quite interesting science presents this week: snow and ice

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Quite Interesting Science presents

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Page 1: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Quite Interesting

Science

presents

Page 2: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

This week:

Snow and ice

Page 3: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

1 Is it possible to walk across the English Channel?

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Page 4: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

It would be – if it was frozen. But will this ever happen?

We all know pure water freezes at 0 ºC. But salty water doesn’t freeze until it gets even colder.

There is a lot of water in the channel. It would take ages for all the particlesto get into a regular pattern and form ice. So it would need to be very cold for a very long time to freeze the channel.

Page 5: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

2 Why spread grit on icy roads?

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Page 6: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Grit is actually rock salt - a mixture of crushed rock and salt. It’s what they dig out of salt mines. So why use salt?

Salt can stop water freezing.

When the salt dissolves, it lowers water’s freezing point. So ice will only form at temperatures much lower than 0°C.

Page 7: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

3 It's 4oC today, so how come the snow hasn’t melted?

Page 8: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Melting takes time. It’s the same with ice-cream. Why?

The ice particles have to absorb energy to overcome the attractive forces holding them together.

Supplying enough energy takes time.

Page 9: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

4 The road is ice-free…

…but in 10s the driver will skid over the side of a bridge! Why?

Page 10: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Bridges get icy (and slippery) before the roads on land. Why is this?

Bridges contain a lot of metal, so they cool down quicker than roads.

Bridges lose heat fast becausemetals are such good conductors.

Page 11: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

5 When can water pack a bigger punch than a boxer?

Page 12: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Water forms ice when it freezes.But why is ice so hard?

Look at these icicles, you wouldn’t want one falling on your head!

Icicles are hard because strong forces hold their particles together.

Page 13: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

6 Why might cold spells give joy to children at Christmas?

Page 14: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Sprouts contain water, so what happens when the temperature drops?

The ice in frozen sprouts is brittle. It shatters in the machines that harvest them, which breaks the sprouts up.

Frozen sprouts can be harvested by hand, but this is slow and expensive.So lots of children will have to go without sprouts on Christmas Day.

Page 15: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

7 Why doesn’t this frog need to stay warm?

Page 16: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

If you stayed out in freezing weather for too long, you would die. But wood frogs can survive. How?

They fill their cells with sugar. This acts like antifreeze to stop them freezing solid.

The frog’s antifreeze stops ice forming the same way salt stops it forming on roads.

Page 17: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

8 You throw water up - snow comes down. How come?

Page 18: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

The air has to be cold – very cold. In Siberia it is –40 ºC. What happens to the water in the air?

It freezes instantly as water particles lose energy and fit together to form crystals.

Throwing it up helps by forming droplets. Their large surface area, makes them lose energy faster.

Page 19: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

liquid watersolid water

9 Why is water strange?

Page 20: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

If this was any other substance, the solid state would sink. So why do icebergs float?

When most substances freeze, their particles get closer together, so they get denser.

Water is strange because the particles in ice crystals are more spread out,which makes it less dense than water.

Page 21: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

10 Santa has a new sledge. It’s made of plastic. Is

this a good choice of material?

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Page 22: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Plastic is lightweight so it’s easier for his reindeer to pull, but will it survive the freezing temperatures on Christmas Eve?

Maybe not! Plastic particles are like strands of cooked spaghetti. They slip and slide over each other to make a soft, flexible material.

But when the temperature drops the particles lose energy and stick together. The plastic goes rigid and brittle like glass. Any small pushing force could make the sledge shatter.

Page 23: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

THE END

Page 24: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

No

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Page 25: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Yes. Use the Channel Tunnel

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Page 26: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Grit is dark. So it absorbs more

sunlight and melts snow.

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Page 27: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Grit increases friction so cars

don’t slide.

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Page 28: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Snow melts at a higher

temperature than ice.

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Page 29: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Bridges aren’t gritted.

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Page 30: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Its too cold for brussel sprouts

to grow.

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Page 31: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

It can’t.

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Page 32: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

It can’t feel the cold.

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Page 33: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

It’s not.

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Page 34: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

Yes

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Page 35: Quite Interesting Science presents This week: Snow and ice

No

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