Answers To The Student Book
Answers To The Student Book
Answers To The Student Book
and
so 𝜃𝜃 = 54º
Resultant force is 8.6 N acting at 54º to the 5.0 N force
4 Let Fx = 6.0 and Fy = 8.0 then:
and
so 𝜃𝜃 = 53º
Resultant velocity is 10 m/s acting at 53º to the horizontal
[Going further]
5 a 2.31 mm [2]
b 14.97 mm [2]
[Total: 4]
6 a C [1]
b 13 N at 67º to 5 N force [7]
[Total: 8]
1.2 Motion
Test yourself questions
1 a Average speed = distance moved / time taken = 400 m / 20 s = 20 m/s
b Distance moved / time taken = 1500 m / (4 × 60) s = 6.25 m/s
2 a Average speed = (10 m/s + 20 m/s) / 2 = 15 m/s
b Distance = v t = 15 m/s × 60 s = 900 m
*3 a Acceleration = change of speed / time taken = 6 m/s / 3 s = 2 m/s2
b Acceleration = –6 m/s / 2 s = –3 m/s2
*4 Time taken = change of speed / acceleration = 500 km/h / 10 km/h/s = 50 s
5 a Straight-line graph through the origin
b Positive, constant
*c Acceleration = slope of graph = 16 m/s / 4 s = 4 m/s2
d Area of triangle = base × height / 2 = 4 s × 16 m/s / 2 = 32 m
e 32 m
6 a Straight line through the origin
b Speed = gradient of graph = constant
c Speed = distance/time = 18 m / 6 s = 3 m/s
7 Acceleration = change of speed / time taken, so
Time = change of speed / acceleration = (30 – 0) m/s / 10 m/s2 = 3 s
Distance = average speed × time = 30 m/s / 2 × 3 s = 45 m
and
so 𝜃𝜃 = 23º
Resultant velocity is 13 m/s acting at 23º to the horizontal
d [3]
[Total: 7]
2
*5 a Acceleration = change in speed / time taken = (5 – 0) m/s / 4 s = 1.25 m/s [2]
b i Distance = average velocity × time = 5.0 m/s / 2 × 4 s = 10 m
(or area under slope = (base × height of triangle) / 2 =10 m) [2]
ii Distance = average velocity × time = 5.0 m/s × 9 s = 45 m
(= area under horizontal line between 4 s and 13 s) [2]
c Remaining distance = (100 – 45 – 10) m = 45 m [1]
Time taken for remaining distance = distance / velocity = 45 m / 5 m/s = 9 s [1]
Total time for 100 m = (13 + 9) s = 22 s [1]
Graph needs to be extended horizontally to 22 s [1]
[Total: 10]
*6 a i Accelerating: OA, BC [1]
ii Decelerating: DE [1]
iii Constant speed: AB, CD [1]
b OA: a = change in speed / time = +80 km/h2
AB: v = 80 km/h
BC: a = (100 – 80) km/h / 0.5 h = +40 km/h2
CD: v = 100 km/h
DE: a = (0 – 100) km/h / 0.5 h = –200 km/h2 [3]
c Distance = average speed × time
OA: distance = 80 km/h / 2 × 1 h = 40 km
AB: distance = 80 km/h × 2 h = 160 km
BC: distance = (80 + 100) km/h / 2 × 0.5 h = 90 km/h × 0.5 h = 45 km
CD: distance = 100 km/h ×1 h = 100 km
DE: distance = 100 km/h / 2 × 0.5 h = 25 km [3]
d (40 + 160 + 45 + 100 + 25) km = 370 km [1]
e Average speed = distance / time = 370 km / 5 h = 74 km/h [1]
f Zero and 5 hours [1]
[Total: 12]
1.4 Density
Test yourself questions
1 a i ρ = m/V = 100 g / 10 cm3 = 10 g/cm3 ii ρ = m/V = 9 kg / 3 m3 = 3 kg/m3
b ii V = m/ρ = 38 g / 19 g/cm3 = 2.0 cm3
iii V = m/ρ = 95 g / 19 g/cm3 = 5.0 cm3
2 a Volume of bar = 4 cm × 3 cm × 1 cm = 12 cm3
ρ = m/V = 96 g /12 cm3 = 8.0 g/cm3
b ρ = m/V = 96 × 10–3 kg / 12 × 10–6 m3 = 8.0 × 103 kg/m3
3 a V = (60 – 50) cm3 = 10 cm3 b ρ = m/V = 60 g / 10 cm3 = 6 g/cm3
*4 Liquid A
1.5 Forces
Test yourself questions
*1 OE
2 May cause an object to move / change speed / change direction; change the shape/size of an
object
13 a Moment = 5 N × 10 cm = 50 N cm b Moment = 5 N × 15 cm = 75 N cm
c Moment = 5 N × 30 cm = 150 N cm
14 a Tie a piece of string onto a weight
b used to find a vertical line; the string indicates the vertical if the plumb line is allowed to
hang freely.
