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Introduction to chemistry

A big picture view of chemistry and why it is fascinating. How chemistry relates to math and other sciences. 

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  • hopper cool style avatar for user Janzen Go
    Is melting of Ice is considered a physical change?
    (142 votes)
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    • male robot hal style avatar for user Joe Anderson
      Yes, the melting of ice would be a physical change since it is just a change of physical state (Gas, liquid, or solid).
      During a physical change, the chemical formula of the sample isn't altered (ice=H2O, water=H2O) whereas in a chemical change, the chemical formula is altered.
      During a chemical change you would notice a permanent change in color, bubbling or fizzing caused by a gas being released, the release an odor, ect.
      (207 votes)
  • leaf blue style avatar for user Aryamanofs
    At 5: 30 you said there are points where these things start to bleed in together but , how does biology bleed in to physics ?
    (47 votes)
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    • spunky sam blue style avatar for user Ernest Zinck
      How about these?
      X-ray diffraction to determine the structure of DNA and other biological substances.
      Medical imaging using MRI, CAT scans, and ultrasound.
      New microscopes that use physicists' understanding of lenses, lasers, and algorithms for noise and image analysis.
      (116 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user jessica obrien
    ok one question why do they call it biology who gave that name
    (13 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Jackie Oser
    what are anions?
    (12 votes)
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  • starky tree style avatar for user Kereesa Carrington
    I have a question. Why does the element calcium react in a similar way to the element magnesium?
    (10 votes)
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    • duskpin ultimate style avatar for user Tomas Lopez
      They react in the same way because they are in the same column. We have a special term for atoms in the same column: we say they are in the same family or group. Calcium and magnesium are both in the alkali earth metal group. Elements in the same group react in similar ways because they have the same number of valence electrons.

      Valence electrons are the electrons that actually participate in chemical reactions. So, if they have the same number of valence electrons, they can make similar interactions!
      (40 votes)
  • mr pants pink style avatar for user Noah Smalls
    In the first seconds of the video, there and equation on the top of the screen:
    2h2(g)+O2(g)=2h2O(g) what dose that mean?
    (5 votes)
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  • duskpin tree style avatar for user Nicholas
    Why do some elements have electron energy levels that can fit 18 electrons?
    (4 votes)
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  • starky ultimate style avatar for user Spidey
    Is an atom considered as matter?
    (4 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user sarang.warudkar75
    how can math be a common language
    (3 votes)
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    • leaf red style avatar for user Richard
      Even if we all speak different languages (Chinese, English, Hindi, Spanish, etc.) we all use the same symbols and rules for math. A math problem given entirely in symbols could be conveyed and interpreted between two people who don't share a common language and they would still arrive at the same result.
      (7 votes)
  • male robot hal style avatar for user Suvel M
    At around , you said that subjects, such as psychology and economics, can build on top of these "main" subjects. My question is, how does biology relate to economics?
    (1 vote)
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    • starky ultimate style avatar for user ++§ Αλεκσανδαρ
      Did you notice both economics and ecology have the same prefix, eco- ? It is derived from Greek word οἶκος (oikos) which means house or home. Back in the days of feudalism when arable land was the most valuable possession and the main source of income, knowledge about plants and how all the biotic and abiotic factors affect their growth were essential. Even nowadays there are many examples of biology influencing economics. Have you ever grown potatoes? Do you know how much money you need to invest to grow one kg of potatoes? You can make it cheaper if you don't use fertilizers, but how will that affect your crop? Will you get less potatoes? Does it pay off to buy fertilizers or not? At what cost will you sell your potatoes? Obviously, you can't sell them for the same amount of money you've invested to grow them, you need to earn something too. Will that price be affordable to most people? To whom will you sell your potatoes? What type of soil do potatoes prefer? If you buy a more fertile arable land, will you be able to grow more potatoes with less expenses? There are pests too, they might eat seedlings, leafs, tubers... How will you get rid of them? Will you collect potato beetles by hand or use pesticides? If you buy pesticides that will cost you more, but that will also affect the quality of your potatoes. If you collect them by hand, you might save some money but you will lose more time and maybe still have less crop. How will you regulate the price of your potatoes in those cases?

