Paper 1

Cards (22)

  • System - An object or group of objects that you are interested in
    Closed system - no energy in or out
    Energy is transferred when a system changes:
    • mechanically
    • electrically
    • heating
    • radiation
  • Specific heat capacity - the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1°C
    Investigating:
    1. Block of material with hole for thermometer and hole for heater
    2. Measure mass of block, wrap in insulation, insert heater/thermometer
    3. Measure initial temp, set power supply potential difference to 10V and start stopwatch
    4. Record temperature and current (using ammeter) every 10 mins. Current shouldn't change
  • Electricity units
    Power (P) - Watt (W) = joules/second
    Potential difference (V) - Volt (V)
    Current (I) - amp (A)
    Resistance (R) = Ohm (Ω)
    Energy (E) - joule (J)
    Charge (Q) - coulomb (C)
  • Investigating insulators
    1. Place boiling water into a sealable container
    2. measure mass and initial temp
    3. seal container and cover in insulator
    4. leave for 5 mins then remove lid and measure final temp
    5. Reset container temp and repeat for different insulator
  • Energy is dissipated when friction occurs - lubricant reduce friction of two surfaces rubbing against each other
  • Resistance:

    • set up a circuit with a wire along a ruler, a voltmeter in parallel and a ammeter in series
    • Secure one crocodile clip to 0cm
    • move the other crocodile clip along recording distance, voltage and current
    • plot a graph of resistance (V/I) against length of the wire
  • I-V characteristics
    • set up circuit with tested component in parallel with a voltmeter and in series with an ammeter and a variable resistor
    • alter the resistance and record potential difference and current (repeat each measurement twice)
    • Swap positive and negative battery terminals and repeat with negative values
    • eg. ohmic conductor (constant resistance) - straight line
    • eg filament lamp - resistance increases with °C
    • eg diode - one-way current - exponential graph
  • Series vs Parallel circuit
    In series:
    • Potential difference at cell is sum of potential difference at each component. Shared amongst components
    • Total resistance is the sum of the resistance of every component
    • Current is equal everywhere
    In parallel:
    • Potential difference is equal at each branch
    • Total resistance decreases with number of components with resistance added (1/total-resistance = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + ...)
    • Current is shared between each branch
  • Investigating resistance
    Series:
    1. set up a circuit with a voltmeter, ammeter and a resistor
    2. record the potential difference and current
    3. add another identical resistor in series
    4. repeat steps 2 and 3 twice more
    5. Use R=V/I to calculate the resistance
    6. Plot the resistance against the number of resistors. should be a straight line
  • Investigating resistance
    Parallel:
    1. set up a circuit with a voltmeter, ammeter and a resistor
    2. record the potential difference and current
    3. add another identical resistor in parallel, ie. on a new branch
    4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 twice more
    5. Use R=V/I to calculate the resistance
    6. Plot the resistance against the number of resistors, should be the positive side of 1/x graph
  • LDR - resistance decreases with light
    Thermistor - resistance decreases with temperature
  • Electricity in the home
    230V DC at 50Hz
    LIVE - brown
    NEUTRAL - blue
    EARTH - green and yellow
  • National grid
    Power lines 400000V down to 230V in the home
  • Change of state
    Sublimation is the change from a solid straight to a gas
    Deposition is the change from a gas straight to a solid
  • Specific latent heat
    of FUSION - solid <-> gas
    of VAPOURISATION - liquid <-> gas
    Amount of energy needed to change the state of 1 Kg of a substance without changing the temperature
  • Increasing the temperature of a gas causes particles to have more kinetic energy and therefore pressure exerted on walls of a container increases
  • History of the atom
    JJ Thompson's plum pudding model was disproved by firing positive alpha particles:
    • most went through - atom mostly empty space
    • some deflected straight back - must be a small positive centre
    • same charges repel
  • Radiation definitions:
    • Ionising - knocking an electron off an atom creating an ion
    • alpha particle ₂⁴​ α = ₂⁴​ He - heavy particle therefore doesn't penetrate or move much - stopped by paper
    • beta particle ⁰₋₁​ β = ⁰₋₁ ​e - stopped by 5mm of aluminium
    • Gamma particle ⁰₀​ ϒ - short wavelength EM wave - stopped by thick lead or concrete
  • Activity and half-life
    Geiger-Muller tube and counter used
    1 becquerels (Bq) = 1 decay/second
  • Irradiation and Contamination
    • Irradiated - affected by a source of radiation
    • Contaminated - radioactive material physically on or into something
    Body:
    • outside - gamma and beta most dangerous - penetrating
    • inside - alpha most dangerous - highly ionising
    • Even low-level radiation doses can cause cell mutations
    • Alpha particles should never be used within the body
    • Radiation within the body should have short half-life
    • Fission - unstable nucleus split using neutron producing energy and another neutron, starting a chain reaction. Used to heat water in power stations or for bombs
    • Fusion - two atoms fused, some mass lost as energy. Currently impossible as pressure and temperature needed is too high