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BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN
6

BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.

Jan 14, 2016

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Page 1: BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.

BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE,

AND JAYLA BROWN

Page 2: BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.
Page 3: BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.

All matter is made of toms or molecules that are always moving, even if it doesn’t look like they are. Because the particles are in motion, they have kinetic energy. The faster the particles are moving, the more kinetic energy they have. Look at the picture at the bottom of the screen. The more kinetic energy the particles of an object have, the higher the temperature of the object is.

Page 4: BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.

Fahrenheit is the degree that most people use in the United States that describes weather.

Celsius is the range of the freezing point and the boiling point. Some people think that Celsius and Fahrenheit are the same but they are not.

Page 5: BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.

The temperature of a substance depends on the average kinetic energy of all its particles. Its temperature does not depend on how much of it you have. A pot of tea and a cup of tea each have a different amount of tea. But their atoms have the same average kinetic energy. So, the pot of tea and the cup of tea are at the same temperature.

Page 6: BY: BRIANNA MOORE, JESSICA MCGEE, AND JAYLA BROWN.

By, Brianna Moore Jessica McGee

And Jayla Brown