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1.1: science basics

introductory terms

  • chemistry: the study of the properties and behavior of matter

    • central to our fundamental understanding of many science-related fields

scientific laws and theories

  • law: a statement about what happens in nature that seems to always be true

    • allows predictions about how a natural system will work or behave

    • does not explain how a process takes place

  • theory: an explanation for a natural phenomenon

    • eg. big bang theory (broad explanation)

observations and types of data

  • quantitative measurements

    • involve numbers and units

    • objective and precise (eg. -12°C, 100kg, 14cm)

    • must include units

  • qualitative measurements

    • descriptions

    • subjective and imprecise (eg. red, hot, bubbly, heavy)

    • perception-based

  • observation: information gathered directly through the five senses

  • inference: a logical explanation for an observation based on context, prior knowledge, and experience

  • eg. observation—the fire alarm is oging off

  • possible inferences: the building is on fire, there is a fire drill, someone pulled the fire alarm

units of measurement—SI units

  • based on the Système International d’Unités (International System of Units)

  • there is a different base unit for each quality (eg. length, weight)

SI base units

physical quality

name of unit

abbreviation

mass

kilogram/gram

kg/g

length

meter

m

temperature

Kelvin

K or °C

amount of substance

mole

mol

  • mass and length

    • mass: the amount of matter (stuff) in an object—not weight!

    • length: a measure of distance

  • volume

    • not a base unit in the SI sy31dx2stem

    • derived unit from length; most commonly used metric units are liters (L) and milliliters (mL)

  • temperature

    • temperature: the measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles that make up an object

    • the Kelvin and Celsius temperature scales are used in science, not Fahrenheit

    • heat flow at a higher rate = higher temperature and vise-versa

    • the Celsius scale is based on the physical properties of water

  • density

    • derived unit from mass/volume (D=M/V)

    • commonly used units: g/mL or g/cm^3

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1.1: science basics

introductory terms

  • chemistry: the study of the properties and behavior of matter

    • central to our fundamental understanding of many science-related fields

scientific laws and theories

  • law: a statement about what happens in nature that seems to always be true

    • allows predictions about how a natural system will work or behave

    • does not explain how a process takes place

  • theory: an explanation for a natural phenomenon

    • eg. big bang theory (broad explanation)

observations and types of data

  • quantitative measurements

    • involve numbers and units

    • objective and precise (eg. -12°C, 100kg, 14cm)

    • must include units

  • qualitative measurements

    • descriptions

    • subjective and imprecise (eg. red, hot, bubbly, heavy)

    • perception-based

  • observation: information gathered directly through the five senses

  • inference: a logical explanation for an observation based on context, prior knowledge, and experience

  • eg. observation—the fire alarm is oging off

  • possible inferences: the building is on fire, there is a fire drill, someone pulled the fire alarm

units of measurement—SI units

  • based on the Système International d’Unités (International System of Units)

  • there is a different base unit for each quality (eg. length, weight)

SI base units

physical quality

name of unit

abbreviation

mass

kilogram/gram

kg/g

length

meter

m

temperature

Kelvin

K or °C

amount of substance

mole

mol

  • mass and length

    • mass: the amount of matter (stuff) in an object—not weight!

    • length: a measure of distance

  • volume

    • not a base unit in the SI sy31dx2stem

    • derived unit from length; most commonly used metric units are liters (L) and milliliters (mL)

  • temperature

    • temperature: the measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles that make up an object

    • the Kelvin and Celsius temperature scales are used in science, not Fahrenheit

    • heat flow at a higher rate = higher temperature and vise-versa

    • the Celsius scale is based on the physical properties of water

  • density

    • derived unit from mass/volume (D=M/V)

    • commonly used units: g/mL or g/cm^3