15 Vertically below the point of suspension
0 0 20.0 0
[4]
[Total:10]
*2 a k = F/x1 = 4 N / (22 – 10) cm = 0.33 N/cm; [3]
b i x2 = F/k = 6 N / (4/12 N/cm) = 18 cm; [2]
ii Total length of spring = original length + extension
= 10 cm + 18 cm = 28 cm [1]
[Total: 6]
3 a i 12 N 5 N or 5 N 12N [2]
ii Resultant force = 12 N – 5 N = 7 N; 7 N or 7N [2]
*b 𝐹𝐹 = �𝐹𝐹𝑋𝑋2 + 𝐹𝐹𝑌𝑌2 = √52 + 122 = √25 + 144 = √169 = 13 N
and so 𝜃𝜃 = 67º
d Backward frictional forces (due to air resistance and friction between road and
tyres) are equal to the forward force exerted on the bicycle [2]
[Total: 8]
*5 a Rearranging F = ma gives a = F/m. If F is large and m is small (due to the
use of lightweight material) the acceleration will be large, as is required for
a racing car [3]
b a = F/m; if the car has a small engine, F is small but m is also small. Low F
reduces a, but a low m will increase a. If m is low enough, the acceleration
can still be large. [3]
[Total: 6]
3
6 a Weight = mg = 500 kg × 9.8 N/kg = 4.9 × 10 N [1]
b i Resultant force = 25 000 N – 4900 N = 20 100 N; [2]
2
*ii From F = ma, initial acceleration a = F/m = 20 100 N / 500 kg = 40 m/s [3]
[Total: 6]
*7 a Friction between tyres and road [2]
b i larger ii smaller iii larger [3]
c Slicks allow greater speed in dry conditions but in wet conditions treads
provide frictional force to prevent skidding [2]
[Total: 7]
*8 a Circumference = 2 π r [1]
b Speed, v = distance / time so T = 2 π r/v [2]
c T = 2 π r/v = 2 × π × 6400 × 103 m / 8000 m/s = 5000 s (83 min) [4]
[Total: 7]
9 a 0 [2]
b between 0 and 5 N m [2]
c 25 × 0.2 = 5 N m [2]
[Total: 6]
10 Taking moments about pivot:
a clockwise moment = 10 N × (50 – 40) cm = 10 N × 10 cm = 100 N cm [3]
b anticlockwise moment = 3 N × (40 –10) cm = 3 N × 30 cm = 90 N cm [3]
c clockwise moment is greater than anticlockwise moment so beam tips to right [2]
[Total: 8]
11 a Suspend lamina so it can swing freely from a nail clamped in a stand. When
the lamina comes to rest, locate and draw the vertical line from the point of
suspension with a plumb line; repeat process using a different suspension point.
Centre of gravity located where the two lines cross. [5]
b i Stability increases because centre of gravity is lowered [2]
ii Stability increases because the centre of gravity is lowered and the area of
the base is increased [2]
[Total: 9]
[4]
ii OL [2]
*iii L [1]
*b For example: gradient = 3 N / 6 mm = 0.5 N/mm [2]
*c 0.5 N/mm [1]
[Total: 10]
14 a i [1]
ii [2]
iii [2]
iv [2]
Ruler
Mass/g Force/N d/cm F × d/N cm
reading/cm
50 0.49 5 20 9.8 A
50 0.49 10 15 7.4 B
50 0.49 15 10 4.9 C
50 0.49 20 5 2.5 D
1.6 Momentum
Test yourself questions
1 Momentum p = mv
a p = 10 kg × 5 m/s = 50 kg m/s
b p = 10 kg × 20 × 10–2 m/s = 2 kg m/s
c p = 10 kg × 36 × 103 m/s / (60 × 60) = 100 kg m/s
2 Momentum p = mv
Total momentum before collision is (1 kg × 2 m/s) + (1 kg × 0 m/s) = 2 kg m/s
Total momentum after collision is (1 kg × 0 m/s) + (1 kg × v) = 1 kg × v
If momentum is conserved: (1 kg × v) = 2 kg m/s, so v = 2 m/s
3 Momentum p = mv
Total momentum before boy jumps on trolley is (50 kg × 5 m/s) + (20 kg × 1.5 m/s)
= (250 + 30) kg m/s = 280 kg m/s
Total momentum after collision is (50 + 20) kg × v = 70 kg × v
If momentum is conserved: 70 kg × v = 280 kg m/s, so v = 280/70 = 4 m/s
4 Forward momentum of girl = mv = 50 kg × 3 m/s = 150 kg m/s
Backward momentum of boat = mv = 300 kg × v m/s
If momentum is conserved: 300 kg × v = 150 kg m/s, so v = 150/300 = 0.5 m/s
5 a Impulse = F Δt = 5 N × 0.02 s = 0.1 N s b Δp = F Δt = 0.1 N s
d Apply force for a longer time; increase the size of the force [2]
[Total: 8]
*3 a Rearranging Ek = mv2/2, gives v = √(2 × Ek/m) = √( 2 × 100 J / 0.5 kg) = 20 m/s [3]
b Ek = ∆Ep = 100 J [1]
2
c ∆Ep = mgΔh, so Δh = ∆Ep/mg = 100 J / (0.5 kg × 9.8 m/s ) = 20 m [3]
[Total: 7]
4 a Work done = F d = 100 N × 1.5 m = 150 J [2]
b 150 J [1]
c Power = work done / time taken = 4 × 150 J / 60 s = 10 W [3]
[Total: 6]
5 a 2% [1]
b Hydroelectric [1]
c Cannot be used up [1]
d Solar energy, wind energy [2]
e All energy ends up as thermal energy which is difficult to use and there is only
a limited supply of non-renewable sources [2]
[Total: 7]
6 a i Reliable, readily available at all times, high energy density [2]
ii Polluting, non-renewable [2]
b i Renewable, non-polluting [2]
ii Only available when the sun shines, needs large areas of land [2]
[Total: 8]
*7 a Efficiency = (useful energy output / total energy input) × 100%
= (300 MJ / 1000 MJ) × 100 % = 30% [3]
b Energy lost = 1000 MJ – 300 MJ = 700 MJ; thermal energy [2]
