CONTAIND9D) THEY HAVE DIFFERENT NUMBERS OF CARBON AND HYDROGEN ATOMS"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===V" "O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===t"B}CH 15 WORKSHEET - WORK/POWERMATCH 1-7 WITH A,B,C'1) J/sec (p351) A. work(2) Nm (p349) B. power(3) N (p349) C. force4) hp "O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===Z", __ANY ADDITIONAL HIGHLIGHTS:____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>______________________________________________________________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>____________________________________________________________>________________xz{|>TEAM_____________________________SCORE______ DATE___________.OPPONENT_________________________SCORE______>PLAYER ASTS RBS FTA FTM FG 3PT PF POINTS>________________________ TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:DB WHAT A JOY IT IS TO BE ABLE TO WRITE THIS LETTER FOR A YOUNG DBPERSON SUCH AS MIKE SPEARMAN. I FIRST MET MIKE NEARLY FOUR YEARS ?=AGO. AS MIKE HAS REPRESENTEDOW MUCH WORK DID SHE= DO IN JOULES? (HINT: on p349 you can find out how to figure work in JOULES)=12) A group of men pushed their broken down truck (weighing< 2000 N) 20 meters to get it off the road. A) How much> work didfts 100 kg to a height of 2 meters.: How much work did he do? (HINT: 100 kg converts to3 newtons by 100 kg x 9.8m/s/s = 980 N)=11) If a teacher uses 5 Newtons of force to move a stack of= books 10 meters to the storeroom, H (p352)5) W (p351)6) J (p349)7) Nm/sec (p351)&WRITE THE FORMULA FOR THE FOLLOWING:+8) WORK = (use F & d) (p349)+9) POWER = (use W & t) (p350);10) A weight lifter li SINCERELY,B JOHN A. DUNKMAN, SRB HEAD BASEBALL COACHD FORT ZUMWALT SO. H.S. ANY OF IT WASTED OR REGRET EVEN ONE SECOND.DB THIS YOUNG MAN IS SOMETHING SPECIAL AND HE WILL BE A SUCCESS CAAT WHATEVER HE CHOOSES AND IS ALLOWED TO DO. THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME AND CONSIDERATION.9 C TOGETHER WE HAVE SWEATED, WORKED AND PLAYED, WON AND LOST, WE A?HAVE LAUGHED AND SIGHED TOGETHER. I CAN HONESTLY SAY THAT THE DBTIME I HAVE BEEN ABLE TO SPEND WITH MIKE SPEARMAN HAS ALWAYS BEEN DBQUALITY TIME AND THAT I HAVE NEVER CONSIDEREDTICALLY =;WORKED AT HONING THIS SKILL WHICH IS NOT MACHO OR COOL AND ECPROBABLY CUT HIS BATTING AVERAGE BY 50 POINTS. HE STILL HIT 340. A?THE END RESULT WAS THAT THE TEAM SCORED MANY RUNS FROM RUNNERS *THAT MIKE UNSELFISHLY PUT ON THIRD BASE.EN HAS DONE BRINGING UP HER FAMILY AS A SINGLE PARENT.