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TRIVIA 2

Part 1
Prepared By: Danver Mendoza

____ 1. In May 13, 2014, a coal mine explosion occurred in Soma, Manisa, Turkey caused by an
underground mine fire two kilometers below the surface. There are 787 workers present during the
disaster and 301 of them died. What is the cause of their death?
a. Starvation b. CO poisoning
c. Falling Debris d. H2S poisoning
____ 2. Hawks Nest Tunnel Disaster (1927-1932), is caused by a hydroelectric project in West Virginia
and is considered one of the worst industrial disasters in American History. Within the given years, 476
workers died from silicosis, a lung diseases caused by inhalation of crystalline silica dust. What is the
other name for silicosis?
a. Miner’s phthisis b. Grinder’s Asthma
c. Potter’s Rot d. All of the above
____ 3. A boiler explosion killed 23 workers in Gazipur , Bangladesh. The boiler triggered a fire which
spread to the surrounding areas and collapsed part of a four storey building. When did this occur?
a. September 10, 2013 b. September 10, 2016
c. September 10, 2015 d. September 10, 2014
____ 4. Hydroquinone is used to/in
a. Lighten skin b. Sugar industry
c. Catalyst in Petroleum Refining d. Peanut Butter Making
____ 5. In 2013, Francois Englert and Peter W. Higgs won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics for the
discovery of the Higgs boson or “The God Particle.” In achieving their discovery, they used a particle
accelerator called
a. Compact Muon Celenoid b. Cyclotron
c. CERN d. Large Hadron Collider
____ 6. Who invented the first particle accelerator, also known as cyclotron
a. Ernest Lawrence (1930s) b. Ernest Hemmingway (1940s)
c. Ernest Rutherford (1950s) d. Ernest Cavendish (1920s)
____ 7. What is the name of the tallest skyscraper in Thailand opened last August 2016, with a height
equivalent to 314 m?
a. Burj Kahlifa b. One World Trade Center
c. MahaNakhon d. Zifeng Tower
____8. North American X-15 is a hypersonic rocket-powered aircraft and is considered as the fastest
aircraft. What is its mach number?
a. 6.7 b. 6.8
c. 6.6 d. 6.5
____ 9.A solid mass product from the Chernobyl Disaster made from melted nuclear fuel with lots of
concrete, sand, and core sealing material that the fuel had melted through. What do you call this
material that is considered one the most dangerous things in the world for it still emits radiation?
a. Cyclop’s Product b. ChernobylX
c. Elephant’s Foot d. Roentgen’s Matter
____ 10. The material invented by Charles Goodyear in 1839 by making natural elastomer more durable
by the addition of sulfur or other curatives or accelerators.
a. Elastopaint b. Latex
c. Cellular Rubber d. Vulcanized Rubber
Part 2

____ 1. Father of Chemical Engineering


a. George Edward Davis b. Robert Langer
c. Nicolas Leblanc d. Warren Lewis

____ 2. Father of Modern Chemical Engineering


a. George Edward Davis b. Robert Langer
c. Nicolas Leblanc d. Warren Lewis

____ 3. Strongest material in the Universe


a. Carbyne b. Graphene
c. Wurtzite Boron Nitride d. Mineral Lonsdaleite

____ 4. Color of Fe (III) in a flame test


a. Fuchsia b. Silver
c. Lilac d. Gold

____ 5. The circumstance when warmer water freezes faster than colder water
a. Erasto Effect b. Batholomeo Effect
c. Mpemba Effect d. EBM Effect

____ 6. Amount of salt present in an average adult human body? (additional trivia: lack of salt in body is
called hyponatremia)
a. 100 grams b. 15 grams
c. 250 grams d. 50 grams

____ 7. Most abundant protein in the human body?


a. Keratin b. Collagen
c. Endrogen d. Albumin

____ 8. What trace metal is found in Vitamin B12?


a. Magnesium b. Cobalt
c. Potassium d. Zinc

____ 9. A cucumber is _____ water


a. 96% b. 86%
c. 97% d. 87%

____ 10. Herb wormwood is a licorice-anise flavored green liqueur with 68% alcohol content or 132 proof.
Herb wormwood’s another name is
a. Pufferfish b. Mary Jane
c. Absinthe d. Laxinth
Answer Key”
Part 1
1. B
2. D
3. B
4. A
5. D
6. A
7. C
8. A
9. C
10. D

Part 2
1. A
2. D
3. A
4. D
5. C
6. C
7. B
8. B
9. A
10. C
Trivia 1
Prepared by: Beatriz Torre

