TEAS SCIENCE Flashcards
1
Q
- How do monomers combine and what do they form?
- As well as forming living organisms, what else do macromolecules form?
- How does digestion break the bonds of macromolecules?
- Is dehydration endergonic or exergonic? What about hydrolysis?
- What are the 4 types of macromolecules?
A
- Dehydration reactions. Biological polymers called
Macromolecules. - Food groups
- Hydrolysis
- Dehydration = endergonic (uses energy) / Hydrolysis = exergonic (releases energy)
- Carbs, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids
2
Q
- What are the monomers of carbohydrates called? When two are combined what is is called? More than 2? What is an oligosaccharide?
- Typically, how many carbons do these monomers have, and what are they called?
- What type of carbs have a structural function?
- What type of carbs have energy storage functions?
- What type of carbs are recognition molecules?
- What is the general chemical formula for carbohydrates?
A
- monosaccharides, disaccharides, polysaccharides. Oligosaccharides are huge, long stretches of linked monosaccharides and polysaccharides
- They have 3,4,5,or 6 carbons and are called triose, tetrose, pentose, and hexose
- chitin and cellulose
- amylose, glycogen, and amylopectin.
- glycoproteins and glycolipids
- C H O
3
Q
- Lipids are ………….. predominantly made of what two elements?
- What is the monomer of lipids?
- What are the 2 major functions of lipids?
A
- proteins, hydrogen and carbon
- fatty acids.
- structure and storage
4
Q
- What are monomers of Proteins called?
- How many different groups of proteins are there, and what chemical properties do the all share?
- What 4 functions can various proteins perform?
- What do enzymes do?
A
- amino acids
- 20 groups all share the chemical makeup of an amino group and a carboxylic acid group linked by peptide bonds
- They can be enzymes, structure, transport, and immunity
- Enzymes speed up reactions by lowering the energy required to initiate the reaction
5
Q
- What is the monomer of nucleic acids called? What are the 2 nucleic acids in living systems? Which is double stranded?
- What is DNA composed of?
- What is RNA composed of?
- Which stores genetic info? Which mediates the conversion of genetic info into proteins synthesized in ribosomes?
- What are the 2 functions of DNA and RNA
- What are the complementary bases of DNA?
- In what direction is a strand of DNA read? What direction is mRNA made?
A
- Nucleotide. DNA and RNA. DNA is double stranded
- DNA: deoxyribose, and one of the following: adenine, guanine, cytosine, or thymine
- RNA: ribose, and one of the following: adenine, guanine, cytosine, or uracil. Single stranded
- DNA, RNA
- Heredity and regulation
- A-T and G-C
- 5’-3’ direction “sense”. mRNA 3’-5’ direction “antisense”
6
Q
- What is a chromatid?
- What is a structure made of protein and 1 molecule of DNA?
- What is the name for a string of DNA. The basic unit of heredity?
- What is the building block of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)?
- Where are chromosomes housed within a cell?
- What is a 3 letter segment/word of DNA referred to?
- A nucleotide is a ………, a codon is a ………, a gene is a …………, a chromosome is a ……………, and a genome is a …………….. .
A
- One of two duplicates of a chromosome formed during cell division
- a chromosome
- A gene
- nucleotide
- In the nucleus
- A codon
- letter, word, sentence, chapter, book
7
Q
- a positively charged ion is a ………………. . A negatively charged ion is a ………………. .
- What is the difference between a covalent bond and an ionic bond?
- What subatomic particle is responsible for making isotopes of an element?
- The atomic number is how many …………….. an atom has.
- The atomic mass is how many ………….. and …………. an atom has.
- electrons of an atom increase in energy the ………… they are from the nucleus.
- Atoms with the same number of …………….. ……………….. share similar properties
- name the periods, orbital names they contain, and number of electrons that each orbital can contain.
A
- cation. anion
- A covalent bond is a chemical bond where electrons are shared between atoms. An ionic bond is a bond between 2 oppositely charged ions.