@> NOT MANY PLAYERS HAVE THE POSITIVE ATTITUDE AND SENSE OF DBTEAMWORK TO DO WHAT I ASKED OF MIKE. MIKE HAS THE ABILITY TO HIT CATO THE OPPOSITE FIELD - THE "RIGHT SIDE". MIKE ENTHUSIASADMIRERS, BOTH PEER AND ADULT.DBWHEN OTHERS HAVE GIVEN UP AND QUIT YOU'LL FIND MIKE STILL ON TASK @>WITH HIS SHOULDER TO THE LOAD. I'M SURE MIKE'S PERSEVERANCE, ECSENSE OF VALUES AND LEVEL OF MATURITY ARE A PRODUCT OF THE QUALITY ?=JOB BEV SPEARMAHE POSSESSES AND HIS CADEPENDABILITY AND CHARACTER SET HIM APART FROM OTHERS. HIS WORK =ETHIC IS PHENOMENAL AND HE HAS A BURNING DESIRE TO SUCCEED.>< MIKE'S ABILITY TO GET ALONG WITH AND RESPECT OTHERS IS AWITNESSED BY HIS LARGE NUMBER OF @>JUST HIS STATISTICS; YOU GET TO KNOW THE FIBER FROM WHICH THE CAPERSON IS MADE. THE QUALITIES THAT MAKE MIKE SPECIAL AND ENDEAR ECHIM TO SO MANY OF THE ADULTS HE WORKS WITH ALL LIE WITHIN. MIKE'S ECABILITY TO ACHIEVE SO MUCH WITH THE ABILITIES OUR SCHOOL AND SUMMER BASEBALL CAPROGRAMS FOR CLOSE TO 160 GAMES, I HAVE HAD THE PLEASURE OF GET- TING TO MIKE.EC A? AS A COACH, ONE IS ABLE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT A PERSON THAN they do? B) If it took them 40 seconds to do. this work, HOW MUCH POWER DID THEY HAVE?#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===0" E) DECELERATIONMATCH 30-33 WITH A,B,C,D530. AIR RESISTANCE A) LUBRICANT:31. 2 SOLIDS RUBBING AGAINST ONE B) FLUID FRICTION ANOTHER<32. CHANGES FROM SLIDING TO FLUID C) ROLLING FRICTION<S A) FASTER THE SPEED526. STRAIGHT UP B) NO MOTION627. A STRAIGHT LINE C) IMPOSSIBLE:28. DOWNWARD CURVE D) CONSTANT SPEED829. GREATER THE SLOPE NAL C) EARTH'S GRAVITY VELOCITY DIVIDED TIME<23. CAUSE OF FREE FALLING BODY D) TERMINAL VELOCITY/24. ACCELERATION STOPS E) MOON7MATCH 25-29 WITH A,B,C,D,E *(QUESTIONS ON GRAPHING)<25. STRAIGHT ACCROSACCELERATION219. ORBITAL MOTION E) PROJECTILE MOTIONMATCH 20-24 WITH A,B,C,D,E720. MOST COMMON FRAME OF REFERENCE A) ACCELERATION021. SMALLER FORCE OF GRAVITY B) EARTH:22. FINAL VELOCITY MINUS ORIGI = E) MASS x ACCELERATIONMATCH 15-19 WITH A,B,C,D,E015. A CHANGE OF POSITION A) BALANCED FORCES116. A CURVED PATH B) A TYPE OF MOTION'17. AN UPWARD CURVE C) MOTION-18. NO MOVEMENT D) MATCH 10-14 WITH A,B,C,D,E.10. GRAVITY = A) MASS x VELOCITY/11. WORK = B) MASS -- DISTANCE/12. FORCE = C) DISTANCE -- TIME113. SPEED = D) FORCE x DISTANCE414. MOMENTUME MEASURE OF THE EFFECT OF B) INERTIA GRAVITY ON AN OBJECT77. MOT THE ACTUAL SPEED NOW C) FRICTION58. AIR RESISTANCE = FORCE OF GRAVITY D) WEIGHT>9. THE PROPERTY OF NOT CHANGING MOTION E)TERMINAL VELOCITY MOMENTUM C) GRAVITY D) FRICTION E) INERTIA84. HAS TO DO WITH FRICTION A) MOTION B) LUBRICANT * C) FORCE D) SLIDING E) ALL OF THESEMATCH 5-9 WITH A,B,C,D,E<5. A FORCE THAT OPPOSES MOTION A) AVERAGE SPEED66. THIRECTION=2. CONSTANT SPEED IS GRAPHED AS A) UPWARD CURVE B) DOWN-= WARD CURVE C) STEADY UPWARD CURVE D) LINE WITH EQUALLY' DIFFERENT SLOPES E) STRAIGHT LINE93. ALL OBJECTS IN THE UNIVERSE ATTRACT EACHOTHER WITH > A) FORCE B)9TEST: CHAPTER 12-13 D O N O T W R I T E? O N T H I S . . . 