Midterm Reviewer
Midterm Reviewer
Midterm Reviewer
LESSON 1
COSMOLOGY
Understanding of the origin, evolution, structure & fate of the universe.
BARYONIC MATTER
Protons, electrons & neutrons
DARK MATTER
Has gravity but does not emit light.
DARK ENEGRY
Antigravity; a force causes the universe to expand.
PROTOSTAR
Formation of star from the gravitational collapse of gases. (Pull the gases together
into a ball)
LIGHT YEAR
Measurement of astronomical distance; distance light can travel in a year.
STAR
The building block of the galaxies; born out of clouds of gas and dust.
THERMONUCLEAR REACTIONS
It is reaction where two light atomic nuclear fusion by extremely high
temperature, then release of a relatively large amount of energy. (ex. SUN)
STELLAR INTERIOR
Where elements are synthesized/fused together
MAIN SEQUENCE STARS
It is a star that is fusing hydrogen in its core
DENSITY
Mass per unit volume of an object or region
Ratio of the density of matter and energy
UNIVERSE
it comprises all space, time, all matter and energy in it.
it’s made of
4.6% Baryonic Matter
24% Cold Dark Matter
71.4% Dark Energy
The Universe is 13.8 billion years old
3 Most Abundant Elements
Hydrogen
Helium
Lithium
SOLAR SYSTEM
Revolves around the galactic center once in 240 million years
Earth & Solar System are 4.6 billion years old
Milky way
About at least 100 billion stars and other bodies
Rotates around a globular cluster blackhole
A part of the galaxies
Supercluster of galaxies
Galaxy
100 million light years
Early Hypotheses
Catastrophic Hypothesis
States our solar system formed due to a sudden and improbable event such as the
Collision of the two stars
Evolutionary Hypothesis
States that gradual and natural changes caused the formation of our solar system
Nebular Hypothesis (Pierre Laplace 1755)
Spinning cloud of dust from light elements, called a “nebula”, flattened into
protoplanetary disk and become a solar system consists of a star with orbiting
planets
Rotating gaseous cloud that cools and contracts in the middle to form the sun and
the rest into a disc that become the planets
5 stages of Nebular Hypothesis
Collapse
Spinning
Flattening
Condensation
Accretion
But the theory failed to account for the distribution of angular momentum (L) in
the solar system
Encounter Hypothesis
It states that around 5 billion years ago, a Rouge Star come close to the Sun. and
due to some force, it tidally striped some part of the Sun & the Rouge Star that
forms the planets
Has advance explanation why the planets all revolve in the same direction and
why inner planets are denser than outer planets
But has major flaw like
Hot gas expands instead contracts, lumps of hot gas would not form
planets
The chance of encounters between stars are extremely rare, so rare as to be
improbable in the lifetime of the universe
Collision theory (George louis leclerc comte de buffon 18th Century)
Planets were formed by the collision of the sun with a giant comet
The resulting debris formed into planets that rotate in the same direction as they
revolve around the sun
Protoplanet Hypothesis
The current working model for the formation of the solar system
Is a modified version of the nebular hypothesis
It incorporates many of the components of the nebular hypothesis, buts add some
new aspects from modern knowledge of fluids and states of matter
A dense interstellar cloud produces a cluster of stars
Contraction of slowly rotating gas cloud dominated by hydrogen and helium due
to gravity that later form a cloud of rotating disc
Most of the maa move to the sun creating the protosun
Remaining materials formed a disc and eventually become the planets and
momentum is transferred outwards
Collisions of other fragment and other solid matter formed larger bodies;
protoplanets
Advance note
Expect to hydrogen, helium, insert gases and volatiles, earth and the universe
have a similar abundance of elements specially to rock and minerals
The Sun and larger planets have enough gravity to retain the hydrogen & helium
Rare insert gases are too light to retain the earth’s gravity
Earth and the solar system could derive from the universe
LESSON 2
Factors That Make Planets Habitable
1.Temperature
Influences how quickly atoms & molecules move
2.Water
Essential requirement for life
Capable of dissolving substances and enabling key chemical reactions in animal,
