๐
Welcome to Secondary Science — Exploration (เค
เคจ्เคตेเคทเคฃ)
In your middle school (Classes 6–8), science invited you
to be curious, observe the world, ask questions, and find out how
things work. Now, as you step into Class 9, the journey gets
deeper!
๐ก
๐ฌ The Two Symbols of This
Textbook
๐
๐
๐งฉ
Scientific Models — Simplifying the Complex (เคฎॉเคกเคฒ)
The natural world is incredibly complex. To study it,
scientists create models — simplified ways of looking at real
systems that focus only on what matters most for a given question.
๐
๐ญ How Models Are Used in
Different Sciences
|
Branch of Science |
Example of a Model |
What is Simplified? |
|
⚛️ Physics |
Moving car shown as a single point |
Shape, colour, size ignored |
|
๐งช Chemistry |
Atoms/molecules
as spheres and bonds |
Actual
electron clouds ignored |
|
๐ฟ Biology |
Cell diagrams showing key parts |
Thousands of proteins inside ignored |
|
๐ Earth Science |
Earth
as a smooth, layered sphere |
Mountains,
valleys, oceans smoothed out |
๐ Example 1.1 — Cricket
Shot Model (NCERT Example)
๐
Question: Will the cricket ball hit a six?What to
INCLUDE:Mass of the ball, speed of the hit, direction of the shot.
What to IGNORE:Brand of bat, colour of ball, amount
of grass on field, stitching of seam (in a simple model).
As we build more complex models, we can add air resistance,
spin, etc. for greater accuracy.
๐ฒ Activity 1.1 — Bicycle
Ride Model
Suppose you ride a bicycle from school to home. You want to
model the time taken.
- Keep: Distance
from school to home, average speed of cycling, traffic signals
- Ignore: Colour
of bicycle, what you’re wearing, music you’re listening to
- Why
ignoring helps: Fewer details = simpler calculations = quicker
useful answers!
๐ฎ๐ณ
✅
๐
Language and Mathematics in Science (เคญाเคทा เคเคฐ เคเคฃिเคค)
Science uses language in a very careful and precise
way. Many everyday words have very specific meanings in science. This is
important because scientific ideas must be shared clearly and without
confusion!
๐ Scientific Words vs
Everyday Words
|
Word |
Everyday
Meaning |
Scientific
Meaning |
|
Force (เคฌเคฒ) |
Strength, power |
A push or pull that changes or tends to change the state
of motion of an object |
|
Work
(เคाเคฐ्เคฏ) |
Any
activity or job |
Work is
done only when a force causes displacement in the direction of force |
|
Cell (เคोเคถिเคा) |
A small room or battery |
The basic structural and functional unit of all living
organisms |
|
Reaction
(เค
เคญिเค्เคฐिเคฏा) |
A
response |
A
chemical change where reactants transform into products |
๐ Symbols and SI Units —
The Language of Measurement
Scientists across the world use a shared language of
symbols and units to describe measurements. This avoids confusion and
errors.
๐ข Why Mathematics in
Science?
Mathematics is the language of relationships in
science. An equation is not just a calculation tool — it is a compact statement
about how certain things are related.
๐ฏ
✈️
⚖️ Why One Standard Unit (เคिเคฒोเค्เคฐाเคฎ)?
When we buy rice or vegetables, we expect a kilogram
to mean the same everywhere — whether in Delhi, Mumbai, or Tokyo!
Standard units allow:
- Scientific
results to be compared across the world
- Fairness
in daily life and trade
- Avoiding
dangerous conversion errors (like the airplane story!)