81. VELOCITY IS SPEED AND ________ A) MASS B) MOTION" C) ACCELERATION D) D"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===" ><CHAPTER 14/15 TEST D O N O T W R I T E O N T H I S=A) WORK B) FORCE C) PRESSURE D) POWER E) MECH.ADVANTAGE1. LENGTH HEIGHT2. WORK TIME3. FORCE AR33. THE LAST TYPE OF FRICTION D) SLIDING FRICTIONt AIR BALLON FOR MANNED FLIGHT WAS THE YEAR _______. ELASTICITY __________ ENERGY.>_______ ________ ENERGY IS DUE TO AN OBJECT'S ____________.2________ ________ IS ENERGY OF MOVING OBJECTS.7NAME THE 5 TYPES OF ENERGY: ____________<:VIDEO: E N E R G Y - OVERVIEW DO NOT WRITE ON THIS>THE FIRST SOURCE OF ENERGY MAN USED WAS ____________ POWER.>HOT AIR _______. BECAUSE THERE IS ENERGY IN THE FORM OF ___81sl"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===D"( HINES ARE 100 % EFFICIENT(50. A WEDGE IS TWO (2) INCLINED PLANES s / s IS CAUSED BY THE FORCE OF GRAVITY*45. A WHEEL & AXLE IS A COMPOUND MACHINE%46. A PULLEY IS LIKE A WHEEL & AXLE$47. A LEVER IS LIKE A WHEEL & AXLE948. A PUSH ON AN OBJECT BY A MACHINE IS AN EFFORT FORCE149. ONLY THE BEST MAC SIMPLE MACHINES38. A LEVER THAT ROTATES39. SUPPORTING ROPE SEGMENTS40. THREE (3) CLASSES$41. TWO (2) DIFFERENT SIZED WHEELS42. FIXED OR MOVABLET R U E / F A L S E!43. MASS VOLUME IS PRESSURE644. 9.8 m /CHINE032. THE FASTER A FLUID MOVES THE LESS PRESSURE>A) SCREW B) PULLEY C) WHEEL & AXLE D) LEVER E) COMPOUND MACH33. NOT A SIMPLE MACHINE134. AN INCLINED PLANE WRAPPED AROUND A CYLINDER 35. FULCRUM 36. ROPE37. TWO (2)LY LIQUIDS(27. A PULLEY CAN MOVE OR BE STATIONARY=28. MACHINES' INPUT WORK IS ALWAYS GREATER THAN OUTPUT WORK229. A PIVOT POINT ON A WHEEL & AXLE IS A FULCRUM!30. FLUID FRICTION REDUCES DRAG/31. RESISTANCE FORCE IS PRODUCED BY A MADISTANCE(20. A FORCE ACTING OVER A CERTAIN AREA21. RATE OF DOING WORK22. USES DENSITIES 23. A DOWNWARD PUSH IN A FLUID 24. A PULL(25. ARCHIMEDES PRINCIPLE INVOLVES THIST R U E / F A L S E26. FLUIDS ARE ONDIUS OF WHEEL RADIUS OF AXLE15. hp7A) WORK B) FORCE C) PRESSURE D) POWER E) BUOYANCY 16. A PUSH*17. HAPPENS ONLY WHEN AN OBJECT IS MOVED118. A FORCE OF A FLUID THAT PUSHES AN OBJECT UP'19. A FORCE ACTING THROUGH A EA 4. NEWTON 5. N / cm2 6. WATT7. NEWTON METER8. _________ OF GRAVITY9. JOULE / SECOND 10. JOULE611. LENGTH OF EFFORT ARM LENGTH OF RESISTANCE ARM12. FORCE x DISTANCE 13. THRUST'14. RA____ ENERGY> ____________ __________ ENERGY7 ________________ ENERGY; ____________________ ENERGY3 ____________ ENERGY9ENERGY IS BEING USED WHENEVER __________ IS BEING DONE.