Sunday, February 22, 2015

Lesson Plans for Feb 23-27

Chemistry I Lesson Plans Feb 23 - 27

Monday:

  1. Grade alkali metals sheet
  2. Periodic Properties Review due tomorrow
  3. Quiz over it tomorrow
  4. Lab reports due Weds with turnitin due Sunday midnight
  5. Start ch 6 notes on naming ions and electronegativity
  6. Worksheet side I first column due tomorrow
  7. Bending water demo

Tuesday:
  1. Grade Periodic Properties Review
  2. Quiz over it
  3. Lab reports due Weds with turnitin due Sunday midnight
  4. Continue notes on bonding
  5. Electronegativity worksheet due Thursday
  6. Naming and Writing #1 due Friday

 Weds:
  1. Lab reports due with turnitin due Sunday midnight
2.       Finish up ion sheet
3.       Continue notes on bonding
4.       Naming and Ionic #1 due Friday
5.       Naming and Ionic #2 due Monday
6.        
Thursday:
1.        Electronegativity worksheet due
2.       Electrolyte demo lab
3.       Naming and Ionic #1 due Friday
4.       Naming and Ionic #2 due Monday
5.       Continue notes
6.        
Friday: 
  1.  Grade #1
  2. #2 due Monday
  3. Naming #3 due Tuesday
  4. Continue notes
  5. Pre-lab  for Ionic Bonding Lab


Adv. Chemistry  Lesson Plans Feb 23 - 27

Monday:
1.       Notes on Specific Heat
2.       Specific Heat worksheet due Weds
3.       Mpemba article and worksheet due Weds
Tuesday: 
1.       notes on heat capacity and enthalpy
2.       practice problems on Hess’s Law
3.    Mpemba article and worksheet due Weds
Weds:
1.       Grade Mpemba article and specific heat worksheet
2.       Continue notes on enthalpy and Hess’s Law
3.       Pre-lab for tomorrow

Thursday:  Cool Reaction Lab – due Monday

Friday: 
1.       Continue notes  and problems over Hess’ Law
2.       Finish lab questions
3.       Thermochemistry hmwk sheet due Tuesday

AP Chemistry I Lesson Plans Feb 23 - 27

Monday:
1.       Grade Electrochemistry Review
2.       Test tomorrow
3.       Notes on Specific Heat
4.       Specific Heat worksheet due Weds

Tuesday:   
1.  Electrochemistry Test
2.  Mpemba article and worksheet due Thursday

Weds:
1.  notes on heat capacity and enthalpy
2.  practice problems on Hess’s Law
3.  Grade specific heat worksheet
4.  Continue notes on enthalpy and Hess’s Law
5.  Pre-lab for tomorrow

Thursday:  Cool Reaction Lab – due Monday

Friday: 
1.       Continue notes  and problems over Hess’ Law
2.       Finish lab questions

3.       Thermochemistry hmwk sheet due Tuesday

Friday, February 20, 2015

The Majorana neutrino is discovered!!!!

A new particle
Such splitting would depend on the presence of a theorized particle that has gone undetected so far: a so-called heavy Majorana neutrino. Neutrinos are fundamental particles that come in three flavors (electron, muon and tau). A fourth neutrino might also exist, however, that is expected to be much heavier than the others and thus more difficult to detect (because the heavier a particle is, the more energy a collider must produce to create it). This particle would have the strange virtue of being its own antimatter partner. Instead of a matter and antimatter version of the particle, the matter and antimatter Majorana neutrinos would be one and the same.
 
This two-faced quality would have made neutrinos into a bridge that allowed matter particles to cross over into antimatter particles and vice versa in the early universe. Quantum laws allow particles to transform into other particles for brief moments of time. Normally they are forbidden from converting between matter and antimatter. But if an antimatter particle, say, an antielectron neutrino turned into a Majorana neutrino, it would cease to know whether it was matter or antimatter and could then just as easily convert to a regular electron neutrino as turn back into its original antielectron neutrino self. And if the neutrino happened to be lighter than the antineutrino back then, because of the varying Higgs field, then the neutrino would have been a more likely outcome—potentially giving matter a leg up on antimatter.
 