      Well, that's just one example but we could go on like that forever. You buy food that you eat every day and pay for it. Do you feel the food is too cheap or too expensive? What does go into the process of producing food that affects its price?
      (12 votes)

Video transcript

Here some picture of what most people associate when they think of chemistry. They think of scientists working on a bench with the different vials of different chemicals. They might think of a mad scientist. Some of them boiling and changing colors. They might associate chemistry with chemical equations. Thinking about how different things will react together to form other things. They might think about models of the different molecules that can be depicted different ways. They might associate it with the periodic table of elements. And all of these things are a big part of chemistry. But I want you to do in this video is appreciate what at its essence chemistry is all about. And chemistry is one of the sciences that really just helps us understand and make models and make predictions about our reality. And even something like the periodic table of elements, which you'll see at the front of any chemistry classroom, you take it for granted. But this is the product of, frankly, thousands of years of human beings trying to get to an understanding of all of the different complexity in the world. If you look at the world around us, and it doesn't even have to be our planet, it could be the universe around us, you see all these different substances that seem to be different in certain ways. You see things like fire and rock and water. Even in the planets, you see meteorological patterns. In life, you see all of this complexity and all of these different things and it looks like there's just like a infinite spectrum of differentness out of there. Of different substances. Even in things like our human brain. The complexity and the electrochemical interactions. And you could imagine as a species, this is kind of overwhelming. How do you make the sense of all of this? And it was not an easy path, but over thousands of years, we did start to make sense of it. And why it's very lucky for all of us to be born when we are now or to be around when we are now. To be able to learn chemistry where we are now is that we get the answer. And it's a partial answer, which is also exciting, cause we don't want the full answer. But it's a partial answer that takes us a long way. We realize that the periodic table of elements, that all of this complexity that we're seeing before, that at the end of the day, things are made of basic building blocks. Kind of you could imagine the legos that really make up everything. And there aren't an infinite number of legos. There's actually a finite number of them. We're discovering more all of the time, well not all of the time, now new elements are not discovered that frequently, but there's a few of these elements that are disproportionately showing up in a lot of what we see here. These things that seem so different. Well a lot of this is different compositions of elements like carbon and oxygen and hydrogen. And even the elements themselves are made of things like protons and electrons and neutrons that are just rearranged in different ways to give us these elements that have all of these different properties. So when you think about chemistry, yes, it might visually look something like this. These are obviously much older pictures. But at its essence, it's how do we create models and understand the models that describe a lot of the complexity in the universe around us? And just to put chemistry in, I guess you could say, in context with some of the other sciences, many people would say at the purest level, you would have mathematics. That math, you're studying ideas, which could even be independent, you're seeing logical ideas that could be even independent of anything that you've ever observed or experienced. And a lot of folks that say if we ever communicate with another intelligent species that could be completely different than us, math might be that common language. Because even if we perceive the world differently and think differently in certain ways, math might be that common language. But on top of math, we start to say, well how is our reality actually structured? At the most basic level, what are the constituents of matter and what are the mathematical properties that describe how they react together? And then, or interact with each other? Then you go one level above that, you get to the topic of this video, which is chemistry. Which is very closely related to physics. When we talk about these chemical equations and we create these molecular structures, the interactions between these atoms, these are quantum mechanical interactions which we do not fully understand at the deepest level yet. But with chemistry, we can start to make use of the math and they physics to start to think about how all of these different building blocks can interact to explain all sorts of different phenomena. This chemical equation you see right here, this is combustion. This is hydrogen combusting with oxygen to produce a lot of energy. To produce energy. When we imagine combustion, we think of fire. But what even is fire at its most fundamental level? How do we get, why do we perceive this thing here? And chemistry is super important because on top of that, we build biology. We build biology. And as you'll see as you study all of these things, there's points where these things start to bleed together. But the biology in, say, a human being, or really in any species, it's based on molecular interactions. Interactions between molecules, between atoms, which, at the end of the day, is all about chemistry. As I speak, the only reason why I'm able to speak is because of really, hard to imagine the number of chemical interactions happening in me right now to create this soundness. To create this thing that thinks it exists that wants to make a video about how awesome and amazing chemistry is. And then from biology, you can build out on all of everything else. So sciences like psychology and economics, which of course, these things also leverage math and other things. But this gives you kind of a sense of how we build up and how we explain the reality around us. And not one of these is more important than the other. These are all studying incredibly fascinating things that as humans beings first became thoughtful about their environment, said, "Gee, why are we here? "What is this place? "Why do we exist? "How do we exist?" And chemistry builds models for us to understand interactions at a scale and a speed that we can't directly observe, but nonetheless, we can to start to make predictions. So that's what's really cool about this. When you study chemistry, you should not view this as some type of a chore that the school system is forcing you through. There are people who would've done anything 100 years ago to get the answers that are in your chemistry book today or that you can learn from your chemistry teacher or that you can learn from a Khan Academy video. There are people in the world in the past and today who'd do anything to be able to understand deeply what this is. That they consider it a privilege to be able to learn at this level. And then to think about where this could go because none of these fields are complete. We have very partial knowledge of all of these fields. Arguably, there's an infinite more that we could learn relative to what we know. But what's exciting is that we have such a strong start. We're starting to make sense of it. To really describe everything in our reality.