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Matter
Anything that has mass and takes up space
Property
Any characteristic of matter thst allows us to recognize and distinguish different types of matter
Atoms
Building blocks of life
Molecule
Two or more atoms joined together in specific arrangements
3 states of matter
Gas(vapor), liquid, solid
Gas
No fixed volume or shape; conforms to the volume and shape of its container; can b3 compressed or allowed to expand
Liquid
Distinct volume but no specific shape; assumes the shape of the portion of the container thst it occupies; not readily compressible
Solid
Definite shape and definite volume; not readily compressible
Pure substance
Matter that has distinct properties and a composition that does not vary from sample to sample
Element
Substance that can not be decomposed into simpler substances
Compound
Substances composed of two or more elements; they contain two or more kinds of atoms
CH4
Methane
CO2
Carbon dioxide
C8H10N4O2
Caffeine
C6H8O6
Ascorbic acid (vitamin C)
C7H8N4O2
Theobromine
C9H8O4
Acetylsalicylic acid (asprin)
Al2O3
Aluminum Oxide
Law of constant composition
The elemental composition of a compound is always the same
Mixture
Combination of 2 or more substances in which each substance retains its chemical identity
Heterogenous mixture
Not uniform throughout
Homogeneous mixture
Uniform throughout
Physical property
Property that is observed without changing the identity and composition of the substance
Chemical property
Describes the way a substance changes, or reacts, to form another substance
Intensive property
Does NOT depend on the amount of the sample
Extensive property
Depends on the amount of the sample
Physical change
Substance changes its physical properties but not it's chemical properties
Chemical reaction
Substance is transformed into another substance
Metric system
Used for scientific measurments
Mass
Kilogram
Length
Meter
Time
Second
Temperature
Kelvin
Amount of substance
Mole
P
Peta 10^15
T
Tera 10^12
G
Giga 10^9
M
Mega 10^6
k
Kilo 10^3
d
Deci 10^-1
c
Centi 10^-2
m
Milli 10^-3
Funny m
Micro 10^-6
n
Nano 10^-9
p
Pico ^10-12
f
Femto 10^-15
a
Atto 10^-18
z
Zepto 10^-21
Mass
Measure of the amount of material in an object
Kelvin Scale (K)
Defines absolute zero as the lowest attainable temperature
Celsius scale (°C)
Defines 0 and 100 as freezing and boiling points of water
0 K
-273.15 °C
°C
5/9 (°F - 32)
°F
9/5 (°C + 32)
Derived unit
Combination of 2 or more SI base units
Speed
meters/seconds
Volume
m^3
Density
grams/cm^3 or g/mL
Density
= mass / volume
(The amount of mass in a unit volume of a substance)
Exact numbers
Those whose numbers are known exactly
Inexact numbers
Those whose values have some uncertainty
Numbers obtained by measurments are always inexact
Accuracy
Measure of how close to the measured quantity is to the true value
Precision
The degree of reproducibility of a measured quantity.
Significant figures
1: non zero numbers are always significant
2: zeros between significant figures are always significant
3: zeros before the first nonzero are never significant
4: zeros at the end of a number that contains a decimal are always significant
5: zeros at the end of a number that does not contain a decimal are normally not significant
Addition/subtraction of sigfigs
The answer can not have more decimal places than the measurment with the fewest number of decimal places
Multiplication/division of sigfigs
The answer cannot have more sigfigs than the measurment with the fewest numbers of sigfigs