____ 1. What is the fifth most abundant gas in the atmosphere


a. Xenon b. Argon
c. Helium d. Neon

____ 2. Ultraviolet-B has a wavelength with a range of


a. 100-280 b.280-315
c. 315-400 d. 400-470

____ 3. Average ozone has a thickness of 300 du. Ozone layer is considered an ozone hole if it has a thickness less than
_____.
a. 120 du b. 210 du
c. 220 du d. 110 du

____ 4. Who discovered CFC’s in 1929?


a. Midgeley b. Molina
c. Cruzen d. Rowlands

____ 5. Halophile are “salt loving bacteria.” They can survive a pH up to _____.
a. 9.5 b. 10.5
c. 11.5 d. 12.5

____ 6. It is the steroids in plants


a. Cholesterol b. Phytosterol
c. Collagen d. Estrogen

____ 7. It is added to iron in pig iron production to lower the melting point
a. MgO b. Al2O3
c. CaO d. K2O

____ 8. Referred to as wood alcohol


a. Butanol b. Ethanol
c. Methanol d. Isobutanol

____ 9. Bacquerel used _________ in his discovery of radioactive rays.


a. Potassium Uranyl Sulfate b. Magnesium Uranyl Phosphate
c. Potassium Uranyl Phosphate d. Magnesium Uranyl Sulfate

____ 10. Graphite is transformed into diamond at


a. 3000 C and 100 000 atm b. 4000 C and 200 000 atm
c. 3000 C and 200 000 atm d. 4000 C and 100 000 atm
TRIVIA 2
Prepared By: Danver Mendoza
Part 1

____ 1. In May 13, 2014, a coal mine explosion occurred in Soma, Manisa, Turkey caused by an underground mine fire
two kilometers below the surface. There are 787 workers present during the disaster and 301 of them died. What is the
cause of their death?
a. Starvation b. CO poisoning
c. Falling Debris d. H2S poisoning
____ 2. Hawks Nest Tunnel Disaster (1927-1932), is caused by a hydroelectric project in West Virginia and is considered
one of the worst industrial disasters in American History. Within the given years, 476 workers died from silicosis, a lung
diseases caused by inhalation of crystalline silica dust. What is the other name for silicosis?
a. Miner’s phthisis b. Grinder’s Asthma
c. Potter’s Rot d. All of the above
____ 3. A boiler explosion killed 23 workers in Gazipur , Bangladesh. The boiler triggered a fire which spread to the
surrounding areas and collapsed part of a four storey building. When did this occur?
a. September 10, 2013 b. September 10, 2016
c. September 10, 2015 d. September 10, 2014
____ 4. Hydroquinone is used to/in
a. Lighten skin b. Sugar industry
c. Catalyst in Petroleum Refining d. Peanut Butter Making
____ 5. In 2013, Francois Englert and Peter W. Higgs won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the Higgs
boson or “The God Particle.” In achieving their discovery, they used a particle accelerator called
a. Compact Muon Celenoid b. Cyclotron
c. CERN d. Large Hadron Collider
____ 6. Who invented the first particle accelerator, also known as cyclotron
a. Ernest Lawrence (1930s) b. Ernest Hemmingway (1940s)
c. Ernest Rutherford (1950s) d. Ernest Cavendish (1920s)
____ 7. What is the name of the tallest skyscraper in Thailand opened last August 2016, with a height equivalent to 314
m?
a. Burj Kahlifa b. One World Trade Center
c. MahaNakhon d. Zifeng Tower
____8. North American X-15 is a hypersonic rocket-powered aircraft and is considered as the fastest aircraft. What is its
mach number?
a. 6.7 b. 6.8
c. 6.6 d. 6.5
____ 9.A solid mass product from the Chernobyl Disaster made from melted nuclear fuel with lots of concrete, sand, and
core sealing material that the fuel had melted through. What do you call this material that is considered one the most
dangerous things in the world for it still emits radiation?
a. Cyclop’s Product b. ChernobylX
c. Elephant’s Foot d. Roentgen’s Matter
____ 10. The material invented by Charles Goodyear in 1839 by making natural elastomer more durable by the addition
of sulfur or other curatives or accelerators.
a. Elastopaint b. Latex
c. Cellular Rubber d. Vulcanized Rubber
Part 2

