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AQA A-Level Physics Notes

/u/BaronPaprika

May 2018

Contents
Overview 3

1 Particles 4
1.1 Fundamental forces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2 Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2.1 Balancing interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

2 Electricity 5
2.1 Resistivity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.2 Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

3 Quantum Phenomena 6
3.1 The photoelectric effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.2 Wave-particle duality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

4 Mechanics 7
4.1 Newton’s laws of motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.2 SUVAT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

5 Materials 8
5.1 Core vocabulary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
5.2 Hooke’s law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
5.3 Young’s modulus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

6 Waves 9
6.1 Core vocabulary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
6.2 Phase difference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.3 Polarisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.4 Stationary waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.4.1 Superposition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.4.2 Stationary wave formation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.5 Refraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

1
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 CONTENTS

6.5.1 Refractive index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11


6.5.2 Snell’s Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.5.3 Total internal reflection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.5.4 Fibre optics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.6 Interference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.6.1 Young’s double slit experiment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.7 Diffraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
6.7.1 Single slit diffraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
6.7.2 Diffraction gratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

7 Further Mechanics 15
7.1 Circular motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
7.2 Simple harmonic motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
7.3 Resonance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

8 Thermal Physics 17
8.1 Thermal energy transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
8.2 Ideal gases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
8.2.1 Kinetic theory of gases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

9 Fields 19
9.1 Gravitational fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
9.1.1 Gravitational potential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
9.1.2 Orbits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
9.1.3 Escape velocity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9.2 Electric fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9.2.1 Electrical potential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.3 Capacitance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.3.1 Dielectrics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.3.2 Energy stored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.3.3 Charging and discharging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.4 Magnetic fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.4.1 Moving particles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
9.4.2 Magnetic flux . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
9.4.3 Electromagnetic induction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
9.4.4 Alternating current . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
9.4.5 Transformers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

10 Nuclear Physics 26
10.1 Atomic structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
10.1.1 Rutherford scattering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
10.2 Radiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
10.2.1 Uses of radiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
10.2.2 Background radiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
10.2.3 Gamma radiation intensity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

2
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 OVERVIEW

10.2.4 Safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
10.3 Radioactive decay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
10.4 Nuclear radius . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
10.5 Mass defect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
10.5.1 Nuclear fusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
10.6 Nuclear reactors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.6.1 Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.6.2 Induced fission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.6.3 Safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

11 Astrophysics 32
11.1 Telescopes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
11.1.1 Refracting telescopes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
11.1.2 Reflecting telescopes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
11.1.3 Resolving power . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
11.1.4 Charge-coupled devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
11.1.5 Non-optical telescopes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2 Star classification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2.1 Luminosity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2.2 Apparent magnitude . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2.3 Parsecs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2.4 Absolute magnitude . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.2.5 Black body radiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.2.6 Stefan’s law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.2.7 Spectral classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.2.8 Stellar evolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.2.9 The Hertzsprung-Russel diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.2.10 Stellar death . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
11.3 Cosmology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
11.3.1 Doppler effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
11.3.2 Quasars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
11.3.3 Hubble’s law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
11.3.4 The Big Bang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
11.3.5 Exoplanets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

12 Appendix 40
12.1 Data and units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
12.2 Damping graphs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Overview
Paper 1 Mon. June 4 Sections 1-7
Paper 2 Fri. June 8 Sections 8-10 and Paper 1
Paper 3 Thu. June 14 Section 11 and practical

3
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 1 PARTICLES

Formulae marked with a (?) are not given in the formula book, but can be easily derived. Formulae
marked with (??) must be memorised. The full specification is available at
http://filestore.aqa.org.uk/resources/physics/specifications/AQA-7407-7408-SP-2015.PDF

1 Particles
Particles (classification) Hadrons Composition
π+ , π− , π0 ud̄, ūd, (uū, dd̄)
Hadrons
Leptons Bosons K+ , K− , K0 , K̄0 us̄, ūs, ds̄, d̄s
Baryons Mesons
proton uud
electron photon (γ) proton π-meson
neutron udd
muon W± neutron K-meson
Λ0 uds
tau Z0
Σ+ , Σ− , Σ0 uus, dds, uds
neutrino gluon
Ξ− , Ξ0 dss, uss
graviton
∆++ , ∆− uuu, ddd
Higgs
Ω− sss

· Fermions have half-integer spin. This class of particles includes leptons and baryons.
– Leptons are defined by their non-observance of the strong nuclear force.
· Bosons are defined by their non-observance of the Pauli exclusion principle, meaning two of
them can occupy the same space at once. They also have integer spin, so all mesons and some
nuclei (those with even mass numbers) are bosons.
· Hadrons are composed of quarks. Baryons contain three quarks and mesons contain a quark-
antiquark pair.

