When a force moves an object through a
distance, Energy is transferred and work
done.
Gravitational potential energy
Gravitational Potential Energy =
mass x g x height
Gravitational potential energy is the energy that an object
has because of its vertical position in a gravitational field
Kinetic Energy
K E = 1/2 x mass x speed2
Anything that is moving
has K E
Due to the law of the
conservation of
energy
When a car is moving the kinetic energy
is transferred to heat energy when
breaking
Kinetic energy transferred = work done by brakes
1/2 x mass x speed2 = F x D
Forces and Elasticity
Work done to an elastic object is stored as
elastic potential energy
Extension of an elastic object is directly proportional
to force.
This stops working when the force is great enough
There is a limit to the amount of force you can
apply to an object for the extension to keep on
increasing proportionally
F = k x E
Power
Power is
the rate of
doing work
- I.E. How
much per
second
P = Work
done /
Time
taken
Measured in Watts
1 watt = 1 joule transferred per min
Momentum and Collisions
Momentum = mass x Velocity
conservation of
momentum
Momentum before = Momentum After
Forces cause changes in momentum
The larger the force the faster the change in momentum
Cars are designed to slow down
slower in a crash so that the forces
are smaller on the human body.
Car Design and Safety
Brakes
Brakes do work against
the k e of the car.
Regenerative brakes convert the heat energy
from the brakes to electrical energy which is stored
chemical energy
Cars are designed to
convert kinetic energy
safely in a crash
Crumple Zones
Car body changes shape
at front and rear in a crash
Side Impact bars
Metal tubes in side of car
They help to divert the energy
away from the passengers
towards other parts of the car.
Seat
Belts
Around passengers body
stretch slightly to increase time for
passenger to stop.
Air Bags
stop you from hitting hard surfaces
Power Ratings
the higher the engine
power the higher the
power rating
Static Electricity
The build up of static electricity is caused
by friction
When certain insulating materials are rubbed
together - charged electrons will be rubbed off
and dumped on the other
It is ONLY the electrons that move -
Like charges repel, Opposite charges attract.
Charges can move easily through conductors - metals
Current and Potential Difference
P.D = the driving forces that pushes the current round . Volts
the greater the resistance
across a component, the
smaller the current that flows.
Total charge through a circuit depends
on current and time
Current = charge/Time
P.D is the Work Done per unit
charge
P.D = Work Done / Charge
Circuits - The Basics
Ammeter
Measures current
Must be in Series
Voltmeter
Measures P.D - Voltage
Must be in parallel
Resistance
Resistance increases on tempreture
The longer the wire the more resistance
The smaller the diameter of the
wire the more resistance
P.D = Current x Resistance
Circuit Devices
Diodes
1 way
LED
Emits light when a
current flows through in a
forward direction
LDR
More light
less
resistance
Thermistor
As temp increases resistance decreases
Series Circuits
All connected in a line
P.D is shared
Current is the same everywhere
Resistance adds up
Parralel Circuits
Separately connected to the supply
P.D is the same across all components
Current is shared between branches
Series and parallel circuits
Series Circuit - Example
Christmas Trees lights
Parallel Circuit - Example
Cars electrics
Mains electricity
Mains supply is AC battery supply is DC
The UK mains supply is
approximately 230 volts
It is a Alternating current,
which means it is constantly
changing direction
Electricity supplies
can be shown on a
oscilloscope
on a oscilloscope a AC
current will be a wave and DC
will be a straight line
Th e vertical height of AC is the input voltage
On DC, the distance from the
centre line to the trace is the
voltage
Electricity in the home
Hazards
Long Cables
Frayed
Cables
Cables in
contact with
something
hot or wet
Water near sockets
Socket overloading
Lighting
sockets without
bulbs
Shoving
things into
sockets
Damaged plugs
Appliances without
covers on
Most cables have three separate wires
The brown LIVE WIRE in a mains
supply alternates between the high
+VE and -VE VOltage
The blue NEUTRAL WIRE
is always at OV. Electricity
normally flows in and out
through the live and neutral
wires only.
