Publication 3 2670 1282
Publication 3 2670 1282
Publication 3 2670 1282
1. What do the following words mean? Match them with their definitions
– the study of the nature and behaviour of natural things and the knowledge obtained about them
– a particular area of scientific knowledge and study, or the study of an area of a human behaviour
- not based on experimental testing but they can be considered a part of science because they are
- deal with the individuals, groups and institutions that make up human society.
7. How do we call the scientists who specialise in the following fields of study? (How are the
names formed).
permanent deformation.
reverse: re
Unit 2
If you look 'chemistry' up in Webster's Dictionary, you'll see: "chem·is·try.
1. the science that systematically studies the composition, properties, and activity
My definition is the short and sweet, "scientific study of matter, its properties, and
interactions with other matter and with energy". An important point to remember is
that chemistry is a science, which means its procedures are systematic and
reproducible and its hypotheses are tested using the scientific method. Chemists,
scientists who study chemistry, examine the properties and composition of matter and
the interactions between substances. Chemistry is closely related to physics and to biology.
As is true for other sciences, mathematics is an essential tool for the study of
chemistry.
Q: How many meanings of the word chemistry are mentioned in the article?
Q: Which branches of science are, according to the article, closely related to chemistry?
Do you agree?
Q: Why, according to the article, is chemistry a science? What criteria are mentioned?
Q: Do you think that mathematics is an essential tool for the study of chemistry, as the
article says? Do you as the students of chemistry need to study mathematics?
hypothesis ____________
phenomenon phenomena
criterion ____________
formulas
Q: Read the text and fill in the gaps with the following expressions in appropriate forms.
Use each expression only once.
The most basic chemical substances are the chemical elements. They are building blocks
of all other substances. An element is a class of atoms which have the same number of
protons in the nucleus. This number is known as the atomic number of the element.
For example, all atoms with 6 protons in their nuclei are atoms of the chemical element
carbon, and all atoms with 92 protons in their nuclei are atoms of the element uranium.
Each chemical element is made up of only one kind of atom. The atoms of one element
differ from those of all other elements. Chemists use letters of the alphabet as symbols for
the elements. In total, 117 elements have been observed as of 2007, of which 94 occur
naturally on Earth. Others have been produced artificially.
An Ion is an atom or a molecule that has lost or gained one or more electrons.
Positively charged cation (e.g. sodium cation Na+) and negatively charged anion(e.g.
chloride Cl−) can form neutral salts (e.g. sodium chloride NaCl).
Electrical forces at the atomic level create chemical bonds that join two or more
atoms together, forming molecule. Some molecules consist of atoms of a single
element.
Oxygen molecules, for example, are made up of two oxygen atoms. Chemists represent
the oxygen molecule O2. The 2 indicates the number of atoms in the molecule.