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Paper 2
Topic 6 - Waves
Uses of EM Waves
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❀Rebecca❀
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Radio waves
EM radiation with wavelengths longer than about
10
cm
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Long-wave radio waves
Wavelengths of
1-10
km
Can be transmitted from one location and received
halfway
round the world
Can diffract (bend) around the curved surface of the Earth,
hills
, and into
tunnels
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Short-wave radio signals
Wavelengths of about
10
m-100 m
Can be received at long distances from the
transmitter
by reflecting off the
ionosphere
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Medium-wave signals
Can also reflect from the
ionosphere
, depending on atmospheric conditions and
time
of day
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Radio waves used for TV and FM radio
Have very
short
wavelengths
Require direct line of sight between
transmitter
and receiver, do not bend or travel
far
through buildings
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Microwaves
Used by
satellites
for
communication
, can pass easily through the Earth's watery atmosphere
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Satellite communication
1. Signal from
transmitter
is sent to
satellite
2. Satellite receives and
transmits
signal back to
Earth
3. Signal is received on the
ground
with a slight
time
delay
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Microwave ovens
Microwaves
are absorbed by
water
molecules in food, causing them to heat up and transfer energy to the rest of the food
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Infrared
radiation
Given out by all objects, hotter objects give out
more
IR radiation
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Infrared cameras
1. Detect
IR
radiation and turn it into an
electrical
signal displayed as a picture
2. Hotter objects appear
brighter
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Absorbing
IR radiation
Causes objects to get
hotter
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Fibre optic cables
Thin glass or
plastic fibres
that can carry data as pulses of visible light, using
reflection
to keep the light travelling along the fibre
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Fluorescence
Property of certain chemicals where
UV
radiation is absorbed and
visible
light is emitted
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rays
Pass easily through
flesh
but not through denser materials like bones or metal, allowing
X-ray
images to be taken
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Gamma rays
Used in
radiotherapy
to kill
cancer
cells, and as medical tracers
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Both
X-rays
and
gamma
rays can be harmful, so precautions are taken to minimize exposure
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