Science Exam 08' Hangman

 
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Device that uses electromagnetic inductionto produce electric current.  generator  
Materials that are neither good conductors nor good insulators.  semiconductors  
Device used to manually open or close a circuit.  switch  
Current (amperage) in a conductor is directly proportional to voltage and inversely proportional to resistance; V=IR, (know how to work the problems)  Ohm's law  
Instrument used to measure amperage  ammeter  
a circuit with loads arranged in separate branches of the circuit so that the current is divided amoung them  parallel circuit  
an electric lamp that produces light by heating a thin piece of wire to a very high temperature  incandescent lamp  
a group of electrochemical cells connected together as a single source of current  battery  
a material that allows electric current to flow through it with no resistence at all  superconductor  
the unit used by electric companies to charge for electricity  kilowatt hour  
direct current and alternating current  two types of electric current  
occurs when electricity is given the opportunity to take a "short cut" through a circuit, avoiding the load  short circuit  
a hypothetical time scale devised by evolutionists that supposedly charts both the earth's history and the sequence of the rock layers in the earth's crust  geological column  
the belief that God called the universe and all that is in it into existence out of nothing or "ex nihilo"  special creation  
the false belief that the universe and all that is in it originated by natural process over billions of years  evolution  
What is the most important evidence against evolution in the fossil records?  lack of transitional forms  
the false belief that all geological processes have always proceeded at the same rate  uniformitarianism  
popularized the false idea of uniformitarianism  Charles Lyell  
popularized evolution with the book On the Origin of Species  Charles Darwin  
a hypothetical fossil that would show signs of evolving from one kind of organism into another, a "missing link"  transitional form  
German scientist who showed that the energy of an electromagnet wave is directly related to the wave's frequency  Max Planck  
states that all motion is relative to some reference point and that the speed of light is constant in relation to an observer  theory of relativity  
high frequency electromagnetic waves used in medicine, dentistry, and in airport security to "see" inside solid objects  x ray  
states that light has characteristicsof both particles and waves  quatum theory of light  
Scottish scientist who discovered that light consists of Electromagnetic waves  James Clerk Maxwell  
electromagnetic waves responsible for tanning and sunburn  ultraviolet rays  
a lens that is thicker in the middle than at the edges, causing light rays to be concentrated and objects to appear magnified  convex  
a lens that is thinner in the middle than at the edges, causing light rays to be spread out and objects to appear smaller  concave  
light is described as consisting of tiny bundles or "packets" of energy. These travel as electromagnetic waves  photons  
low frequency waves widely used for communication  radio waves  
the most powerful and pentrating form of electromagnetic radiation  gamma rays  
a device that uses reflected electromagnetic waves to measure the distenced and direction of faraway objects  radar  
electromagnetic waves sometimes referred to as "heat waves"  infrared waves  
is approximately 300,000 kilometers per second or 300,000 km/s  speed of light in a vacuum  
a combination of all the colors of light mixed together is perceived as this  white  
an arrangement of all forms of electromagnetic radiation in order of frequency and wavelength  electromagnetic spectrum  
American scientist who constructed the first laser  Theodore Maymin  
distance traveled in a given time  speed  
in physics, any chang in speed, in direction, or in both speed and direction  acceleration  
the SI unit of force  newton  
the pushing of pulling action of one object upon another  force  
the branchof physics that deals with objects in motion  mechanics  
a Greek philosopher whose often erroneous ideas about nature were accepted unquestioningly for almost 2000 years  Aristotle  
the Italian scientist who first demonstrated that the acceleration of a falling object does not depend on the mass of the object  Galileo Galilei  
the quantity of matter an object contains  mass  
the scientist who formulated the laws of motion and gravitation  Sir Isaac Newton  
What are the fundemental forces?  strong nuclear force, weak nuclear force, electromagnetic force, and gravitational force  
the speed of an object in a particular direction  velocity  
proposes the General Theory of Relativity, which contains a geometric explanation of gravity  Albert Einstein  
the tendency of matter to resist changes in motion  inertia  
piece of semiconductor containing an entire electronic circuit  intergrated circuit  
a branch of study of electricity that deals with the behavior and motion of electrons in a vacuum or in special materials  electronics  
modern device used to store electrical charges  compassatator  
versatile, computer-directed machine capable of being programmed to perform different tasks  robot  
a number system based on only two digits, 0 and1  binary numbers  
the processof replacing some of the atoms of a semiconductor with atoms of another element in order to increase the conductivity of the semiconductor  doping  
large computer specifically designed to store and retrieve vast amounts of information  mainframes  
a semiconductor that contains many "holes" (missing electrons) in its crystal lattice  p type semiconductor  
semiconductor device that produces electric current when light strikes its surface  photovoltacic cell  
Advantages of intergrated circuits over separate circuit components  much cheaper to manufacture, much more reliable, and extremely small  
device that produced intense, coherent beams of monochromatic light by stimulated emission  laser  
semiconductor device that can perform the same functions of a vacuum-tube triode, such as acting as a "switch" and amplifying weak signals  transistor  
small, relatively inexpensive computer designed for home and business use  personal computer  
simple device that uses the laws of electrostatics to detect small electric charges  electroscope  
the most powerful type of computer, originally developed for military and scientific research  supercomputers  
a single intergrated circuit chip containing a complete central processeing unit of a coomputer  microprocessor  
a unit of information equal to eight bits  byte  
the actual physical components of a computer  hardware  
a type of vacuum tube designed so that the stream of electrons misses the anode and strikes the end of the glass tube, which is coated with a fluorescent material; the basis of the picture tube  cathode-ray tube  
two-electrode vacuum tube that allows current to flow through it in one directions by not the other  diode  
a low hill formed when a glacier overruns a moraine  drumlin  
a fan-shaped deposit of sediments that forms at the mouth of a river  delta  
the study of fossils  palentology  
the process by which rocks are broken down by the forces of nature  weathering  
a pile of debris left behind when a glacier melts  moraine  
general term for the carrying away of rock fragments such as by wind or running water  erosion  
a fan-shaped depoit of sediments at the mouth of a dry stream bed in the desert  oluvial fan  
the period of history during which much of the earth's high latitudes were apparently covered with glaciers  Ice Age  
the perserved remains of plants, animals, or humans in sedimentary rock  fossil  
the sediments carried by a stream  load  
the SI unit of power  watt  
possesses a negative charge  electron  
the unit of electric charge  coulomb  
the unit of electron current  ampere  
the unit used for measuring resistance  ohm  
a group of aligned atoms having a single magnetic field  domain  
electric charge can be imparted at a distance, without direct contect between the charged object and teh uncharged object  induction  
the process of diverting unwanted electrical charge directly into the earth  grounding  
a material that is strongly attracted to magnets and that has several umpaired electrons per atom  ferromagnet  
the unit used to measure the force with which an electric current flows  volt  
an atom or other object that has no overall electrical charge  neutral  
the mutual reinforcement of cancellation that occurs when two or more waves meet  interference  
a periodic back-and-forth motion that transmits energy through a substance  wave  
a change in sound frequency caused by an object's motion  Doppler effect  
the bending of the path of a wave as a result of a change in wave speed, such as when crossing a boundary between medium  refraction  
speeds faster than the speed of sound  supersonic  
the substance through which a wave transfers energy  medium  
the highest point if a wave  crest  
the SI unit of frequency, equal to 1 wave or cycle per second  hertz  
the number of complete waves that pass a given point in a second  frequency  
the spreading out of a wave after it passes trough a narrow opening  defraction  
the distance from one wave crest or trough to the next  wavelength  
the effect of frequency on the way out ear perceives sound  pitch