Prepare for your Abeka Science of the Physical Creation tests with these practice questions and answers. This guide covers physics, chemistry, and earth science concepts.

Q: weather

Answer: state of the earth’s atmosphere at a certain time and place

Q: climate

Answer: year-round weather typical of a certain place

Q: meteorology

Answer: study of the weather

Q: thermal energy

Answer: energy that comes from the sun

Q: thermal energy, distribution of heat, water vapor

Answer: three major factors that together cause variable weather

Q: evaporation

Answer: process by which a molecule of liquid becomes a gas

Q: heat of vaporization

Answer: amount of heat required to change one gram of a liquid into a gas without changing its temperature; extra energy gained by evaporating molecules

Q: 540 calories per gram

Answer: heat of vaporization for water

Q: condensation

Answer: process of a gas changing into a liquid

Q: heat of condensation

Answer: the amount of heat released when a gas changes into a liquid

Q: saturated

Answer: word used to describe air that cannot hold any more water

Q: dew point

Answer: temperature at which water in the air begins to condense

Q: dew

Answer: water vapor condensed on grass and soil in tiny droplets

Q: sublimation

Answer: when gas below the freezing point collides with an object and changes directly into a crystal of ice

Q: frost

Answer: light, feathery deposits of ice crystals formed by the sublimation process

Q: condensation nuclei

Answer: floating, microscopic particles that form the center of a rain drop

Q: freezing nuclei

Answer: microscopic nucleus for water vapor to sublime and form ice crystals

Q: clouds

Answer: condensed, airborne water vapor formed when temperatures fall below the dew point

Q: alto

Answer: “high”

Q: nimbus/nimbo

Answer: refers to a cloud that produces precipitation

Q: cumulus

Answer: “heap” or “pile”

Q: cumulonimbus

Answer: thunderclouds

Q: stratus

Answer: “layer”

Q: nimbostratus

Answer: stratus rain clouds

Q: cirrus

Answer: “wisp” or “curl”

Q: lenticular

Answer: a lens-shaped cloud

Q: stratocumulus

Answer: low, heavy layer of puffy, gray clouds

Q: cirrostratus

Answer: thin, translucent clouds spread like a sheet in the upper troposphere

Q: radiation fog

Answer: fog that forms when the ground is cold but the air is still moist

Q: advection fog

Answer: fog formed when a warm, humid breeze blows over a clod surface

Q: upslope fog

Answer: fog formed by moist wind blowing up a gentle slope

Q: precipitation fog

Answer: fog formed by warm rain falling into cool air

Q: photochemical smog

Answer: thick, brownish haze that results from complex molecules (such as exhaust fumes) being broken down by sunlight into ozone and other noxious chemicals

Q: air mass

Answer: a large body of air with relatively uniform temperature, humidity, and pressure

Q: tropical

Answer: refers to warm air masses

Q: polar

Answer: refers to cold air masses

Q: maritime

Answer: refers to moist air masses

Q: continental

Answer: refers to dry air masses

Q: Arctic

Answer: refers to very dry and very cold air masses

Q: front

Answer: area where two air masses meet, often accompanied by severe storms

Q: cold front

Answer: boundary between a cold air mass advancing into a warmer air mass

Q: warm front

Answer: boundary between a warm air mass advancing into a colder air mass

Q: stationary front

Answer: front created when two air masses cannot overtake each other and slowly spin in place

Q: frontal lows

Answer: small whirlpools of low pressure in a stationary front

Q: occluded front

Answer: front formed when two cold air masses overtake a warm air mass and lift it up, forming a “Y” shape

Q: precipitation

Answer: release of water from the atmosphere in the form of rain, sleet, snow, or drizzle

Q: water cycle

Answer: continuous cycle of movement of water from the earth to the atmosphere and back again

Q: rain

Answer: most common form of precipitation; consists of drops of liquid water larger than 0.5mm

Q: Bergeron process

Answer: process of rain being formed by snowflakes melting at a certain point on their descent

Q: collision-coalescence process

Answer: droplets become too big and fall out of a cloud, then collide and join with other rain drops on their descent to become even bigger

Q: drizzle

Answer: precipitation that consists of drops smaller than 0.5mm

Q: sleet

Answer: precipitation formed by raindrops freezing into miniscule pellets as they fall through an extremely cold layer of air

Q: freezing rain

Answer: supercooled precipitation that freezes when it makes contact with something solid

Q: hail

Answer: layered balls of ice that form in strong storm clouds

Q: snow

Answer: six-sided ice crystal; most beautiful form of precipitation

Q: storms

Answer: atmospheric disturbances characterized by strong winds, heavy precipitation, and usually lightning

Q: thunderstorms

Answer: localized storms involving lightning, thunder, turbulent winds, heavy rains, and sometimes hail

Q: squall lines

Answer: a long line of thunderstorms along a cold front

Q: updraft

Answer: a current of rising air

Q: cumulus, mature, dissipating

Answer: the 3 stages of thunderstorms

Q: downbursts

Answer: concentrated blasts of cool wind that blow downward at 130mph or more

Q: cell

Answer: thunderstorm updraft system

Q: supercell

Answer: giant, single-updraft thunderstorm

Q: lightning

Answer: abrupt discharge of electricity through the air

Q: electrons

Answer: negatively charged particles of an atom

Q: stepped leader

Answer: barely visible stream of electrons from a cloud to the ground

Q: return stroke

Answer: brilliant stream of electricity that occurs when the stepped leader and a positive streamer meet and electrons flow downward in a huge current

Q: thunder

Answer: shock wave of sound that is a result of the expanding air super-heated by a lightning bolt

Q: superbolt

Answer: most powerful type of lightning

Q: tornado

Answer: narrow funnel of powerful, rapidly whirling winds

Q: waterspout

Answer: tornado formed over water

Q: dust devil

Answer: “tiny tornado”; usually harmless and only lasts a few minutes

Q: hurricanes

Answer: giant, whirling storms accompanied by destructive winds (74-200mph), torrential rains, high waves and tides

Q: eye

Answer: low-pressure center of a hurricane

Q: eye wall

Answer: cylinder of thick, whirling clouds and rain that surround the eye of the hurricane

Q: rain bands

Answer: lines of thunderstorms in the lower altitudes of a hurricane

Q: storm surge

Answer: elevated water levels caused by a hurricane