____ 1. Father of Chemical Engineering


b. George Edward Davis b. Robert Langer
c. Nicolas Leblanc d. Warren Lewis

____ 2. Father of Modern Chemical Engineering


b. George Edward Davis b. Robert Langer
c. Nicolas Leblanc d. Warren Lewis

____ 3. Strongest material in the Universe


b. Carbyne b. Graphene
c. Wurtzite Boron Nitride d. Mineral Lonsdaleite

____ 4. Color of Fe (III) in a flame test


b. Fuchsia b. Silver
c. Lilac d. Gold

____ 5. The circumstance when warmer water freezes faster than colder water
b. Erasto Effect b. Batholomeo Effect
c. Mpemba Effect d. EBM Effect

____ 6. Amount of salt present in an average adult human body? (additional trivia: lack of salt in body is called
hyponatremia)
b. 100 grams b. 15 grams
c. 250 grams d. 50 grams

____ 7. Most abundant protein in the human body?


b. Keratin b. Collagen
c. Endrogen d. Albumin

____ 8. What trace metal is found in Vitamin B12?


b. Magnesium b. Cobalt
c. Potassium d. Zinc

____ 9. A cucumber is _____ water


b. 96% b. 86%
c. 97% d. 87%

____ 10. Herb wormwood is a licorice-anise flavored green liqueur with 68% alcohol content or 132 proof. Herb
wormwood’s another name is
b. Pufferfish b. Mary Jane
c. Absinthe d. Laxinth
TRIVIA 3 - Organic Chemistry Trivia
Prepared by: Jelly Langaman
Be aware of your body

_____1. It occurs when the melanocyte cells in the skin grow in cluster instead of being spread throughout the body.

a. Skin Tags C. Moles

b. Lentigo D. Freckles

______2. Roughly 96% of the human body is made up of just four elements- which of these in not one of them?

a. Fe c. O 2

b. C d. N 2

______3. If your body mass is 70 kilograms, approximately how many golds you possess inside your body?

a. 1.5 mg c. 0.5 mg

b. 1 mg d. 0.2 mg

______4. What is the average diameter of your hair strand?

a. 2.5 nm c. 100 nm

b. 10 nm d. 100,000 nm

______5. The deadliest element. It pretends to be Potassium, so it can slink into the cells of our bodies then it breaks down the amino acids bonds
within our proteins and we depart from this life.

a. Hg c. Fr

b. Th d. Cf

Recalling the Basics

______6. This element smells like garlic when heated

a. As c. Br

b. Te d. S

_______7. Component of chocolate and cocoa products that can kill your dogs due to the slow metabolism of this compound.

a. Xantheose c. Caffeine

b. Polyphenol d. Either b or c

_______8. What is the chemical symbol for Deuterium?

a. Dm c. Dt

b. Du d. D

______9. How many constitutional isomers does Hexane has?

a. 4 c. 7

b. 5 d. None of the choices

______10. Acid obtained by distillation of the bodies of ants.

a. C 6 H 8 O 7 c. C 2 H 4 O 2

b. CH 2 O 3 d. CH 2 O 2

______11. What is the strongest base?


a. H 2 O c. CH 3 CH 3

b. HSbF 6 d. OH-

______12. What chemical is used to test for sugars in food?

a. Iodine c. Benedict’s Solution

b. Sudan III D. Biuret Solution

Around us

______13. Fuel with the lowest octane number of zero

a. Iso-octane c. n-heptane

b. Avgas d. methane

______14. This chemical is responsible for the tears you cry when chopping onions

a. Allylpropyl c. Sallylcystein

b. Trisulfide d. Propanethial S-oxide

______15. This popular comfort food has an active ingredient called phenylethylamine

a. Toffee c. Oatmeal

b. Chocolate d. Caramel

______16. The first fullerenes to be discovered were found inside of the laboratory, but they exist in trace amounts in nature as well. Where might
you find buckyballs in your house?

a. Fireplace c. Sink

b. Toilet d. Refrigerator

______17. How many grams of gold can be found in each liter of seawater?

a. 13 thousandth c. 13 billionth

b. 13 millionth d. 13 trillionth

______18. It is the only metal that is naturally antibacterial

a. Mg c. Cu

b. Al d. Mn

_____19. It is known as the “miracle material” that is only one atomic layer thick and is a better conductor of electricity and heat than any material.

a. Graphene c. Single-walled nanotube

b. Fullerene d. Multi-walled nanotube

20. China’s 10.3-meter-long space station that aimlessly drifts out of control in space and is likely to crash on Earth by 2017.
a. Tiangong-1 c. Wu Ping

b. Tiangong-2 d. “Heavenly Mansion”

