Notes 2023 1-Merged 1 1
Notes 2023 1-Merged 1 1
Notes 2023 1-Merged 1 1
UNITS OF MEASUREMENT
Measurement means comparing any physical quantity with a standard to determine
its Relationship to standard this standard is called unit all measurable quantity
expressed in
a) Some number or magnitude and
b) Some unit
For example if the distance is 200km, 200 is the number or magnitude and km
(kilometer) is the unit
kilometer ton
meter kilogram
centimeter gram
hour
minute
second
Powers of prefix
Prefixes are used to give multiples and submultiples. The prefix represents a power
of ten. The standard multiples and submultiples are mostly in steps of 103
1
Symbol Prefix Value
n Nano 10-9
μ Micro 10-6
m Milli 10-3
C Centi 10-2
K Kilo 103
M Mega 106
If you have to measure a small length, such as the thickness of a wire, it may be
better to measure several thicknesses and then calculate the average.
2
Take a stack of 500 sheets and measure its thickness with a
ruler then divide by 500 to find the thickness of one sheet.
Measuring Time
The common devices to measure the time or duration of an
event are clock and stopwatch
The precession of time duration of an event can be improved by
measuring the time for number of events and dividing time by total
number of events.
Period =
Vector quantities: a quantity which has both magnitude and direction, and
both should be mentioned to describe it ( displacement, weight, velocity and
acceleration)
3
Speed
To calculate speed
Questions
1. The runner completes 400 m is a time of 160 seconds. What is her average
speed?
Answer
Answer
4
Acceleration
Is rate of change in velocity
v-u Δv
a= or a =
t t
Questions
Answer
Δv 16
a= =
t 20
5
4. A cheetah is widely believed to be the fastest animal on Earth. It can
accelerate at 2.5 m/s2. If the cheetah starts at a velocity of 3 m/s, how long will
it take to reach a velocity of 13 m/s?
Answer
Δv 10
t= =
a 2.5
Motion graphs
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Graph ( A ) gradient is speed and graph is straight line so it constant speed
opposite direction of ( D )
Graph ( B )gradient is speed and graph is increasing ( stepper up ) so
increase in speed
Graph ( C ) gradient is speed and graph is decreasing (stepper down ) so
decrease in speed
Graph ( D ) gradient is speed and graph is straight line so constant speed
Questions
Sketch a distance-time graph for this motion. You do not need to estimate any
values for this question.
Answer
7
2. A student writes a program to make a small robot move
across the desk. This graph shows the motion of the robot
Answer
a) Line 'X' shows the robot moving away from the start at constant velocity.
b) Line 'Y' shows the robot stops / is stationary (100 cm from the start).
c) Line 'Z' shows the robot moving back towards the start at constant velocity.
d) The fastest speed is where the line is the steepest, (the highest gradient), which is
line X. For this section, reading from the graph, the robot covers 100 cm in 5
seconds. As we are using cm, the speed will be given in cm/s.
distance 100 cm
speed = =
time 5s
8
2- Velocity - time graphs
9
Calculations distance using velocity-time graphs
A velocity-time graph is often used to show motion because you can use it to find
other information. The two that we will cover here are how to find
the acceleration and the distance travelled from the graph.
Acceleration
This is the gradient of the line the steeper the line, the higher the acceleration. The
'steepness' of a line is the gradient
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Questions
The graph shown in figure gives data on the movement of a city tram moving
away from a station.
Which section or sections of the graph shows the
tram
b) Decelerating?
Answer
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c) The distance travelled in the first 10 seconds.
Answer
change in velocity
acceleration =
time taken
change in y-axis
or by using acceleration = gradient =
change in x-axis
15 - 5 10
acceleration = =
10 10
12
Mass
Weight
W=mxg
For many of these questions, the mass of an object will remain the
same (assuming it is the same object), but the weight can change as it depends
on the strength of gravity acting on it.
Take the weight of 1.0kg to be 9.8N (acceleration of free fall = 9.8m/s2)
Questions
1. If we took the 5 kg bag of fruit on a space journey, how much would it weigh
in the following locations?
Answer
a) W= m x g =5 x 1.6 = 8.0 N
b) W= m x g =5 x 23 = 115 N
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c).In deep space, there is no gravity! g = zero.
Therefore W = 0 N (The bag is 'weightless').
2. On the Moon mission in 1972, the astronauts picked up a rock to bring back
to Earth. The weight of the rock was 32 N on the Moon. Calculate
Answer
W
m=
g 32
m=
1.6
m = 20 kg.
Density
It is defined as the mass per unit volume of a substance. The unit of density is kg/m3
or g/cm3.
It is denoted by Greek symbol ρ (rhoo) and is calculated from the formula
Density = ρ=
14
Measurement of physical quantities
1. The mass of an object is the amount of matter contained in this object. The mass
is usually measured in kilograms/grams using a balance (beam balance or top pan
balance).
2. The volume of an object is the amount of space occupied by this object. The
volume is usually measured in cubic meter (m3), cubic centimeter (cm3), or liter (l).
Density =
Questions
Answer
a) m
ρ=
V
15
Determining the density of a liquid
1- The mass m of the liquid can be measured using a mass balance. To find the mass
of the liquid we subtract the mass of the empty measuring cylinder from the mass of
the liquid and the measuring cylinder.
2- The volume V can be read directly from the measuring cylinder.
3- Then use the following formula to calculate density
Density =
Example
Answer
Mass of liquid = 50 – 30 = 20
Volume = 10
16
4- Measure the new volume Y
5- The volume of the stone is Y - X.
6- Use the following formula to calculate the density
Density =
Precautions
1. The measuring cylinder should be placed on a flat horizontal surface.
4. Tie a string round the object and lower it gently to avoid splashing
of water (which will reduce the volume of water & cause an error).
5. Always measure from the bottom of meniscus when using
measuring cylinder
Questions
A customer orders are large block of aluminum for an art project.
a) The block must have a length of 1.2 m, a width of 2.0 m, and a height
of 0.8 m. If the density of aluminum is 2700 kg/m3, calculate the mass of
this block.
b) The customer suggests supplying the block in two halves of length
0.6 m, to make it easier to transport. What is the density of the
aluminum in one of these smaller blocks?
Answer
17
a) The volume of this large block will be:
V = 1.2 x 2 x 0.8 = 1.92 m3
m
The density formula is ρ=
V
So m = ρ x V,
If you put an object like a piece of wood on the surface of a pure water lake, then
It will sink if the density is above 1.0 g/cm3 (the density of water)
It will float if the density is below 1.0 g/cm3.
Forces
A force is basically a push or a pull on something. There are many different things
that cause forces, but they are all measured in newton’s (N)
Here are a few of the most common types of forces found in nature
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involved, we often call this force of friction the 'drag'. If it is an object like a
plane moving through the air, we often call this type of friction air
resistance.
Drawing forces
Force is a vector so can be drawn with an arrow. The length of the arrow can be
used to show the size of the force, and obviously the direction of the arrow shows
the direction of the force.
If two or more forces are acting in the same direction, we can add them
together to find the total.
if they act in opposite directions, we need to subtract, as shown here by
two forces acting on a ball
Questions
1. A small van is travelling down a road. The forward force provided by the
engine is 2 kN . The air resistance acting on the van is 600 N, and the friction
between road and tiers is 300 N.
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a) What is the resultant force acting on the van?
b) Describe the motion of the van at this point.
Answer
a) The forward force is 2 kN, which equals 2000 N. Air resistance AND
friction both act to prevent movement so act backwards, and total 900 N.
Therefore there is a resultant force of 1100 N (1.1kN) acting forwards.
Then the value of the resultant vector can be found graphically parallelogram
Draw a parallelogram to scale, in which two adjacent sides each represent a force.
Try to choose a simple scale, for example 1 cm = 1 N
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A force can make an object accelerate. The bigger the force acting on an
object, the bigger the acceleration that it gives to the object 𝑎 ∝ F
(proportional) so, doubling the force acting on an object doubles its
acceleration.
The mass of an object affects how easily it can be accelerated or decelerated.
The bigger the mass, the smaller the acceleration given by a particular force
𝑎∝ (inversely) so, doubling the mass of the body will halve the
acceleration
F=mxa
Questions
A mountain bike rider and bike together have a total mass of 80 kg. If the bike
is to accelerate at 1.8 m/s, what force needs to be applied?
Answer
F= m x a
Therefore F = 80 x 1.8 = 144 N
A firework rocket of mass 200 g is set alight, and the force produced at the
start is 5 N.
Answer
a). We know F = m x a and also that 200 g = 0.2 kg (the mass MUST be in kg, not g).
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Rearranging the formula gives:
F
5 a=
a= m
0.2
a = 25 m/s2
b) If a = 40 m/s2 and F = 5 N,
then F = m x a gives:
5 F
m= m=
40 a
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Larger centripetal force
1) if the mass of the object is increased
2) if the speed of the object is increased
3) If the radius of the circle is reduced.
The weight of the object - this is a force acting downwards, caused by the
Earth's gravitational field acting on the object’s mass.
Stages of falling
When an object is dropped, there are three stages before it hits the ground:
1. At the start, the object accelerates downwards because of its weight. There is
very little air resistance. There is a resultant force acting downwards. The
acceleration is constant when the object is close to Earth.
2. As it gains speed, the object's weight stays the same but the air resistance on
it increases. There is a resultant force acting downwards.
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Questions
1. The diagrams below figure show forces acting on a skydiver who has
jumped out of a plane. There are 3 diagrams, showing different stages of the
descent
Answer
a). The downwards force in diagram A is larger (by 300 N) and so the
skydiver accelerates downwards.
b). The forces are balanced, so the skydiver stays at a constant velocity.
Remember the question asks you to describe acceleration - the acceleration
is zero.
c). There is now a resultant force upwards. Be careful - this does NOT make
the skydiver go back up to the plane. They are falling
downwards, so the unbalanced force just slows them down.
The skydiver decelerates (or has negative acceleration).
d) The downwards force is gravity, and the upwards force
is air resistance.
e) See the example here
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Falling object in vacuum (space)
The graph will be straight line due to absence of air resistance
as shown in figure
Hooks experiment
In the opposite figure, a clamp and stands are used to
show a stretched spring supporting some weights at rest.
When the spring extends (increases in length), therefore
the difference between the non-stretched length of the
spring and its stretched length (when loaded) is called
“Extension”.
𝐸𝑥𝑡𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛=𝑆𝑡𝑟𝑒𝑡𝑐𝑒𝑑 𝑙𝑒𝑛𝑔𝑡−𝑛𝑜𝑛 𝑠𝑡𝑟𝑒𝑡𝑐𝑒𝑑 𝑙𝑒𝑛𝑔𝑡
(original length)
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Attach a spring to a clamp or similar support, and measure the upstretched
length with a ruler.
Add a load to the spring. Remember that a mass of 0.1 kg will have a weight
of 1 N.
Measure the new, stretched length.
Repeat this with additional weights, recording the new length.
Once finished, work out how much the spring has stretched compared to the
original length - this is known as the extension, shown in the diagram as 'x'.
Plot the extension x (cm) against the load (N) applied to see how the spring has
behaved under a force
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The limit of proportionality
Is the point beyond which the spring extension will not be proportional to
the load Up to this limit the extension increases by a set amount for every
newton of force applied Above this limit the increase in extension per
newton will be greater.
The limit of proportionality is an important point.
If the spring is stretched beyond this point, it will no longer
extend proportionally to the load (weight) applied.