(ENERGY CAN EASILY CHANGE ___________.>ENERGY CAN NOT BE _________________ OR __________________.8ENERGY IS THE ______________ ____ ____ __________ .*ENERGY IS MEASURED IN ______ A LIQUID IS CALLED A ________ CHANGE;4. AT THE FREEZING POINT A ______ TURNS TO A _________ .55. WHAT TYPE OF HEAT TRANSFER IS "HOT AIR RISING"?/6. WHAT IS THE SPECIFIC HEAT VALUE OF WATER?57. HEAT IS RELATED TO THE ________ OF ___0OPEN BOOK QUIZ: CH 17/16 PART I HEAT ENERGY:1. ANOTHER NAME FOR 0 K IS _________________ _________=2. ___________ IS AN INSTRUMENT THAT MEASURES TEMPERATURE.>3. GOING FROM A GAS TO#O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===" Fort Zumwalt So. H.S.o use our'back fields this weekend. Thank you.3 Sincerely,5 John Dunkman< Head Baseball Coach> l 6 P.M. as part of a BULLDOG BASEBALL FUNDRAISER.< The bearers of this letter have permission to use the:game field that has been prepared for them for the abovetimes and dates.: We are asking our other BASEBALL FRIENDS tTO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN,= On Saturday, April 1st and Sunday, April 2nd, the main<BASEBALL GAME FIELD at Fort Zumwalt South High School will>be used from noon unti"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===`" _________ .________.>8. SUBSTANCES THAT ALLOW GOOD HEAT FLOW ARE HEAT __________>9. CONDUCTION, CONVECTION & RADIATION ARE TYPES OF HEAT ___>10. SUBSTANCES THAT DO NOT ALLOW HEAT FLOW ARE _____________-11. _______ IS NOT REALLY THE SAME AS HEAT.+12. WHAT DOES K F C MEAN IN THIS CHAPTER?,13. WHICH TEMPERATURE SCALE IS NOT METRIC?>14. WHAT IS THE MOST COMMONLY USED METRIC TEMPERATURE SCALE?15. 0 C = ______ K916. AT WHAT TEMPERATURE DOES ALL MOLECULAR MOTION STOP?917"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===t". A. ENERGY LOSS B. ENERGY GAIN 21. WATER GETS COLDER22. LIQUID TO GAS23. ICE MELTS24. LIQUID TO SOLID25. EXPANSION OF A SUBSTANCE=17. DURING A PHASE CHANGE THERE IS A CHANGE IN ____________=18. DURING A PHASE CHANGE THERE IS NO CHANGE IN ___________619. "MEASURE OF AVERAGE KINETIC ENERGY OF MOLECULES":20. HEAT ENGINES CHANGE _________ INTO MECHANICAL ENERGY#ID TO A GAS IS A PHASE _________12. NOT THE SAME AS HEAT,13. ENERGY DUE TO ______ IS KINETIC ENERGY)14. AN ENERGY CONVERSION IS A _________-15. POTENTIAL ENERGY IS DUE TO ____________016. TEMPERATURE INDIRECTLY MEASURES __________ ICE MELTS.A. CONDUCTION B. CONVECTION C. RADIATION7. HOT AIR RISES8. DIRECT CONTACT!9. FLOWS IN CURRENTS OF FLUIDS10. FROM SUN TO EARTH<A. HEAT B. TEMPERATURE C. CHANGE D. MOTION E. POSITION111. FROM A LIQU CHAPTER 16/17 TESTA8A. 0 K B. 0 C C. 0 F D. 100 K E. 100 C1. ABSOLUTE ZERO 2. 