23 September 2018

Chemistry






                                                                                                                                                          



This is a list of important chemistry vocabulary terms and their definitions. A more comprehensive list of chemistry terms can be found in my alphabetical chemistry glossary. You can use this vocabulary list to look up terms or you can make flashcards from the definitions to help learn them.
absolute zero - Absolute zero is 0K. It is the lowest possible temperature. Theoretically, at absolute zero, atoms stop moving.

accuracy - Accuracy is a measure of how close a measured value is to its true value. For example, if an object is exactly a meter long and you measure it as 1.1 meters long, that is more accurate than if you measured it at 1.5 meters long.
acid - There are several ways to define an acid, but they include any chemical that gives off protons or H+ in water. Acids have a pH less than 7. They turn the pH indicator phenolphthalein colorless and turn litmus paper red.
acid anhydride - An acid anhydride is an oxide that forms an acid when it is reacted with water. For example, when SO3- is added to water, it becomes sulfuric acid, H2SO4.
actual yield - The actual yield is the amount of product you actually obtain from a chemical reaction, as in the amount you can measure or weigh as opposed to a calculated value.
addition reaction - An addition reaction is a chemical reaction in which atoms add to a carbon-carbon multiple bond.
alcohol - An alcohol is any organic molecule that has an -OH group.
aldehyde - An aldehyde is any organic molecule that has a -COH group.
alkali metal - An alkali metal is a metal in Group I of the periodic table. Examples of alkali metals include lithium, sodium, and potassium.
alkaline earth metal - An alkaline earth metal is an element belonging to Group II of the periodic table.Examples of alkaline earth metals are magnesium and calcium.
alkane - An alkane is an organic molecule that only contains single carbon-carbon bonds.
alkene - An alkene is an organic molecule that contains at least one C=C or carbon-carbon double bond.
alkyne - An alkyne is an organic molecule that contains at least one carbon-carbon triple bond.
allotrope - Allotropes are different forms of a phase of an element. For example, diamond and graphite are allotropes of carbon.
alpha particle - An alpha particle is another name for a helium nucleus, which contains two protons and two neutrons. It's called an alpha particle in reference to radioactive (alpha) decay.
amine - An amine is an organic molecule in which one or more of the hydrogen atoms in ammonia have been replaced by an organic group. An example of an amine is methylamine.
base - A base is a compound that produces OH- ions or electrons in water or that accepts protons. An example of a common base is sodium hydroxide, NaOH.
beta particle - A beta particle is an electron, although the term is used when the electron is emitted in radioactive decay.
binary compound - A binary compound is one made up of two elements.
binding energy - Binding energy is the energy that holds protons and neutrons together in the atomic nucleus.
bond energy - Bond energy is the amount of energy required to break one mole of chemical bonds.
bond length - Bond length is the average distance between the nuclei of two atoms that share a bond.
buffer - A liquid that resists change in pH when an acid or base is added. A buffer consists of a weak acid and its conjugate base. An example of a buffer is acetic acid and sodium acetate.
calorimetry - Calorimetry is the study of heat flow. Calorimetry may be used to find the heat of reaction of two compounds or the heat of combustion of a compound, for example.
carboxylic acid - A carboxylic acid is an organic molecule containing a -COOH group. An example of a carboxylic acid is acetic acid.
catalyst - A catalyst is a substance that lowers the activation energy of a reaction or speeds it up without being consumed by the reaction.
Enzymes are proteins that act as catalysts for biochemical reactions.
cathode - A cathode is the electrode which gains electrons or is reduced. In other words, it is where reduction occurs in an electrochemical cell.
chemical equation - A chemical equation is a description of a chemical reaction, including what reacts, what is produced, and which direction(s) the reaction proceeds.
chemical property - A chemical property is a property that can only be observed when a chemical change occurs. Flammability is an example of a chemical property, since you can't measure how flammable a substance is without igniting it (making/breaking chemical bonds).
covalent bond - A covalent bond is a chemical bond formed when two atoms share two electrons.