c Warms surroundings; lost from cooling towers [2]
[Total: 7]
1.8 Pressure
Test yourself questions
1 To raise the level of the water supply above that in the reservoir and provide water pressure to
the taps in the building
2 The pressure in a liquid increases with depth so the wall at the bottom of the dam must
withstand a greater pressure than it does at the top of the dam
*3 Δp = ρgΔh = 1000 kg/m3 × 9.8 m/s2 × 2 m = 2 × 104 Pa
*4 Δp = ρgΔh so Δh = Δp/ρg = 3.0 × 106 Pa / (1.02 × 103 kg/m3 × 9.8 m/s2) = 300 m
1 = 300 N
a 0.1 m 2
2 f= F × = 70 N × =7N
A 1.0 m 2
3 Incompressibility
[2]
[2]
[2]
[Total: 6]
3 a Gas [1]
b Particles strike the surfaces of the container in large numbers per second and
cause a pressure on the surfaces [2]
c The pressure increases [1]
When the temperature rises so does the average speed of the gas particles so
there are more collisions per second and the pressure on the surfaces increases [3]
[Total: 7]
4 a Random [1]
*b Due to collisions with the air molecules in the box [1]
A smoke particle is huge compared to an air molecule but if there are a larger
number of air molecules striking one side of the smoke particle at a given
instant, it will move in the direction in which there is a net force [2]
The imbalance and hence the direction of the net force changes rapidly in a
random manner [1]
[Total: 5]
5 a i True [1]
ii True [1]
iii False [1]
b i Absolute zero where particle motion ceases [2]
ii T = 273 + θ = 273 – 273 = 0 K. [1]
iii T = 273 + θ = 273 – 200= 73 K [1]
[Total: 7]
*6 a p1V1 = p2V2 ; so p2 = p1V1 /V2 = 1 × 105 Pa × 10 cm / 40 cm = 2.5 × 104 Pa [3]
b p1V1 = p3V3 ; so p3 = p1V1 /V2 = 1 × 105 Pa × 10 cm / 50 cm = 2.0 × 104 Pa [3]
[Total: 6]
*7 a p1V1 = p2V2; V2 = p1 × V1 / p2 = 1 × 105 Pa × 30 cm3 / 2 × 105 Pa = 15 cm3
(pressure doubled, volume halved) [3]
b V2 = p1 × V1 / p2 = 1 × 105 Pa × 30 cm3 / 5 × 105 Pa = 6 cm3 [3]
[Total: 6]
[3]
b [1]
24 1.0 1.00
12 2.0 0.50
8 3.0 0.33
6 4.0 0.25
4 6.0 0.17
[3]
*3 The particles in a liquid are further apart and more mobile than in a solid so expansion is easier
for liquids than for solids. In gases, particles are further apart than in liquids and can move
about freely at high speeds; this means they are able to expand much more easily than liquids
4 a Water expands when it is cooled from 4 ºC to 0 ºC; most liquids contract when the
temperature decreases
b Water pipes burst when the water in them freezes; water-based liquids may burst their
containers when they freeze; fish can survive below the frozen surface of a pond
5 Liquid in a glass bulb expands up a capillary tube when the bulb is heated; the temperature is
marked in degrees on a scale next to the capillary tube
6 C
*7 Heat needed = mass × temperature change × specific heat capacity
= mΔθc = 5 kg × 10 ºC × 300 J/(kg ºC) = 15 000 J
*1 Using
c = 25 000 J / (2 kg × (35 − 10) ºC)
= 25 000 J / 50 kg ºC
= 500 J/(kg ºC)
*2 Rearrange equation to give the heat equation:
ΔE = mcΔθ = 3 kg × 500 J/kg ºC × 10 ºC = 15 000 J
(Page 107)
*1 Assume heat supplied to water = heat gained by water
then 3000 J/s × t = mcΔθ
and t = mcΔθ / 3000 J/s = 1 kg × 4200 J/(kg ºC) × (100 – 30 )ºC / 3000 J/s = 98 s
*2 Heat lost by sphere = mcΔθ = 0.1 kg × c × (100 – 25) ºC = c × 7.5 kg ºC
Heat gained by water = 0.2 kg × 4200 J/kg ºC × (25 – 20) ºC = 4200 J
Equating heat lost to heat gained gives c = 4200 J / 7.5 kg ºC = 560 J/kg ºC
8 Faster
[Going further]
9 Students’ own responses based on their results
[Going further]
10 Collect the ice melted before the heater is switched on for the same time
[Going further]
11 Wrap insulation around the funnel
[4]
b 80 ºC; temperature constant [2]
c They move nearer together and become more ordered [2]
[Total: 8]
Section 3 Waves
3.1 General properties of waves
Test yourself questions (Page 130)
1 a λ = 5 cm /5 = 1 cm b f = 5 cycles / 5 seconds = 1 cycle/s = 1 Hz
c v = f λ = 1 Hz × 1 cm = 1 cm/s
2 a Speed of ripple depends on the depth of the water
b AB since ripples travel more slowly towards it so the water is shallower in this direction
3 35°
4 B
5 C
[Total: 6]
3.2 Light
Test yourself questions (Page 142)
1 Larger, less bright
2 a Four images
b Brighter but blurred
3 C
*5 A
6 B; the image is the same distance behind the plane mirror as the object is in front.
7 D
8
13 Parallel
14 Distance from lens:
a Beyond 2F
b 2F
c Between F and 2F
d Nearer than F
15 Towards
16 C
17 A; the ray is refracted towards the normal at the first surface and away from the normal at the
second surface.
