Distribution of earth's water
This online resource discusses the distribution of earth's water.
This online resource discusses the distribution of earth's water.
The idea of the electric field, how it's useful, and explains how the electric field is defined.
This YouTube video will guide you through a fun activity where you will draw the earth's continents and oceans.
Forces at a distance are explained by fields (gravitational, electric, and magnetic) permeating space that can transfer energy through space. Magnets or electric currents cause magnetic fields; electric charges or changing magnetic fields cause electric fields.
Magnetism is an interaction that allows certain kinds of objects, which are called ‘magnetic’ objects, to exert forces on each other without physically touching. A magnetic object is surrounded by a magnetic ‘field’ that gets weaker as one moves further away from the object. A second object can feel a magnetic force from the first object because it feels the magnetic field of the first object. The further away the objects are the weaker the magnetic force will be.
This online lesson explains what rotations are.
This video will look at rotation. Rotation involves turning a shape around a set point.
This online resource discusses the importance of the ocean, the layers and composition of the ocean and how it moderates climates.
This online resource investigates the features and topology of the ocean floor, the effects of wave erosion and the landforms created by coastal depositions.
Students learn about two-axis rotations, and specifically how to rotate objects both physically and mentally about two axes. A two-axis rotation is a rotation of an object about a combination of x, y or z-axes, as opposed to a single-axis rotation, which is about a single x, y or z-axis. Students practice drawing two-axis rotations through an exercise using simple cube blocks to create shapes, and then drawing on triangle-dot paper the shapes from various x-, y- and z-axis rotation perspectives.