“If true, this would solve a big mystery in particle physics,” says physicist Don Lincoln of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois, who was not involved in the study. Yet the Majorana neutrino “is entirely speculative and has eluded discovery, even though the LHC experiments have a vigorous research program looking for it. Researchers will certainly keep this idea in mind as they dig through the new data the LHC will begin generating in the early summer this year.”
 
Kusenko and his colleagues also have another hope for finding additional support for their theory. The Higgs field process they envision could have created magnetic fields with particular properties that would still inhabit the universe today—and if so, they might be detectable. If found, the existence of such fields would provide evidence that the Higgs field really did decrease in value long ago. The scientists are trying to calculate just what the magnetic field properties would be and whether experiments have a plausible hope of seeing them, but the option raises the tantalizing hope that their theory could have testable consequences—and maybe a chance to solve the antimatter mystery after all.
 

NEW LARGE HADRON COLLIDER EXPERIMENTS DONE AT CERN!!!

Baryons discovered!  Woo Hoo!



Two new particles made of exotic types of quarks have appeared inside the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) near Geneva, Switzerland. The particles are never-before-seen species of baryons—a category of particles that also includes the familiar protons and neutrons inside atoms. The new baryons had been long predicted to exist, but their specific characteristics, such as their mass, were unknown until they were discovered in the flesh. The new measurements serve to confirm and refine the existing theory of subatomic particles and help pave the way for a deeper theory that could include even more exotic particles.

Scientists at the collider’s Large Hadron Collider beauty (LHCb) experiment reported the discovery of the baryons, called Xib'and Xib*(pronounced “zi-b-prime” and “zi-b-star”), February 10 in Physical Review Letters. (They posted a preprint of their paper in November on the arXiv server.) “These were two things that very much should have existed,” says Matthew Charles of Paris 6 University Pierre and Marie Curie, a co-author of the study. “Of course, you still have to check because every now and then you get a surprise.” Both particles contain one beauty, or b, quark, one strange quark and one down quark. What differentiates these particles from one another, and from one other conglomeration of the same three types of quarks that was previously found at the LHC, is the arrangement of the quarks' spins.

Quantum spin
Spin is one of the basic quantum characteristics intrinsic to any particle, and comes in unitless, discrete amounts. All quarks have a spin of one half. When two quarks inside the same particle are spinning in the same direction, their spins add together; when they rotate in opposite directions their spins cancel out. Spins are like magnets in that like repels like, so quarks prefer to spin in opposite directions. Extra energy is needed to align two quarks to spin in the same direction. The lowest-energy configuration of a Xib particle is for the two lightest quarks (the down and strange) to be antialigned, with their spins canceling out to zero, and the heavy b quark spinning in either direction, adding another one-half spin for a total spin of one half. That ground state, called Xib*0, was found at the LHC in 2012.

The two newfound baryons are higher-energy configurations. Both have the lightest two quarks spinning in parallel, adding to a combined spin of 1. Xib'has its b quark spinning opposite those two, giving the particle a total spin of one half (from 1 minus one-half). In Xib* the spin of all three quarks is aligned, giving it a total spin of 1 and a half. This triple alignment requires the most energy of any configuration, causing Xib* to be the heaviest of the three states.

Before the particles were discovered, physicists had estimated their masses based on a theory called quantum chromodynamics (QCD), which describes the strong force—one of the four fundamental forces of nature—that is responsible for binding quarks together. The strong force is carried by particles called gluons, so inside any particle held together by the strong force there will also be gluons. And in addition to the main quarks and gluons “virtual” pairs of quarks and antiquarks (the antimatter counterpart of quarks) continuously pop into and out of existence. This particle zoo makes calculations based on QCD incredibly difficult, to the point that mass estimates can only be accomplished using powerful supercomputers running complex simulations that aim to take all of the constituents of the particle into account. “We supposedly have a theory that tells us how these particles are supposed to behave and in principle it should open new doors. But in practice, our ability to calculate is quite limited,” says Frank Wilczek, a theoretical physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who won the Nobel Prize for helping to formulate QCD.

