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FOSS Science Water Planet Vocabulary Investigation 1: Sun – an average star at the center of the solar system around which all other solar-system bodies revolve. Moon – Earth’s natural satellite Solar System – is the Sun and all the bodies that orbit it, including the planets and their moons, the asteroids, and the comets. Orbit – the path an object takes around another object; for example, Earth has an orbit around the Sun. Planet – a large natural object that orbits around a star, such as the Sun Asteroid – a rocky object, which can be a few hundred meters to several hundred kilometers wide, that orbits the Sun Comet – a small body made of large chunks of ice, rocks, gas, and dust that orbits the Sun in a large oval path Gravity – the force of attraction between two objects; larger bodies, like the Sun, have a greater force of gravity Revolve – to travel in a path or orbit around another object; for example, Earth revolves around the Sun Revolution – occurs when an object travels in an orbit and returns to its starting position. It takes Earth 1 year to make a complete revolution around the Sun Kuiper Belt – a huge region beyond the gas giants made up of different size icy chunks of matter FOSS Science Water Planet Vocabulary Investigation 2: Pendulum – a mass (bob) hanging from a fixed point that is free to swing to and fro Cycle – a motion that repeats itself Variable – anything you can change in an experiment that might affect the outcome Standard – the basic procedure used in a controlled experiment, before changing any of the variables Experiment – an investigation designed to find out how variables affect outcomes Controlled variable – a variable that is not allowed to change in an experiment Controlled experiment – one in which one, and only one, variable is changed in order to assess its effect Independent variable – changed in an experiment to find out how it affects the experiment outcome, what we know before the experiment starts (graphed on the X axis) Dependent variable – changes in response to changes in the independent variable, what you find out by doing the experiment (graphed on the Y axis) Two-coordinate graph – display of experimental data that shows a relationship between an independent variable and a dependent variable Prediction – a reasoned estimation of a future event based on context, data, or experience FOSS Science Water Planet Vocabulary Investigation 3: Evaporation – when water changes from liquid to gas Condensation – the process by which water vapor changes into liquid water, usually on a surface Water vapor – the gas state of water Seriate – put objects in order by one property, like amount of water left Thermometer – a tool used to measure temperature Surface area – the area of a liquid exposed to or touching the air Frost – frozen condensation, when water vapor contacts a surface below freezing, it condenses and freezes as solid frost Freezing point – the temperature at which water changes state from liquid to solid; for water it is 0ºC Dew – water that condenses on surfaces when the temperature drops at night Clouds – tiny droplets of water, usually high in the air Fog – water droplets that condense from the air, close to the ground FOSS Science Water Planet Vocabulary Investigation 4: solar energy – heat and light from the sun. Materials exposed to solar energy heat up. Soil and water do not heat up at the same rate. uneven heating – the result of different amounts of energy being transferred to adjacent surfaces (land heats up and cools rapidly; water heats up and cools slowly) energy transfer – the movement of energy from one place to another , or the change of energy from one form to another (when air molecules bang into the hot surface of land, energy transfers to the air molecules) convection current – a circular movement of fluid (such as air) that is the result of uneven heating of the fluid (air that is warmed by the hot land moves upward; warm air cools as it moves up, gets denser, and starts to fall; rising and falling air sets up a big circular air current called a convection current) wind – air in motion, caused by the uneven heating of the Earth. It is the movement of denser air to an area where air is less dense atmosphere – the whole layer of air covering the earth atmospheric pressure – the force caused by the mass of the air above you meteorologist – scientists who study weather weather – the condition of the atmosphere at a given time and place. Heat, moisture, and movement are the three important variables that describe weather weather forecast – a prediction of future weather conditions compress – compress air is to squeeze the molecules into a smaller volume pressure – the force or push caused by moving molecules FOSS Science Water Planet Vocabulary Investigation 5: salt water – water with salt, ocean water fresh water – water without salt that is found in lakes, rivers, groundwater, soil, and the atmosphere water cycle – global water cycling system, water evaporates from earth’s surface and goes into the atmosphere and condenses. It returns to earth’s surface as precipitation in a new location. rain – liquid water that is condensed from water vapor in the atmosphere and falls to earth in drops snow – precipitation in the form of ice crystals grouped together as snowflakes sleet – precipitation in the form of ice pellets created when rain freezes as it falls to earth from the atmosphere hail – precipitation in the form of small balls or pellets of ice weather – the condition of the atmosphere at a given time and place. Weather is described using heat (temperature), moisture (water), and air movement (wind) weather variables – data that meteorologists measure (temperature, wind speed & direction, air pressure, cloud cover, and precipitation) severe weather – out-of-the-ordinary and extreme weather conditions (thunderstorms, tornadoes, drought) tornado – rapidly rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. Wind speeds can reach 417 kph (260 mph) or more hurricane – severe tropical storm or moving wind system that rotates around an eye thunderstorm – severe weather that results from cold air flowing under a warm, humid air mass over the land drought – less-than-normal amount of rain or snow over a period of time radiosonde – an instrument sent into earth’s atmosphere to measure temperature, pressure, and humidity weather map – map that shows weather data as a picture front – the leading edge of a moving air mass, where warm air and cold air masses meet warm front – contact zone where a warm air mass overtakes a cold air mass (shown on a weather map by a red line with round bumps) cold front – contact zone where a cold air mass overtakes a mass of warm, moist air (shown on a weather map by a blue line with points) stationary front – when a warm air mass and a cold air mass come together and stop moving (shown on a weather map by a red and blue line with points on one side and bumps on the other)