273 K3. NO MOLECULAR MOTION4. WATER FREEZES5. WATER BOILS6. "O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===." ________.>33. AS THE TEMPERATURE OF MOLECULES GOES UP THEY MOVE _____.>34. ENERGY CONTAINED IN A SUBSTANCE IS CALLED _______ ____.=35. AS WATER GETS COLDER AND FREEZES, IT GETS ____ IN SIZE.%36.-40. NAME THE 5 FORMS OF ENERGY.:4175 C HOW MUCH HEAT IS GAINED? PART II HEAT ENERGY & ENERGY=29. WHEN SOMETHING EXPANDS ITS MOLECULAR K.E. GOES _______.%30. ICE IS ______ DENSE THAN WATER.%31. MOST THINGS ______ WHEN HEATED.)32. THE ABILITY TO DO WORK IS____.825. EVAPORATION TAKES PLACE ON THE ______ OF A LIQUID.>26. HOW MANY CALORIES PER GRAM OF WATER DOES IT TAKE FOR ICE TO MELT?:27. IF WATER GOES TO WATER VAPOR IS HEAT LOST OR GAINED?:28. IF 20 GRAMS OF WATER GOES FROM 50 C TO LATING THE LOSE/GAIN OF HEAT121. THE ______ IS THE UNIT OF MEASURE FOR HEAT..22. TEMPERATURE INDIRECTLY MEASURES _______.<23. A PHASE CHANGE REQUIRES A ______ OF ______ _________.>24. DURING A PHASE CHANGE THERE IS NO CHANGE IN _______. ENERGY OF MOTION IS CALLED ___________ _________ .818. WHAT IS THE "MEASURE OF AVERAGE KINETIC ENERGY OF  MOLECULES"?:19. THE ABILITY OF A SUBSTANCE TO ______ HEAT ENERGY IS  CALLED SPECIFIC HEAT.=20. WRITE THE FORMULA FOR CALCU&DO NOT WRITE ON THIS QUIZ . . .41. WHAT ARE THE 2 TYPES OF SOLAR HEATING SYSTEMS?12. WHERE DOES A HEAT PUMP GET ITS HEAT ENERGY?;3. WHY DOES A HEAT PUMP SOMETIMES NOT WORK IN ST. LOUIS? 6CHAPTER 18, 19, 20 TEST D O N O T W R I T E0 O N T H I STRUE/FALSE NUMBERS 1-18;1. SOMETIMES ST LOUIS IS TOO HOT FOR A HEAT PUMP TO WOR"O=====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|====|===" PUT THE WINDOWS FOR SOLAR HEATING?011. EVAPORATION IS A ________________ PROCESS.____ ENGINE IS WHEN FUEL IS BURNED INSIDE THE ENGINE.=49. THE SOURCE OF ______ ______ IS THE CENTER OF THE ATOM.950. X-RAYS, RADIO WAVES & LASERS ARE __________ ENERGY.CHAPTERS 16 & 17O HEIGHT & AN OBJECT'S MASS IS _____________ POTENTIAL ENERGY.946. _______ ________ = MASS times VELOCITY squared( 2:47. HEAT ENGINES CHANGE HEAT INTO _____________ ENERGY.;48. _______ ___. ENERGY DUE TO POSITION IS CALLED ________ ________.242. ENERGY DUE TO MOTION IS _________ ________.843. FOR ENERGY. E = (WRITE THE FORMULA)>44. AN ENERGY CHANGE FROM ONE FORM TO ANOTHER IS CALLED WHAT>45. ENERGY DUE T?;6. FREON (DICHLORODIFLUOROMETHANE) IS A _______________.)7. NAME THE 3 PARTS OF ACTIVE HEATING.%8. WHERE DOES CELLULOSE COME FROM?