critical mass - Critical mass is the minimum quantity of radioactive material needed to cause a nuclear chain reaction.
critical point - The critical point is the endpoint of the liquid-vapor line in a phase diagram, past which a supercritical liquid forms. At the critical point, the liquid and vapor phases become indistinguishable from one another.
crystal - A crystal is an ordered, repeating three-dimensional pattern of ions, atoms, or molecules. Most crystals are ionic solids, although other forms of crystals exist.
delocalization - Delocalization is when electrons become free to move all over a molecule, such as when double bonds occur on adjacent atoms in a molecule.
denature - There are two common meanings for this in chemistry. First, it can refer to any process used to make ethanol unfit for consumption (denatured alcohol).
Second, denaturing can mean breaking down the three-dimensional structure of a molecule, such as a protein is denatured when exposed to heat.
diffusion - Diffusion is the movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to one of lower concentration.
dilution - Dilution is when a solvent is added to a solution, making it less concentrated.
dissociation - Dissociation is when a chemical reaction breaks a compound into two or more parts. For example, NaCl dissociates into Na+ and Cl- in water.
double displacement reaction - A double displacement or double replacement reaction is when cations of two compounds switch places.
effusion - Effusion is when a gas moves through an opening into a low-pressure container (e.g., is drawn by a vacuum). Effusion occurs more quickly than diffusion because additional molecules aren't in the way.
electrolysis - Electrolysis is using electricity to break the bonds in a compound to break it apart.
electrolyte - An electrolyte is an ionic compound that dissolves in water to produce ions, which can conduct electricity. Strong electrolytes completely dissociate in water, while weak electrolytes only partially dissociate or break apart in water.
enantiomers - Enantiomers are molecules that are non superimposable mirror images of each other.
endothermic - Endothermic describes a process that absorbs heat. Endothermic reactions feel cold.
endpoint - The endpoint is when a titration is stopped, typically because an indicator has changed color. The endpoint need not be the same as the equivalence point of a titration.
energy level - An energy level is a possible value of energy that an electron can have in an atom.
enthalpy - Enthalpy is a measure of the amount of energy in a system.
entropy - Entropy is a measure of the disorder or randomness in a system.
enzyme - An enzyme is a protein that acts as a catalyst in a biochemical reaction.
equilibrium - Equilibrium occurs in reversible reactions when the forward rate of the reaction is the same as the reverse rate of the reaction.
equivalence point - The equivalence point is when the solution in a titration is completely neutralized. It is not the same as the endpoint of a titration because the indicator may not change colors precisely when the solution is neutral.
ester - An ester is an organic molecule with a R-CO-OR' function group.
excess reagent - Excess reagent is what you get when there is leftover reagent in a chemical reaction.
excited state - An excited state is a higher energy state for an electron of an atom, ion, or molecule, compared with the energy of its ground state.
exothermic - Exothermic describes a process that gives off heat.
family - A family is a group of elements sharing similar properties. It is not necessarily the same thing as an element group. For example, the chalcogens or oxygen family consists of some different elements from the nonmetal group.
Kelvin - Kelvin is a unit of temperature. A Kelvin is equal in size to a degree Celsius, although Kelvin starts from absolute zero. Add 273.15 to a Celsius temperature to get the Kelvin value. Kelvin is not reported with a ° symbol. For example, you would simply write 300K not 300°K.
ketone - A ketone is a molecule that contains a R-CO-R' functional group. An example of a common ketone is acetone (dimethyl ketone).
kinetic energy - Kinetic energy is energy of motion. The more an object moves, the more kinetic energy it has.
lanthanide contraction - The lanthanide contraction refers to the trend in which lanthanide atoms become smaller as you move left to right across the periodic table, even though they increase in atomic number.
lattice energy - Lattice energy is the amount of energy released when one mole of a crystal forms from its gaseous ions.
law of conservation of energy - The law of conservation of energy states the energy of the universe may change form, but its amount remains unchanged.
ligand - A ligand is a molecule or ion stuck to the central atom in a complex. Examples of common ligands include water, carbon monoxide, and ammonia.