Hook’s law
Force (F) is Directly Proportional with extension (X) Until Elastic Limit
F=K xX
Where k is spring constant
Questions
28
Answer
If the wire extends from 50 cm to 70 cm, the extension for 40 N loads is 20 cm. (0.5
cm per 1 N load).
Therefore for 60 N, the extension will be 30 cm. However this is NOT the final
answer! The question asks for the length, not the extension.
The original length was 50 cm, so the extended length will be 50 + 30 = 80 cm
How is Hooke's Law identified on a graph of the load on a spring against the
spring's extension?
Answer
Answer
Elastic behavior means that a material will return to its original shape after being
deformed.
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Moment (turning effect)
When a force acts on an object which has a pivot a point around which an object
can turn or rotate, it creates a turning effect or moment. When forces are used to
open doors, steer and pedal bicycles or turn a tap; they are causing turning effect
The moment of a force is defined like this
Moment = F x d
The moment of a force is a vector quantity that can only have one of two
directions; either clockwise or anticlockwise
Combining moments
Questions
Answer
a) Force F2 is pushing upwards on the left hand side, so is trying to turn the spanner
in a clockwise direction.
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c) The moment of F1 = force x perpendicular distance to the pivot
So moment = 30 x 0.6 = 18 Nm anti-clockwise
F1 d1 = F2 d2
or m1 d1 = m2 d2
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Questions
Answer
450
W=
1.2
W = 375 N
2. Two boxes are balanced on a long beam as shown. What is the missing
distance labeled d - the distance
of the center of the right hand
box from the pivot?
Answer
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Center of Gravity (center of mass)
It is a point where the whole weight of a body may be considered to act.
Explanation
When the lamina is released, its weight causes a turning effect which makes it
swing.
When the lamina comes to rest, the weight has no turning effect since the line of
action of weight passes through the pivot in each case the center of gravity of the
lamina lies somewhere along the plumb line, so it has to be at the point where
the two lines cross.
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Center of Gravity and Stability
The stability of a body is increased by
1) Lowering its center or mass
2) Increasing the area of its base (wide)
Momentum
Imagine you work in a sports shop. Some of the equipment is stored on very high
storage platforms. Your job is to catch the equipment as it is
thrown down to you.
Which would you rather catch - the netball or the large punch
bag from the top platform?
The formula for momentum depends on the mass and the velocity of the object
p=mxv
The units of momentum are simply the units of mass (kg) multiplied by the units for
velocity (m/s), and are therefore kg m/s
For example, a 2 kg rock rolling down a hill at 3 m/s will have a momentum of 6 kg
m/s.
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Impulse
The impulse of a force is the change in momentum that it causes. Using the concept
of impulse, the second law can be written as
𝑖𝑚𝑝𝑢𝑙𝑠𝑒 = 𝑓𝑜𝑟𝑐𝑒 ×𝑡𝑖𝑚𝑒 = 𝑐𝑎𝑛𝑔𝑒 𝑖𝑛 𝑚𝑜𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑢𝑚
Answer
Δp (mv - mu)
F= =
t t
(0.1 x 2) - (0.1 x 0)
F=
5
F = 0.04 N
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2. On a roller-coaster ride, passengers are held safely in their seats by seat
belts. The belt provides a force that will push backwards on the passengers
and slow them down in an emergency.
The maximum force that the seat belts can apply is 2 kN.
If a 100 kg passenger slows down from 15 m/s to rest, calculate:
Answer
a) The initial velocity here is 'u' and equals 15 m/s. The final velocity v = 0, so:
Change in momentum Δp = mv - mu,
so Δp = (100 x 0) - (100 x15),
Δp = -1500 kg m/s. (or just 1500 kg m/s - the negative sign tells us that the
momentum is reducing instead of increasing. however the change is momentum is
still 1500 kg m/s, so both answers will be marked as correct).
b) We know that
Δp (mv - mu)
F= or F =
t t
1500
so the maximum force 2000 =
t
1500
t=
2000
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Momentum and safety
The force on our bodies depends on the change in momentum and also
the time taken to do this. If the time is longer, the force needed will be
smaller.
seat belt or air bag or crumble zone is safety features on car as it increase
impact time , so reduce force on passenger for less injures since change in
momentum is conserved
Conservation of momentum
The total momentum before any collision is equal to the total momentum after the
collision, as long as no external forces act
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Questions
Use information in the diagram and calculate velocity of van after
collision?
Answers
Momentum before collision = momentum after collision
m1u1 + m2u2 = m1v1 + m2v2
1200 x 10 + 3200 x zero = 1200 x 2 + 3200 x m2
12000 = 2400 + 3200 x V2
12000 – 2400 = 3200 x V2
9600 = 3200 x V2
V2 = 3 m/s
Questions
Use information in the diagram and calculate velocity of van and car
after collision?
Answers
Momentum before collision = momentum after collision
m1u1 + m2u2 = ( m1 + m2 )v
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1500 x 8 + 900 x zero = (1500 + 900) V
12000 = 2400 V
V = 5 m/s
Energy
Physicists say that "work is done when energy is transferred." Work and energy
are both measured in joules (J).
1) Potential Energy
Is the type of energy stored in a body and available to do work
Questions
Answer
G.P.E. = m g h
G.P.E. = 60 x 9.8 x 30
so the gain in G.P.E. = 17640 J
39
A farmer has a small hydroelectric scheme that stores water in a large tank
high on a hill when needed, the water flows downhill and through a generator,
transferring the stored gravitational energy to electrical energy. The tank is
50 m above the nearby river.
What mass of water needs to be stored at this height so that the tank stores 2
MJ of gravitational energy?
Answer
2 000 000
m=
490
So m = 4081 kg
40
c) Elastic Potential Energy (Strain Energy)
This is the energy stored in a body when it stretch or bend this type of stored
energy is used in rubber band , or spring
2) Kinetic Energy
Is the energy of an object due to its motion the faster the object moves, the more
KE it has.
𝐾𝐸= 𝑚 𝑣2
Where, KE = Kinetic Energy, in Joules
m = mass of object, in kg
v = speed of object, in m/s
Questions
2 kg cat is running across a room at 4 m/s. What is the kinetic energy of the
cat?
41
Answer
K.E. = ½ m v2
K.E. = ½ x 2 x 42
So K.E. = ½ x 2 x 16
so the cat has a K.E. = 16 J
A dog is chasing the cat from question 1. It has mass of 14 kg and a kinetic
energy of 63 J
Answer
K.E. = ½ m v2
Substituting in the values from the question gives
63 = ½ x 14 x v2
63 = 7 x v2
rearranging the equation
63
v2 =
7
Conservation of Energy
The Law of conservation of Energy states that
" 𝑬𝒏𝒆𝒓𝒈𝒚 𝒊𝒔 𝒏𝒐𝒕 𝒄𝒓𝒆𝒂𝒕𝒆𝒅 𝒐𝒓 𝒅𝒆𝒔𝒕𝒓𝒐𝒚𝒆𝒅 𝒊𝒏 𝒂𝒏𝒚 𝒑𝒓𝒐𝒄𝒆𝒔𝒔,𝒊𝒕 𝒊𝒔 𝒋𝒖𝒔𝒕 𝒄𝒐𝒏𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒕𝒆𝒅
𝒇𝒓𝒐𝒎 𝒐𝒏𝒆 𝒕𝒚𝒑𝒆 𝒕𝒐 𝒂𝒏𝒐𝒕𝒉𝒆𝒓 ”
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Some examples of energy conversion
A light bulb converts electrical energy to light energy;
A moving car converts chemical energy from petrol to kinetic and heat energy;
A drill machine converts electrical energy to kinetic energy.
Questions
A ball rolls down a hill. State the energy store at the top and at the bottom of
the hill.
Answer
At the top of the hill the ball will have stored gravitational energy. At the bottom,
the ball will have accelerated and have kinetic energy.
i) State the energy store in the catapult just before, and after firing.
Answer
i) Before firing, there is a store of elastic energy. Afterwards, the stone has a store
of kinetic energy.
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Kinetic energy to gravitational potential energy and vice
versa
At the top of the board, the diver has gravitational potential energy. When the diver
jumps, this G.P.E. will convert to K.E. However,
3920
v2 =
25
v2 = 156.8
so v = √156.8 giving v = 12.5 m/s
Questions
Answer
The mass of the ball is 0.1 kg (don't forget to convert 100g to kg)
If the velocity is 20 m/s we can calculate the K.E. of the ball
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K.E. = ½ m v2, therefore
K.E. = ½ x 0.1 x (20)2
K.E. = 20 J
Efficiency
The efficiency of any process that does work by transferring energy
Questions
1. A small toy car uses a spring inside to drive the car. The spring can be
wound up using a key, and then the car
released.
b) What form of energy store does the car have once it is released?
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Answer
b) Once the car is released, the energy stored into the spring as elastic energy is
transferred to kinetic energy.
c) The energy lost as wasted thermal energy is dissipated into the surrounds. The
missing value is 24 J - 18 J = 6 j
18
e)
efficiency = x 100%
24
Efficiency = 75 %
Work
Is the product of the force (F) and the distance (d) in the direction of the force
Work done = force × distance moved in the direction of force
Work = F × d
The unit of work (and energy) is the joule
Example
Work is done when you push a car to start it moving: you force
transfers energy to the car; the car’s KE increases (you lose energy
while the car gains)
Work is not done when you push a car but it doesn’t move; no
energy is transferred because your force does not move the car. The
car’s KE does not change.
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Questions
Answer
A small toy boat contains a battery storing 2 kJ of energy. When moving at top
speed, the resistance from the water is 12 N Assuming the boat motor is 100 %
efficient, how far could the boat travel before the batteries run out?
Answer
We know that W = F x d, and the work done will be 2 000 J assuming all the battery
energy is transferred. So:
2 000 = 12 x d
2000
d=
12 d = 167 m
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Answer
b) Work done = F d
so Work = 78.4 x 600
Work done = 47040
Power
Is the rate at which energy is transformed from one form to another or the work
done per unit time
Power =
Unit of power 1 Watt = 1 joule/second
Questions
Answer
W 28 000
p= 4=
t t
48
rearranging this equation gives
28 000
t=
4
t = 7 000 seconds
Amy is timed running up some stairs. She weighs 550 N, and takes 12.5
seconds to complete the climb. The stairs have a vertical height of 9 m.
Calculate
Answer
a) Amy's weight is the downward force of gravity (F) on her. The work done is given
by
W = F d So W = 550 x 9 = 4 950 J
W 4 950
p= and therefore:- P =
t 12.5
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ENERGY SOURCES
Renewable energy source
Renewable energy source is the one that is generated from natural resources such
as sunlight,
Wind, waves, tides and geothermal and hydroelectric heat which means it can be
received from nature forever
The Sun is the source of energy for all our energy resources except geothermal,
nuclear and tidal.
1) Solar energy
Solar heating systems consist of water-filled black panels. Heat from the Sun
warms the panels, and the hot water can be used directly, for central heating
systems or for hot water at home.
2) Wind Power
Wind energy turns the turbine blades in a wind turbine. The turbines rotate the
generator. The kinetic energy of the wind is converted into electrical energy by the
generator.
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3) Water
hydroelectric power station
Energy stored as G.P.E. transfers to kinetic energy as it flows down through
pipes to turbines and a generator, which convert this to electrical energy.
A tidal power station uses the rising and falling of water in the sea to generate
electricity. The tides are produced by the gravitational pull of the Moon and Sun
on the seas
Waves
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and fall in the air chamber. The air above the water causes the turbine to turn and
electricity is produced by the generator.