-9. WHAT DO WE HAVE TO GIVE TO A HEAT PUMP?=10. WHICH SIDE OF OUR HOUSE IN ST. PETERS SHOULD WEHAT ARE THE 2 TYPES OF SOLAR HEATING SYSTEMS?12. WHERE DOES A HEAT PUMP GET ITS HEAT ENERGY?;3. WHY DOES A HEAT PUMP SOMETIMES NOT WORK IN ST. LOUIS?%4. NAME THE 3 TYPES OF INSULATION.35. WHERE DOES THERMAL (HEAT) POLUTION COME FROM WHAT DO WE HAVE TO GIVE TO A HEAT PUMP?=10. WHICH SIDE OF OUR HOUSE IN ST. PETERS SHOULD WE PUT THE WINDOWS FOR SOLAR HEATING?011. EVAPORATION IS A ________________ PROCESS.&DO NOT WRITE ON THIS QUIZ . . .41. W%4. NAME THE 3 TYPES OF INSULATION.35. WHERE DOES THERMAL (HEAT) POLUTION COME FROM?=6. FREON (DICHLORODIFLUOROMETHANE) IS A ________________.)7. NAME THE 3 PARTS OF ACTIVE HEATING.%8. WHERE DOES CELLULOSE COME FROM?-9. K=2. WINDOWS MUST BE ON THE EAST SIDE OF THE HOUSE FOR SOLAR! HEATING TO WORK IN ST LOUIS=3. DC (DIRECT CURRENT), WHEN ELECTRONS FLOW IN 1 DIRECTION+4. THE ENDS OF A MAGNET ARE CALLED POLES65. WHEN LIGHTNING STRIKES IT IS A BU NEXT LEVEL+ P nCHS CalculatedYEAR.GRADCOLLEGEPARENTS PARENTS PHONE PARENTS LIST '   !PLYR.L.NAMECategory1 PLYR.F.NAMESTREETCITYSTZIPPHONE UD17. PARALLEL CIRCUITS HAVE ALL THEIR PARTS ONE AFTER AN LASTS A LONG TIME510. STATIC ELECTRICITY MAY BE DEVELOPED BY FRICTION-11. MAGNETISM IS CAUSED BY SPINNING PROTONS)12. ELECTRIC POWER IS MEASURED IN WATTS>13. UP IN CANADA THE EARTH'S MAGNETIC POLE IS REALLY A SOUTH POLE>14.ILDUP OF STATIC ELECTRICITY;6. THERMAL POLLUTION COMES FROM LOUD NOICES OF FACTORIES57. CARPETS ARE GOOD THINGS TO HIDE EXTENSION CORDS48. FUSES AND CIRCUIT BREAKERS ARE THE SAME THINGS<9. A NATURAL MAGNET IS HARD TO MAKE BUT  !P nCHSA DECKELMANSAMEcDEPRIESTMIKE24 WEST GARDEN WALK DR ST. PETERSMO63376279-115098CALIB & JOYCE DEPRIESTSAMEVDUKEADAM324 SPENCER PLACE ST. PETERSMO63376928-366598GARY & DIANNA DUKESAME\DUVALEUSBUD90 SPENCER TRAIL ST. PETERSMO633OLLINS"J.R."536 MISTY MOSS ST. PETERSMO63376928-201698MIKE & KATHY COLLINSSAME\DALTON"R.C."18 SHODOWCREEK DR. ST. PETERSMO63376441-982997RON & CONNIE DALTONSAMEY DECKELMANJIM 33 SOUTEE ST. PETERSMO63376278-857798DARRELL & WANDTRAIL ST. PETERSMO63376281-051998EUGENE & JANE BOISVERTSAMEYCARDWELLBYRON 41 ROLAND DR ST. PETERSMO63376240-609497GAYLEN & LIZ CARDWELLSAME\CHAPELLJUSTIN2 DIANNE ST.PETERSMO63376281-887194NEMSUGARY & PENNY CHAPELL281-8871ZC JOHN LOGAN CCROGER/SHERRY KING447-6157XBARTHSEAN719 N. YOSEMITE CT ST. PETERSMO63376397-804095JOHN & PEGGY BARTHSAME]BILODEAUJEFF57 LOST DUTCHMAN ST. PETERSMO63376928-593198JOE & PHYLLIS BILODEAUSAME^BOISVERTKEVIN60 SPANISH XALAMEDAALEX21 SUNNYVIEW DR ST. PETERSMO63376278-641398STU & JULIE ALAMEDASAMEd