The new LHCb measurements agree with the best QCD predictions of the Ximasses. “This is a validation that the theoretical approach is the correct one and that we have the calculation under control,” says theorist Richard Woloshyn of the Canadian particle physics laboratory TRIUMF, who published a prediction of the Xib masses in 2009. The measurements will serve as new data points to anchor down the theory. “We need more examples to test out computational methods and explore what the different methods can teach us,” Wilczek says. “This system will help us to refine those techniques.”

Testing the standard model
So far, the newfound baryons behave according to QCD and to the larger “standard model” of physics, which describes all the known particles in the universe. Yet scientists know that the standard model cannot be the final word, because it does not account for dark matter—the invisible material that seems to dwarf normal matter in the cosmos. By making increasingly precise measurements of all the predictions of the standard model, researchers hope eventually to find cracks that lead the way to a larger theory to supersede it. “These two particles themselves are perfectly standard-model and expected,” Charles says, “but we’re hoping that we will be able to build on these in the long run to move beyond the standard model.”

The Xib particles, like all new species discovered at the LHC (including the famedHiggs boson), arose in the aftermath of collisions between speeding protons inside the accelerator’s 27-kilometer underground ring. When the protons disintegrate, their mass and energy is converted into new particles. The higher a collision's energy, the more massive newly appearing particles can be. This spring the LHC will rev up again at higher energies than ever before, following a two-year hiatus for upgrades. Those higher energies should allow more and heavier particles to arise than earlier runs saw, potentially revealing exotic particles that finally push the bounds of the standard model.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Lesson Plans February 17-20

Chemistry I Lesson Plans for February 17-20

Tuesday:

1. Ch 4 tests back
2.  Alkali metals pre-lab
3. Periodic Table Trends I due
4.  Alkali metals worksheet due Friday

Wednesday:   Alkali metals lab – reports due2/25 with turnitin due 2/27 by midnight

Thursday:

1. grade periodic properties I
2. Periodic Table Trends I due tomorrow
3.  Quiz tomorrow
4. Periodic Properties Review due
5. ch 5 review due Monday
6.  Alkali metals worksheet due Friday

Friday:

1.  grade periodic review
2.  quiz over periodic trends
3.  reports due2/25 with turnitin due 2/27 by midnight
4.  Alkali metals worksheet due
5.  Gas Laws Unit


Adv. Chemistry  Lesson Plans for February 17-20

Tuesday:

1.  grade acids/bases review
2.  test tomorrow


Wednesday:   acid base test

Thursday:

1. acid base test part II
2. read Mpemba article and answer questions due Monday
Friday:

1.  thermodynamics notes
2.  Mpemba article due Monday

AP Chemistry Lesson Plans for February 17-20

Tuesday:  prep gold penny electrochemistry lab

Wednesday:   

1.  notes to finish electrochemistry unit
2.  review due tomorrow
3.  finish lab

Thursday:

1.  grade review
2.  finish lab if needed
3.  electrochemistry test tomorrow

Friday:

1.  electrochemistry test

2.  labs due

Monday, February 9, 2015

Lesson Plans Feb 9-13

Chemistry I Lesson Plans for Feb 9 - 13

Monday:

      1.   Laser Labs Back
      2.   4.3 quiz back
      3.  go over quantum numbers
      4.  Review sheet questions
      5.  journal assignment due tomorrow
      6.  test on Weds over chapter 4

Tuesday:

      1. journal discussion
      2. Test tomorrow
      3. short hand notations handout for periodic trends
      4. Periodic Table Trends I due Monday

Weds:
1.  chapter 4 test - part I
2.  pick up Periodic Table Trends I due Monday

Thursday: 
1.  Part II of chapter 4 test
2.  Periodic Table Trends I due Monday
3.  Periodic Properties Review due Tuesday

Friday: 
      1.  Finish test if absent
      2.  Alkali metals pre-lab
      3.  Periodic Properties Review due Tuesday

Adv. Chemistry Lesson Plans for Feb 9 - 13

Monday: 
1.       Grade titration curves
2.       continue notes on Ka
3.       Ka homework due Weds
4.       quiz over it on Weds
5.       Quiz over titration curves tomorrow
6.       work on unit review