4) Geothermal
Geothermal power stations use heat from underground where
hot rocks lie near to the surface. Water is pumped in pipes down
to hot rocks and returns as steam to turbine and a generator
produce electricity.
5) Fossil fuels
Fossil fuel power stations can produce a large power output, 24 hours a day. For this
reason, the majority of the World's electrical energy is still produced in this way.
Fuel (coal, oil, gas) energy stored as chemical energy by burning fuel it converted as
thermal energy which supply in water in boiler water turn into steam kinetic energy
of steam turn turbine and generator produce electricity
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6) Nuclear power
Nuclear power stations have a huge power output and are also reliable, working 24
hours a day. Nuclear energy stored in nucleus (uranium atom) by fission it release
huge energy thermal energy released which supply in water in boiler water turn
into steam kinetic energy of steam turn turbine and generator produce electricity
These fuels are far more energy dense Fossil fuels are becoming increasingly
than renewable sources and thus, in expensive to mine (coal) and drill for
many countries, they allow production of (oil), as reserves are running out (being
larger amounts of energy in depleted).
comparison to renewable sources. They They cause global warming due to high
are also relatively easy to transport and carbon dioxide (CO.) emissions when
can be stored ready for use. they are burnt. Some also produce sulfur
dioxide (SO,), which causes acid rain.
Nuclear power stations are expensive to
build and any radiation
leak or explosion may have a
devastating effect on the immediate
population and environment
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Advantages of renewable sources Disadvantages of renewable sources
They are all regarded as clean Generally all renewable energy sources
(producing little or no pollution) and have high installation costs
will not run out. The fuel itself is cheap
or free.
Solar energy
- When the sun doesn't shine (at night) no electricity is produced.
- Dirty solar panels are inefficient.
- To install panels is an expensive process.
- The panels take up large areas.
Wind energy
- When the wind doesn't blow no electricity is produced.
- Wind farms can destroy the natural beauty of a landscape and are noisy.
- Offshore wind farms are expensive to build and need to be avoided by shipping.
Wave energy
- Waves vary in size and therefore will produce varying quantities (amounts) of
energy. When the sea is calm, no electricity is produced
- Installation is expensive and challenging.
- Boats would have to be careful and be aware of the location of the turbines to
prevent accidents.
Tidal energy
- Many countries do not have suitable locations.
- Might affect local marine life and destroy habitats.
54
Geothermal energy
- There are few locations that are suitable.
- It is often necessary to drill very deep and this makes the energy very expensive to
obtain.
Hydroelectric energy
- The local environment may be destroyed because water needs to be stored behind
a dam, the land behind it flooding.
- Dams are expensive to build.
Pressure
Pressure =
Where, force is measured in Newton (N), area is measured in square meters (m2)
and the unit for pressure is Pascal (Pa).
1 Pa = 1 N/m2
55
Questions
answer
F 5
P= P=
A 0.8
2. A classroom stool has a weight of 160 N. Each of the 4 stool legs produces a
pressure of 8.0 N/cm2 on the floor.
Calculate the area of each stool leg that is in contact with the floor.
Answer
Each stool takes ¼ of the weight. This means the force on each leg is ¼ of 160 N, or
40 N each.
We know that:
F F 40
P= A= and therefore A =
A P 8
A = 5.0 cm2 (The pressure was given in N/cm2 so the answer must be in cm2, not
m2).
56
2) Pressure in fluids (liquids & gases)
A liquid held in a container exerts pressure on the inner walls of the container as
well as on any object that is inside the liquid. Following are the properties applied to
any object in a liquid.
1. Pressure of liquid on an object acts equally in all direction,
2. Pressure of liquid increase with the increase of depth,
3. Pressure depends upon the density of the liquid,
4. Pressure does not depend upon the shape of the container.
The pressure due to liquid of density ρ and height h can be expressed by
Pressure = Density x Gravity x Height
P=ρxgxh
Where
P is the pressure difference between two points in a liquid or a gas.
h is the depth beneath the surface of the liquid (measured in meters). The
greater the depth, the greater the pressure.
ρ is the density of the liquid (kg/m3). The greater the density, the greater the
pressure at any depth.
g is the gravitational field strength (N/kg)
The atmosphere
The Earth's atmosphere is a thick layer of a mixture of gases. This produces a
pressure just like a deep pool of water
57
Questions
Answer
a) We know that P = ρ x g x h.
The value of 'g' on earth can be taken as 10 N/kg.
P = 1050 x 10 x 500
P = 5 250 000 Pa
b) F = P x A,
F = 5 250 000 x 0.0015
F = 7 875 N
The maximum pressure increase for safe recreational diving in water is given
as 400 kPa. In a fresh water lake of density 1000 kg/m3, how deep can a diver
go so that this limit is not exceeded?
Answer
P = ρ x g x h.
So 400 000 = 1000 x 10 x h
400 000 = 10 000 x h
400 000
h=
10 000
h= 40 m
58
2-Thermal PHYSICS
Thermal Physics
The branch of physics that study the temperature, heat energy and their relation to
the matter
Molecular Model
Matter is made up of atoms and molecules, which may only be seen by electronic
microscope
States of Matter
All matter is made up of tiny particles (molecules) that are moving. The idea that
molecules have a certain kind of motion is called the Kinetic Theory. The way
that the particles are arranged and the way that they move determine the
properties of a material, such as its state at room temperature or it density.
Therefore, the kinetic theory can explain the existence of solid, liquid and gas
states.
All substances can exist in any of the three states solid, liquid or gas. The
increase in particle separation during a change of state from solid to liquid is
small, whereas particle separation during change of state from liquid to gas is
large. This particle separation is responsible for the main physical properties
that we observe for any of the three states
Solid
are tightly packed (dense)
Are held in a fixed pattern or crystal
Structure by strong forces between them (have a fixed shape).
Have fixed volume and are incompressible.
Vibrate around their fixed positions within the close-packed
regular structure.
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As we heat a solid, the particles vibrate more quickly. The increase in the
kinetic energy of the particles is noticed as an increase in the temperature of
the substance.
Liquid
Are tightly packed (but have slightly smaller densities than
solids).
Are not held in fixed positions but are still bound together by
strong forces between them. Thus, they have a fixed volume but
not a fixed shape.
Take up the shape of their container (occupy the lowest part) and are almost
incompressible.
Move at random with close packed irregular structure.
As we heat a liquid, the movement of the particles becomes more
energetic.
Gas
Are very spread out (have much smaller densities than solids and liquids)
Have no fixed positions and the forces between them are very weak. Thus,
Have neither a fixed shape nor a fixed volume.
Can fill up all the space available to them and are compressible.
Move with a rapid, random motion.
Bump into anything in the gas or into the walls of the container, and
forces caused by these collisions are responsible for the pressure
the gas exerts.
60
Summary of the properties of solids, liquids and gases
Property Solids Liquids Gases
Attractive forces Very strong strong attractive Negligible attractive
between molecules attractive forces forces forces
Spacing between molecules are molecules are Molecules are far
molecules closely packed loosely packed apart
Motion of Vibrate about a Move around while Move with rapid,
molecules fixed position sliding past each random motion
other
shape Fixed Not fixed, take up Not fixed
the shape of the
container
Can be easily no no yes
compressed
Melting is the change of state from a solid to a liquid. The melting point of a
substance is the temperature at which the substance changes from a solid to a
liquid. Most substances have a unique melting point that can be used to identify
them.
Freezing is the reverse process of melting. It is the change of state from a liquid
to a solid (sometimes called solidification). During freezing, some bonds are
formed between the molecules and energy is released to do this.
Condensation is the change of state from gas to liquid, during which energy is
also released and bonds are formed.
61
Heating curve
If we take an ice cube as an example, and we start heating it, the following curve is
obtained (by plotting temperature against time).
The graph is horizontal at two places. These are where energy is being used to
break the bonds (against attractive force) between the particles to change the
state, rather than increase the speed of the particles (and so to increase the
temperature).
The longer the horizontal line, the more energy has been used to cause the
change of state (boiling)
62
Cooling curve
during condensing and freezing, internal energy decreases as the motion of
particles decreases and new bonds are formed Horizontal line Freezing
(Solidifying )
The more stepper Graph the more rate of cooling
Questions
Answer
a) The molecules are close together, moving past each other, taking the shape of the
(bottom of the) container, moving randomly, have weak forces between them
holding them near to each other
63
b) The molecules move far apart, move faster, have no forces keeping them together,
fill the container they go into or spread through the atmosphere.
Answer
a) Ice is a solid, so to begin with the molecules are arranged in a fixed pattern and
are held in place by strong forces between them. They vibrate around a fixed point,
and are close together. As the ice melts, heat energy is used to break/weaken the
bonds between the molecules, allowing them to move more freely with only weak
forces between them. They stay close together, moving randomly.
b) A change of state occur when a substance changes between a solid, liquid or gas
state. For example, the ice cube changes state from solid to liquid as it melts.
64
Evaporation
Is the escape of more energetic molecule from the surface of liquid, these
molecule will be able to overcome the intermolecular force with neighbor molecule
and escape so reaming molecule of liquid has less kinetic energy and cool
Evaporation Boiling
Surface molecule only Whole the liquid
Any Temperature Specific Temperature
No Bubbles Bubbles
2. Surface area as it increases, the rate of evaporation increases. As this gives the
faster molecules a greater chance of escaping
(Increase draught) the rate of evaporation increases. When air moves across a
liquid surface, it carries away molecules escaping from the liquid and reduces their
chances of returning to it.
65
decreases. This explains the cooling of a body in contact with an evaporating
liquid. This is known as cooling effect due to evaporation.
Brownian motion
Is an evidence for the continual motion of particles in a liquid or a gas
It shows that massive particles may be moved by light, fast moving particles
Procedure
1. Fill the smoke cell (or glass cell) with smoke.
2. Replace the lid on the cell and set it on the microscope
platform.
3. Switch on the lamp; focus the light on the smoke.
Observation
Finding bright specks of light moving about in a random
Conclusion
The air molecules are: very tiny, moving randomly about and their motion is
much faster than that of the smoke particles.
Explanation
The smoke particle in air is being hit by air particle from all direction (as air has
kinetic energy) so smoke particle move in random straight line
The same experiment can be carried out by sprinkling some pollen grains in
water and observing the motion of the pollen grains.
66
Pressure by Gas
All moving particles have kinetic energy and momentum Gas molecules have
large energies (because they are moving very fast).
The gas particles exert a force on the walls of a container when they collide
with it. The pressure exerted by the gas particles is the force per unit area.
The total pressure of the gas is the effect of the sum of all the collisions with
the wall.
When the molecules collide with the walls of the container they change
direction and bounce back. This means that the velocity (a vector quantity)
has changed. If the velocity changes, the momentum changes.
The force is larger if the particles are moving faster (because the change in
momentum is greater) or if there are more particles colliding with the walls
per second.
A higher temperature gases more collisions in a given time and causes the
collisions to be harder because the particles are moving faster.
Consequently, a higher temperature causes a larger pressure.
67
Boyles’s Law
This means that for a fixed mass of gas at constant temperature, the
pressure multiplied by the volume is constant p× V= constant
When the pressure increases, the volume decreases and vice versa, as shown
in the graph below.
By add mass on piston the pressure increases because the gas molecules
are squeezed into a smaller space volume decrease Therefore there are
more collisions per second between the
molecules and the container walls. The
more frequent collisions cause a larger
force on the walls and hence a larger
pressure.
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pressure and volume are related by equation
p1 v1 = p2 v2
Questions
Answer
If you increase the temperature, the pressure inside the can increases further.
