rIon - an atom with a positive or negative charge. The only thing that can change in an atom is the number of neutrons and electrons.The only thing that changes in an ion is the number of electrons.Ions happen when valence (outermost orbital) electrons are lost.*A +1 Charge Ion, as the one valence electron is lost from the outermost orbital. Ionic BondsA compound made of 1 metal and 1 nonmetalLink between elements is called an Ionic Bond.In Ionic compounds, the valence electrons are transferred from metals to non-metals so they both have a complete shell (all or none).While drawing a bohr-rutherford diagram for an Ion, the atom illustrates how much electrons are lost, surrounded by square brackets [], with the charge (x+ or x-) written top-right.Naming Ions. 1) Write metal + nonmetal (or order of appearance).2) Change non-metal's suffix to "ide". 3) Change prefixes according to number of atoms (i.e. dioxide).e.x.Sodium Chloride.Chemical formula tells us the number of element atoms in a compound.To write an Ion:1) Write the Ion's charge (electrons lost/gained) in superscript.2) cross the charge diagonally downward.e.x. Cesium Sulphide.Cs (+1) S (-2)Cs2 SCovalent Compounds are compounds that don't lose or gain atoms, rather share them.Writing covalent compoundsWrite the substances in order of appearance.Read subscript for number of atoms, adjust pre/suffixes accordingly.e.x. Carbon Dioxide.
rCharging a neutral object by bringing a charged object close (not touching), creating an induced charge separation.Induced charge separation - When a charged object is brought towards a neutral object to temporarily have two areas of charge.To make the object have a permanent charge, grounding is involved.The object inducing the charge will always have an opposite charged to the object being charged.A negative rod approaches a neutral sphere, forcing the electrons to one side. Via grounding, the electrons are forced out, causing a permanent positive charge. A positive rod attracts the electrons toward it. Electrons from the ground flow upward, creating a negative charge.
rLightningmoving clouds "rub together" with the air, creating a friction charge.clouds accumulate electrons, becoming negative.the clouds induce a charge separation.electrons repel further into the ground, making the tallest points of the Earth's surface.eventually, the separation is big enough that the electrons and protons meet, creating lightning.
Carbon, Nitrogen, Water Cycles
rCarbon is an essential building block of life, cycled through the hydro, litho, bio and atmosphere in different forms such a sugar and CO2.Air is 78% nitrogen, important for making protens and DNA, but needs to be put in a different form to be used. i.e. Nitrate is absorbed from soil or eating organisms.1) Fixation - Conversion of atmospheric N to ammonia (NH3) usable for soil.2) Ammonifications - organisms die and release N into soil, and decomposers break it down to Ammonium (NH4), then Ammonia.3) Nitrification.NH3 converted to NO3 via bacteria4) Assimilation - plants absorb NO3 via roots.5) Dentrification - N compounds convert to Nitrogen gas (N2) via dentrifying bacteria
rConstellation - group of stars in night sky.Asterism - group of stars in a constellation. Light year- the distance that light travels in a year.Approx. 9.5 x 10^22 km.Stars are light years apart in random order, dictating their brightness.Optical telescope. - a tool that collects and focuses light, used to observe space.2 types of telescope: Reflecting - Uses mirrors.Refracting - Uses lenses.Luminosity measures the total energy a star outputs per second. (J/s) Apparent magnitude - star's brightness as seen from Earth.Absolute - how it would look if they were 32.6 Light years from Earth. Colour tells us a star's temperature.Blue = hot, 12k-35k Celcius Yellow = mediumRed = coolUsing wavelengths of colour and matching them to elements, we can figure out what stars are made of.Hertsprung-Russel is a diagram that combines colour, brightness and temperature information.Allows us to see different star categories.
Connections.
rIon - an atom with a positive or negative charge. The only thing that can change in an atom is the number of neutrons and electrons.The only thing that changes in an ion is the number of electrons.Ions happen when valence (outermost orbital) electrons are lost.*A +1 Charge Ion, as the one valence electron is lost from the outermost orbital. Ionic BondsA compound made of 1 metal and 1 nonmetalLink between elements is called an Ionic Bond.In Ionic compounds, the valence electrons are transferred from metals to non-metals so they both have a complete shell (all or none).While drawing a bohr-rutherford diagram for an Ion, the atom illustrates how much electrons are lost, surrounded by square brackets [], with the charge (x+ or x-) written top-right.Naming Ions. 1) Write metal + nonmetal (or order of appearance).2) Change non-metal's suffix to "ide". 3) Change prefixes according to number of atoms (i.e. dioxide).e.x.Sodium Chloride.Chemical formula tells us the number of element atoms in a compound.To write an Ion:1) Write the Ion's charge (electrons lost/gained) in superscript.2) cross the charge diagonally downward.e.x. Cesium Sulphide.Cs (+1) S (-2)Cs2 SCovalent Compounds are compounds that don't lose or gain atoms, rather share them.Writing covalent compoundsWrite the substances in order of appearance.Read subscript for number of atoms, adjust pre/suffixes accordingly.e.x. Carbon Dioxide.
rIon - an atom with a positive or negative charge. The only thing that can change in an atom is the number of neutrons and electrons.The only thing that changes in an ion is the number of electrons.Ions happen when valence (outermost orbital) electrons are lost.*A +1 Charge Ion, as the one valence electron is lost from the outermost orbital. Ionic BondsA compound made of 1 metal and 1 nonmetalLink between elements is called an Ionic Bond.In Ionic compounds, the valence electrons are transferred from metals to non-metals so they both have a complete shell (all or none).While drawing a bohr-rutherford diagram for an Ion, the atom illustrates how much electrons are lost, surrounded by square brackets [], with the charge (x+ or x-) written top-right.Naming Ions. 1) Write metal + nonmetal (or order of appearance).2) Change non-metal's suffix to "ide". 3) Change prefixes according to number of atoms (i.e. dioxide).e.x.Sodium Chloride.Chemical formula tells us the number of element atoms in a compound.To write an Ion:1) Write the Ion's charge (electrons lost/gained) in superscript.2) cross the charge diagonally downward.e.x. Cesium Sulphide.Cs (+1) S (-2)Cs2 SCovalent Compounds are compounds that don't lose or gain atoms, rather share them.Writing covalent compoundsWrite the substances in order of appearance.Read subscript for number of atoms, adjust pre/suffixes accordingly.e.x. Carbon Dioxide.
rCharging a neutral object by bringing a charged object close (not touching), creating an induced charge separation.Induced charge separation - When a charged object is brought towards a neutral object to temporarily have two areas of charge.To make the object have a permanent charge, grounding is involved.The object inducing the charge will always have an opposite charged to the object being charged.A negative rod approaches a neutral sphere, forcing the electrons to one side. Via grounding, the electrons are forced out, causing a permanent positive charge. A positive rod attracts the electrons toward it. Electrons from the ground flow upward, creating a negative charge.
rLightningmoving clouds "rub together" with the air, creating a friction charge.clouds accumulate electrons, becoming negative.the clouds induce a charge separation.electrons repel further into the ground, making the tallest points of the Earth's surface.eventually, the separation is big enough that the electrons and protons meet, creating lightning.