- differing numbers of neutrons
- protons
- protons and neutrons
- further
- valence electrons
8. Periods 1-4, orbitals s, p, d, f period 1: s (2) period 2: s (2) + p (6) period 3: s (2) + p (6) + d (18) period 4: s (2), + p (6) + d (18) + f (32)
8
Q
- T or F, ionic bonds conduct electricity and are soluble in water?
- What is a group in the periodic table
A
- T.
2. a column
9
Q
- What is density? Is it an intensive of extensive property?
- What is an intensive physical property?
- What is an extensive property?
- What is the difference between diffusion and osmosis?
A
- amount of mass per volume. It is an intensive property.
- Properties that don’t depend on the amount of a substance. EX: boiling/melting point, and luster.
- Properties that depend on the amount of a substance. EX: mass and volume
- Diffusion is the passive movement of a substance from areas of high concentration to low concentration. Osmosis is similar but pertains to fluid passing thru a membrane.
10
Q
- What are the 4 phases that matter exists in?
- What is absolute zero
- As temp increases, what happens to molecules?
- Describe what molecules are doing at solid, liquid, and gaseous states.
A
- solid, liquid, gas, and plasma
- 0 K or -273 C. Above absolute zero molecules are in constant motion.
- molecules begin to break apart and move away from each other. However, the heat required for a phase change won’t break molecules.
- Solid state: molecules are closely packed together in orderly fashion. There is vibrational motion, but no transitional motion.
Liquid: molecules are less ordered. There is both vibrational and transitional motion.
Gas: molecules move rapidly and are spread out.
11
Q
- What are the 2 conditions that the phase of a substance depends on?
- What do these 2 conditions do?
- What is the triple point?
- What is sublimation?
- What is deposition?
- Does gas have Shape? Volume? Is it compressible?
A
- temperature and pressure.
- Increased temp causes particles to move apart. Increased pressure moves particles together.
- the temp and pressure at which solid, liquid, and gas phases of a pure substance can coexist.
- when a substance passes from solid to gas w/o going thru a liquid state.
- when a substance passes from gas to solid w/o going thru a liquid state.
- Nod definite shape, nor volume, but it’s compressible.
12
Q
- T or F metals and nonmetals often form ionic bonds?
- T or F Ionic bonds can only form when the elements involved have large differences in electronegativity.
- In an ionic bond, electrons are …………….. whereas in a covalent bond, electrons are ………….. .
- What are the 5 basic chemical reactions?
- In what 4 ways can a chemical reaction rate be altered?
- What happens if heat is added to an endothermic reaction? Exothermic?
- In biological systems catalysts are called …………
- Acids donate ……. and accept …….. .They have a pH below …… . Bases donate ………. and accept ……. and have a pH above ……. . Acids and bases react with each other to create …… and ……… .
- When 2 or more metals are present in a molecule, the bond is …………… .
A
- T
- T
- donated, shared.
- synthesis, decomposition, single replacement, double replacement, and combustion
- pressure, temperature, concentration of reactants and substrates, and catalysts
- Endothermic = heat speeds it up. Exothermic = heat slows it down
- enzymes
- H+ ions, OH- ions. Vice versa for bases. H2O and Salt.
- covalent
13
Q
- What is 10cm x 10cm x 10 cm? Also expressed as 1000cm^3?
2. What are the units of measure for 10, 100, 1000, and 10ths, 100’ths, 1000ths?
A
- a liter
- deca, hecta, kilo.
deci, centi, milli
14
Q
- what is the control variable?
- What is the independent variable?
- What is the dependent variable?
- What is a variable?
A
- something kept constant in an experiment (the amount of water given to all plants in the experiment)
- Independent variable: what is measured as the possible cause (ex: fertilizer on plants to see if it makes them grow more)
- Dependent: what is measured as a possible effect from the independent variable (ex. the height of the plants
- Something that changes 9 (ex. the amount of sun that the plants get.)