This could cause the can to break open or even explode in high temperatures.
2. A diver is deep under the sea. When divers breathe out, they release
bubbles of gas which rises to the surface. Explain what happens to:
Answer
a) The pressure in water depends on the height (h) of water above that point due to
the formula P = ρ g h.
Therefore as a bubble rises, h decreases, and so the pressure decreases.
b) If the pressure of the water decreases as a bubble rises, then the pressure on the
gas bubble also decreases. If the pressure decreases, the volume increases.
69
3. A syringe contains 10 cm3 of air at a pressure of 100 kPa.
Answer
a) P1 x V1 = P2 x V2
Substituting in values for the initial volume (10 cm3) and pressure (100 000 Pa), and
the final volume (4 cm3) gives:
100 000 x 10 = P2 x 4
1 000 000
P2 =
4
b) This formula only applies if the temperature or mass of gas remains constant.
a) Calculate the volume the air in the diver's lungs would occupy at the
surface, where the pressure is only 100 kPa.
b) Suggest why it is dangerous for divers to hold their breath whilst swimming
upwards to the surface.
70
Answer
a) P1 x V1 = P2 x V2
Then substituting in values for the initial and final values gives
500 000 x 0.006 = 100 000 x V2
b) This volume is 5 times larger than the volume of the lungs. The diver is in danger
of causing damage to his /her lungs or even rupturing them, as the air expands
outwards.
The pressure of the gas is determined by the force of the particles colliding
with the walls of the container and by the rate of collision. As the
temperature increases, the force increases and so the pressure of a gas
increases with temperature.
71
As the volume of the container is kept constant, there will also be more
molecules hitting the walls of the container every second and so the
pressure is increased
The zero of the Kelvin scale is absolute zero, the lowest possible temperature
72
Questions
Answer
Thermal Expansion
When matter is heated, it expands (volume increases). When it is cooled, it
contracts. Higher temperatures of a substance mean greater speed of molecules
and bigger vibrations. Accordingly, spacing between molecules increases causing
expansion.
a) Expansion in solids
When a solid is heated, its atoms vibrate faster about their fixed points. The relative
increase in the size
For railway tracks Gaps are left between lengths of rail to allow for expansion
in summer.
For cables: provide sagging between telephone poles to allow for contraction of
cables.
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Bimetallic strips: Strips of iron and copper or brass
, brass expands more than the Iron. It is mostly used
in fire alarm and thermostat (metal).
b) Expansion in Liquid
Liquids expand for the same reason, but because the bonds between separate
molecules are usually less tight they expand more than solids. This is the
principle behind liquid-in-glass thermometers. An increase in temperature results in
the expansion of the liquid which means it rises up the glass
c) Expansion in gas
Molecules within gases are further apart and weakly attracted to each other. Heat
causes the molecules to move faster,
“Expansion of a gas more than the volume of liquid and, liquid is more than
solid “
When there is no change of state, the heat lost or gained by an object can be
calculated
𝐸 = 𝑚 𝑐 Δ𝑇
74
Where
E is the quantity of heat energy, measured in J. note that heat energy supplied by
an electric heater is given by: 𝐸𝑛𝑒𝑟𝑔𝑦=𝑝𝑜𝑤𝑒𝑟 ×𝑡𝑖𝑚𝑒
m is the mass of the object in g or kg
c is the specific heat capacity of the material in J/kgºC or J/kgK.
ΔT is the change in temperature in ºC or K since as the change in temperature of
1 ºC equals the change in temperature of 1 K and is always expressed as (Tf - Ti).
c=
Improvement
put insulating material around the aluminum block ( to reduce heat lost )
put oil in the gap of the aluminum block (to ensure thermal conduct
between aluminum and thermometer )
75
Finding specific heat capacities (liquid)
1. put 0.25 kg of water into beaker
2. setup the experiments as shown in figure
3. measure and record the initial temperature(Ti)
of the block
4. turn on power supply and leave until the
temperature change by about 50 Co
5. turn off power supply record final temperature
(Tf)
6. calculate the change in temperature Δ𝑇=𝑇𝑓− 𝑇𝑖
7. record joule meter reading and calculate specific heat capacity by equation
c=
Questions
1. A kettle is filled with 2.5 kg of water of S.H.C. 4180 J/kg 0C. Calculate the
energy needed to heat the water from a room temperature of 25 0C to the
boiling point at 100 0C .
Answer
ΔQ = m x c x ΔT
ΔQ = 2.5 x 4180 x (100-25)
ΔQ = 784 000 J (784 kJ)
76
b) The heating element has a power output of 48 W. Calculate the time
it takes to heat the copper to 61 0C.
Answer
ΔQ
c= 16 400
m x ΔT c=
1 x 39
c= 421 J/kg 0C
b) we know that power and energy /work are related by the formula
W 16 400
t= t= t = 341 seconds
P 48
3. Ice cubes of mass 60 g are placed into a glass of 300 g of water. The ice is
initially at -18 0C and warms up to -1 0C over a period of 4 minutes. Ice has a
S.H.C. of 2110 J/kg 0C.
a) Calculate the heat energy gained by the ice during this time.
b) Calculate the temperature drop of the water as heat energy is
transferred to the ice. The S.H.C. of water is 4180 J/kg 0C.
C) Suggest one reason why the answer in (b) may be unrealistic and
incorrect.
Answer
77
b) The heat energy to warm the ice comes from the surrounding water. Therefore
the water cools, losing the same quantity of heat energy.
As ΔQ = m x c x ΔT , then using m = 0.3 kg gives
ΔQ 2150
ΔT= ΔT=
mxc 0.3 x 4180
ΔT = 1.71 0c
c) The water may not cool by 1.71 0C due to any of the following:
Glass cools down as well / heat gain or loss due to surroundings / some ice may
melt / ice may not cool by the same temperature drop across the cubes
Conduction
Thermal conduction is the transfer of thermal (heat) energy through a substance
without the substance itself moving.
78
1) Collisions between neighboring particles
When heat is applied to a substance, the kinetic energy of its atoms increases so
their vibrations get bigger. The vibrating atoms bump into neighboring atoms
and pass on their kinetic energy. These atoms then pass on their kinetic energy to
atoms close to them and so on. In such way, the heat energy moves through the
substance. Conduction takes place in solids, liquids and gases, but it works best in
solids as their molecules are closer together.
79
During heat transfer by conduction, the molecules do not change their
positions within the substance.
Poor Conductors
They do not possess free moving electrons. When such substances are heated,
the kinetic energy of the molecules increases and
they move faster and bump into their neighboring
molecules giving them part of their kinetic energy.
Here, this is a much slower process, that’s why
these substances are called poor conductors or
insulators of heat.
Generally, most non-metal solids, almost all
liquids (except mercury) and gases are poor
conductors of heat.
This figure shows that water is a poor conductor of heat.
Convection
Convection is the transfer of heat through fluids (liquids and gases) by the upward
movement of warmer, less dense regions of fluid.
When a mass of liquid (or gas) is heated, the heated liquid expands and become
less dense than the colder surrounding liquid so it floats up to
the top of the container. Colder liquid sinks to take its place,
and is then heated too. At the top, the warm liquid starts to
cool, becomes denser again and will begin to sink, so a
circulating current is set up in the liquid. This is called
convection current
80
Convection cannot occur in solids as the molecules are not free to move about
within the solid structure.
Convection cannot occur in vacuum as there are no molecules to transfer heat
by convection.
Convection cannot occur if the fluid is heated at the top rather than at the
bottom. The warmer, less dense fluid simply stays at the top.
Radiation
Thermal radiation is the transfer of energy by infra-red (IR) waves unlike
conduction and convection (both need matter to occur), radiation can occur in
vacuum. In radiation, heat energy is transferred by infra-red waves – one of the
electromagnetic spectrum. Radiation is emitted by all objects in all directions, at
the speed of light (3×108 m/s). The amount of radiation emitted depends on the
1. Surface temperature
2. Surface area of the body
Highly polished silvered shiny light
colored surfaces are good reflectors of
thermal radiation
(Are poor emitters and poor absorbers)
Dull matt black and dark surfaces are poor reflectors of heat radiation
(Are good emitters and good absorbers)
81
Experiment Good and bad absorbers of
radiation
1. Two flasks are used, one covered with dull (matt) black paint
and the other with shiny white paint.
2. Both flasks contain the same amount of water, at the same
Temperature and are placed at equal distances from a radiant
heater.
Results
The temperature of the water in the flask with the dull black surface is found to rise
significantly more than the flask with the light shiny surface.
Conclusion
Dull dark matt surfaces are the best absorbers; shiny mirror-like surfaces are the
poorest.
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2) Windows are double or triple glazed
Two or three layers of glass with vacuum in between or with a moderate layer of air
trapped in-between this reduces heat loss by conduction, convection and not
radiation
In a car radiator, the coolant liquid flows through the tubes inside combustion engine and
absorb the engine's heat and in-turn gets heated itself
The heated fluid then makes its way through a rubber hose to the radiator in the front of
the car. As it flows through the thin tubes in the radiator, the hot liquid is cooled by the air
stream entering the engine compartment from the grill in front of the car. Once the fluid is
cooled, it returns to the engine to absorb more heat.
The air picks up heat from the coolant by convection process, heated air is blown away by
the fan, and colder air replaces it.
83
4) A fire burning wood or coal
When coal or wood is burnt the chemical combustion releases infra-red radiation,
in addition the air close to fire heat and rises so thermal energy transfer to
surrounding by convection, energy transfer by conduction to object in contact
with burning fuel
84
3-Waves
Waves
Waves are a means of transferring energy from one place to another through
vibrations without transferring matter
Types of waves
1) Mechanical waves
These are waves that require a medium to travel through; they cannot travel
through vacuum.
Sound waves ripple waves and slinky spring waves. These waves are either:
transverse or longitudinal.
2) Electromagnetic waves
These are waves that do not require a medium to travel through and can travel
through vacuum.
Radio waves, X-rays, infrared waves… All electromagnetic waves are transverse.
Waves can be classified according to how the particles vibrate relative to the
direction of wave propagation into two categories transverse or longitudinal
1) Transverse waves
A transverse wave is one that vibrates or oscillates at right angles (perpendicular)
to the direction in which the energy or wave is moving light waves and waves
travelling on the surface of water.
This can be shown by a slinky spring: give one end a quick wiggle at right angles
to the spring the coils of the slinky are vibrating up and down “across” the
direction
85
2) Longitudinal waves
This can be shown by a slinky spring: push and pull the end of a slinky in a
direction parallel to its axis the coils of the slinky are vibrating in the directions
that are along its length.
Questions
86
Answer
b) Water (surface) waves, Light (or any electromagnetic wave) are all transverse
waves.
Wave properties
Amplitude (A)
The amplitude ‘A’ is the maximum height of wave from rest position
Wavelength (λ)
The wavelength of a wave, represented by the Greek letter λ (lambda), is the
distance between the two successive points (crests or troughs).
Frequency (f)
The frequency f is the number of complete waves generated per second. The unit of
frequency is ‘cycle per second’ or hertz (Hz). Where 1 Hz = 1 wave/second
87
Time period (T)
It is the time taken for a wave to complete one cycle or one wave.
The frequency and the period are related by the following equation
𝑓=
Questions
1. Ocean waves hit a wall in a harbor at a rate of 12 waves per minute. What is
the frequency of these waves?
Answer
If there are 12 waves per minute, then we have 12 waves per 60 seconds.