mass - Mass is the amount of matter in a substance. It is commonly reported in units of grams.
mole - Avogadro's number (6.02 x 1023) of anything.
node - A node is a location in an orbital with no probability of containing an electron.
nucleon - A nucleon is a particle in the nucleus of an atom (proton or neutron).
oxidation number The oxidation number is the apparent charge on an atom. For example, the oxidation number of an oxygen atom is -2.
period - A period is a row (left to right) of the periodic table.
precision - Precision is how repeatable a measurement is. More precise measurements are reported with more significant figures.
pressure - Pressure is force per area.
product - A product is something made as a result of a chemical reaction.
quantum theory - Quantum theory is the description of energy levels and the predictions about the behavior of atoms at specific energy levels.
radioactivity - Radioactivity occurs when the atomic nucleus is unstable and breaks apart, releasing energy or radiation.
Raoult's Law - Raoult's Law states that the vapor pressure of a solution is directly proportional to the mole fraction of solvent.
rate determining step - The rate determining step is the slowest step in any chemical reaction.
rate law - A rate law is a mathematical expression relating the speed of a chemical reaction as a function of concentration.
redox reaction - A redox reaction is a chemical reaction that involves oxidation and reduction.
resonance structure - Resonance structures are the set of Lewis structures that can be drawn for a molecule when it has delocalized electrons.
reversible reaction - A reversible reaction is a chemical reaction which can go both ways: reactants make products and products make reactants.
RMS velocity - The RMS or root mean square velocity is the square root of the average of the squares of individual velocities of gas particles, which is a way of describing the average speed of gas particles.
salt - An ionic compound formed from reacting an acid and a base.
solute - The solute is the substance that gets dissolved in a solvent. Usually, it refers to a solid that is dissolved in a liquid. If you are mixing two liquids, the solute is the one that is present in a smaller amount.
solvent - This is the liquid that dissolves a solute in solution. Technically, you can dissolve gases into liquids or into other gases, too. When making a solution where both substances are in the same phase (e.g., liquid-liquid), the solvent is the largest component of the solution.
STP - STP means standard temperature and pressure, which is 273K and 1 atmosphere.
strong acid - A strong acid is an acid that completely dissociates in water. An example of a strong acid is hydrochloric acid, HCl, which dissociates into H+ and Cl- in water.
strong nuclear force - The strong nuclear force is the force that holds the protons and neutrons in an atomic nucleus together.
sublimation - Sublimation is when a solid changes directly into a gas. At atmospheric pressure, dry ice or solid carbon dioxide goes directly into carbon dioxide vapor, never becoming liquid carbon dioxide.
synthesis - Synthesis is making a larger molecule from two or more atoms or smaller molecules.
system - A system includes everything you are evaluating in a situation.
temperature - Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles.
theoretical yield - Theoretical yield is the amount of product which would result if a chemical reaction proceeded perfectly, to completion, with no loss.
thermodynamics - Thermodynamics is the study of energy.
titration - Titration is a procedure in which the concentration of an acid or base is determined by measuring how much base or acid is required to neutralize it.
triple point - The triple point is the temperature and pressure at which the solid, liquid, and vapor phases of a substance exist in equilibrium.
unit cell - A unit cell is the simplest repeating structure of a crystal.
unsaturated - There are two common meanings for unsaturated in chemistry. The first refers to a chemical solution that does not contain all of the solute that can be dissolved in it. Unsaturated also refers to an organic compound which contains one or more double or triple carbon-carbon bonds.
unshared electron pair - An unshared electron pair or lone pair refers to two electrons that aren't participating in chemical bonding.
valence electron - The valence electrons are the atom's outermost electrons.
volatile - Volatile refers to a substance that has a high vapor pressure.
VSEPR - VSEPR stands for Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion. This is a theory used that predicts molecular shapes based on the assumption that electrons stay as far as possible from each other.


































