Matter

  1. Q: What is matter?
    A: Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space.

  2. Q: Name the three states of matter.
    A: Solid, liquid, and gas.

  3. Q: Give two examples of each state of matter.
    A: Solid – stone, wood; Liquid – water, milk; Gas – air, oxygen.

  4. Q: What is mass?
    A: Mass is the amount of matter in an object.

  5. Q: What is volume?
    A: Volume is the amount of space an object occupies.

  6. Q: Name two properties of solids.
    A: Fixed shape and fixed volume.

  7. Q: What property of liquids makes them take the shape of the container?
    A: Liquids have no fixed shape.

  8. Q: Do gases have fixed volume?
    A: No, gases do not have fixed volume.

  9. Q: What happens to the particles of matter when it is heated?
    A: They move faster and may change state.

  10. Q: Define condensation.
    A: The process of gas changing into a liquid on cooling.

  11. Q: What is evaporation?
    A: The process of a liquid changing into gas on heating.

  12. Q: What is freezing?
    A: The process of a liquid changing into solid on cooling.

  13. Q: Can matter be created or destroyed?
    A: No, it only changes form.

  14. Q: What is a physical change?
    A: A change in which no new substance is formed.

  15. Q: What is a chemical change?
    A: A change in which a new substance is formed.

  16. Q: Give one example of a physical change.
    A: Melting of ice.

  17. Q: Give one example of a chemical change.
    A: Burning of paper.

  18. Q: What are atoms?
    A: Atoms are the smallest unit of matter.

  19. Q: What are molecules?
    A: Molecules are groups of two or more atoms bonded together.

  20. Q: What is diffusion?
    A: The mixing of particles of one substance with another.

  21. Q: Which state of matter is most compressible?
    A: Gas.

  22. Q: Which state of matter has the strongest intermolecular force?
    A: Solid.

  23. Q: Which state of matter flows easily?
    A: Liquid.

  24. Q: Why does ice float on water?
    A: Because ice is less dense than water.

  25. Q: What is sublimation?
    A: The change of solid directly into gas without becoming liquid.


🔸 Subjective Type Questions 

  1. Q: Explain the characteristics of solids, liquids, and gases.
    A:

  • Solids: Fixed shape and volume, particles are tightly packed.

  • Liquids: No fixed shape, fixed volume, particles are less tightly packed.

  • Gases: No fixed shape or volume, particles are far apart and move freely.

  1. Q: How does temperature affect the state of matter?
    A: On heating, solids melt into liquids, and liquids evaporate into gases. On cooling, gases condense into liquids, and liquids freeze into solids.

  2. Q: Describe the particle arrangement in solids, liquids, and gases.
    A:

  • Solids: Closely packed, fixed position.

  • Liquids: Loosely packed, can slide past each other.

  • Gases: Very loosely packed, move freely.

  1. Q: Explain the process of water changing states in the water cycle.
    A: Water evaporates from surfaces (evaporation), forms clouds (condensation), and falls as rain (precipitation), which may freeze (freezing) or remain liquid.

  2. Q: Differentiate between physical and chemical changes with two examples each.
    A:

  • Physical Change: No new substance, e.g., melting ice, breaking glass.

  • Chemical Change: New substance formed, e.g., rusting of iron, burning wood.

  1. Q: What are the uses of knowing different states of matter?
    A: Understanding matter helps in cooking, manufacturing, transport of gases and liquids, and storage of materials.

  2. Q: How does pressure affect gases?
    A: Increasing pressure compresses gases as their particles come closer.

  3. Q: Describe an activity to show that air has mass.
    A: Weigh two balloons — one inflated and one deflated. The inflated balloon will be heavier, proving air has mass.

  4. Q: What changes occur when a candle burns?
    A: Melting wax is a physical change; burning wick is a chemical change.

  5. Q: How does matter change from solid to gas directly? Give examples.
    A: Through sublimation. Examples: camphor, dry ice.

  6. Q: Why do we see water droplets outside a cold glass of water?
    A: Water vapor in air condenses on the cold surface of the glass.

  7. Q: How do we know air is a matter?
    A: Air has mass, occupies space, and can exert pressure.

  8. Q: What is the role of heat in changing states of matter?
    A: Heat provides energy for particles to overcome their attraction and change state.

  9. Q: Write a short note on intermolecular forces.
    A: These are the forces of attraction between molecules. Strongest in solids, weaker in liquids, weakest in gases.

  10. Q: What is the importance of the study of matter in daily life?
    A: It helps us understand and use different materials effectively for cooking, cleaning, building, etc.

  11. Q: Why do gases spread faster than liquids?
    A: Gas particles are far apart and move freely, while liquid particles are closer and move slower.

  12. Q: Why is it easier to compress gas than liquid?
    A: Because gas particles are far apart and can be pushed closer.

  13. Q: State three differences between solids and liquids.
    A: Solids have fixed shape and volume, particles are tightly packed; Liquids have no fixed shape, fixed volume, particles are less tightly packed.

  14. Q: Describe the role of evaporation in cooling.
    A: When liquid evaporates, it takes heat from the surroundings, causing cooling.

  15. Q: Why is water called a universal solvent?
    A: Because it can dissolve a wide variety of substances.

  16. Q: Explain how rusting is a chemical change.
    A: Iron reacts with oxygen and water to form a new substance – rust.

  17. Q: Differentiate between reversible and irreversible changes with examples.
    A: Reversible: can be undone (melting), Irreversible: cannot be undone (burning).

  18. Q: How does diffusion help in our daily life?
    A: It helps in smelling food from a distance, mixing of gases in air, etc.

  19. Q: Why are solids not easily compressible?
    A: Their particles are tightly packed with little space between them.

  20. Q: How is boiling different from evaporation?
    A: Boiling occurs at a fixed temperature throughout the liquid, while evaporation occurs at all temperatures from the surface.


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