*1 n
so sin r = sin i / n = sin 30° / 1.5 = 0.50 / 1.5 = 0.33
and r = 20°
speed of light in air (or vacuum)
*2 refractive index, n = speed of light in medium
so speed of light in water = speed of light in air / n = 3.0 × 108 m/s / 1.3 = 2.3 × 108 m/s
(Page 147)
*1 sin 32° = 0.53 so n = 1 / 0.53 = 1.9
*2 Rearrange equation n = 1/sin c to give sin c = 1/n = 1/1.7 = 0.59 so c = 36°
[3]
c 40°, 50°, 50° [3]
d Parallel, but turned through 180 ° (antiparallel) [2]
[Total: 10]
2 a B [1]
b Top half [2]
c She must stand 1m from the mirror if she is to be 2 m from her image (the
image in a plane mirror is the same distance behind the mirror as the object
is in front). She must walk 4 m towards mirror [4]
[Total: 7]
d Ensure pins are vertical, ensure mirror is vertical and placed accurately on
AOB, draw lines thinly [2]
[Total: 10]
4 a Refraction [1]
b POQ [1]
c Towards [1]
d 40° [1]
e 90° – 65° = 25° [1]
[Total: 5]
5 a Angle of incidence = 0° [1]
b Angle of incidence is greater than the critical angle [2]
c CB is refracted away from the normal [2]
[Total: 5]
*6 a i The ray passes into the air and is refracted away from the normal, [1]
since the angle of incidence is less than the critical angle [2]
ii Total internal reflection occurs in water, since the angle of incidence is
greater than the critical angle [3]
b n = 1/sin c, so sin c = 1/n = 3/4 = 0.75 [3]
so c = 49° [1]
[Total: 10]
7 a Converging [1]
[3]
[Total: 10]
*8 a 4 cm [1]
b Correct ray diagram [2]
Image is 8 cm behind lens, [1]
virtual, [1]
larger than object [1]
[Total: 6]
10 a Dispersion [1]
b
3.4 Sound
Test yourself questions
1 Produced by a vibrating source such as a guitar string or loudspeaker
2 Longitudinally; molecules vibrate about a fixed position in the direction in which the wave
propagates
*3 One wavelength
4 256 Hz
5 0.8 m (it has the highest frequency)
6 B
7 a 20 Hz to 20 000 Hz b 330 m/s to 350 m/s
8 v = s/t so s = v t = 330 m/s × 5 s = 1650 m (about 1 mile)
9 a Reflection, refraction, diffraction
b In a transverse wave, vibrations are perpendicular to rather than along the direction of
travel of the wave. Sound waves are longitudinal.
2 Rearrange the equation v = f λ to give f = v/λ then f = 340 m/s / 1.0 m = 340 Hz
(Page 172)
2 a
i [2] ii [2]
b i v = f λ so λ = v/f = 340 m/s / 340 Hz = 1.0 m [3]
ii λ = v/f = 340 m/s / 170 Hz = 2.0 m [2]
[Total: 9]
*3 a i Compressions occur where the molecules of the medium
transmitting a longitudinal sound wave are closer together
than normal [3]
b SNNS
[1] [2]
c Magnetic field line goes from the North to the South pole of the magnet. [1]
[Total: 4]
2 a Place a bar magnet on a piece of paper and a plotting compass near the N pole.
Mark the position of the N and S poles of the compass on the paper;[1] then
move the compass so that the S pole is at the point where the N pole was
previously and mark the new position of the N pole.[1] Continue until
compass is near the S pole then join up the points to give a field line.[1] Plot
other field lines by repeating the process with the compass at different
starting points.[1]
b Electromagnets are used where the strength of the magnetic field needs to be
varied and turned on and off.[2] Permanent magnets do not require an
electricity supply and are used when the magnetic field does not need to be
varied.[2]
c Examples: compass, computer hard disk, electric motor or generator,
microphone, loudspeaker, credit and debit cards. [2]
[Total: 10]
5 a Ink-jet printer, photocopiers, paint and crop sprayers, flue ash precipitators…
b Damage to electronic equipment, explosion in presence of flammable vapour, lightning
strikes…
6 By the movement of free electrons
7 Place ammeter in series with its positive terminal connected to the positive terminal of the
supply
*8 a I = Q / t = 10 C / 2 s = 5 A b I = Q / t = 20 C / 40 s = 0.5 A
c I = Q / t = 240 C / 120 s = 2 A
14 R = V / I = 12 V / 4 A = 3 Ω
15 V = I R = 2 A × 10 Ω = 20 V
16 I = V / R = 6 V / 3 Ω = 2 A
*17 I = V / R = 12 V / 4 Ω = 3 A; Q = I × t = 3 A × 1 s = 3 C
*18 a
(Page 203)
1 a p.d. V = IR = 1.0 A × 12 Ω = 12 V
b P = IV = 1.0 A × 12 V = 12 W = 12 J/s
c P = E/t so E = Pt = 12 J/s × 10 s = 120 J
2 a P = IV = 0.3 A × 12 V = 3.6 W
b 3.6 J/s
c P = E/t so E = Pt = 3.6 J/s × 60 s = 216 J
(Page 205)
1 Electrical energy E = Pt = 6.4 kW × 2 h = 12.8 kWh
Cost of using the oven = 12.8 kWh × 10 cents = 128 cents
2 Electrical energy E = Pt = 0.150 kW × 12 h = 1.8 kWh
Cost of using the refrigerator = 1.8 kWh × 10 cents = 18 cents
14 Coil of wire, ammeter, voltmeter, variable resistor/rheostat, battery/power supply, circuit board
15 R = V/I = 4.5 V / 0.15 A = 30 Ω
16 P = IV = 30 V × 0.5 A = 15 W
17 Po = mgh/t = 0.5 kg × 9.8 m/s2 × 0.8 m / 4 s = 0.98 W
c attracted [1]
d 2 [1]
[Total: 6]
2 a Charge a gold-leaf electroscope and then touch the cap with the test material.
The gold leaf will fall quickly when the electroscope is discharged through a
good conductor and only slowly or not at all when discharged through a bad
conductor or insulator [4]
b Any metal or carbon [2]
c Plastics such as polythene and cellulose acetate, Perspex and nylon [1]
d Conductors have some free electrons which can move through the material;
the electrons in insulators are firmly bound to their atoms and are not free
to move. [3]
[Total: 10]
*3 a An electric field is a region in which an electric charge experiences a force [2]
b
[4]
c coulomb (C) [1]
[Total: 7]
*4 a The direction of an electric field at a point is the direction of the force on a
positive charge [3]
b
[4]
[Total: 7]
5 B [Total: 1]
6 C [Total: 1]
7 a Electrons [1]
b In d.c. electrons flow in one direction only; in a.c. the direction of flow reverses
regularly [2]
c Connect the ammeter in series in the circuit with the + of the ammeter closest to
the + of the battery. For a digital ammeter, choose the d.c. setting. For either
analogue or digital ammeters select a suitable range for the size of current. [3]
[Total: 6]
*8 a An electric current is the charge passing a point per unit time and is given by
the equation I = Q/t [2]
[Total: 9]
*6 a
*3 a Resistors in parallel: 1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 = 1/4 + 1/4 = 1/2 Ω–1; so R = 2 Ω [4]
b For resistors in parallel: 1/R// = 1/R1 + 1/R2 = 1/6 + 1/2 = 4/6 Ω–1
so R// = 6/4 =1.5 Ω; then combined resistance = (1.5 + 6) Ω = 7.5 Ω [6]
[Total: 10]
4 a i R = (6 + 7 + 8) Ω = 21 Ω [2]
ii Increased [1]
b The p.d. across each lamp is fixed (at the supply p.d.), so the lamp shines with
the same brightness irrespective of how many other lamps are switched on.
