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1.4: Types of Observations

  • Page ID
    451489
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    Learning Objectives

    • Distinguish between quantitative and qualitative observations.

    Observations can be qualitative or quantitative. Qualitative observations describe properties or occurrences in ways that do not rely on numbers. Examples of qualitative observations include the following: the outside air temperature is cooler during the winter season, table salt is a crystalline solid, sulfur crystals are yellow, and dissolving a penny in concentrated nitric acid forms a blue solution and a brown gas. Quantitative observations are measurements, which by definition consist of both a number and a unit. Examples of quantitative observations include the following: the melting point of crystalline sulfur is 115.21 °C, and 35.9 grams of table salt—whose chemical name is sodium chloride—dissolve in 100 grams of water at 20 °C.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Classify each statement as a law, a theory, an experiment, a hypothesis, a qualitative observation, or a quantitative observation.

    1. When 10 g of ice were added to 100 mL of water at 25 °C, the temperature of the water decreased to 15.5 °C after the ice melted.
    2. Litmus paper dipped in lemon juice turns red.
    3. A prism separates white light into a spectrum of colors.
    4. Limestone is relatively insoluble in water but dissolves readily in dilute acid with the evolution of a gas.
    5. Gas mixtures that contain more than 4% hydrogen in air are potentially explosive.
    Answer a

    quantitative observation

    Answer b

    qualitative observation

    Answer c

    qualitative observation

    Answer d

    qualitative observation

    Answer e

    quantitative observation


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