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What Is Physics?

What Is Physics?. Mark Lesmeister Pearland ISD. Objectives. 1. Identify activities and fields that involve the major areas within physics. 2. Describe the role of models and diagrams in physics. What is physics?.

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What Is Physics?

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  1. What Is Physics? Mark Lesmeister Pearland ISD

  2. Objectives • 1. Identify activities and fields that involve the major areas within physics. • 2. Describe the role of models and diagrams in physics.

  3. What is physics? • Physics is the study of the physical world, that is, the world of matter and energy. • Physics is everywhere; any problem that deals with temperature, size, motion, position, shape, or color involves physics.

  4. Areas Within Physics

  5. Areas Within Physics

  6. Areas Within Physics

  7. Areas Within Physics

  8. Areas Within Physics

  9. Areas Within Physics

  10. Areas Within Physics

  11. Areas Within Physics

  12. What area of physics is most relevant to: • A high school football game? • Food preparation for the prom? • Playing in the school band? • Lightning in a thunderstorm? • Wearing a pair of sunglasses outside in the sun?

  13. Today’s Warm-Up O P E R A T I O N

  14. How Physicists Simplify Reality • System – a set of items or interactions considered a distinct physical entity for the purpose of study; usually, this involves a single object and the items that immediately affect it. • Model- a replica or description designed to show the structure or workings of an object, system or concept.

  15. Scientific Method • Using models can help to build hypotheses. • Hypothesis – • a possible answer, based on background information available. • provides a plan or model for investigation or experimentation. • Controlled experiment – an experiment involving the manipulation of a single variable or factor.

  16. Scientific Methods • Independent variable- the quantity that is manipulated by the experimenter in an experiment in order to determine its effect on another quantity. • Dependent variable- the quantity that is being measured; the experimenter tries to determine how the dependent variable is affected by changes in the independent variable.

  17. Graphing experimental results • When graphing the results of an experiment, the independent variable is graphed on the horizontal axis, and the dependent variable is graphed on the vertical axis.

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