The frequency is defined as the number of waves per second, so we need to divide
12 by 60
12
frequency =
60
2. A guitar string produces a sound of frequency 1.2 kHz. What is the time
period of this wave?
Answer
1.2 kHz is equal to 1200 Hz. using the formula above, the time period is therefore:
1
time period =
1200
88
Wave fronts
The wave front can generally be thought of as continuous line,
perpendicular to direction of propagation, like view sea waves from
top of cliff (Straight lines and can be thought as the crests or
troughs of the waves)
Wave equation
The higher the frequency (f) of a wave the smaller its wavelength (λ) It is true for all
types of waves and the relation between them is called wave equation which is
Speed of wave = wave length x frequency
v=fxλ
Questions
1. Sound waves have a velocity of 340 m/s in air. A car horn in a stationary car
makes a sound of frequency 500 Hz.
Answer
v 340
λ= λ=
ƒ 500
λ = 0.68 m
89
b) As the car moves away from the observer, the frequency decreases (because the
pitch we hear is lower).
Behavior of waves
1) Reflection
Change in direction of wave when it meets a hard boundary (mirror)
Law of reflection
“The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection”
i=r
Where
The angle of incidence (i) is the angle between the
incident ray and the normal.
The angle of reflection (r) is the angle between the
reflected ray and the normal.
The normal is a line drawn at right angles to the
surface.
When a wave is reflected, it is still in the same medium so its speed doesn’t
change. Accordingly, its wavelength doesn’t change.
Questions
90
c) Measure or calculate the angle between the incident and reflected
ray.
Answer
c) The angle between the incident and reflected rays should be 600. This can be
measured, or you could calculate it by extending the normal line
Reflection of light
When light reflects from a plane mirror, the angle of incidence (i) is equal to the
angle of reflection (r); the law of reflection is applied.
This figure shows how an image is formed behind a plane mirror. Two rays from any
point on the object are sufficient to establish the position of the image of that point.
Solid lines represent real rays whereas dashed lines represent virtual rays.
2. The formed image has the same size as the object.
3. The image is as far behind the mirror as the object is in front (same distance)
4. It is laterally inverted.
5. It is upright.
91
Circular waves (reflection)
The reflected waves are also circular and appear to come from a corresponding
image point at the same distance behind the reflector as the point source is in front
of it.
2) Refraction
is the change in both speed and wavelength of a
wave as it travels from one medium to another or
the bending of a wave due to change in its speed as it
moves from one medium to another.
92
Remember this
a) If the incident ray is lying along the normal (the ray is perpendicular to the
boundary or the angle of incidence = zero), then no bending occurs.
b) If the wave comes from a less dense medium to a more dense medium, then its
speed decreases and it bends towards the normal (i>r).
c) If the wave comes from a more dense medium to a less dense medium, then its
speed increases and it bends away from the normal (i<r).
Where,
i is the angle of incidence (the angle between the ray incident to the boundary and the
normal) and r is the angle of refraction (the angle between the refracted ray and the
normal).
When water waves pass across a boundary, from deep water (less density) to
shallow water (more Density) they move slower in the shallow water
93
3) Diffraction
Is the spreading out of waves as they travel through a gap or round a corner
If the waves pass through a narrow gap which is equal to or smaller than the
wavelength of the wave, then there are waves to the left and right of the gap
“complete diffraction”.
If waves pass through a large gap, the majority of the waves passing through
the gap continue in straight line “small/partial diffraction”.
The narrower the gap, the more the waves spread out “ more diffraction”
In all diffraction cases, the wavelength and frequency do not change.
Accordingly, the speed does not change.
94
Summary
Refractive index
It is a ratio that has no unit
Refractive index =
1-Place a transparent block in the middle of a plain sheet of paper; trace around the
block in pencil.
2-Position a ray box so that the light from it strikes the glass block at an angle.
95
3-Mark the positions where the light meets the glass boundary and where it leaves
the glass boundary with dots
4-Mark two crosses (or place optical pins) on the paper along the incident ray and
the emergent ray approximately 5cm apart.
5-Remove the glass block and switch off the ray box.
6-Using a ruler, complete the lines between the dots and the crosses.
7-Draw in the normal at 90° to where the light strikes the glass boundary.
8-Draw the second normal where the light leaves the glass boundary, again at 90°.
9- Using a protractor, measure the angles of incidence and refraction as shown on
the diagram above.
Critical angle
Waves going from a dense medium to a less dense medium speed up at the
boundary between them. This causes light rays to bend when they pass from glass
to air at an angle other than 90°. This is refraction.
Beyond a certain angle, called the critical angle, all the waves reflect back into the
glass. We say that they are totally internally reflected
96
critical angle ( I = c ) is the incident angle when the refracted ray at the top of
the prism
n=
Uses
1-communcation
Mobile phones and internet transmit information digitally (0,1) in form of light
pulses by total internal reflection
2-medical
97
3-periscope
Questions
Answer
sin 250
= 1.33
sin r
0.423
sin r =
1.33
So sin r = 0.318,
r = sin -1 (0.318)
r = 18.50 , or 190
98
2. The diagram below shows a Perspex block with a refractive
index of 1.5.
Answer
sin i
= 1.5
sin 380
Answer
1
sin C =
1.33
99
sin C = 0.75
C = sin-1 (0.75)
C = 48.60
b) At an angle of incidence of 500, the ray will be reflected, because this angle
is greater than the critical angle calculated in part (a).
LENSES
They are divided into two types
1. Convex or converging lens is thicker at the middle than the edges.
2. Concave or diverging lens thicker at the edge than at the center.
Principal axis
The straight line passing through the center of the lens is called principal axis.
100
Drawing ray diagrams
1-Draw a ray from the top of the object through the Centre of the lens, which does
not change direction
2-Draw a ray from the top of the object parallel to the principal axis until it reaches
the central plane of the lens. The ray then passes straight through the principal
focus on the other side of the lens. An image is formed where the rays meet
101
A converging lens can be used as a magnifying glass when an object is placed
between F and the lens , image describe as ( upright , virtual , enlarged )
102
103
104
105
106
107
Eye
The normal human eye has a lens that converges light to form an image on the light-
sensitive membrane at the back of the eyeball called the retina. The image is
converted to an electrical signal, which is relayed to the brain via the optic nerve to
translate the image into something meaningful. The focal length of the eye lens
is very short - less than 20 mm - the distance from the lens to the back of the eyeball.
108
short sighted
Can see close object but object faraway are blurred, to
correct short sighted diverging lenses can be placed in
front of eyes
long sighted
Can see object a long way away but object close by are
blurred, to correct long sighted converging lenses can be
placed in front of the eyes
109
Electromagnetic spectrum
A spectrum of different wavelengths this spectrum includes visible light, X-rays and
radio waves. Electromagnetic radiation can be useful as well as hazardous
They all travel at the same speed (the speed of light) in a vacuum.
They are all transverse waves.
They are all electromagnetic waves.
Region of E.M.
Uses Dangers
spectrum
broadcasting,
radio -
communication
cooking, internal heating of body
microwaves
satellite communication tissue
heating,
infrared night vision , remote skin burns
control
photography,
visible skin burns
fiber-optic communication
110
fluorescent lamps blindness,
ultraviolet
and inks damage to surface cells
observing internal
structures, damage to internal cells
x-rays
for medicine and and organs
materials
sterilizing food mutation of cells,
gamma rays
and medical equipment cancer
Communication
mobile phones (cell phones) and wireless internet use microwaves because
microwaves can penetrate some walls and only require a short aerial for
transmission and reception
Bluetooth uses radio waves because radio waves pass through walls but the
signal is weakened on doing so
111
optical fibres (visible light or infrared) are used for cable television and
high-speed broadband because glass is transparent to visible light and some
infrared; visible light and short wavelength infrared can carry high rates of
data
b) Digital signals
A signal that consists of a voltage that can have one of only two values “High and
low” or “On and Off” or “0 and 1” , digital clocks and digital meters
112
Sound
✓ Sounds are produced by objects that
are vibrating.
Speed of sound
gas 340 m/s
liquid 1500 m/s
solid 5000 m/s
113
flash of the gun and hearing the sound - this is measured in seconds
Where,
𝑠𝑝𝑒𝑒𝑑 𝑜𝑓 𝑠𝑜𝑢𝑛𝑑 =
Human Hearing
Humans can hear a wide range of frequencies. The lowest sounds that we can
detect are about 20 Hz. The highest sounds for a healthy young adult are about 20
000 Hz or 20 kHz.
less 20 Hz is infrasound
more 20000 Hz ultrasound
114
Questions
Answer
Boats use a SONAR (Sound Navigation and Ranging) system to locate objects
such as shipwrecks and shoals of fish beneath the surface of the sea, and to
measure the depth of the ocean. An ultrasound pulse is sent from the boat to the
object and the time taken for the pulse to reach the object and return to the ship,
together with the speed of sound in seawater, enables the distance to be
calculated.
115
Ultrasound scanning can also be used to diagnose problems with various
organs in the body, such as the heart, liver and kidneys. It is a non-invasive
technique, i.e. doctors do not have to operate on patients to be able to 'see' what
is inside them, and it does not have the same risks as X-rays.
Ultrasound scanning can also be used to search for defects in metals, pipes and
other materials. If an ultrasonic pulse is aimed through a sheet of metal it
would be expected to send an echo back from the far side, but if there is a crack
within the metal an echo is sent back sooner than expected as shown below.
116
4-Electricity and Magnetism
Magnetism
Properties of Magnets
Objects made from magnetic materials called
ferrous materials or ferromagnetic (such as iron,
steel, nickel and cobalt) can be magnetized or
attracted by a magnet.
Objects made from non-magnetic materials called non-ferrous materials
(such as plastic, wood, paper or rubber) cannot be magnetized or attracted to
magnets.
The parts of a magnet where the magnetic force is the strongest are called its
poles (as we move Away from the poles, the magnetic force strength decreases).
The poles of a bar magnet are near its ends and occur in pairs of equal strength
(a north pole and a south pole).
When a magnet is suspended freely, its north pole will point towards the
north of the Earth and its south pole will point towards the south of the Earth
Magnetic forces
117
Magnetic Fields
The magnetic field is the region around a magnet where magnetic force can be
detected. This region contains the magnetic flux which is represented using lines of
force or flux lines.
Magnetic flux is a vector quantity, so flux lines should represent both magnitude
and direction,
Accordingly they
1. Show the shape of the magnetic field.
2. Show the direction of the magnetic field (field lines travel from north to South
Pole).
3. Show the strength of the magnetic field (the closer the lines the stronger the
field).
118
To investigate Direction of magnetic field of a bar
magnet
Induced Magnetism
A magnet is placed near a magnetic substance so that the magnetic substance
attracted to the magnet and act as magnet, both iron and steel are magnetized by
induction but there are some differences:
119
More iron filings cling to iron than to steel so induced magnetism in iron is
stronger than in steel. Therefore, iron is easier to magnetize than steel.
When the magnet is removed, iron loses its magnetism easily but steel retains its
magnetism.
Questions
1. The south pole of a magnet is used to test a range of materials. Explain what
will happen when the South Pole is placed near to:
Answer
120
Answer
A soft magnetic material can be magnetized easily but quickly loses a magnetic field
/ is a temporary magnet.
Answer
Answer
a) Salt is not a magnetic material. The crystals will not be affected by the magnetic
field.
b) Iron filings should be used instead, and sprinkled slowly on the region around the
magnet.
121
Electric charge
According to the ability of a substance to allow electric charges to flow through it,
substances have been classified into
Electrical conductor these are substances that allow charges (electricity) to
flow through
Them easily this is because they have free charge carriers, all metals are good
conductors as they have free electrons.