Each lamp can be turned on and off independently; if one lamp fails, the others
can still be operated. [4]
c Less [1]
[Total: 8]
5 a V 1 = V2 = 3 V [2]
b I = V/R = 6 V / (10 + 50) kΩ = 0.1 mA
so V1 = IR1 = 0.1 mA × 10 kΩ = 1 V and V2 = IR2 = 0.1mA × 50 kΩ = 5 V [4]
c I = V/R = 6 V / (20 + 10) kΩ = 0.2 mA
so V1 = IR1 = 0.2 mA × 20 kΩ = 4 V and V2 = IR2 = 0.2 mA × 10 kΩ = 2 V [4]
[Total: 10]
6 a LDR and R in series with a battery [2]
*4 a
[4]
[Total: 10]
4 a Pass a wire through a piece of card, support it vertically and pass a current
through the wire; sprinkle iron filings on the card and tap gently so that they
settle on concentric circles. Place a plotting compass at different points to
find the direction of the magnetic field. [4]
b
[4]
c The direction of the magnetic field reverses [1]
[Total: 9]
5 a To complete the circuits to the negative terminal of the battery [2]
b A contains the relay contacts and starter;
B contains the starter switch and relay coil [2]
c Wire A carries a much larger current to the starter motor than wire B [1]
d It allows the wires to the starter switch to be thin since they carry only the
small current needed to energise the relay [2]
[Total: 7]
6 A small coil placed between the poles of a magnet receives a varying current; [2]
the magnetic fields of the coil and the magnet interact causing the coil to vibrate
with the frequency of the a.c. signal [3]
sound is produced by the vibration of a paper cone attached to the coil [1]
[Total: 6]
7 a Support a wire horizontally between the poles of a magnet so that the
direction of the wire is perpendicular to a horizontal magnetic field; [2]
the wire moves up or down when a current is passed through the wire; [1]
if the direction of the current or of the magnetic field is reversed, the wire
moves in the opposite direction [2]
b i increases [1] ii decreases [1] iii increases [1]
[Total: 8]
8 D [Total: 1]
*9 a [3]
b The commutator rotates with the coil, so that the current through the coil
reverses direction every half-turn [1]
The forces on the coil then always act in the same direction, producing
continuous rotation [1]
If the current is as shown in the figure, Fleming’s left-hand rule gives an
upward force on ab and a downward force on cd, producing clockwise rotation [1]
Reversal of the battery connections would give anticlockwise rotation of the coil [1]
c i The motor would rotate in the opposite direction [1]
ii The motor would rotate in the opposite direction [1]
iii No change in the direction of rotation [1]
[Total: 10]
10 a It is made up of two coils of wire, a primary and a secondary, wound on a
complete soft iron core. [4]
b It changes an a.c. voltage to an a.c. voltage of greater value [2]
c Np/Ns = Vp/Vs so Ns = Np Vs/ Vp = 120 × 720 / 240 = 360 turns [4]
[Total: 10]
11 a Ns/Np = Vs/Vp so Ns = Np × Vs /Vp = 460 × 12 V / 230 V = 24 [4]
*b Ip × Vp = Is × Vs so Is = Ip × Vp /Vs = 0.10 A × 230 V / 12 V = 1.9 A [4]
[Total: 8]
*12 a When the switch is first closed, current will flow in coil A and a magnetic
field will build up in A. Coil B will be cut by a changing magnetic field, a p.d.
will be induced and a current will flow through the galvanometer deflecting
the needle. [2]
Once the current and magnetic field become constant in coil A there will be
no changing magnetic field linking it with coil B, no induced p.d. and the
galvanometer reading will return to zero; this happens almost immediately
after the switch is closed. [2]
When the switch is opened again the magnetic field in coil A falls, there is
again a changing magnetic field linking it to coil B and a p.d. is induced in
the opposite direction to previously; the galvanometer needle will swing briefly
in the opposite direction before returning to zero again [3]
b The deflection on the galvanometer would increase; the soft iron wires will
become magnetised by the coil and will increase the magnetic field linking
coil A with coil B. When the switch is closed or opened the induced p.d. will
be larger [3]
c The deflection on the galvanometer would increase [1]
[Total: 11]
13 a Transformers step a.c. voltages up or down efficiently; p.d.s are stepped up at
the power station before transmission and stepped down at sub-stations for
local distribution. [3]
b Energy lost as heat in cables is reduced; smaller currents result which allow
thinner, cheaper wires to be used. [2]
[Total: 5]
5.2 Radioactivity
Test yourself questions
1 Any two from: cosmic rays, radon gas, rocks/buildings, food/drink, radioisotopes used in
medicine
2 Ionising effect
*3 a 300 counts / 60 s = 5 counts/s b (190 – 5) counts/s = 185 counts/s
4 a α
b γ
c α
d β–
*5 a β
b γ
c α
d γ
*6 neutron → proton + electron
7 a By alpha decay b By beta decay
*8 a Corrected count rates for background radiation
Time/s 0 30 60 90 120 150 180
half-life = 52 s
9 D: 8 minutes = 4 half-lives so activity falls by 1/24 = 1/16
*10 a Gamma rays b Alpha-particles
*11 If a radioisotope which emits gamma rays is placed on one side of a moving sheet of
material and a GM tube on the other, the count rate increases if the thickness of the sheet
decreases.