๐
⚖️
Laws, Theories, and Principles (เคจिเคฏเคฎ, เคธिเคฆ्เคงाเคจ्เคค, เคธिเคฆ्เคงाँเคค)
As observations are repeated and ideas are tested through
experiments, science organises knowledge using three important terms: Laws,
Theories, and Principles. Each means something specific!
|
Term |
What it means |
Example |
|
Law (เคจिเคฏเคฎ) |
Describes a regular pattern observed in nature, often
expressed as words or mathematical relationships |
Newton’s Laws of Motion — explains the jerk felt when a
bus stops suddenly |
|
Theory
(เคธिเคฆ्เคงाเคจ्เคค) |
Explains why those
patterns occur, based on evidence gathered and tested over time |
Atomic
Theory — explains how molecules are formed from atoms |
|
Principle (เคธिเคฆ्เคงाँเคค) |
A broad idea that helps us understand or make decisions in
a given situation |
Conservation of Energy — used when climbing stairs or
riding a bicycle |
⚠️
๐ Science is Always Open
to Revision
Scientific laws and theories are always open to
improvement and often change as new evidence becomes available. This
is NOT a weakness — it is what makes science so reliable and
trustworthy!
๐ง
๐
๐ฎ
Predictions in Science — Reasoning Beyond Guesswork
One of the most powerful things about science is its ability
to make predictions. When laws, theories, and models are
well-established, they allow us to anticipate what will happen under new
conditions — even before performing an experiment!
๐
๐ Examples of Scientific
Predictions
- Physics: Using
laws of motion to predict how far a kicked football will travel
- Chemistry: Using
knowledge of reactions to estimate how much CO₂ will be produced in a
reaction
- Biology: Using
biological principles to predict how one’s breathing changes while running
๐ง️ Example 1.2 — Making a
Prediction Testable (NCERT Example)
☁️
Varsha says: “It will rain because clouds look dark.”This
is not a scientific prediction yet! To make it testable, we need measurable
evidence. Good questions to ask:
- What
was the humidity level today? Was it above 80% before previous rains?
- What
is the wind speed and direction today?
- Is
the temperature dropping like it did before recent rains?
These questions ask formeasurable data and past patterns,
going beyond just “clouds look dark.”
๐ When Predictions Fail —
A Strength, Not a Weakness!
When predictions do NOT match observations, scientists do
not give up. They:
- Re-examine
their assumptions — was something ignored that shouldn’t
have been?
- Check
their model — does it represent the real system well?
- Verify
their measurements — were the data accurate?
- Revise
the theory with new evidence and make better predictions
๐ฏ
๐
๐ค️
๐งฎ
Estimation — The Art of Smart Approximation (เค
เคจुเคฎाเคจ)
Scientists often don’t need exact answers. Learning to make
a rough but reasonable estimate is a very important scientific
skill. It helps you build intuition, detect errors, and develop confidence in
your thinking!
๐
๐ซ Example 1.3 — How Much
Air Do You Breathe Per Day? (NCERT)
Step 1: Estimate breaths per minute
At rest: about 12–15 breaths per minute
Step 2: Minutes in a day
60 × 24 = 1440 minutes in a day
Step 3: Total breaths per day
15 × 1440 ≈ 20,000 breaths per day
Step 4: Volume of one breath
About 4–5 breaths to fill a party balloon (≈ 2 litres)
So one breath ≈ 0.5 litre
Step 5: Total air breathed per day
20,000 × 0.5 = ≈ 10,000 litres per day!
✅
✅ When is Approximation Good
Enough?
⚠️
๐
Science Has No Walls — Interdisciplinary Thinking
In Classes 9 and 10, science chapters focus on Physics,
Chemistry, and Biology separately. But the natural world has no such
boundaries! These divisions are made by humans only to help organise
knowledge.
๐ง
๐ท Example — How Does a
Mask Work? (COVID-19)
Understanding how a mask stops viruses requires knowledge
from:
๐ฑ Pause and Ponder —
Mobile Phone or Pressure Cooker
๐ฒ
Activity: Think about a Pressure Cooker (เคช्เคฐेเคถเคฐ เคुเคเคฐ)
- Physics:Pressure
and temperature inside the cooker
- Chemistry:How
heat causes chemical changes in food
- Biology:How
cooking destroys harmful bacteria in food
- Mathematics:Time
and temperature calculations for cooking
See how all branches connect in one everyday object!
๐ง Science as a Human
Activity
Science is not just a collection of facts, equations, or
experiments. It is a human activity shaped by curiosity, creativity,
collaboration, and careful questioning. It grows as people ask questions,
test ideas, share results, and learn from mistakes.
