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Water: Getting to Know the Water Molecule
This Activity Requires:
Test your system to see if it meets the requirements Important! If you cannot launch anything from this database, please follow the step-by-step instructions on the software page. Please Note: Many models are linked to directly from within the database. When an activity employs our scripting language, Pedagogica, as do some of the "guided" activities, the initial download may take several minutes. Subsequent activities will not take a long time. See this page for further instructions. |
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![]() | Overview and Learning ObjectivesStudents discover that water molecules are polar, and that the polarity makes water a liquid under normal conditions (room temperature and average atmospheric pressure). In the previous activity, students built their model of a simplified cell with solutions on both sides of a membrane. In this activity students "turn up the magnification" to look at water molecules and their interrelations in a network of other water molecules, thus expanding their understanding of the properties of water and aquatic solutions. Students will be able to:
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![]() | Central ConceptsKey Concept: Water molecules are small and highly polarized. Their polar nature gives water its unique, macroscopic properties. On a microscopic level, water is a network of these polarized molecules linked together by hydrogen bonds. Additional Related ConceptsBiology
Molecular Biology
Physics/Chemistry
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![]() | Textbook References
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![]() | Benchmarks and StandardsAAAS
NSES
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![]() | Activity CreditsCreated by CC Project: Molecular Workbench using Molecular Workbench + Pedagogica |
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![]() | Requirements
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Last Update: 11/25/2008
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These materials are based upon work supported by the
National Science Foundation under grant number DUE-0402553
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions
or recommendations expressed in this material are those of
the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views
of the National Science Foundation.