Chapter 1 Essential Ideas
Chapter 1 Key Terms
how closely a measurement aligns with a correct value
smallest particle of an element that can enter into a chemical combination
unit of temperature; water freezes at 0°C and boils at 100°C on this scale
change producing a different kind of matter from the original kind of matter
behavior that is related to the change of one kind of matter into another kind of matter
study of the composition, properties, and interactions of matter
pure substance that can be decomposed into two or more elements
volume of a cube with an edge length of exactly 1 cm
SI unit of volume
ratio of mass to volume for a substance or object
(also, factor-label method) versatile mathematical approach that can be applied to computations ranging from simple unit conversions to more complex, multi-step calculations involving several different quantities
substance that is composed of a single type of atom; a substance that cannot be decomposed by a chemical change
number derived by counting or by definition
property of a substance that depends on the amount of the substance
unit of temperature; water freezes at 32°F and boils at 212°F on this scale
state in which matter has neither definite volume nor shape
combination of substances with a composition that varies from point to point
(also, solution) combination of substances with a composition that is uniform throughout
tentative explanation of observations that acts as a guide for gathering and checking information
property of a substance that is independent of the amount of the substance
SI unit of temperature; 273.15 K = 0 ºC
standard SI unit of mass; 1 kg = approximately 2.2 pounds
statement that summarizes a vast number of experimental observations, and describes or predicts some aspect of the natural world
when matter converts from one type to another or changes form, there is no detectable change in the total amount of matter present
measure of one dimension of an object
state of matter that has a definite volume but indefinite shape
(also, cubic decimeter) unit of volume; 1 L = 1,000 cm3
realm of everyday things that are large enough to sense directly by human sight and touch
fundamental property indicating amount of matter
anything that occupies space and has mass
standard metric and SI unit of length; 1 m = approximately 1.094 yards
realm of things that are much too small to be sensed directly
1/1,000 of a liter; equal to 1 cm3
matter that can be separated into its components by physical means
bonded collection of two or more atoms of the same or different elements
change in the state or properties of matter that does not involve a change in its chemical composition
characteristic of matter that is not associated with any change in its chemical composition
gaseous state of matter containing a large number of electrically charged atoms and/or molecules
how closely a measurement matches the same measurement when repeated
homogeneous substance that has a constant composition
procedure used to ensure that calculated results properly reflect the uncertainty in the measurements used in the calculation
path of discovery that leads from question and observation to law or hypothesis to theory, combined with experimental verification of the hypothesis and any necessary modification of the theory
SI unit of time
SI units (International System of Units)
standards fixed by international agreement in the International System of Units (Le Système International d’Unités)
(also, significant digits) all of the measured digits in a determination, including the uncertain last digit
state of matter that is rigid, has a definite shape, and has a fairly constant volume
specialized language used to represent components of the macroscopic and microscopic domains, such as chemical symbols, chemical formulas, chemical equations, graphs, drawings, and calculations
intensive property representing the hotness or coldness of matter
well-substantiated, comprehensive, testable explanation of a particular aspect of nature
estimate of amount by which measurement differs from true value
standard of comparison for measurements
ratio of equivalent quantities expressed with different units; used to convert from one unit to a different unit
amount of space occupied by an object
force that gravity exerts on an object