Electrical insulators these are substances that do not allow electric charges to
flow easily through them. This is because they do not have free charge
carriers, most non-metals plastic, rubber, glass and wood. (except graphite and
silicon)
122
There are two methods to obtain static electricity, either by friction of an
insulator or By induction of conductor
Only negative electrons can move / the positive protons remain fixed.
123
Electric forces between charges and electric fields
a) Electric forces
Charged objects can exert forces on other charged objects without
being in contact with them.
The closer the charges, the greater the force
“Like charges repel and unlike charges attract”
124
125
Electric current
Electron flow and conventional current
Electric current is the flow of charge (carried by electrons)
If a cell or battery is connected across the conductor (in a closed circuit), the
electrons flow in the direction away from the negative terminal and towards
the positive terminal. This flow of charge is an electric current.
The free electrons flow from the negative terminal to the positive terminal of the
battery “Direction of electron flow”.
Whereas the “direction of conventional current” is from the positive terminal to
the negative terminal of the battery
𝐶𝑢𝑟𝑟𝑒𝑛𝑡 (𝐼) =
126
The size of the current flowing in a circuit is measured using an ammeter which
is connected in Series with the component of the circuit being investigated
Ammeters have low resistance so that they measure the size of the
current flowing in the circuit without affecting its value.
Questions
1. A 0.3 amp household lamp is left on for 5 minutes. Calculate the charge
flowing through the lamp in this time.
Answer
Answer
6
Q
t=
t=
3 x 10-2
I
t = 200 s
127
Voltage (potential difference)
Cells or batteries transfer energy to the charges as they move them around
circuits. If a 1.5V cell is connected into a circuit, it means that 1.5 Joules of energy
is given to each coulomb of charge that passes through the cell.
So the potential difference (voltage) between two points in a circuit is the
work done to drive one coulomb of charge between these two points. It is the
energy transferred per unit charge which is measured in Volt (V). 1 Volt = 1 J/C.
𝐸𝑛𝑒𝑟𝑔𝑦 𝑇𝑟𝑎𝑛𝑠𝑓𝑒𝑟𝑟𝑒𝑑
𝑃𝑜𝑡𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑖𝑎𝑙 𝑑𝑖𝑓𝑓𝑒𝑟𝑒𝑛𝑐𝑒 (V) =
The electromotive force (e.m.f.) of an electrical source is the work done (energy
supplied) by the source to drive 1 coulomb of charge round a closed circuit
(energy gained by each coulomb).
The potential difference (voltage drop) across a component (or between two
points in a circuit) is the drop in electric potential energy experienced by each
coulomb of charge due to resistance between these two points ( difference in
electrical energy )
128
Questions
3. A kettle needs 20 kJ to boil the water inside. If the kettle voltage is 240 V,
calculate the total charge flowing through the kettle.
Answer
20 kJ is equal to 20 000 J.
We know E = Q x V,
20 000
E Q=
Q= 240
V
Q = 83.333 coulombs
4. A small cell is used to run a camping lamp. The cell stores 180 J of energy,
and is rated as 1.5 V.
a) What is the total charge that can be delivered by the cell before it
runs out? (Assume when running, the cell voltage remains constant and
the cell is 100% efficient).
b) The lamp needs 20 mA to operate. Using this information and your
answer from part (a), calculate the time for which the lamp can remain
lit.
Answer
a) If E = Q x V
180
E Q=
Q= 1.5
V
Q = 120 C
129
b) If I = 20 mA (0.02 A) and Q = 120 C,
then using Q = I x t
Q 120
t= t=
I 0.02
t = 6000 s
Type of resistor
1-fixed resistor
A resistor which have constant value all the time ( obey ohm’s law )
130
Measuring the resistance of a resistor
Set up the following experiment
The voltmeter measures the voltage drop across the
resistor.
The ammeter measures the current through the
resistor.
The variable resistor allows you to change the size of
the current
Ohm’s law
The current that flows through a metallic conductor is directly
Proportional to the potential difference across its ends, provided
its temperature remains constant
Questions
Answer
We know that V= I x R, So
131
V
6
I=
I=
R
20
I= 0.3 A
Answer
Answer
In a parallel circuit, the current splits, and here both branches of the
circuit are identical. Therefore 2 amps flows down each branch.
Also for a parallel circuit, the voltage across all branches is the same
as the cell, so each resistor has a p.d. of 6V.
V 6
R= R=
I 2
132
R=3Ω
133
b) I-V characteristics of a filament lamp:
The graph is not a straight line, so the lamp is a non-
ohmic
Conductor. As more current flows, the metal filament
gets hotter and electron in the wire collide with the
particle inside the wire the electron transfer energy to
the particle therefore internal energy of wire increase
𝑃 = 𝐼𝑉 & 𝐸 = 𝐼𝑉𝑡
Using this rule and Ohm’s law, 2 other formulae can be obtained
energy (E) is measured in joules (J) , power (P) is measured in watts (W)
Questions
134
Answer
2. The diagram below shows two heating elements connected in series. The
current flowing through the elements is 2.5 amps.
135
3. A 230 V, 2kW mains kettle is used to boil a litre of water. This requires 340
kJ of energy.
Answer
b) We know P = I x V
2000
P I=
I= 230
V
I = 8.70 amps
c) E = I x V t
E
t= 340 000 340 000
IxV t= =
8.7 x 230 2000
t = 170 seconds
E 340 000
t= =
P 2000
t = 170 seconds
136
Current in series and parallel circuits
Current in series
The current at all points around a series circuit is always the same
Current in parallel
The current in a parallel circuit splits between the branches of the circuit.
137
The voltage in a series circuit is split (or shared) between the components
Voltage in parallel
The voltage (p.d) across all components in a parallel circuit is the same
Parallel
If we connect two resistors in parallel, there are now two paths for the current,
and it makes it easier for current to flow round the circuit. The total resistance
is lower and the current is higher.
138
Summary
Series connection Parallel connection
IT = I1 = I2 IT = I1 + I2
VT = v1 + v2 V T = v1 = v2
RT = R1 + R2
= +
Questions
a) Draw a circuit showing the bulbs and cell. Add an ammeter that is
measuring the current in bulb X.
b) The current through bulb Y is 500 mA.
i) What is this current in amps?
ii) What is the current through bulb X?
Answer
a) The diagram should look something like this, with all the
components in one loop
139
2. What is the current shown on the ammeters labeled P
and Q in the circuit shown here?
Answer
Once the current recombines and flows back to the cell, it equals 0.7 amps again.
The current through ammeter Q is 0.7 amps.
Answer
a) Note that the cell, buzzer and ammeter are all in series (in a single loop),
and the voltmeter is in parallel with the buzzer only.
4. All the bulbs in this circuit are identical. What are the readings on the
ammeter and voltmeter in this diagram?
Answer
Current reading:
The bulbs are all identical. That means the current in both branches
of the parallel circuit must be the same - 0.25 A in each. Therefore
the total current flowing out of the cell and back in to it must be 0.50
A.
140
Voltage reading:
The bottom branch is in parallel with the top branch of the circuit. According to rule
4 in the green box, the voltages must be the same as the cell, 9V for each branch.
The voltage in a series circuit is split between the two components. As the two bulbs
are identical, each gets 4.5 volts, or a p.d of 4.5 V.
141
LDRs (light-dependent resistors)
in the dark and at low light levels, the resistance of an LDR is high and little
current can flow through it
in bright light, the resistance of an LDR is low and more current can flow through
it
Diode
A diode has a very high resistance in one direction. This means that
current can only flow in the other direction.
142
This is the graph of current against potential difference for a diode
LEDs and lamps are often used for indicator lights in electrical
equipment, such as computers and television sets
Questions
143
Answer
a) The circuit diagram should look like this. Note that the L.E.D.
arrow must be in the direction of current flow from positive to
negative.
b) As the temperature increases, the resistance of the thermistor
decreases. This means that the current will increase in the
circuit, and the LED will become brighter.
a) the ammeter
b) voltmeter 1 (labelled V1)
c) voltmeter 2 (labelled V2)
Answer
a) As light falls on an LDR, the resistance decreases This means the total resistance
of the two components also decreases (The total is the sum of the two resistors - the
ammeter can be ignored).
If the total resistance decreases, then the current increases as shown on the
ammeter.
144
c) The voltage in a series circuit is shared between the components.
If V1 increases, then V2 must decrease - the LDR gets a smaller share of the voltage
and has a smaller p.d. across it.
Electrical sources
1. Direct Current D.C
it is the supply which has an e.m.f. of constant polarity
and the
current is always in the same direction. Cells and
batteries provide direct current, which may change in
value but remains in the same direction.
145
A cell is a single component power supply has a value 1.5v or 2.0v
A battery however is a group of cell connected together to increase voltage or
power supply
When battery is a group of cell in series the voltage increase , but the positive
terminal has to be followed by a negative terminal and vice versa so that the
current would flow in the same direction
if the cells are connected so that like terminals face each other’s the current
opposite direction so decrease the current and may cancel current in the circuit
Switches
A switch is used to control the flow of current in a circuit. Current flows in a
circuit when the Switch is closed or on… and does not flow when the switch is
open or off.
1. Normal switch: opens and closes a circuit
2. Parallel switch: A circuit can be switched on and off using either of the two
switches.
146
The live wire - this is the wire that is effectively connected to the power
station, pushing and pulling current around the circuit. If you touch the live
wire, you will receive a shock!
The neutral wire - this is the 'return wire' completing the circuit back to the
power station.
The earth wire - this is the third wire that is frequently missing in some
plugs, along with the third pin.
The cable grip - this simply locks the cable in place, preventing someone
pulling on the connections, and possibly disconnecting part of the plug.
Sparks inside the plug can cause fires.
Fuse - this is another safety feature like the earth wire,
Hazards of electricity
Protection
1. Fuse
It consists of a thin metal wire, mounted inside a short cylinder the fuse is designed
to melt when a specific current passes through it
When the fuse melts, it breaks the circuit and turns the appliance off preventing a
fire or other hazard. The appliance no longer works, so the fault is investigated,
fixed, and the fuse replaced
147
This is because the fuse should always be rated as just above the current
needed for the appliance.
Questions:
Answer
a) We know that P = I x V, so
P
I=
2000
V
I=
240
I= 8.33 A
b) If the hairdryer uses 8.33 A, then an 8 A fuse will blow, as will anything rated
lower than 8 A. The next one available above 8.33 A is the 13 A fuse.
148
2. Circuit breakers
A circuit breaker is basically a more modern adaptation to the fuse. They work using
electromagnets, which open a switch if the current gets too high, and this breaks
the circuit. Many different current ratings are available.
Although the large circuit breaker box used in many homes is expensive, the
advantage is that the switches can be easily reset.
Electromagnetic induction
If a wire is moved across a magnetic field at right angles (to cut across lines of
flux), voltage is induced or generated in the wire this is called electromagnetic
induction.
149
This can be demonstrated using the following experiment
a) When the magnet is moved into the coil, the galvanometer deflects in one
direction. If the magnet is pulled away from the coil, the galvanometer deflects in
the opposite direction showing that the induced current flows in the opposite
direction.
b) If the magnet is stationary, the galvanometer
point is at zero and there’s no current induced
in the circuit.
c) If you move the magnet slowly, then small
deflection if you move it quickly, then large
deflection.
d) If you move a weak magnet, then small
deflection if you move a strong magnet, then
large deflection.
cut off or interference between two magnetic field ( magnetic field magnet
and magnetic field of coil ) so change in magnetic field line so induced
voltage or induced current
if it move parallel to magnetic field (no cut off) no current is induced
150
To increase induced current
1. Using coil with more turns (increases the peak value not the frequency).
2. Using a stronger magnet or a powerful electromagnet or winding the coil round
a soft-iron core so that the field is stronger (increases the peak value not the
frequency).
