Act Aspire Science
Quiz
•
Science
•
6th Grade
•
Hard
+4
Standards-aligned
Charles Martinez
FREE Resource
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16 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Students used a graduated cylinder (see Figure 1) to study the densities of liquids, including honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water, as well as of several solid objects. Fluids or solid objects float in liquids that are denser. Fluids or solid objects sink in liquids that are less dense.
Experiment 1: Students prepared a density column by slowly pouring 100 ml each of honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water one at a time into the graduated cylinder. The liquids formed four separate layers (A, B, C, and D) in the graduated cylinder. The densities of these liquids are shown in Table 1.
Experiment 2: Students dropped small solid objects of various materials, including aluminum, balsa wood, coal, and rubber, into the density column one at a time. The densities of these substances are shown in Table 2.
Which of the following statements is true?
Corn syrup is less dense than vegetable oil
Honey is less dense than vegetable oil.
Water is less dense than corn syrup.
Honey is less dense than water.
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Students used a graduated cylinder (see Figure 1) to study the densities of liquids, including honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water, as well as of several solid objects. Fluids or solid objects float in liquids that are denser. Fluids or solid objects sink in liquids that are less dense.
Experiment 1: Students prepared a density column by slowly pouring 100 ml each of honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water one at a time into the graduated cylinder. The liquids formed four separate layers (A, B, C, and D) in the graduated cylinder. The densities of these liquids are shown in Table 1.
Experiment 2: Students dropped small solid objects of various materials, including aluminum, balsa wood, coal, and rubber, into the density column one at a time. The densities of these substances are shown in Table 2.
Which of the following correctly lists the layers of the density column from top to bottom?
Corn syrup, vegetable oil, water, honey
Vegetable oil, water, corn syrup, honey
Honey, corn syrup, water, vegetable oil
Water, vegetable oil, honey, corn syrup
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Students used a graduated cylinder (see Figure 1) to study the densities of liquids, including honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water, as well as of several solid objects. Fluids or solid objects float in liquids that are denser. Fluids or solid objects sink in liquids that are less dense.
Experiment 1: Students prepared a density column by slowly pouring 100 ml each of honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water one at a time into the graduated cylinder. The liquids formed four separate layers (A, B, C, and D) in the graduated cylinder. The densities of these liquids are shown in Table 1.
Experiment 2: Students dropped small solid objects of various materials, including aluminum, balsa wood, coal, and rubber, into the density column one at a time. The densities of these substances are shown in Table 2.
Which of these objects would be most likely to sink to the bottom of the density column?
Aluminum paperclip
Rubber band
A small piece of coal
Balsa wood
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Students used a graduated cylinder (see Figure 1) to study the densities of liquids, including honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water, as well as of several solid objects. Fluids or solid objects float in liquids that are denser. Fluids or solid objects sink in liquids that are less dense.
Experiment 1: Students prepared a density column by slowly pouring 100 ml each of honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water one at a time into the graduated cylinder. The liquids formed four separate layers (A, B, C, and D) in the graduated cylinder. The densities of these liquids are shown in Table 1.
Experiment 2: Students dropped small solid objects of various materials, including aluminum, balsa wood, coal, and rubber, into the density column one at a time. The densities of these substances are shown in Table 2.
During Experiment 2, what is the most likely location of the piece of coal?
Floating on top of layer A
Floating on top of layer B
Floating on top of layer C
Floating on top of layer D
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Students used a graduated cylinder (see Figure 1) to study the densities of liquids, including honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water, as well as of several solid objects. Fluids or solid objects float in liquids that are denser. Fluids or solid objects sink in liquids that are less dense.
Experiment 1: Students prepared a density column by slowly pouring 100 ml each of honey, corn syrup, vegetable oil, and water one at a time into the graduated cylinder. The liquids formed four separate layers (A, B, C, and D) in the graduated cylinder. The densities of these liquids are shown in Table 1.
Experiment 2: Students dropped small solid objects of various materials, including aluminum, balsa wood, coal, and rubber, into the density column one at a time. The densities of these substances are shown in Table 2.
In another experiment, the students drop a small object of an unknown substance into the density column. If this object floats on top of layer D, what may the students conclude?
The object has a density less than 0.92 g/cm3.
The object has a density less than 1.00 g/ cm3.
The object has a density less than 1.33 g/ cm3.
The object has a density less than 1.42 g/ cm3.
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Clouds form when tiny droplets of water condense in the sky. When an air mass rises and expands, it cools. As the air cools, it becomes saturated with water vapor. When the temperature drops below the dew point, microscopic water droplets condense on tiny particles such as dust or soot. Cirrus clouds have tiny ice crystals. Meteorologists use ten basic classifications for clouds. See Figure 1. Clouds are named using the Latin roots in Table 1.
According to Table 1, which of the following clouds is associated with rain?
Cumulus
Altostratus
Cirrocumulus
Nimbostratus
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS2-5
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Clouds form when tiny droplets of water condense in the sky. When an air mass rises and expands, it cools. As the air cools, it becomes saturated with water vapor. When the temperature drops below the dew point, microscopic water droplets condense on tiny particles such as dust or soot. Cirrus clouds have tiny ice crystals. Meteorologists use ten basic classifications for clouds. See Figure 1. Clouds are named using the Latin roots in Table 1.
According to Table 1, which of the following cloud names indicates a cloud that is located higher in the sky than similar clouds?
Cumulus
Nimbostratus
Altostratus
Stratocumulus
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