Seeley Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology 6th Edition Chapter 2

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AT THE CELLULAR LEVEL: CHEMISTRY BECOMES BIOLOGY
Advertisements

Chemistry of Biology. What is Matter? Anything that has mass and volume.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Concepts of Matter and Energy. We shall begin with a pun… A neutron walked into a diner and asked, "How much for a coke?" How did the waiter reply? "For.
Chemistry of Life. n Matter -- anything that has MASS and takes up SPACE n EVERYTHING is made of matter.
Chapter 6 Notes The Chemistry of Life
Anatomy and Physiology
Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life.
Atoms and Reactions Test 1a Biology. 1) ____________is anything that occupies space and has mass. Matter.
Chemical bases of life. Matter, Mass, and Weight All living and nonliving things are composed of matter, which is anything that occupies space and has.
Living things consist of atoms of different elements.
Copyright © 2004 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 2 Chemistry, Matter, and Life.
Foundations in Microbiology Sixth Edition
Chemistry Of Life KEY CONCEPT All living things are based on atoms and their interactions.
Chapter 2.  The smallest particle of an element that has the chemical properties of the element.
CHEMISTRY OF LIFE Atomic Structure (p. 31; Fig. 2.1; Table 2.2)
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Chapter 2 Chemistry.
Chemical Basis of Life. Matter – Anything that occupies space and has mass Mass – The amount of matter in an object (kg) Weight – Gravitational force.
Chapter 2 – Chemicals of Life $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100$100$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 MatterBondingFormulas Chemical Reactions Cells FINAL ROUND.
Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology Fifth edition Seeley, Stephens and Tate Slide 2.1 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin.
ESSENTIALS OF BODY CHEMISTRY MATTER, ELEMENTS, AND ATOMS MATTER-anything that occupies space and has mass MATTER-anything that occupies space and has.
Matter – anything that takes up space and has weight; composed of elements Elements – composed of chemically identical atoms as of 2002, 114 elements known,
Living things consist of atoms of different elements.
Chemistry For Life Matter - occupies space and has mass Elements - C,H,O,N,S,Fe,Ca,Na,Cl,K; make up matter and can’t be decomposed by ordinary chemical.
Chemistry of Life Matter… Energy… Life…. Objectives Objectives: A.Explain the nature of matter; B.Discuss the importance of water and solutions; C.Break.
Chemistry Chapter 2 Quizzes. Quiz 2.1 and ________ are the smallest unit of matter. 2.Atoms in molecules share electrons and form __________ bonds.
Chapter 6 The Chemistry of Life. Atoms and their interactions.
Biochemistry The basic building blocks of life. Basic Chemistry 1. Atoms: the most basic unit of matter (that still has the characteristics of that element)
The Chemistry of Life Chapter : Matter and Substances.
Chapter 2 - Chemistry Comes Alive $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Properties of Water AtomsMolecules Biochemistry FINAL ROUND.
The Chemistry of Life Chapter 2 Atoms matter is anything that fills space atom-the smallest unit of matter nucleus-center of the atom.
All life processes involve chemical reactions –Ex. Ca ++ in muscle contraction Na +, K + in nerve impulses.
Chapter 2 Chemical Basis of Life Why study chemistry in an Anatomy and Physiology class ? - body functions depend on cellular functions - cellular functions.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany 2-1 Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Tenth Edition Shier  Butler  Lewis Chapter 2 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill.
Chapt2student 2-1 Human Anatomy and Physiology I CHAPTER 2 Chemical Basis of Life.
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 2 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
Chemistry of Life…and some Biology. Fundamental Building Blocks Elements-can’t be broken down by chemical reaction Atoms-basic unit of an element Atomic.
The Chemical Basis of Life Chapter 2. Structure of Matter 2 Matter – anything that takes up space and has mass (weight). It is composed of elements. Elements.
2-1 Anatomy and Physiology, Sixth Edition Rod R. Seeley Idaho State University Trent D. Stephens Idaho State University Philip Tate Phoenix College Copyright.
The Chemistry of Life Chapter 2 Mr. Scott. 2-1 Atoms, Ions, and Molecules Living things consist of atoms of different elements. Living things consist.
Advanced Biology. Atoms – the building blocks of matter Nucleus – the center of the atom; the location of neutrons and protons Protons – positively charged.
ESSENTIALS OF HUMAN ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY
Ch 2 The Chemistry of Life Students know most macromolecules (polysaccharides, nucleic acids, proteins, lipids) in cells and organisms are synthesized.
Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Chapter 6 Chemistry of Life.
Biology 140 Chapter 2 Notes.
The chemical basis of Life
THE CHEMICAL BASIS OF THE BODY
Chapter 2 Chemical Basis of Life
Chemical Basis of Life Chapter 2
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
2-1 The Nature of Matter.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Images in this power point were obtained from Google Images
Review Chapter 2.
9/1/2017 the Chemistry of Life.
Seeley Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology 6th Edition Chapter 2
Anatomy and Physiology
9/1/2017 THE CHEMISTRY OF LIFE.
Chemistry of Life Matter… Energy… Life….
The Chemistry of Life Unit One Biology Notes.
Chapter 6 Chemistry of Life.
Chemical Basis of Life Chapter 2.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
The Chemical Level of Organization
Images in this power point were obtained from Google Images
The Chemical Basis of the Body
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life.
Presentation transcript:

