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Why do some things explode?

Why do some things explode?

Lesson narration:
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DISCUSS:

What makes these things explode? What’s going on?

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DISCUSS:

Why do you think the containers were shattering?

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DISCUSS:

On the back of your worksheet, draw a picture using a particle model to explain why the bag exploded. (Or you can label or add to the picture you drew earlier.)

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Slide Image
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explosion


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when something bursts outwards
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Slide Image

substance


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a material that has specific properties
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chemical reaction


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a process where one or more substances form a new substance
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states of matter


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the different forms of matter that include solid, liquid, and gas
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liquid


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a state of matter, such as water when you can pour it
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gas


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a state of matter, such as water when it is steam
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carbon dioxide


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a type of gas that plants sometimes take in and that animals release when they breathe
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oxygen


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a type of gas that animals use to breathe and that plants release
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particle


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a very tiny thing, sometimes too small to be seen
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experiment


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a test used to discover new information about a question
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model


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a pretend version of something that scientists use when the real thing is too big, small, or complicated to work with
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Lesson narration:

Activity Prep

Print Prep

In this lesson, students investigate and model how gases cause explosions. In the activity, Bag of Bubbles, students experiment by combining baking soda and vinegar inside a sealed bag and observe how the gas bubbles produced cause the bag to inflate–and sometimes pop!

Preview activity

Exploration

11 mins

Wrap-Up

4 mins

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