Tuesday:
1.  quiz over titration curves
2.  finish notes on Ka
3.  Ka probs due tomorrow
4.  quiz over Ka tomorrow
Weds: 
1.  Ka quiz
2.  Ka problems due
3.  finish review - due Thursday
Thurs: 
1.        go over Ka probs
2.       Unit review due - grade part I
Friday:
1.       go over Ka quiz
2.       grade review part II Tuesday
3.       test on Wednesday

AP Chemistry Lesson Plans for Feb 9 - 13

Monday: 
1.  notes on electrolytic cells
2.  Nernst due tomorrow
3.  quiz over it tomorrow

Tuesday:
1.  grade Nernst
2.  take Nernst quiz tomorrow
3.  start electrolytic cell lab
Weds: 
1.  Nernst quiz
2.  pick up free energy worksheet
Thurs: 
1.  Nernst quiz back
2.  continue electrolytic lab
3.  free energy worksheet due tomorrow
Friday:
1.  finish lab

2.  turn in free energy worksheet

Thursday, February 5, 2015

journal topic for Tuesday 2/10

JOURNAL ENTRY - 20 points
1.draw the molybdenum atom, showing the location of all the protons, neutrons, electrons, nucleus, and electron cloud quantum numbers that are present

2.give the pros and cons for using a prison instead of a hotel as an analogy for the electron cloud arrangement around the nucleus - discuss a pro and a con for Aufbau, Hund's Rule, and the Pauli Exclusion Principle

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Lesson Plans Feb 2-6

2/2 – 2/6 Chemistry I Lesson Plans
Monday:
1.  grade notations 1 worksheet
2.  laser lab with graphs due, turnitin due Weds
3.  notations 2 due tomorrow
4.  practice quiz
5.  4.2 review due Thursday
6.  4.2/4.2 worksheet due Thursday

Tuesday:
1.      grade notations 2
2.      questions on worksheets?
3.      notations quiz -takes time

Wednesday:

1.      quiz back
2.      turn in practice quiz
3.      questions on review 2 or 4.2/4.3
4.      pick up review sheet for test - due Monday
5.      POMS worksheet due Friday
6.      quiz 2

Thurs:
1.      grade 4.2 review
2.      quiz 2 back
3.      quiz 3
4.      journal entry - draw the molybdenum atom, showing the location of all the protons, neutrons, electrons, nucleus, and electron cloud quantum numbers that are present
- give the pros and cons for using a prison instead of a hotel as an analogy for the electron cloud arrangement around the nucleus - discuss a pro and a con for Aufbau, Hund's Rule, and the Pauli Exclusion Principle
5.      POMS worksheet due Friday

Friday:
1.      grade 4.2/4.3
2.      quiz 3
3.      POMS worksheet due
4.      review sheet over ch 4 due Monday
5.      test Tuesday

2/2 – 2/6 Chemistry II Lesson Plans
Monday: 
1.      titration 1 back
2.      quiz over naming acids and bases
3.      Titration curves notes
4.      titration curves worksheet due Thursday
5.      Reviews over acids, pH,  and bases due today
Tuesday:
1.  grade titration 2
2.  pick up titration review - due Friday
3.  weak acid titration notes

Weds:
1.  quiz over titration
2.  grade naming acids and naming bases review
3.  ICE table notes
4.  pick up unit review for test - due Monday

Thurs: 
1.      ICE homework
2.      Naming acid/base review due tomorrow
3.      Unit review due Monday
Friday:
1.      Grade ICE Table homework
2.       ICE quiz
3.      Unit review due Monday
4.      Test on Tuesday

2/2 – 2/6 AP Chemistry Lesson Plans
Monday:
1.  daily
2.  WYSE test questions

Tuesday:
1.  free energy lecture
2.  Nernst is overdue
3.  WYSE test questions

Weds:
1.  WYSE questions
2.  grade Nernst probs
3.  Nernst quiz

Thursday:
1.  WYSE questions
2.  continue notes on electrolytic cells


Friday:  WYSE TEST