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Melting and Freezing Concepts

The document discusses heating, melting, and magnetism. It provides examples of permanent and temporary material changes. Melting is defined as a solid changing to a liquid when heated, while freezing is a liquid changing to a solid when cooled. The melting and freezing points of most substances are the same. The document also discusses magnetism. A magnet attracts magnetic materials towards itself. Examples of natural and man-made magnets are provided. The poles of magnets experience the strongest attraction or repulsion when brought close together. Magnetism cannot pass through non-magnetic materials.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
124 views3 pages

Melting and Freezing Concepts

The document discusses heating, melting, and magnetism. It provides examples of permanent and temporary material changes. Melting is defined as a solid changing to a liquid when heated, while freezing is a liquid changing to a solid when cooled. The melting and freezing points of most substances are the same. The document also discusses magnetism. A magnet attracts magnetic materials towards itself. Examples of natural and man-made magnets are provided. The poles of magnets experience the strongest attraction or repulsion when brought close together. Magnetism cannot pass through non-magnetic materials.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Chapter 5 Heating and Melting

A. Fill in the blank.


List down 2 examples of permanent change and temporary changes in state of
material.
Permanent Change Temporary Change

A solid can change into a ___________ when it is heated.


A liquid can change into a ______________ when it is cooled.
___________________ is the temperature at which a solid melts.
___________________ is the temperature at which a liquid freezes.
What is the melting temperature of an ice? __________
What is the freezing point of an ice? _________

B. Please circle the correct answer.

Freezing / Melting is the process of changing a liquid into a solid when the
liquid loses heat.

Freezing / Melting is the process of changing a solid into a liquid when the
solid gains heat.

The melting and freezing points of most substances are different / same.
Chapter 6 Magnets
A. Fill in the blank
1. Magnet is an object that _________________ magnetic materials towards
itself.
2. Which materials can be attracted to magnets? _______________________
3. Which materials are metals but non-magnetic materials?
__________________
4. Which materials are non-metals and non-magnetic materials?
_________________________
5. List one example of natural magnet. _____________________
6. List two examples of man-made magnet.
__________________________________
7. A magnet will always point to which direction when suspended freely?
___________________
8. In what situation the magnetism of a magnet cannot pass through non-
magnetic materials?
(i) The magnet is too ___________
(ii) The non-magnetic material is too __________
9. List down 3 ways in which magnets can be made.
(i) ____________ method
(ii) ____________ method
(iii) ____________ method
[Link] down 3 ways of losing the magnetism.
(i) ____________________________________________________
(ii) ____________________________________________________
(iii) ____________________________________________________
[Link] down 3 examples of objects that use ordinary magnets and 3 examples of
objects that use electromagnets.
Ordinary magnets Electromagnets
B. Please circle the correct answer.

A magnet can / cannot attract non-magnetic materials.

Like poles attract / repel whereas unlike poles attract / repel.

Force of attraction / repulsion is when different poles of two magnets are


brought close to each other.

Force of attraction / repulsion is when same poles of two magnets are


brought close to each other.

A stronger / weaker magnet would be able to attract more magnetic materials.


A magnet is weakest / strongest at its poles and weakest / strongest in the
middle.

Magnetism of a magnet can / cannot attract non-magnetic materials.

C. Fill in the name of the man-made magnets

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