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Paper 2
Module 4
Definitions
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Emf is the work done to charge carries as they pass through components like cells and batteries
Pd is the work done by charge carries as they pass through components like bulbs and resistors
1v =
1J per 1C
Reflection occurs when a
wave changes direction
at a boundary between
two different media
but remaining in
one medium
Refraction occurs when a
wave changes direction
as it
changes speed
when it
passes
from
one medium to another
Conductors
:
Materials that allow the flow of electrical charge
Good
conductors
have a larger amount of free charge carriers to carry a current
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Conservation of Charge:
The total charge in a system cannot change
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Conventional Current
:
The flow from positive to negative, used to describe the direction of current in a circuit
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Coulomb:
The unit of charge
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Electric Current
:
The rate of flow of charge in a circuit
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Electrolytes
:
Substances that contain ions that act as charge carriers and allow current to flow when dissolved in a solution
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Electron Flow
:
The opposite direction to conventional current flow
Electrons flow from negative to positive
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Elementary Charge
:
The smallest possible charge, equal to the charge of an electron
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Insulators
:
Materials that have no free charge carriers and do not allow the flow of electrical charge
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Kirchhoff's First Law:
The total current
entering
a junction must equal the total current
leaving
it
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Mean Drift Velocity
:
The
average velocity
of an
electron
passing through an object
Proportional
to the
current
, and
inversely proportional
to the number of
charge carriers
and the
cross-sectional area
of the object
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Quantisation of Charge:
Charge can only exist in
discrete packets
of multiples of the
elementary charge
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Semiconductors
:
Materials that can change their number of charge carriers and ability to conduct electricity
Examples include light-dependent resistors and thermistors
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Diode
:
A
component
that allows current through in one
direction
only
Has a
threshold voltage
(typically
0.6 V
) above which
current
can flow
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Electromotive Force
:
The energy supplied by a source per unit charge passing through the source, measured in volts
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Filament Lamp:
A
bulb
consisting of a
metal filament
that
heats up
and
glows
to produce
light
Resistance increases
as the filament temperature
increases
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V Characteristics:
Plots of current against voltage that show how different components behave
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Kilowatt-Hour
:
A unit of electrical energy used to measure domestic power consumption
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Light-Dependent Resistor
:
A light-sensitive semiconductor whose resistance increases when light intensity decreases
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Negative Temperature Coefficient Thermistor:
A thermistor whose resistance
decreases
as temperature
increases
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Ohm
:
The unit of resistance
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Ohmic Conductor
:
A conductor for which the current flow is directly proportional to the potential difference across it under constant physical conditions
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Ohm’s Law
:
The current and potential difference through an ohmic conductor held under constant physical conditions are directly proportional, with resistance as the constant of proportionality
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Potential Difference
:
The difference in electrical potential between two points in a circuit
Work done per coulomb to move a charge from lower to higher potential point, measured in volts
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Power
:
The rate of energy transfer in a circuit
Calculated as the product of current and potential difference, measured in watts
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Resistance
:
A measure of how difficult it is for current to flow through a material
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Resistivity
:
A measure of how difficult it is for charge to travel through a material
Proportional to the object’s resistance and cross-sectional area, inversely proportional to the object’s length, measured in Ohm
metres
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Resistor
:
A device with fixed resistance that follows Ohm’s law
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Volt
:
The unit of potential difference
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Conservation of Energy
:
Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred into different forms
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Internal Resistance
:
The resistance to the flow of charge within a source, resulting in energy dissipation within the source
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Kirchhoff
's Second Law:
The
sum
of
voltages in any closed loop must equal zero
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Lost Volts
:
The difference between a source’s emf and terminal voltage, equal to the potential difference across the source’s internal resistance
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Parallel Circuit
:
Components connected across each other in separate loops
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Potential Divider
:
A method of splitting potential difference by connecting two resistors in series, split in the ratio of their resistances
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