Seeley Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology 6th Edition Chapter 2 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Question 1 The smallest particle of an element that has the chemical characteristics of that element is a(n) A. atom. B. proton. C. neutron. D. electron. E. molecule.

Question 2 The atomic number of an element is equal to the number of A. protons in each atom. B. electrons in each atom. C. neutrons in each atom. D. both a and b

Question 3 Most of the volume of an atom is occupied by A. electrons. B. neutrons. C. protons.

Question 4 The chemical behavior of an atom is determined largely by A. its number of protons. B. its outermost electrons. C. the size of the electron cloud. D. its mass. E. its weight.

Question 5 The symbol Na+ indicates that a sodium atom has A. gained an electron. B. gained a proton. C. gained a neutron. D. lost an electron. E. lost a proton.

Question 6 When Na+ and Cl- are attracted to each other, a(n) _______ bond is formed. A. covalent B. hydrogen C. ionic D. polar covalent

Question 7 The weak attraction between two water molecules is called a(n) A. covalent bond. B. hydrogen bond. C. electrical bond. D. ionic bond. E. polar covalent bond.

Question 8 Which of these is a NOT a compound? A. H2O B. H2 C. NaCl D. NO2 E. C6H12O6

Question 9 When two or more reactants combine to form a larger, more complex product, the process is called a(n) A. decomposition reaction. B. synthesis reaction. C. exchange reaction. D. reversible reaction.

Question 10 In which of these types of reactions does an equilibrium occur? A. decomposition reaction B. synthesis reaction C. exchange reaction D. reversible reaction

Question 11 If the number of hydrogen ions in a solution is increased, the A. solution becomes more acidic. B. solution becomes more alkaline (basic). C. pH of the solution will be increased. D. solution is a buffer.

Question 12 Which of these is NOT an important characteristic of water for living organisms? A. produces CO2 in the body B. cushions and lubricates C. dissolves molecules to allow chemical reactions D. transports molecules E. stabilizes body temperature

Question 13 Which of these is a monosaccharide? A. sucrose B. starch C. glycogen D. glucose E. cellulose

Question 14 The building blocks for proteins are A. amino acids. B. fatty acids and glycerol. C. monosaccharides. D. disaccharides. E. nucleic acids.

Question 15 Enzymes A. are always composed of monosaccharides. B. function by lowering the activation energy for a reaction. C. can control many different reactions. D. generally decrease the rate of chemical reactions. E. are destroyed during the reaction they catalyze.

Question 16 Four elements compose about 96% of the weight of the body. Which of these elements is NOT part of those four? A. carbon B. nitrogen C. phosphorus D. oxygen E. hydrogen

Question 17 Energy is defined as A. the simplest type of matter with unique chemical properties. B. anything that occupies space and has mass. C. the amount of matter in an object. D. the capacity to do work. E. the smallest particle of an element that has the chemical characteristics of that element.

Question 18 The rate of a chemical reaction can be influenced by all of the following EXCEPT: A. catalysts B. temperature C. reactants D. concentration E. products

Question 19 An acidic solution A. has an equal number of H+ and OH-. B. has a greater number of H+ than OH-. C. has a greater number of OH- than H+. D. has a pH of 7.0. E. has a pH greater than 7.0.

Question 20 The four major groups of organic molecules essential to living organisms are A. adenosine triphosphates, proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids. B. adenosine triphosphates, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids. C. adenosine triphosphates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. D. proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids.

Answer Key 1. A 2. D 3. A 4. B 5. D 6. C 7. B 8. B 9. B 10. D 11. A