plants and microbial cells
Atmosphere
Traps heat, shields the surface from harmful radiation, and provides chemicals
needed for life; such as Nitrogen & Carbon Dioxide
Energy
With a steady input of either light or chemical energy, cells can run the chemical
reaction necessary for life
Nutrients
To build and maintain an organism
Earth Is Habitable Because Of:
1. the right distance from the Sun
2. strong Magnetic field
3. it is protected by plate tectonics
(plate tectonics=event)
4. right chemical materials
5. presence of oxygen
6. atmospheric condition
Earth As a System
the earth system is all the matter, energy, and processes within earth’s boundary
earth is a complex system made of living and non-living things, and matter &
energy continuously cycle through the smaller system
Earth Subsystem
ATMOSPHERE
A thin gaseous layer that envelopes the earth
Consist of a mixture of gases composed primarily of nitrogen, oxygen,
carbon dioxide & water vaper
Atmosphere of the earth composition
: Nitrogen=78%
: Oxygen=20.95%
: Argon=0.93%
: other gases =0.04%
Layers of Atmosphere
Exosphere-highest and top layer of the earth’s atmosphere
Thermosphere-protect earth from sun’s harmful radiation
Mesosphere-where meteors burns as they enter the earth’s
atmosphere
Stratosphere-very important ozone layer; it protects earth from
ultraviolet radiation
Troposphere-where most weather phenomena occur; contains
greenhouse gases
GEOSPHERE
Composed of rock and minerals
The geosphere develops a layer of soil in which nutrients become available
to living organisms
Crust-the light & very thin outer skin of the earth
Mantle-less dense layer; made up of silicate, rocks, mostly made
silicate, oxygen, iron & magnesium
Core-dense layer; creates earth’s magnetic field (molten/liquid)
1. Outer Core-mostly composed of liquid
2. Inner Core-most metal place; keeps solid due to intense pressure
BIOSPHERE
The living things/organisms of the earth
It covers all ecosystem; Form plants to humans to animals to sea animals
HYDROSPHERE
liquid Composed of the earth
it covers 71% of the earth surface
97% of the water on earth is salt water
SYSTEM INTERACTION
LESSON 3
MINERALS
Building block of rocks
Characteristics of Minerals
Naturally Occurring-it’s not man made; a product of earth’s natural processes.
Inorganic-it’s not a living thing.
Homogenous Solid- (mixture solid) will have uniform composition and the
same properties throughout. The different pure substances present in it cannot
be distinguished separately.
Definite Chemical Composition-all occurrences of that mineral have a
chemical composition that varies within a specific limited range and the atoms
that make up the mineral must occur in specific ratios.
Ordered Internal Structure/Crystal Structure- a description of the
ordered arrangement of atoms, ions or molecules in a crystalline material.
Properties of Minerals
LUSTER: the manner in which a mineral reflects light.
Glassy
Metallic
COLOR
STREAK: is the color of the mineral in powdered form
HARDNESS: scratch ability
MOH’S HARDNESS SCALE
CLEAVAGE: the ability to break
SPECIFIC DENSITY: (mass/volume)
CRYSTAL HABIT/FORM: the general appearance a mineral tends to have; external
shape of crystal
ROCKS
Solid mixture of two or more minerals/ organic matter
Can be classified by; how they are formed, their composition & their texture
Rocks change over time (rocks cycle)
Magma
Mixture of many minerals
Magma can form:
When rock is heated
When pressure is released
When rock changes composition
Types of Rocks
IGNEOUS ROCKS
Begins as Magma
2 Types of Igneous Rock
Intrusive Igneous Rocks
Magma pushes into surrounding rock below the earth’s surface
Extrusive Igneous Rocks
Forms when magma erupts onto the earth’s surface (lava); cools quickly
with very small or no crystal formed
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
Formed by erosion
Sediments are moved from one place to another
Sediments are deposited in layers; the older ones on the bottom
The layers become compacted and cemented together
Formed at/near the earth’s surface
No heat and pressure involved
Strata
Layers of rocks
Stratification
The process in sedimentary rocks are layers
Types Of Sedimentary Rocks
Clastic: made of fragments of rock cemented together with calcite quartz; “clasts”
Ex. Breccia
METAMORPHIC ROCKS
Meaning to change shape
Change with temperature and pressure; but remains solid