3. Rotating the coil faster (increases both the peak value and the frequency).
Direction of deflection
Used to determine the direction of the induced current
The direction of induced current is opposite to the change
causing it
151
A.C. Generator
The a.c. generator converts kinetic energy into
electrical energy.
The induced e.m.f. in an a.c. generator varies
with time (alternating) because the rate of
change in magnetic flux around the sides of
the coil varies as the coil rotates within the magnetic field.
152
Questions
Answer
Movement
Of a wire / coil / conductor..
Through a magnetic field /cutting through field lines / perpendicular to a
magnetic field.
a) State one way the output voltage from the generator can be
increased.
153
b) Explain why an alternating voltage is produced.
c) Explain why there is a point in the rotation where no voltage is
produced.
Answer
c) At one point of the rotation, the sides of the coil are moving parallel to the field, so
no field lines are cut. Therefore, no voltage is induced
154
To make a powerful electromagnet, you need a large number of turns in the coil, a
high current, and a highly magnetic material like a soft iron core, notice the 3 'C's
Remember Coil, Current, Core.
Relay switch
allow a small current to switch on or off a large current
when small current , usually supplied with a low voltage passes through the coil
( electromagnet ) it is magnetized and attracts the spring metal to close the
second circuit which has separate power supply (high current)
Solenoid
Is basically a long coil of wire When a current passes through it, a strong magnetic
field is produced in the center of the coil as shown in figure Outside the coil, the
field is much weaker.
155
Properties of the magnetic field around a solenoid
1. The magnetic field around a solenoid is the same as that around a bar magnet.
One end of the coil is a north pole and the other is a south pole.
2. The magnetic field inside a solenoid consists of close, equally spaced and parallel
flux lines “it is a strong uniform field”.
3. If the direction of the current flowing through the solenoid is reversed, so too are
the positions of the poles.
reversing the direction of the current reverse the direction of the magnetic
field
156
DC electric motor
Motor consists of
1. a rectangular coil
2. N-S poles of a permanent magnet,
3. split ring commutators
4. Carbon brushes.
As current passing to coil by two carbon brushes magnetic field is created
around the coil
Repulsion Force between magnetic field of coil and magnetic field of permanent
magnet , the coil turn 180 0 half turn
split ring commutator reverse direction of current every half turn , to reverse
magnetic field of coil to complete rotation of coil ( complete turn )
If the direction of the current, or the poles of the magnet are reversed,
rotation will proceed in the Opposite direction.
Loudspeaker
The interact of the magnetic field generated by the coil and magnetic field of
permanent magnet apply force on the cone so that it moves in
certain frequency which produce sound
157
Questions
a) A louder sound.
b) A higher frequency sound.
Answer
a) To make the sound louder, you can increase the current (or voltage) from the
supply, increase the strength of the magnet / field used in the speaker, or use more
turns on the coil.
b) To produce a higher frequency sound, the frequency of the a.c. supply must also
be increase
2. A simple motor rotates due to the 'motor effect' forces acting on the coil.
Suggest two ways of increasing the force on the coil, and hence the speed of
rotation.
Answer
158
Fleming's left-hand rule
The Thumb indicates the thrust (a force) on the current carrying
conductor.
The First finger indicates the magnetic field (remember field lines go from
north to south).
The second finger indicates the current.
The magnetic field is always directed from north to south.
Note that all three fingers in the left-hand rule are perpendicular to each other.
If there is a situation where the current is parallel to the magnetic field, then
there is no force.
Questions
a) Use the left-hand rule to predict the force on the wire. Draw an arrow
on the diagram to show the direction of this force. Label the arrow 'F'.
159
b) Describe a method of increasing the size of the force F without
replacing the magnets.
Answer
a) Your first finger on your left hand should point right, from
N to S. Your second finger should point into the 'page'. This
leaves your thumb pointing downwards. Your thumb
indicates the motion and hence the force. Draw an arrow downwards as shown here
b) You can increase the force by increasing the current. Alternatively, wrapping the
wire into a loop or coil with only one edge inside the field will effectively increase
the length of the wire. (Note that the magnets cannot be replaced in the question, so
you cannot increase the field strength).
Summary
Transformers
A transformer is a device that can change the potential difference or voltage of an
alternating current AC
160
a step-down transformer reduces the voltage
Structure of a transformer
A basic transformer is made from two coils of wire, a primary coil from the
alternating current (ac) input and a secondary coil leading to the ac output. The
coils are not electrically connected. Instead, they are wound around an iron core.
This is easily magnetized and can carry magnetic fields from the primary coil to the
secondary coil
161
input (primary) voltage [V] number of primary turns
=
output (secondary) voltage [V] number of secondary turns
Vp Np
=
Vs Ns
Questions
1. A phone charger uses a transformer with 5 000 turns on the primary coil
and 250 turns on the secondary. It is plugged into the mains supply with an
input voltage of 240 V.
Answer
a) There are fewer turns on the secondary coil than the primary, so this is a step-
down transformer.
b)
Vin np
240 5000
= =
Vout ns Vout 250
So Vout = 12 V
2. A very high voltage is required for 'spark' plugs that ignite the petrol in any
car engine. The transformer used to do this has an input voltage of 12 V and an
output voltage of 4800 V. The primary coil has only 10 turns.
162
Calculate the number of secondary turns required to produce 4800 V.
Answer
V n 12 10
p p =
= 4800 ns
Vs ns
ns 4800 x 10
=
1 12
So ns = 4000
Vp x Ip = Vs x Is
Questions
The transformer used in the power supply has 240 V input and 800 turns on
the primary coil.
Calculate:
163
Answer
Vp np
240 800
= =
Vs ns 12 ns
12 x 800
ns =
240
So ns= 40
b) P = I x V,
so 60 = I x 12 Therefore I = 5 A
Therefore:
12 x 5
Ip =
240
Ip = 0.25 A
164
system to step-up the voltage and keep the current very low. This is the main
reason for using a.c. in the Grid (transformers do not work with d.c.).
The step down transformer at the end of the transmission line reduces the
voltage back to safe usable levels at the consumer end
Questions
4. The diagram below shows the main stages in a local power distribution
system:
Answer
b) A step-up transformer increases the voltage and decreases the current. A lower
current leads to less power loss in the cables. (The high voltage and low current
makes the transmission more efficient).
165
The step-down transformer is required to reduce this high voltage back down to
safe levels for domestic use.
166
5-Atomic Physics
Atom
All atoms are made of three sub-atomic particles
167
Example
an atom of oxygen is represented by O816
is the chemical symbol for oxygen
The atomic number is 8 (the nucleus contains 8 protons )
The mass number is 16 (so it must have 8 neutrons).
Questions
23
1. The element sodium (Na) is written in notation as: Na
11
Answer
The bottom number represents the proton number, so there are 11 protons.
The top number of 23 gives the total number of protons and neutrons, so there are
23 - 11 = 12 neutrons.
2. Lead is a metal with the symbol Pb. A common atom of lead has 82 protons
and 125 neutrons. Using standard notation (as shown in question 1), give the
notation for this atom of lead.
Answer
If the atom has 82 protons and 125 neutrons, the total mass is 82 + 125 = 207.
Therefore the notation will be:
207
Pb
82
168
Isotopes
Isotopes have the same number of protons, but different numbers of neutrons.
Questions
3. The list below shows the notation for some atoms found in a sample of sea
water. It includes 2 isotopes:
1 4 5 2 9 9
H He Li H B Be
1 2 3 1 5 4
Answer
a) isotopes have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons.
b) We are looking for 2 atoms with the same proton number (the bottom number)
and hence the same symbol.
1 2
The two isotopes are: H and H
1 1
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Alpha scattering experiment
In this experiment, a beam of alpha particles was aimed at a thin sheet of gold foil.
The experiment must be carried out in a vacuum tube to prevent alpha particles
from being stopped by air particles.
Results
1. Most of alpha particles pass straight
through the gold foil, because they do
not pass close to the nucleus
Conclusions
From 1, the volume of the nucleus is small as compared to the volume of the
atom; the atom is mostly empty space.
From 2, the atom has a positively charged nucleus.
From 3, the atom has a dense, relatively heavy nucleus; the nucleus carries
most of the atom’s mass.
Radioactivity
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Radioactive decay
Is the spontaneous random emission of alpha (α), beta (β) particles or gamma (γ)
rays from the nuclei of unstable atoms to become more stable
Random
Means we cannot predict which particular nucleus will decay next, all nuclei have a
constant probability of decay.
Spontaneous
Means that the decay process is unaffected by environmental conditions such as
temperature, pressure,
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Note that
The mass number reduced by 4 and the atomic number reduced by 2
For example
For example
Note that
the mass number stay the same while the atomic number increase by 1
Neutron decay
Some isotopes lose neutrons when they decay , A neutron has a mass of 1 and no
1
charge, it is therefore written as:
n
0
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Again, the decay of an isotope is then quite easy to work out. For example, if
Beryllium-13 decays by emitting a neutron:
13 1 12
Be → n + Be
4 0 4
Penetrating power
The penetrating power of alpha rays, beta rays, and gamma rays varies greatly.
Alpha particles can be blocked by a few pieces of paper. Beta particles pass through
paper but are stopped by aluminum foil. Gamma rays are the most difficult to stop
and require concrete, lead, or other heavy shielding to block them
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Questions
Answer
Answer
First, place paper / tissue in front of the source. If alpha radiation is present, the
detected count rate will drop significantly. If there is no drop, the radiation is beta or
gamma.
Second, place a thin aluminum sheet or two in front of the source. If the count rate
drops, the source is a beta emitter. Gamma rays will not be significantly affected by
the aluminum barrier.
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3. An alpha particle is given the letter α
Answer
239 235 4
Pu → U + α
94 92 2
4. During beta decay, the mass of the nucleus remains constant, whilst the
atomic number increases by 1.
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Answer
a) During beta decay, a neutron changes into a proton and an electron, causing an
increase in the nuclear proton number of +1 but no change in mass. (The electron is
ejected from the nucleus).
90 0 90
Sr → β + Y
38 -1 39
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b) Deflection in magnetic fields
Alpha & beta particles are deflected in directions given by Fleming’s left hand rule.
Keep in mind that negative charges traveling to the right counts as a conventional
current to the left
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Questions
Answer
If the dangerous isotope is buried for 30 years, what will be the activity after
this period?
Answer
For this we will use a table of results to show our working out, halving the activity
each half-life:
number of half-lifes 0 1 2 3
Time (yrs) 0 10 20 30
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From this table we can see that after 30 years, the activity is 100 kBq.
Answer
number of half-lifes 0 1 2 3 4
Time (hours) 0 6 12 18 24
From the table we can see that after 24 hrs, the activity is 1250 Bq
Detection of Radiation By
1-photographic film
Become blacked when subject to radioactivity, the darker the film the greater the
radiation dose
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Background radiation
A GM tube will record some count rate even in the absence of a source. This count
rate is due to the ionizing radiation which is always present from the surroundings.
It is called background radiation and should be subtracted from the counts
recorded when a source is present to give the true count rate due to the source.
Used of radioactivity
1. Gamma rays are used to kill bacteria specially in sterilizing medical equipment
and in preserving food.