*1 +
*2 +
(Page 268)
1 a The count rate drops by half between 15 and 20 minutes
b Half-life = 17 min
2 60 minute / 15 minutes = 4; after 4 half-lives fraction left = 1/2 × 1/2 × 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/16
3 After 1 half-life count rate =140 / 2 = 70 counts/minute, after 2 half-lives count rate = 70 / 2 =
35 counts/minute so 60 minutes = 2 half-lives. Half-life of the material = 60 / 2 = 30 minutes
4 After 1 × 5700 years the activity will be 80 / 2 = 40 counts per minute;
after 2 × 5700 years the activity will be 40 / 2 = 20 counts per minute.
Estimated age of the canoe is 2 × 5700 = 11 400 years
Exam-style questions (Page 273)
1 a B [3]
b i C [1]
ii A [1]
iii B [1]
iv A [1]
[Total: 7]
2 a The half-life of a radioisotope is the time taken for half the nuclei of that
isotope in a particular sample to decay [2]
b 2 minutes; count rate falls by a half every 2 minutes [4]
[Total: 6]
3 a i After 1 × 1500 million years there will be N/2 atoms of argon left [1]
ii Number of potassium atoms formed = N − (N/2) = N/2 [1]
iiiAr : K ratio = N/2 : N/2 = 1 : 1 [1]
iv After 2 × 1500 = 3000 million years, there would be
(N/2)/2 = N/4 argon atoms left [1]
v and N − (N/4) = 3N/4 potassium atoms formed [1]
vi Ar : K ratio of N/4 : 3N/4 = 1 : 3 [1]
b Measured ratio is 1 : 3 so the rock must be about 3000 million years old [1]
[Total: 7]
*4 a i C [1]
220
ii 86Rn → 218 4
84Po + 2He [3]
b i B [1]
234
ii 90Th → 234 0
91Pa + −1e [3]
[Total: 8]
5 a Can damage living cells and tissue leading to cell death, gene mutation,
cancer, eye problems, radiation burns and sickness [2]
b i alpha ii gamma iii gamma iv alpha [4]
c Two from: reduce exposure time, increase distance between source and
person/handle source with forceps, keep away from eyes, shield source, store
source in a lead box when not in use [2]
[Total: 8]
*6 a A small amount of an α-particle emitter, such as Americium-241, causes
ionisation of the air in an ionisation chamber and results in a current flow
between two metal electrodes. When smoke enters the detector, it impedes the
flow of ions and the current reduces. The fall in current is detected
electronically and an alarm activated [3]
An α-particle emitter is chosen because α-particles have only a short range in
air; Americium-241 has a long half-life so its activity remains fairly constant
over time [1]
b A radioisotope is placed on one side of a moving sheet of material and a GM
tube on the opposite side; the count rate decreases when the thickness increases [2]
β-emitters are suitable for thin sheets, but γ-rays are needed for thicker sheets
because of their penetrating power; a long half-life source is preferred so that
the activity of the source remains fairly constant over time [1]
c Gamma rays kill bacteria on the food without damaging the food itself [1]
This leads to a longer shelf-life for the product [1]
A γ-rays source is used for its high penetrating power; a long half-life is
preferred so that the activity stays fairly constant over time [1]
[Total: 10]
d 8
e 2/3
f –3/4
g 13/6
h –16
i 1
7 a = (v – u)/t
a 5
b 60
c 75
8 a = (v2 – u2)/2s
9 a Students’ graphs of extension against mass
b Extension ∝ mass because the graph is a straight line through the origin
10 a Students’ graphs of m against v
b No: graph is a straight line but does not pass through the origin
c 32
11 a Graph is a curve
b Graph is a straight line through the origin, therefore s ∝ t2 or s/t2 = a constant = 2
Thermal physics
(Page 300)
*13 a Consists of equal lengths of two different metals of different expansivity welded together.
When heated, one of the metals expands more than the other and the strip bends. It can be
used in many applications from thermostats to fire alarms
b i pV = constant
ii p1V1 = p2V2 so p2 = p1V1 / V2 = p1 / 2; pressure halves
c When the temperature of a gas increases the average speed of its molecules increase. If the
volume of the gas remains constant, there will be more frequent collisions with the walls of
the container and the pressure of the gas will increase
14 a Wood is a less good conductor of heat than metal, which conducts heat away from the
hand
b When a fluid is heated it expands and becomes less dense. Parts that are warm will rise
above colder denser regions leading to a convection current being set up in the fluid
c Conduction and convection require a medium to transfer thermal energy
Waves
(Page 300)
*15 a i Longitudinal
ii Compression
iii Rarefaction
b i Become circular
ii No change
iii No change
16 a 60°
b 30°
c The image is:
as far behind the mirror as the object is in front with the line joining the
object and image being perpendicular to the mirror;
the same size as the object; virtual; laterally inverted
17 C
18 a Dispersion
b i Red
ii Violet
c Violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange, red
19 a i The line through the centre of a lens at right angles to the lens
ii The point on the principal axis of the lens to which a parallel beam of light passing
through the lens converges
b i Less than the focal length of the lens
ii Upright
iii Virtual
20 a i Infrared
ii X-rays
b i Radio
ii γ-rays
c Transverse
d Communications, microwave ovens for cooking
21 A
22 D
23 a Two from: electromagnetic (light, radio …), water, seismic S-waves,
b Two from: sound, mechanical waves on a spring, seismic P-waves
c Three from: reflected, refracted, diffracted, obey the wave equation, carry energy from
place to place
Nuclear physics
(Page 303)
30 a After 1 half-life count rate will be 50 counts/s; after 2 half-lives count rate will be 25
counts/s. Time for two half-lives = 2 × 1 hour = 2 hours
b i alpha-particles < beta-particles < gamma rays
ii alpha-particles > beta-particles > gamma rays
Space physics
(Page 303)
31 a Away
b At noon, around June 21
c On or near to Dec 22
d March and September
*32 a distance = 2 π r = 2 × π × 385 000 km = 2.42 × 106 km
b average speed = distance / time so, time = distance / speed = 2.42 × 106 km / 1 km/s
= 2.42 × 106 s. Time in days = 2.42 × 106 s / (60 × 60 × 24) = 28 days.