The green and yellow
wire is the EARTH
WIRE. it is for
protecting the wiring
and for safety
It works with fuse
to prevent fires and
shocks
Learn the
safety
features
The right
coloured
wire is
connected
to the right
pin
No bare wires
showing inside
the plug
Cable
Grip
Fuses and Earthing
Earthing
and fuses
prevent
electrical
overloads
If there is a fault in the circuit, because of the
earth it will connect and make the fuse break
because the current is too great. This isolates the
whole appliance
Insulating Materials make appliances
"Double Insulated"
Double insulated appliances don't need a earth wire
because there is nothing to earth
Circuit Breakers have some
advantages over fuses
They are the same as fuses but
they open a switch instead of
break / melt
They also can be reset by a
switch which is more
convenient than fuses and
cheaper
Energy and Power in circuits
Energy is transferred from cells
and other sources
Anything which
supplies
electricity is
also supplying
energy
Kinetic energy = motors
Light energy = lamp
Heat energy = Kettles
Sound energy
= speakers
All resistors produce heat when a
current flows through them.
When an electric current flows through
anything with electrical resistance then
electrical energy is converted into heat
energy
The more current the more heat
The more voltage means more heating
If an appliance is efficient
it wastes less energy
Appliances that are energy efficient
transfer more of their total
electrical energy output to
useful energy
Power Ratings
of appliances
The total energy transferred
by an appliance depends on
how long the appliance is on
and it's power rating. The
power of an appliance is the
energy that it uses per
second
Energy Transferred = Power rating x Time
Power and energy change
Electrical Power and Fuse Ratings
Power = current x potential difference
(voltage)
Most electrical goods
show their power rating
and voltage rating. To
work out the size of the
fuse needed, you need to
work out the current that
the item will normally use.
The Potential
Difference is
the energy
transferred
per charge
passed
when charge (Q) goes
through a change in
potential difference (V),
then energy(E) is
transferred.
Energy is supplied to the
charge at the power source to
'raise' it through a potential.
The charge gives this
energy when it 'falls'
through any potential
drop in components
elsewhere in the circuit.
Energy
transformed =
charge x
potential
difference
The bigger the change in PD the more energy
is transferred for a given amount of charge
passing through a circuit
The Atomic structure - and Rutherford
In 1804, John Dalton agreed with democritus
that matter was made up of tiny spheres
(atoms) that couldnt be broken up
100 years later J J Thomson discovered
that electrons could be removed from
atoms
In 1909, Rutherford and Marsden tried firing a
beam of alpha particles at a thin sheet of gold foil
They expected that the positively charged alpha
particles would be slightly deflected by the
electrons in the plum pudding model. However,
most of the particles went straight through, but
the odd one came straight back at them.
They realised that most of the mass was in the +
charged nucleus
Rutherford
and
Marsden
came up
with the
nuclear
model
Atoms and Ionising Radiation
Isotopes are different
forms of the same
element
An isotope has the same amount of protons and electrons, however has a different number of neutrons
Radioactiviiy is a totally
random process
Radioactive substances give out
radiation from the nuclei of their atoms,
whatever is done to them.
Radioactive substances spit out one or
more of the three types of radiation - alpha,
beta and gamma
Background
radiation comes
from many
sources
Radioactivity
of naturally
occurring
unstable
isotopes which
are all around
us
Radiation due
to man made
sources -
Nuclear
weapons tests,
nuclear
accidents,
dumped
nuclear waste.
Radiation
from
space -
cosmic
rays
Atoms and Ionising Radiation
Alpha
particles
they are the same as a helium nucleus, and they are big and heavy and slow moving. Therefore they don't penetrate very far
into materials and are stopped quickly, even when travelling through air. Because of their size they are strongly ionising.
Which means they bash into a lot of atoms ans knock electrons off them before they slow down, which creates lots of ions.
Beta particles
Beta particles are electrons. They move quite fast and they are quite small (they're electrons). They penetrate moderately
into materials before colliding, have a long range in air, and are moderately ionising too. For every Beta particle emitted, a
neutron turns to a proton in the nucleus. A B-particle is an electron, with virtually no mass and a charge of -1
Gamma rays
Gamma Rays, are very short wavelength, EM Waves. They are the opposite of alpha particles in a way. They penetrate far into
materials without being stopped and pass straight through air. This means they are weekly ionising because they tend to pass
through rather than collide with atoms. Eventually they hit something and do damage. Gamma rays have no mass and no charge.
Radiation Dose
The damage
caused by
radiation
depends on
the radiation
dose
Enter text here
Radiation dose
depends on the type and
the amount of radiation.
Radiation Dose
depends on location
and occupation
Certain underground rocks
(e.g. granite) can cause higher
levels at the surface, especially
if radioactive radon gas is
released and it can get trapped
in people's houses.