2. Alpha particles are used in smoke alarm for smoke detection. Alpha particles
have high ionization effect and therefore they ionize the air molecules in between
the two metal plates allowing the current to pass through. When smoke enters
between the plates, some of the alpha particles are absorbed causing less ionization
to take place. This means a smaller than normal current flows so the alarm switches
on.
3. Beta particles are used to monitor the thickness of the paper or metal sheets in
manufacturing factory. Some of the radioactivity is absorbed by the foil and some
passes through to the detector. The thicker the foil, the fewer radio activities passes
through it to the detector. The amount of radioactivity arriving at the detector is
monitored by the computer. The thickness of the foil is controlled by the gap
between the rollers.
4. Carbon-14 is used to find the age of living organism or plants. This method is
called radioactive carbon dating. There's a small amount of radioactive carbon-14 in
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all living organisms. When they die no new carbon 14 is taken in by the dead
organism. The carbon-14 it contained at the time of death decays over a long period
of time. By measuring the amount of carbon-14 left in dead organic material the
approximate time since it died can be worked out
5. Uranium -238 which eventually decays into lead is used to find the age of
igneous rock
6. In radiotherapy the high doses of gamma radiation are used to kill the cancer
cells
7. Find leaks or blockages in underground pipes.
Safety precautions
1. Always use the radioactive symbol where there is a radioactive substance stored
2. Always be stored in a lead-lined container;
3. Be handled only with tongs
4. Never be pointed at anyone
5. Never be put in pockets
6. Only checked by looking at them in a mirror.
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6- SPACE PHYSICS
The Earth
The Earth is a planet, and it orbits the Sun.
The Earth takes just over 365 days to complete one orbit.
The Earth also spins on its axis and it takes about 24 hours to
rotate once.
The Earth's axis (an imaginary line through the Earth from the North pole to
the South pole) is tilted at an angle of about 23.5 degrees
The Earth is about 150 million kilometers from the Sun, and the Moon is
about 384 thousand kilometers from the Earth
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The Seasons
The Earth moves round the Sun once in approximately 365 days , We
experience different seasons due to the amount of direct sunlight we
receive
In December the Northern Hemisphere is tilted away from the Sun and in
June it is tilted towards the Sun. In June the Northern Hemisphere receives
more direct sunlight and so it is summer. At the same time, the Southern
Hemisphere is tilted away from the Sun and it is winter.
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At the equator the seasons do not vary as much because there is direct
sunlight all year round.
At the poles during winter there are days when the Sun never rises, and days
during summer when the Sun never sets.
The maximum height of the Sun in the sky varies according to the seasons.
In summer it is high and casts short shadows. In winter it is low and casts
long shadows. The variation is more pronounced nearer the poles. The
diagram below shows how shadows vary in the Northern Hemisphere.
Phases of moon
It takes about a month for the Moon to orbit the Earth. It orbits with the
same side of the Moon facing the Earth all the time.
We can only see the Moon because it is illuminated by (reflects light from
the Sun), which shines on it. It does not produce its own light.
As the Moon orbits the Earth it reflects different amounts of light towards
Earth. When the Moon is between the Sun and the Earth it does not reflect
any light towards the Earth. We call this a New Moon. As it continues to orbit
we see more and more of the Moon, and we say it is waxing, towards a Full
Moon, and then it wanes again
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Orbital speed
2 x π x orbital radius
orbital speed =
time period
2xπxr
v=
T
If a question gives the radius in kilometers (km) and the time in hours (h), then
the speed will be in units of km/h.
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Questions
1. The moon orbits the Earth in approximately 708 hours, with a radius of
orbit of 385 000 km. Using the formula given above, calculate the orbital
velocity of the Moon.
Answer
2 x π x 385 000
2xπxr v=
v= 708
T
2. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) orbits the earth at a speed of 7.6 km/s
and has an orbital time period of 5700 seconds.
a) Using the formula given above, calculate the radius of the HST's orbit
from the center of the Earth.
b) The Earth has a radius of 6400 km. Calculate the distance from the
HST to the Earth's surface.
Answer
a) Both time period and speed include seconds, so we can substitute the numbers
directly into the formula
2xπxr
7.6 =
2xπxr
5700
v=
T
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7.6 x 5700
r=
2xπ
b) The Earth's radius is 6400 km, so the HST's height above the Earth's surface is
6900 - 6400;
so the distance = 500 km
Space
1. The solar system: Our solar system consists of the Sun at the center, with 8
planets in orbit around it. There are also comets orbiting the Sun, and moons
orbiting the planets. There are similar solar systems around other stars.
2. Galaxies: There are billions of stars in most galaxies. Our Sun is in a huge
galaxy called the Milky Way. It has about 100 billion stars in it. Many probably have
planets. The galaxy nearest to us is called the Andromeda galaxy both of these
galaxies are spiral galaxies, with the outer stars orbiting around a very heavy central
mass of stars.
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3. The universe: The observable universe is believed to consist of billions of
galaxies
Gravity
The motion of galaxies, stars and planets are all ruled by the force of gravity. This
force between any 2 objects depends on the masses of the objects and also the
distance between them. The pull of gravity makes:
Orbits
Moons generally travel around planets in a circular orbit. This means that they keep
approximately the same distance from the planet at all times. This is also true of
planets as they orbit the Sun. The Earth stays at approximately the same distance
from the Sun all year as it travels around in its orbit.
However, comets are very different. The distance from the Sun and the speed of a
comet varies dramatically, as shown in figure
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The correct mathematical name for this orbit shape is an ellipse. All comets have an
elliptical orbit, and as they approach the Sun, the pull of gravity makes them travel
faster and faster. The comet is fastest at its closest approach to the Sun
as the distance from the sun increase the time to complete an orbit for a planet
increase for planet increase because
-the orbital distance increase
-the speed of a planet in its orbit decrease as gravitational field strength
decrease
in elliptical orbit the distance from the sun change and gravitational potential
energy change because of the conservation of energy
Total energy = Ek + Ep
when the planet is closer to the sun its Ep is smaller and its Ek is greater and
it move faster
Asteroids
Are made up of metal and rock and are much smaller than planets usually with
irregular shapes
most of them are found between the planets mars and Jupiter the dwarf planet
ceres is found there
Comets
comets are lumps of ice and dust which orbit around the sun , many comets
have elliptical orbit
Satellites
A satellite is anything that orbits a celestial body (star, planet, moon ). Both natural
and artificial satellites exist.
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Natural satellites
The Moon is the Earth’s natural satellite. Scientists believe that it was formed when
a Mars-sized planet collided with the early Earth, throwing some of the crust into
orbit. However the Moon was formed, it is locked into the Earth’s gravitation field
and circles our planet once every 27.5 days. Many other moons are the natural
satellites for other planets in our solar system and beyond.
Artificial satellites
These have been placed into orbit by man. Among other jobs, artificial satellites
orbiting the Earth are used for:
weather forecasts
Questions
3. A rocket launched from the Earth's surface has to escape from the Earth's
gravitational pull.
Explain why it might be easier to launch a rocket from the surface of Mars.
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Answer
Mars has a lower mass than the Earth, and therefore lower gravitational field
strength (g). This means it takes less energy to launch the rocket into space.
Answer
Both comets and planets orbit the Sun. However, planets have an
approximately circular orbit, whereas comets have a highly elliptical orbit
Stars
Stars have many different colors, ranging here from red and orange, to white and
blue. This is because the stars all have a different temperature at the surface.
The color of the star indicates the temperature. Red stars are not as hot as orange
stars. Then comes yellow/white, white, and finally blue stars that are extremely hot
at the surface.
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The evolution of stars
Nebula
All stars begin from a humble cloud of gas and dust, called a nebula. If the mass of a
region of the nebula is large enough, gravity begins to pull the nebula together and
compress it form a hot ball of gas known as protostar
The gas has been compressed so much that the temperature reaches millions of
degrees Celsius, enough for a fusion reaction to begin. A star is born! The fusion
reaction lasts for a long time - billions of years for a star like the Sun
Red giant
When stars begin to run out of hydrogen, more complicated fusion reactions can
start. The star begins to swell outwards and cool a little at the surface,
producing red giant stars.
White dwarf
When the last of the fusion reactions stops, the star shrinks. As it does this, the
compressed gases heat up making the star white hot at the surface, but very small
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Very large stars (Supergiant)
Stars with a mass much higher than the sun will be extremely bright and will
convert hydrogen at a vast rate through fusion reactions when the hydrogen runs
out, they also swell up to make red supergiant stars
Supernova
Once a red supergiant runs out of fuel to sustain the complicated fusion reactions
that occur, the star collapses very rapidly. As it rushes inwards, The star explodes in
a flash releasing so much energy it can out-shine an entire galaxy This explosion is
called a supernova.
Neutron star
The remaining core collapses into a tiny, extremely dense core made of neutrons,
called a neutron star.
Black hole
If the core remnant has a huge mass, it collapses inwards to a point. Nothing can
stop the collapse. This is where things get very weird, as the star is still there, with a
high mass and strong gravity, but it is effectively a point in space. This is called
a black hole.
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Questions
1. The Sun is currently a main sequence star, in the middle of its evolutionary
path.
Describe the next two stages in the evolution of stars like the Sun.
Answer
The sun will eventually increase in size, and cool to become a red giant.
After that, it will shrink to a much smaller size, and heat up to become
a white dwarf.
2. Very large main sequence stars will eventually run out of hydrogen in the
star's core. Describe the next stages in a life cycle of a star.
Answer
Answer
A nebula is a large cloud containing gases (like hydrogen and helium) / dust.
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The Big Bang theory
This theory states that the Universe started from extremely hot single point and
began expanding and cooling. In an enormous release of energy (the Big Bang) all
matter was created and moved outward from this point. Eventually the matter
formed dust clouds, stars and the galaxies we see today. However, these galaxies are
still moving outwards - the universe is still expanding.
Key pieces of evidence led to this being the main theory that is supported today.
The two pieces of evidence are the red-shift of distant galaxies, and CMB
radiation
1-Red-shift
When very distant galaxies were first observed, astrophysicists noticed that
frequencies produced by the hydrogen in stars had been shifted to longer
wavelengths.
Wavelength red end of the spectrum. This effect is called red shift.
If the big bang happened, releasing a vast quantity of matter and radiation, then the
radiation remaining should now be enormously red-shifted into the microwave
region of the EM spectrum. Penzias and Wilson had discovered what we now call
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the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB radiation), exactly as
predicted by the Big Bang theory.
The CMB radiation, along with the red shift of distant galaxies has provided
astrophysics with enough evidence for them to be reasonably certain that the Big
Bang theory is correct. The universe did have a starting point
Questions
Answer
a) CMB radiation is cosmic (from space) microwave background (all around us)
radiation.
b) This radiation is predicted from the big bang theory: Any radiation produced in
the big bang should now be red-shifted to microwave radiation, but should be
observable in all directions.
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This graph shows that galaxies that are further away from Earth are
moving away even faster than those closer to Earth. The Hubble constant is
equal to the gradient of the graph
the time it has taken for the galaxies to reach their current is given by
t= =
This is further evidence that all matter in the universe came from hot dense
point
Questions
A galaxy is found to be moving away with a speed of 2.1 × 107 m s-1. The galaxy
is at a distance of 9.5 × 1024 m from Earth Assuming the speed has remained
constant, what is the age of the universe in years?
Answer
v = H0d
Write the equation for the age of the universe T0, and calculate
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Convert from seconds into years
Therefore, the age of the universe is estimated to be about 14.3 billion years
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