ALEXANDERSAM 37 CONNEMARA ST.PETERSMO63376447-615794PARENTS MAIL LABELS )))))))))))))))))))))))))    !!!!!!!! # CVS  !P nCHSPLYRS BY CLASS   P nCHS PLAYERS LIST   +   !MAILING LABELS0 )))))))))))))))))))))))    !!!!!! # CVS76441-478898GENE & MAGGIE DUVALEUSSAME[ EATHERTONMIKE235 LAUALEWOOD ST. PETERSMO63376278-327298MIKE & JUDY EATHERTONSAMEX ENTWISTLEROBBY 18 SOUTEE ST. PETERSMO63376397-161198RON & RHONDA ENTWISTLESAMEcFERANECNICK10 NORTH STAR CT. ST. PETERSMO63376441-772497JERRY FERANEC & DENISE IRWINSAME]FLOYD "J.R." JOHN6351 SPRUCEFIELD DR.O'FALLONMO63366272-895298MARK & SUE FLOYDSAMEWFOLEYJOHN111 SUNNYHILL BLVD ST. PETERSMO63376397-587296BILL & JAN KLARICSAME & DELIA SCHINDLERSAMERSCHLEYLANCE 13 OAK BLUFF ST. PETERSMO63376978-430998DAN & DEB SCHLEYSAME^ SELLMEYERSTEVE15 RED OAK DR. ST. PETERSMO63376240-320797MARK & DEBBIE SELLMEYERSAMEUSENNJOSH8320 MEXICO RD ST. PETERSMO63376978-TRAVIS6 KNIGHTS FERRY CT. ST. PETERSMO63376 447-2037-97STEVE & VALERIE ROWANSAME]ROBINSONBARRETT 24 JOAN DR. ST. PETERSMO63376978-229598DARRYL & ELAINE ROBINSONSAME_ SCHINDLERJAKE41 SPENCER TRAIL ST. PETERSMO63376441-178798JERRYMO63376447-978194DR. & MRS. DEAN PHILLIPS447-9781WPRATTEJASON 4 HEATHER DR ST. PETERSMO63376441-607198ROBT. & SANDRA PRATTESAME]REESEDENNY42 JEFFERY WAYNE ST. PETERSMO63376928-433797AUDIE & DOTTIE STILLWELLSAMEf REGENSBERGERN & DEBBIE MISURACASAMEZO'LEARYANDY27 SPENCER TRAIL ST. PETERSMO63376928-834098JOHN & NANCY O'LEARYSAMEaOSTERNATE214 WEST SUNNYHILL BLVD ST. PETERSMO63376397-442897DWIGHT & REBECCA OSTERSAME^PHILLIPSTODD 19 CONNEMARA ST.PETERSEYMCMAHONTIM20 MILL RACE DR ST.PETERSMO63376447-333794MR. & MRS. MCMAHON447-3337YMEYERSBRIAN772 BEAR MTN. DR. ST. PETERSMO63376397-273298BOB & MARTY MEYERSSAME_MISURACAJOHN1 RUSTIC CREEK CT. ST. PETERSMO63376240-602297JOHAHANIAN 8 SUNTREE ST. PETERSMO63376397-861897NICK & LAURA MAHANSAME] MATTINGLYJOHN17 MICHELLE LANE ST. PETERSMO63376397-161298JON & CHRIS MATTINGLYSAMEUMAZZUCANICK 316 CARDUBA ST. PETERSMO63376939-334697JERRY & JUDY MAZZUCASAMIEW LANE ST. PETERSMO63376447-552898PAT & PATTY LEDBETTERSAMEVLEWISJEFF516 PIONEER DR. ST. PETERSMO63376278-816798PAUL & MARTHA LEWISSAME]MAGGARTJOSH811 S. YOSEMITE CT. ST. PETERSMO63376278-202798CLIFF & GAIL MAGGARTSAMENM-619397 JULIE LAHTISAMEc LAJEUNESSEPAUL9 CRICKLEWOOD LN ST.PETERSMO63376278-482594MR & MRS TED LAJEUNESSE278-4825a LANCASTERDEREK25 DOUGLAS DR WEST ST. PETERSMO63376397-599297CARL & CAROL LANCASTERSAME` LEDBETTERCHAD131 MISTY VRICH & KATHI HOORMANNSAMEY HUTCHESONJACK 11 TRACY DR. ST. PETERSMO63376978-084898CHET & JILL HUTCHESONSAMEUJONESKEITH11 HUNTSMAN TR ST. PETERSMO63376978-555698MARK & KAREN JONESSAMELKELLYJIM279 MONTEGO CT ST. PETERSMO63376447ICK17 UP. DARDENNE FARM DR. ST. CHARLESMO63304240-322598GREGORY & JUDY HOBSONSAME^HOFFMANBRIAN812 BROOKWOOD BEND ST. PETERSMO63376240-292098ROD & SHELLEY HOFFMANSAME_HOORMANNMATT801 S. YOSEMITE CT. ST. PETERSMO63376397-1812983376397-042297STEVE & PAT GOVEROSAME\ GRABOWSKIERIC 4 LANTANA CT. ST. PETERSMO63376926-365996DAVID & DIANE GRABOWSKISAMEkHALLTARRANCE7 TAILING WHEEL CT ST.PETERSMO63376441-288994 UNIV OF MOMR & MRS CLINTON HALL441-2889cHOBSONNM & PEGGY GILBERTSAME^GOETTELJEREMY 16 HORIZON ST.PETERSMO63376278-138994PARENTS OF JEREMY GOETTEL278-1389VGOODINSHANE 21 SUNNYHILL ST.PETERSMO63376278-641794MR. & MRS. GOODIN278-6417YGOVEROMIKE35 DOUGLAS DR WEST ST. PETERSMO6CABASAMEXGIFFORDDAVID 441 KNAUST RD ST. PETERSMO63376272-161997GARY & JANICE GERBERSAMEYGILBERTGREG 104 JULIE ST.PETERSMO63376278-407194UMSLJIM & PEGGY GILBERT278-4071VGILBERTTIM104 JULIE LANE ST. PETERSMO63376397-407197JIVFOLEYMIKE111 SUNNYHILL BLVD ST. PETERSMO63376397-587298BILL &JAN KLARICSAMERFORDDAN101 EL CABALLO ST. PETERSMO63376397-396596STEVE & CINDY FORDSAME\FULLERNICK26 LAURA HILL RD ST. PETERSMO63376978-420198TONY & BARBRA RUBAL367497NICK & MICHELLE SENNSAME]SIGNORIOMIKE120 LAKE RIDGE DR. ST. PETERSMO63376978-447198JOE & KAREN SIGNORIOSAME_SKINNERCHRIS726 N. YOSEMITE CT ST. PETERSMO63376279-233098BOB & MICHELLE SKINNERSAME_ SPOTSWOODERIC94 SPENCER TRAIL ST. PETERSMO63376928-614898DOUG & DEBBIE SPOTSWOODSAMEZSTANGLEJASON5 LIPPIZON RD. ST. PETERSMO63376939-309598MIKE & CAROLE STANGLESAME_ STOCKMANNNICK 21 WENDY LANE ST. PETERSMO63376970-244098STEVE & ROSEMARY STOCKMANNSAME7DOUGLAS & MARILEE WILLIAMSSAME\WOLFEDONALD6 WEST SUNNYSIDE DR. ST. PETERSMO63376978-566897MIKE & BETTY WOLFESAMELERSAMEYWIKOFFMATT1116 CARRINGTON PL ST. PETERSMO63376926-220798KEN & KATHY WIKOFFSAMEXWILCOXCOREY33 DEVONDALE PL ST. PETERSMO63376279-243996JIM & CONNIE WILCOXSAMEcWILLIAMSSTEPHEN561 PIONEER DR. ST. PETERSMO63376970-22089WESTJEFF175 PHEASANT POINT BLVDO'FALLONMO63366240-831597DON & JANE WESTSAMEUWHEELERDAN14 AVACADO TREE CR. ST. PETERSMO63376441-658297 JOYCE WHEELERSAMEYWHEELERTIM10 RIVER BEND CT. ST. PETERSMO63376281-214897DON & CATHY WHEEHRIS119 MISTY VIEW ST. PETERSMO63376939-490396JERRY & DONNA BLANKENSHIPSAMEXWAGGONERBEN 9 ARDENNAIS ST. PETERSMO63376928-417797BARRY & LAURIE WAGGONERSAMENWEISSBOB 14 CARIBOU ST. PETERSMO63376240-460297ROBT & JODY WEISSSAMEW^SULLIVANJERRY8 SILVER CITY CT ST.PETERSMO63376447-366194MR. & MRS. SULLIVAN447-3661VVALEJASON1 RIVER BEND CT. ST.PETERSMO63376272-251994MR. & MRS. VALE272-2519:VAUGHANERIC 31 KIMBERLY ST. PETERSMO63376397-268597]VINTONC