๐
๐งญ
⚡
Quick Revision Summary — Chapter 1
๐ ExplorationSecondary
science emphasises deep exploration — not just what we know, but how we know
it.
๐งฉ ModelsSimplified
representations of real systems — assumptions are made deliberately to keep
things manageable.
๐ Language & MathScience
uses precise language and symbols; mathematics expresses relationships, not
just calculations.
⚖️ Laws vs TheoriesLaw =
describes patterns. Theory = explains why. Principle = broad guiding idea.
Theory ≠ guess!
๐ฎ PredictionsScientific
predictions are reasoned expectations based on evidence, not guesses. Failed
predictions guide improvement.
⚠️ SI UnitsAlways use
standard SI units to avoid dangerous errors (like the airplane fuel disaster!).
๐งฎ EstimationApproximate
reasoning is a key science skill — understand situation, identify quantities,
make a reasonable estimate.
๐ InterdisciplinaryReal-world
problems require ideas from multiple branches of science — science has no walls
in nature!
๐งญ Magnifying GlassSymbol
of careful observation and noticing patterns that might be missed.
๐ CompassSymbol of
direction — choosing right models, asking right questions, knowing limits of
ideas.
๐ฎ๐ณ Meghnad SahaIndian
physicist who simplified stars as hot gas to explain the connection between
star colour and temperature.
๐ Myth-bustingSolar
eclipse doesn’t change food — it’s just a play of shadows! Scientific thinking
fights misinformation.
๐
Important Exam Questions with Answers
Q1. What is a scientific model? Why do scientists use
models to study the natural world? (3 Marks)
Ans: A scientific model is a
simplified representation of a real system that focuses on the most important
features needed to answer a specific question, while deliberately ignoring less
important details.
Scientists use models because the natural world is extremely
complex and studying it in full detail is often impossible. Models help
scientists focus on what is most important, make calculations manageable, and
still find useful answers. For example, in physics, a moving car is modelled as
a single point to study its motion without worrying about its shape or colour.
Key point: Assumptions in a model are NOT mistakes — they
are done on purpose to keep things simple enough while still allowing us to
find answers.
Q2. Distinguish between a scientific Law and a scientific
Theory. Give one example of each. (3 Marks)
Important: In science, a theory is NOT a guess or an
untested idea. It is a well-tested, evidence-based explanation that may be
revised as new evidence comes in.
Q3. Why are standard (SI) units important in science?
Give an example to support your answer. (2 Marks)
Ans: Standard SI units are important because
they allow scientists across the world to compare results, share findings, and
avoid errors in calculations.
Example (Airplane Fuel Incident): In a real
incident, a passenger aircraft ran out of fuel mid-flight because the ground
crew used density in pounds per litre instead of kilograms per litre. The
aircraft was about 15,000 litres short of fuel! This shows how a simple unit
error can lead to a dangerous situation. Using SI units everywhere prevents
such costly and dangerous mistakes.
Q4. What is the role of estimation in science? Give an
example showing how estimation is done. (3 Marks)
Ans: Estimation is the process of making a
reasonable approximate answer using logical thinking and known values, without
necessarily doing exact calculations. It is an important scientific skill
because it helps build intuition, detect errors, and check whether an answer is
reasonable or impossible.
Science values careful reasoning more than exact
calculations!
Q5. What is the contribution of Indian scientist Meghnad
Saha to science? How does it demonstrate the use of simplification in
scientific models? (3 Marks)
Ans: Meghnad Saha was an Indian physicist who
studied light from stars. Instead of trying to model every atom, every
reaction, and every movement inside a star, he used a simplified model. He
treated the matter in a star as a hot gas, ignored many complex
processes, and focused only on three things: temperature, pressure, and how
atoms form ions.
This brilliant simplification allowed him to explain how
the colour of a star is deeply connected to its temperature —
a major contribution to astrophysics. His work demonstrates that making
deliberate assumptions and ignoring less important details (building a
simplified model) can lead to powerful scientific discoveries. His image was
even featured on an Indian postage stamp in his honour.