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WATER
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Hydrosphere Any part of the Earth that contains water is part of the hydrosphere On the surface, below the surface, above the surface
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Properties of Water Structure
Made of Hydrogen and Oxygen covalently bonded Hydrogen ends are positive Oxygen ends are negative Exists as a solid, liquid and gas in nature
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POLAR MOLECULE – molecule that has electrically charged areas
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PROPERTIES OF WATER All properties are due to the POLARITY of water
COHESION – attraction between water molecules ADHESION – attraction of water molecules to other molecules
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WATER MOLECULES are cohesive or stick to each other because of + and - charges
WATER MOLECULES are adhesive or stick to other molecules
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CAPILLARY ACTION – combined force of the attraction of water molecules to each other and to molecules of surrounding materials This allows water to climb up material or move through any material with pores
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CAPILLARY ACTION If you put a straw in water it climbs up the straw because water molecules attract to the molecules of the straw (adhesion) and pull other water molecules along also (cohesion)
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SURFACE TENSION – tightness across the surface of water.
Caused by water molecules pulling on each other (cohesion)
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Surface tension allows animals to walk on water
Surface tension is the reason why water forms curves shapes
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UNIVERSAL SOLVENT – substances dissolve in water because it is polar
Water molecules attract to substances of other polar molecules (adhesion) Universal solvent Will not dissolve nonpolar substances
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SPECIFIC HEAT – amount of heat needed to increase a certain mass of a substance by 1 degree Celsius
Water has a high specific – it heats up slowly This is caused by the strong attraction between water molecules (cohesion)
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Heat of Vaporization Amount of heat needed to turn a liquid into a gas
Water has a high heat of vaporization because water molecules stick to each other (cohesion)
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DENSITY relationship between mass and volume D= Mass/Volume
“stuff inside of something” D= Mass/Volume Density of water is 1g/ml To float the density of the object must be less than the density of the fluid Why would a piece of steel not float in water?
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FLOATING AND SINKING Buoyancy – ability to float
Buoyant force – an upward force exerted by fluids Opposite of gravity Makes objects feel lighter
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To make an object sink or float you can change its density.
Example – To make a sub sink, water fills flotation tanks (increasing density) To make a sub float, water is pumped out of tanks and air is pumped in (decreasing density)
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Both objects have the same mass
Both objects have the same mass. The one on the right floats because it takes up more space (volume) therefore displacing more water. By changing the volume its density was lowered.
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Water on Earth All living things need water either for body processes or shelter Habitats – a place where an organism lives More life in aquatic habitats (water) than terrestrial (land)
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Where is the water on Earth?
97% of the water on earth is salt water (oceans, seas) Earth mostly covered by one big ocean
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The remaining 3% is fresh water
just over ¾ (76%) of fresh water is ICE Nearly ¼ (23%) is ground water – water found underground The remaining 1% is in the atmosphere, lakes rivers or streams
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The Water Cycle Continuous process of water moving from the atmosphere to earth and back
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3 major steps Evaporation – L to G on the surface
Transpiration – plants giving off water vapor Water enters the atmosphere via these processes Condensation – G to L , water vapor cools as it rises and clumps with dust to form clouds Precipitation – water falling back to Earth When clouds get “heavy enough” water falls Rain, sleet, snow or hail
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Water cycle is continuous
Renews fresh water supply Keeps amount of water on Earth constant
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Surface Water River Systems – a river and all of its TRIBUTARIES – small river that feeds a main river Rivers are supplied by WATERSHEDS – land area that supplies water to a river system
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Know the following terms: headwaters, tributary, mouth,
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Watersheds of NC
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Water Underground Water that has trickled down between particles of soil and rocks Permeable – material that has pores, allows stuff to pass through Impermeable – has no pores, will not allow stuff to pass thorugh
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Water Zones Saturated zone – layer of soil or rock that is filled with water Water Table – top of the saturated zone Unsaturated zone – above the water table, not filled with water
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Using Groundwater AQUIFERS – any layer of underground rock or sediment that holds water Found above an impermeable layer Water is constantly moving (gravity) Provides drinking water To use the water we drill wells Must drill below the water table
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