33 a 2.85 × 1014 km / (9.5 ×1012) km/ly = 30 light years
b i B ii C iii A iv D
*34 a Discovery of cosmic background radiation left over from the Big Bang;
Red-shift of starlight shows that distant galaxies are moving away from us and that the
further away a galaxy is, the higher the speed of recession; this means that the Universe is
expanding.
b v = Ho d, so d = v / Ho = 16 000 km/s / (2.2 × 10–18 s–1) = 7.3 × 1021 km
= 7.3 × 1021 km / (9.5 × 1012 km/light year) = 7.70 × 108 light years
= 770 million light years
iii 1. kinetic energy of racquet transfers to elastic/strain energy (in ball or strings)
2. elastic/strain energy (in ball or strings) transfers to kinetic energy (of ball)
*15 a Change in momentum = 0.58 kg m/s
b F = rate of change in momentum = 0.096 N
c The truck accelerates backwards/to the right
d It accelerates faster due to truck having less mass (when empty);
force is constant and F = ma
*16 a Change in gravitational potential energy is the work done by the force
b Work done = force × distance moved = 8.3 × 107 J
c Work done by train = 270 × 107 J
Efficiency = (work output/work input) × 100% = 3.1%
*17 a Kinetic energy = = 2.7 × 107 J
b Work done = 1.8 × 105 N
*18 a F, H, G, E
b i 1. 100 W 2. 500 W
ii Less power OR energy used by LED, less CO2, OR greenhouse gases OR global
warming
*19 a i Pressure = 150 000 N/m2
ii Total pressure = 250 000 Pa
iii p = F/A so F = 240 000 N
b Any two from: weight of lid, pressure inside box (or upthrust on lid), moment of force
changes, friction at hinge, drag of water
Thermal physics
(Page 311)
20 a Atoms in a more regular arrangement/fixed position, more tightly packed and slower
moving
b The more energetic water molecules escape from the liquid surface and become gas
molecules; the process is termed evaporation
*21 a i showing straight lines with sudden change in direction
ii Brownian motion – smoke particles bombarded by air molecules moving in random
directions
b F = change in momentum/time = 1.4 N
*22 a 1. solid to liquid 2. liquid to gas/vapour
b There are strong forces of attraction between molecules in a solid OR molecules in a gas
are further apart so the attractive force between them is less
c V = 0.216 m3
*23 a Pressure increases,
Any two from:
Molecules travel shorter average distance between collisions with walls,
Molecules hit walls more often OR more collisions (per unit area) with walls
Greater force OR greater rate of change of momentum of molecules per unit area on walls
b 1st box: gas, 2nd box: solid
24 a Expansion/voltage/p.d./e.m.f./length/colour/pressure/volume/resistance
b i 8.30 pm
ii 9.00 pm, gradient of graph decreases / rate at which temperature falls is slower
c Insulator, conduction, convection
*25 a i Any good insulating material (such as fibre glass or newspaper) so that less heat is
transferred to the surroundings and more energy is transferred to the block
ii Insulation on top of block
b Heat supplied ΔE = 27 000 J
So specific heat capacity = 450 J/(kg ℃)
*26 a i Boiling ii Evaporation
b i Heat supplied ΔE = m c Δϴ = 44 000 J
Power of heater ΔE/t = 292 J/s (290 W)
ii Wrap insulation around the metal block to reduce heat lost to surroundings
Waves
(Page 314)
27 a i z ii water, other parts of electromagnetic spectrum
b i 3 curved waves after gap, evenly spaced, centred on gap ii diffraction
28 a i Normal ii Angle of incidence iii Doubles
b i Principal focus ii Diminished, inverted, real
29 a f = 5 cm
b i Straight line from top of object through F to lens and then parallel to principal axis
ii Straight line from top of object through centre of lens
iii Image drawn at point where lines cross; inverted image on RHS of lens
*30 a i Dispersion ii A – red, B – violet
iii Refractive index/speed different for different wavelengths
b i More reflection on top wall of fibre, between X and end of fibre and no reflections on
lower wall of fibre and ray reaches end of fibre
ii c = 43o
iii Any two from: lighting, carry signals/communications, medicinal diagnosis/imaging
*31 a i It passes through boundary and is refracted away from the normal
ii Total internal reflection occurs
b i Total internal reflection at B with angle of incidence equal to angle of reflection.
Refraction into air at right-hand face with angle of refraction greater than angle of
incidence
ii n = 1.5
*32 a Longitudinal, 35 000 Hz
b v = f λ, so λ = v/f = 3 × 108 m/s / (1.3 × 1017 Hz) = 2.3 × 10–9 m
c X-rays are ionising radiation which is harmful to humans
Any one from: patient rarely exposed, dentist frequently exposed, total dose on dentist
would be high if always stayed in room, low total dose on patient, benefit to patient
outweighs danger
d Microwaves harmful to humans, microwaves could pass through open door
33 a Orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo
ii Any two from; iron bar becomes induced magnet, a South pole is induced in the left-
hand end of the iron bar and it is attracted to the North pole of the magnet, opposite
poles attract
b i Ends of coil connected to d.c. battery or power supply
ii Can be switched on and off or easily magnetised/demagnetised
*37 a Electrons must be removed
b i + + + at top of sphere; – – – at bottom of sphere
ii Earth sphere while rod in position (touch sphere with a conductor or finger);
remove earth connection and then remove charged rod
38 a Friction causes electrons to be transferred from the cloth to the rod
b Like charges repel so the suspended rod moves away
39 a i electrons ii R = 18.0 Ω iii V = 9 V
b Current increases because combined resistance of resistors in parallel is less
*40 a I = 4.2 A
b i E = 3240 kJ
ii Volume = 90 cm3
*41 a i Resistance is constant ii Resistance increases
b R = 1.4 ohms
c Current in lamp = 4.4 A, current in resistor = 4.0 A
Total current = 8.4 A
d p.d. across resistor = 6.0 V, p.d. across lamp = 4.9 V
Total p.d. = 10.9 V
42 a Variable resistor or rheostat
b 0.8 A
c R = 5.6 Ω
Nuclear physics
(Page 321)
49 Any four from:
take background reading without source
place a piece of paper between source and detector
alpha rays are stopped by paper but beta rays will pass through
reading on detector will be similar or unchanged if source does not emit alpha particles
particles
place a sheet of aluminium a few mm thick between source and detector
reading on detector will then be similar to background reading because beta particles are
stopped by a few mm aluminium
*50 a i Two from: cosmic rays, the Sun, soil/rocks/buildings/ the Earth, medical sources,
radon in air, food or drink
ii Radioactivity is a random decay process
b If background count rate stays constant, after 24 days source contribution is 10
counts/minute; after 4 half-lives expect source contribution to be 12.5 counts/minute.