Nuclear Industry workers and uranium
miners are typically exposed to 10 times
more radiation than normal. They have to
wear hazmat suits to stop them from
touching or inhaling radioactive
substances. They monitor their doses with
badges and check ups.
Radiographers work in hospitals using ionising radtion
and so have a higher risk of radiation exposure. They
wear lead aprons and stand behind lead screens to
protect them from prolonged exposure to radiation.
At high altitudes the background radiation is higher because your closer to cosmic rays. Also
underground for miners because they're surrounded by rocks.
Half-Life
The radioactivity of a
sample always
decreases over time
As a radioactive sample decays it loses
more atoms, therefore as it decays it will
lose in mass and will emit less radiation
The half life of a substance is
how long it takes for half of the
starting substance to decay.
for example a substance with a half life of
4 years and a starting mass of 10kg will
decay to 500g after 4 years.
Here is a Half
life graph ===>
Uses of radiation
Smoke detectors
- use alpha
radiation
Tracers in Medicine - Always
short half life Beta or Gamma
emitters
Radiotherapy - the
treatment of cancer using
gamma rays
Sterilisation of food
and surgical
instruments using
gamma rays
Radioactivity safety
Radiation harms living cells
Radiation will enter living cells
and collide with the molecules
These collisions cause
ionisation, which
damages or destroys the
cells
Lower doses tend to cause
minor damage without killing
the cell.
This can give rise to
mutant cells which divide
uncontrollably, this is
called cancer.
Higher doses kill cells which
causes radiation sickness, if
a lot of cells get hit all at once
The severity depends on the
exposure, energy and penetration
and type of radiation.
Outside the body Beta
and Gamma radiation is
the most dangerous
Inside the body
alpha radiation is the
most dangerous
because it does the
most ionising
Safety Precautions
1) use for the shortest time possible
2) Never allow skin contact with the source
3) Hold it at arms length, to reduce amount of
radiation particles that hit you
4) Point it away from you
5) Use lead to store it because it absorbs the radiation
Nuclear Fission and Fusion
Nuclear Fission
Nuclear Power stations
use nuclear reactors to
produce energy
inside, a controlled chain
reaction takes place which
atomic nuclei split up and
release heat energy
The heat, heats water which creates
steam which turns a turbine, which
generates electricity
Nuclear Fussion
It is the joining of small atomic nuclei. Two light nuclei(hydrogen)
can join to make a nucleus - this is called fusion.
Fusion creates even more energy than fission. So
people are trying to make fusion reactors, and there
isn't much waste left behind and there is plenty of
hydrogen. The only problem is that it can only happen
at really high temperatures - 10 000 000'c
For this you need a extremely strong magnetic field, there are a
few experimental reactors around but non of them are
generating electricity yet.
The chain reactions
For fission, a slow moving neutron must be absorbed into a uranium or plutonium
nucleus. This extra neutron makes it unstable, causing it to split. Each time a nucleus
splits up it spits out two or three more neutrons, which hit another nucleus causing
another split, therefore the chain reaction continues.
Nuclear fission gives out a lot of
energy. Nuclear processes give out a
lot more energy than chemical
processes do e.g. Nukes.
The Life Cycle of stars
1) Protostar - clouds of dust and gas pulled together into spirals
by gravity
2) gravitational energy is converted to heat until nuclear fusion happens,
this gives out massive amounts of heat and light. A star is born
3) Main Sequence Star - The star immediately enters a long stable
period. The heat energy creates outward pressure which balances
gravity pulling everything inwards. This energy output maintains for
millions of years due to the massive amounts of hydrogen, this
period lasts for several billions years
4) Small Star/Red Giant - Eventually
the hydrogen begins to run out and
heavier elements such as iron are
made through the nuclear fusion of
hydrogen. As it's a small star it swells
into a red giant.
5) The star then
becomes unstable and
ejects it's outer layer of
dust and gas as a
planetary Nebula
6)This leaves behind a hot dense solid core - a white dwarf, which
cools to become a black dwarf and eventually disappears
4)Large star/Super Red Giant - Eventually
the hydrogen begins to run out and
heavier elements such as iron are made
through the nuclear fusion of hydrogen. As
it's a large star it swells into a Super Red
Giant.
5)The star starts to glow brightly again, as they undergo
more fusion, they expand and contract several times, forming
heavy elements such as iron. Finally they explode to create a
Super Nova, forming elements heavier than iron and ejecting
them into the universe to form other planets and stars.
6) The remainders of the super nova is a very
dense core called a neutron star. If the star is
big enough it will become a black hole.