Page 12 - Understanding NCERT Science 09
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C hapter               1



                            ATTER
                             ATTER ININ O OURUR S SURROUNDINGSURROUNDINGS
                            ATTER IN OUR SURROUNDINGS
                      M M M M MATTERATTER   ININ O OURUR S SURROUNDINGSURROUNDINGS



                 As we look at our surroundings, we see a large     Activity ______________ 1.1
                 variety of things with different shapes, sizes
                                                                    •    Take a 100 mL beaker.
                 and textures. Everything in this universe is
                                                                    •    Fill half the beaker with water and
                 made up of material which scientists have
                 named “matter”. The air we breathe, the food            mark the level of water.
                 we eat, stones, clouds, stars, plants and          •    Dissolve some salt/ sugar with the help
                                                                         of a glass rod.
                 animals, even a small drop of water or a
                                                                    •    Observe any change in water level.
                 particle of sand — every thing is matter. We
                                                                    •    What do you think has happened to
                 can also see as we look around that all the             the salt?
                 things mentioned above occupy space and            •    Where does it disappear?
                 have mass. In other words, they have both          •    Does the level of water change?
                 mass* and volume**.                                 In order to answer these questions we
                    Since early times, human beings have         need to use the idea that matter is made up
                 been trying to understand their surroundings.   of particles. What was there in the spoon,  salt
                 Early Indian philosophers classified matter in  or sugar, has now spread throughout  water.
                 the form of five basic elements — the “Panch    This is  illustrated in Fig. 1.1.
                 Tatva” — air, earth, fire, sky and water.
                 According to them everything, living or non-
                 living, was made up of these five basic
                 elements. Ancient Greek philosophers had
                 arrived at a similar classification of matter.
                    Modern day scientists have evolved two
                 types of classification of matter based on their
                 physical properties and chemical nature.
                    In this chapter we shall learn about
                 matter based on its physical properties.
                 Chemical aspects of matter will be taken up
                 in subsequent chapters.                         Fig. 1.1: When we dissolve salt in water, the particles
                                                                          of salt get into the spaces between particles
                 1.1  Physical Nature of Matter                           of water.

                 1.1.1 MATTER IS MADE UP OF PARTICLES
                                                                 1.1.2 HOW     SMALL   ARE  THESE  PARTICLES
                 For a long time, two schools of thought prevailed
                 regarding the nature of matter. One school             OF MATTER?
                 believed matter to be continuous like a block      Activity ______________ 1.2
                 of wood, whereas, the other thought that matter
                 was made up of particles like sand. Let us         •    Take 2–3 crystals of potassium
                 perform an activity to decide about the nature          permanganate and dissolve them in
                 of matter — is it continuous or particulate?            100 mL of water.
                    *  The SI unit of mass is kilogram (kg).
                    ** The SI unit of volume is cubic metre (m ). The common unit of measuring volume is
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                       litre (L) such that 1L = 1 dm , 1L = 1000 mL, 1 mL = 1 cm .
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