Rescue operations - Air Emergency


  



When you’re in distress in the outdoors and you need to call for help, you may choose to use a number of different rescue signal techniques. But if you believe that an airplane, helicopter, or other airborne rescue parties may be searching for you, then you can use the five-symbol ground-to-air emergency code to signal a specific message in advance of the aircraft’s landing.

Most importantly, the ground-to-air emergency code can help let rescuers know whether or not anyone in your party is injured, and it can guide them more effectively towards your location. The five ground-to-air emergency code symbols and their meanings are as follows:

Require Assistance: V or X

A V-shaped signal communicates that you need assistance, in general, but it doesn’t imply that you or someone in your party is injured.
Use the letter X to communicate that you or someone in your party needs medical attention. Whereas the V symbol communicates a call for help, the X symbol communicates a more urgent request for assistance.

No or Negative: N

The N symbol can be used to communicate your negative response to a question that the aircraft or rescue organization has asked.

Yes or Affirmative: Y

The Y symbol can be used to communicate your affirmative response to a question that the aircraft or rescue organization has asked.

Proceed in This Direction: Arrow, Pointing Towards the Location

Place an arrow-shaped symbol with the head, or point, of the arrow indicating the direction of your location. This symbol is a good one to use when rescuers may need additional information about how to reach your location after they have identified another ground-to-air signal, such as a group of X symbols in an open area indicating a need for medical assistance. Place the arrow in a position that will guide rescuers from the open area towards your location.

Tips for Using the Air-To-Ground Emergency Code

Signal using the air-to-ground emergency code as you would signal with other methods, such as a smoke rescue fire. Remember these key ideas when arranging signals and communicating with rescue crews:
  • As with other visual signals, signaling in threes communicates and confirms distress.
  • Choose a large, open area as close as possible to your location for the signal location.
  • Choose to place signals on the highest, flattest terrain you can find near your location.
  • Choose a signal that will contrast with the underlying terrain. Choose dark-colored branches, for example, on top of the white snow.
  • Go big! Use several rows of rocks or debris to build each part of a signal letter so that it is thick enough and big enough to be seen clearly from above.
  • Be prepared to use a backup signal, such as a signal mirror, to confirm your location as soon as you see aircraft in the area.




















 

Destroyers in my life




 Learned a lot about life on my own reconsigns and morals. It allowed me the option to grow and mature on my own.  Learned technical data and many life lessons. Realy found team work to be an important part of my life.

  Went to Boot Camp in Great lakes Navel Training Center, - left on Mother's day 14 May 1961 served until March 1967.  {Was the first time flying in a  passenger plane - ** had flown with a neighbor in his Single engine Fixed wing  Beechcraft Bonanza at age 12.  leaned team work and many life necessary lessons in Boot camp!  Got government Driver License - drove in foreign countries.

 It was a great experience, served on 3 destroyers, saw much of the world have visited over 25 countries, saved {picked up} people at sea, fought a Fire on a Merchant ship, witnessed a Sub Emergency surface under a  loaded Natural Gas Barge at sea {No explosion}
 USS Greenwood DE679. 

Was one of the original ships dispatched to Cuba during the 1962 Missile Crisis -  operated off Cay Sal then patrolled off Havana - ran down and boarded a Soviet Merchant Attempting to avoid us - the ship has (3) three ICBMs on board, continued tracking all aircraft over Cuba.   Was part of the NASA Mercury Astronaut recovery for the first Manned Space flights.  .
Did plane guard picking up downed pilots and crew blown or fallowing of the Carriers under flight operations day and night.
DDR882 USS Furse

Completed fleet training sessions on 2 of the destroyers at Gitmo included live fire on both shore and targets a float. Became 6th Fleet Flagship for the 3 Star Admiral going into Tunis - acted as a French Interrupter with the police - Shore Patrol. 

 There were on several "Stand by" recovery sites in riot torn countries 
{including Haiti and Zanzibar, rescued over 90 men, women and children, mainly American, British citizens from Islamic riot torn war area in Indian Ocean, Also operated with several allied navies, including Dutch, British, French Ships. Operated with the original Nuclear Flotilla in the Mediterranean sea as we were fast enough with: 1200PSI boilers at 70,000 Shaft HP. 
USS Manley DD940.
  

Class and type:Forrest Sherman class destroyer
Displacement:2,800 tons standard.
4,050 tons full load.
Length:407 ft (124 m) waterline, 418 ft (127 m) overall.
Beam:45 ft (14 m)
Draft:22 ft (6.7 m)
Propulsion:4 × 1,200 psi (8.3 MPa) Babcock & Wilcox boilers, Westinghouse steam turbines; 70,000 shp (52 MW); 2 × shafts.
Speed:32.5 knots (60.2 km/h)  {actual speed was somewhat higher}
Range:4,500 nautical miles (8,300 km) at 20 knots (37 km/h)
Complement:15 officers, 218 enlisted.
Armament:3 × 5 in (127 mm) 54 calibre dual purpose Mk 42 guns; 4 × 3 in (76 mm) 50 calibre Mark 33 anti-aircraft guns; 2 × mark 10/11 Hedgehogs  

 Mark 32 torpedo tubes 6 × 12.75 in .