TRIVIA 4

Prepared by: Crystal Agustin

_____1. America is planning for a manned Mars mission flight in what year?

a. 2020 c. 2018

b. 2025 d. 2022

_____2. This new law in the Philippines is requiring speed limiters to be installed in PUVs and vehicles.

a. RA 10913 c. RA 10910

b. RA 10916 d. RA 10909

_____3. The newly discovered planet, Proxima b is found specifically in __________.

a. Milky Way c. Andromeda

b. Proxima Centauri d. either a or b

______4. Proxima b is neither so hot that water evaporates, nor so cold that it freezes solid. Thus, they
described the planet as "________" sweet spot.

a. Red Ribbon c. Starbucks

b.Goldilocks d. Amore

______5. On September 1, 2016, an unmanned rocket was exploded during a test at Cape Canaveral in
Florida. This rocket is ____________.

a. Space IX Falcon 10 c. Space X Falcon 9

b. Space IX Falcon 9 d. Space X Falcon 10

______6. Ozone Day or __________ is about promoting activities in accordance with the objectives of
the Montreal Protocol and its amendments.

a. Ozone Layer Day c. International Day for the Preservation of Ozone Layer

b. World's Preservation of Ozone Layer d. Ozone Depletion day

______7. This small, intense storms over the ocean could help detect earthquakes.

a. tremor c. wind storm

b. ocean storm d. weather bomb


______8. Teeth of this animal specie provide new materials for the wide range of application from
surgery to packaging.

a. sea lion c. squid

b. shark d. whale

______9. Percentage of phosphorus in human body.

a. 1%w/w c. 1.5%w/w

B. 0.5%w/w d. 2%w/w

______10. pH of human blood.

a. 7.0 c. 7.4

b. 6.5 d. 6.9

______11. This plant specie discovered in the Philippines is known as the metal-eating plant.

a. sundew c. Rinorea Niccolifera

b. Venus flytrap d. Plant M

______12. Annular solar eclipse happens every ______.

a. 18 months c. 12 months

b. 16 months d. 10 months

______13. It is the closest star to Earth which is about 93 million miles away.

a. Centauri A c. Proxima Centauri

b. Centauri B d. sun

______14. The temperature of the sun's core is ________.

a. 15 thousand deg C c. 15 billion deg C

b. 15 million deg C d. 15 trillion deg C

______15. Chemical name of Vitamin B12.

a. folic acid c. cyanocobalamin

b. niacin d. riboflavin

______16. Who discovered waterproof rubber?

a. Charles Goodyear c. Charles Macintosh

b. WIlliam Hurst d. Humphrey Davy


______17. Maximum desirable limit Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) of lead in drinking water.

a. 0.05 mg/L c. 0.1 mg/L

b. 0.09 mg/L d. 1.0 mg/L

______18. Acid used mostly for removal of milk stone.

a. phosphoric acid c. gluconic acid

b. nitric acid d. tartaric acid

______19. Calgon is used for the removal of

a. sodium carbonate c. potassium carbonate

b. permanent hardness of water d. calcium

______20. A solar cell converts the sunlight directly into _______ energy.

a. thermal c. mechanical

b. electrical d. chemical
Answer Key:
TRIVIA 1 TRIVIA 3
Prepared by: Beatriz Torre Prepared by: Jerielyn
1. D Langaman
2. B 1. C
3. C 2. A
4. A 3. D
5. A 4. C
6. B 5. B
7. C 6. B
8. C 7. A
9. A 8. D
10. A 9. B
10. D
TRIVIA 2 11. C
Prepared By: Danver 12. C
Mendoza 13. A
Part 1 14. D
1. B 15. B
2. D 16. A
3. B 17. C
4. A 18. C
19. A
5. D
20. A
6. A
7. C TRIVIA 4
8. A
Prepared by: Crystal Agustin
9. C
10. D 1. A
2. B
Part 2 3. B
1. A 4. B
5. C
2. D
6. C
3. A 7. D
4. D 8. C
5. C 9. A
6. C 10. C
7. B 11. C
8. B 12. A
13. D
9. A
14. B
10. C 15. C
16. C
17. A
18. B
19. B
20. B
____ 1. Who discovered Phenolphtalein
a. John Barber b. Eugen Baumann
c. Adolf von Baeyer d. Robert Bunsen