Half-life = 6 days
c α-particle: most ionising – fire alarms
β-particle: affected by small changes in amount of solid – aluminium foil manufacture
γ -ray: highly penetrating – detect leaks in water pipes
231
*51 a 90Th
b i Breakup of a nucleus into two or more parts
ii To absorb ionising radiation emitted in nuclear fission
iii Advantage: atmosphere not polluted with carbon or sulphur dioxide/greenhouse gases
disadvantage: disposal of radioactive waste/leaks of radioactive material/radiation risk
if an accident occurs
c After one half-life, 26 hours, 2.4 × 109 atoms will have decayed
after two half-lives = 2 × 26 = 52 hours, a further = 1.2 × 109 atoms will have decayed
Total number of atoms decayed after 52 hours = 3.6 × 109 atoms
*52 a Background count rate = 19 ± 2 counts/s
Time/hours 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Detector
324 96 39 23 21 17 21 20 19 20 18
reading/
(counts/s)
Corrected
305 77 20 4 2 –2 2 1 0 1 –1
counts/
(counts/s)
In 1 half-life corrected count rate would fall to 153 counts/s
In 2 half-lives corrected count rate would fall to 77 counts/s
In 3 half-lives corrected count rate would fall to 39 counts/s
In 4 half-lives corrected count rate would fall to 20 counts/s
2 half-lives occur in each hour, so one half-life is 1/2 hours = 30 minutes
3
b 1 H = −01β + 23 X
c Top track – path turned back to left; middle track – path goes right with downward
deflection; bottom track – no deflection
*53 a 86 protons, (220 – 86) neutrons = 134 neutrons, 86 electrons,
220
b 86 Rn = 42 α + 216
84 Po
Notes
The pendulum bobs can be made from modelling clay; one rolled into a spherical shape with a
diameter about 2 cm and the other into a cylinder of length about 5.0 cm. The string should be
embedded in the bob so that the pendulum can swing without the bob slipping from the string.
The stand can be stabilised by putting a weight on the base.
e Method reduces the effect of errors when starting and stopping the stopwatch [1]
f 4 or 5 correct, [1]
from top box V, V, V, V, P, P. [1]
[Total: 11]
2 Equipment
Plastic or polystyrene drinks cup with base narrower than lip and a volume approximately
180 cm3–250 cm3
Ruler 30 cm long graduated in mm
Water
Measuring cylinder 250 cm3 or 100 cm3
Top-pan balance which can measure masses up to 200g to the nearest gram
Supply of paper towels to mop up spills
Note: beaker should be labelled W
Notes
Apparatus should be set up as shown in Fig. P6
The bulb of the thermometer must be well below the 100 cm3 level of the beakers
The hot water should be available at a constant temperature between 80°C and 100°C
Students should be warned of the dangers of burns or scalds when using hot water.
6 Equipment
Sheet of plain A4 paper
Plain mirror mounted so that it is perpendicular to the bench
Screen with slit (see note 1)
Lamp, low voltage (24 W or greater) and power supply
Protractor
30 cm ruler
Note
The screen can be a sheet of stiff card or thin wood (approximately 70 mm × 70 mm) fixed
upright to a support. The slit in the screen should be a minimum of 35 mm long and 1mm to 2
mm wide.
Note
The screen can be a sheet of stiff card (approximately 15 cm × 15 cm) fixed to a wooden
support
c i Correct straight line between points (25.0, 25.0) and (35.0, 35.0) [1]
ii u1 and v1 read correctly to 1/2 small square [1]
Correct calculation of f from values [1]
f value rounded to 14–16 cm [1]
[Total: 11]
8 Diagram: show power supply, ammeter, voltmeter and resistance wire correctly
connected (variable resistor optional) [1]
Correct symbols for ammeter and voltmeter (and variable resistor if included) [1]
Method: measure p.d. (voltage) and current and calculate resistance [1]
Repeat with other types of wire [1]
Key variables: length and diameter stated [1]
Precautions: One of: [1]
Repeat with different voltages (or currents), repeat and take average of voltage
and current readings
Repeat entire experiment with different length or different diameter wire
Use low current to prevent wire heating up
Keep temperature of wire constant
Use micrometer screw gauge to measure diameter/thickness of wire
Table: Columns for type of wire, voltage, current, resistance with correct
units (V, A and Ω) [1]
[Total: 7]
9 Equipment
Lamp X (2.5 V, 0.3 A) and Lamp Y (6 V, 0.4 A) or similar with terminals such that student can
easily rearrange circuit
Power supply of 2–3 V; if cells used they must remain fully charged for the experiment
Switch (may be part of power supply)
10 Connecting leads
0–1 A ammeter with 0.05 A resolution (tape correct setting if variable)
0–3 V voltmeter with 0.1 V resolution (tape correct setting if variable)