Takes place deep in the earth
Lesson 4
Geomorphic processes
Physical processes which create & modify landform on the surface of the earth
Exogenic
MASS WASTING
The movement of rock and soil down slope under the influence of gravity
Types of Mass Wasting
WEATHERING
The breaking down of rocks
Involves with: water, ice, wind, animals & growing plants
EROSION
The movement of sediment from broken rock
Involves with: water, wind, ice & gravity
DEPOSITION
The dropping of sediment in a new place
Ex. Formation of an island & sand dunes
Endogenic
DIASTROPHIC MOVEMENTS
Encompasses all processes that move, elevate, or build up sections of the
earth’s crust
2 Types of Diastrophic Movement
EPEIROGENIC: they create land upheavals or depressions with long-wavelength
undulations (wavy surface) & little folding
1. Uplifted-raise into earth’s surface
2. Subsidence-sinking of ground
OROGENIC: act tangentially to the earth’s surface, as in plate tectonics
1. Tension (fissures)-a stress; stretches rocks into 2 opposite directions
2. Compression (folds)-a stress; directed towards the center of a rock mass
SUDDEN
Earthquakes: when two blocks of the earth suddenly slip past one another; shaking of
the surface of the earth due to the sudden release of energy in the earth’s crust
Volcanic Eruptions: when lava and gas are released from a volcano; explosively
Oral communication Reviewer
Communication
Form 2 Latin word “communis” = working together “communicare” = to join,
share, receive or divide with/without
Process of sharing & conveying messages or information from one person to
another within and across channels, contexts, media, and cultures
A process by which information is exchanged a common system of symbols,
signs, or behavior
Deliberate/accidental transfer of meaning
Includes coordination, symbolic interaction, listening & speaking skills
To be understood and understand other people in an effort to reach a common
goal
Factor Of Communication
INVOLVES
SENDING AND RECEIVING
ENCODING AND DECODING
CONTENT
NEEDS
DESIRES
PERCEPTION
KNOWLEDGE
FEELINGS
IDEAS
THOUGHTS
NEWS
MEDIUM
SPEECH(FACE-TO-FACE)
LETTER
EMAIL
TEXT
TELEVISION
RADIO
MEMOS
FORMS
LINGUISTIC
NON-LINGUISTIC
VERBAL ;(conversation, speech, presentation)
NON-VERBAL ;(waving, pointing, indicating numbers with fingers)
INTENTIONAL ;(speech, advertising)
UNINTENTIONAL ;(shaking hands=nervous)
CONVENTIONAL
UNCONVENTIONAL
PURPOSE
TO INFORM
TO PERSUADE
TO SHARE
TO EMOTE
Nature Of Communication
Dynamic Process
It goes way beyond the words we say. Communication needs all it’s elements
Systemic
Process to create and to interpret the meaning.
The process is involved how sender and receiver encode and decode the message.
Involves Communicators
Communication goes two-ways, a sender and a receiver.
Irreversible
“Think before you say/click” suggests that you go over any message
The discipline of mulling over your thoughts before translating them into words
can help avoid any instances which may cause problems directly or indirectly.
Proactive
Communication is active, forceful or powerful. In a communicative act, there will
always be different effects to the participants. Any message conveyed may have
various interpretations
Symbolic Interaction
Three main aspects of communication
Meaning
Language
Thought
Signs, symbols, letters, graphs, pictures, etc. are concrete objects that stands for
or represents an idea.
Meaning Is Individually Construed
To understand or explain the meaning
Elements Of Communication
Source
Sender of information/ speaker
Messages
A concept, ideas & emotion that the person wants to share
Channel
Also called medium
A system or method that is used for communicating
Receiver
Gathering the information
Feedback
Reply/respond.
Review the effectives of the messages.
Noise
Distorts a message by interfering with the communication process.
Decoding
Involves the receiver, to interpret the appoint meaning on it
Encoding
This process needs the sender to code the ideas that will be communicated
Context
Setting in which the communication is taking place
Form Of Communication
Verbal; sounds, language
Non-verbal; facial expression, body language, gestures & posture
Aural/Audio; radio, podcast, music
Visual; pictures, drawing, arts, charts, tables
Written; journal, emails, texts
Informal; talking to friends
Formal; seminars, meeting, interview