____ 2. All of these are considered as “Noble Metal” except


a. Rhodium b. Iridium
c. Palladium d. Molybdenum

____ 3. Due to thermal expansion, the Eiffel tower expands in summer by how much?
a. 15 cm b. 20 cm
c. 14 cm d. 19 cm

____ 4. The lighter was invented before the match. The Dobereiner’s lamp was invented by Dobereiner in
1823.
a. 1st Statement: T – 2nd Statement: F b. 1st Statement: F – 2nd Statement: T
c. 1st Statement: T – 2nd Statement: T d. 1st Statement: F – 2nd Statement: F

____ 5. Average weight of an ice berg


a. 1 million tons b. 5 million tons
c. 8 million tons d. 10 million tons

____ 6. Sir William Lawrence Brag was the youngest person to receive the Nobel Prize in Physics for his
discovery of X-ray crystallography. How old was he when he received his Nobel Prize?
a. 20 b. 24
c. 25 d. 19

____ 7. The only rock that floats in water


a. Latite b. Pumice
c. Comendite d. Pantellerite

____ 8. The coldest known place in the universe (-458 deg. F)


a. Centaurus b. Westerlund 1-26
c. Boomerang Nebula d. Proxima Centauri

____ 9. The average time is takes for a blood to circulate around the human body
a. 20 seconds b. 75 seconds
c. 40 seconds d. 30 seconds

____ 10. A cheetah can accelerate from __ to __ km/h in 3 seonds


a. 80 to 65 b. 0 to 80
c. 0 to 75 d. 0 to 70

____ 11. A human brain is __% water


a. 76 b. 80
c. 78 d. 75

_____12. Phosphorus Fertilizers are derived from


a. 7Flourite b. Apatite
c. Bauxite d. Flourapatite

_____ 13. It is a technique in which laser light is directed at a beam of atoms, hitting them head on amd
dramatically slowing them down.
a. Laser Cooling b. Laser Warming
c. Laser reforming d. Laser Bonding
_____ 14. The pressure needed to produce snow from a snowmaking machine. (Mixture of Compressed
air and water vapor)
a. 25 atm b. 10 atm
c. 15 atm d. 20 atm

______15. First known LASER


a. Gem Laser b. Flash Laser
c. Ruby Laser d. Simple Laser

______16. An egg is ___% Calcium


a. 35 b. 45
c. 44 d. 27

______17. _______ acts as a kind of cement to keep ocean floor sediments together
a. Methane Hydrate b. Carbonate Hydrate
c. Carbon Hydrate d. Metal hydrate

______18. The time it takes for the light from sun to reach the earth
a. 8 min 10 second b. 8 min 30 second
c. 8 min 20 second d. 8 min 40 second

______19. The country (and its territories) with the most time zones (12 time zones)
a. France b. Germany
c. England d. Libya

______20. 1 eon is equivalent to


a. 1 trillion years b. 1 million years
c. 1 thousand d. 1 billion years

Answers:
1. C
2. D
3. A
4. C
5. D
6. C
7. B
8. C
9. A
10. D
11. D
12. D
13. A
14. D
15. C
16. B
17. A
18. C
19. A
20. D
What is the temperature on the Moon?
The temperature on the Moon varies from -387 Fahrenheit (-233 Celsius), at night, to 253
Fahrenheit (123 Celsius) during the day. Because the Moon has no atmosphere to block some of
the Sun's rays or to help trap heat at night, its temperature varies greatly between day and night.

Sun diameter of about 1,392,684 km (865,374 mi) around 109 times that of Earth, and its mass
(1.989×1030 kilograms, approximately 330,000 times the mass of Earth) accounts for about 99.86% of
the total mass of the Solar System. Chemically, about three quarters of the Sun's mass consists of
hydrogen, while the rest is mostly helium. The remainder (1.69%, which nonetheless equals 5,600 times
the mass of Earth) consists of heavier elements, including oxygen, carbon, neon and iron, among others.

At the core of the sun, gravitational attraction produces immense pressure and temperature,
which can reach more than 27 million degrees F (15 million degrees C). Hydrogen atoms get
compressed and fuse together, creating helium. This process is called nuclear fusion.

Nuclear fusion produces huge amounts of energy. The energy radiates outward to the sun's
surface, atmosphere and beyond. From the core, energy moves to the radiative zone, where it
bounces around for up to 1 million years before moving up to the convective zone, the upper
layer of the sun's interior. The temperature here drops below 3.5 million degrees F (2 million
degrees C). Large bubbles of hot plasma form a soup of ionized atoms and move upwards to the
photosphere.

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