1.1 Fundamental forces


· Electromagnetic force – carried by photons, represented by γ. Responsible for the interactions
between charged particles.
· Strong nuclear force – carried by gluons and π-mesons. Holds quarks together to form larger
hadrons (mediated by gluons), and holds hadrons together to form nuclei (mediated by pions).
Very repulsive below 0.5 fm and strongly attractive between 0.5 and 3.0 fm. Leptons do not
interact with the strong nuclear force.
· Weak nuclear force – carried by W± and Z0 . Regulates flavour change in quarks. Has a limited
range because the mass of its carrier particles causes them to decay after they travel a short
distance.
· Gravity – unknown carrier. Responsible for the interactions between objects with mass. Has an
infinite range, but is the weakest of the fundamental forces.

1.2 Interactions
In most interactions, the exchange particle is a virtual particle – it briefly appears and disappears, just
long enough to mediate the interaction.

4

AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 2 ELECTRICITY

Electron repulsion β − decay Electron capture Annihilation

β−
e −
e − p n νe γ
W− ν̄e
e+
γ W+ e−
e− e− n p e− γ

Some important interactions, as they relate to atomic nuclei:


Electron capture p + e − → n + νe A
ZX →A
Z−1 Y
Beta plus decay p → n + β + + νe A
ZX →A
Z−1 Y
Beta minus decay n → p + β − + ν̄e A
ZX →A
Z+1 Y
Alpha decay A
ZX →A−4
Z−2 Y (+42 He2+ )
Gamma emission does not alter the nucleus, as photons have no mass and no charge.
Sufficiently highly energetic photons can turn into particle-antiparticle pairs in a phenomenon called
pair production.
Free neutrons are unstable, with a lifetime of around 880 s, and decay into protons (which are
stable) through β − decay.

1.2.1 Balancing interactions


Charge, lepton number, lepton generation, and baryon number must all be balanced between the two
sides of an interaction. Strangeness must also be balanced unless the interaction is weak. Quarks all
have a baryon number of 13 and strange quarks have a strangeness of −1. Strange quarks are created
by the strong interaction, but because they are always created in quark-antiquark pairs, strangeness is
conserved.

2 Electricity
2.1 Resistivity
Whereas resistance is specific to a component, resistivity applies to a material. It is defined by the
equation
ρ = resistivity in Ω m−1 ,
RA R = resistance in Ω,
ρ=
` A = area in m2 ,
` = length in m.
Temperature can also affects resistivity. For some materials, such as the ones used in thermistors,
resistance increases with temperature, but for some materials, it decreases.
Superconductors are materials that have zero resistivity below a certain critical temperature, and
can be used to transfer power without loss or make very strong magnets.

5
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 3 QUANTUM PHENOMENA

2.2 Circuits
diode varaible resistor capacitor lamp
thermistor fuse inductor

Circuit analysis is similar to GCSE. Important things to remember:


· For resistors in parallel, R1 = r11 + r12 + r13 + · · · . For two resistors, this can be expressed as
r1 r2
R= .
r1 + r2
· In series circuits, all components have the same current, but a different voltage, across them.
In a parallel circuit, voltage is the same across each branch, but current varies.
· The potential divider: in a circuit with multiple resistors, the voltage across each is proportional
to its share of the total resistance – for a circuit with total resistance R, a component with
resistance r has Rr of the total voltage across it.
· Batteries have an internal resistance that is hard to measure. They can be modelled as a perfect
battery with an attached perfect resistor.

ε = emf in V,
I = current in A,
ε = I(R + r )
R = external resistance in Ω,
r = internal resistance in Ω.

ε
r

3 Quantum Phenomena
3.1 The photoelectric effect
When light of a sufficiently high frequency is shone on a metal surface, it is able to liberate electrons
from that surface. The following observations can be made about the effect:
1. For a given metal, no electrons are emitted unless the light is of a sufficiently high frequency,
2. The maximum kinetic energy of the emitted electrons is determined by the maximum frequency
of the light,
3. The rate of electron emission is proportional to the intensity of the light.

6
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 4 MECHANICS

The wave theory of light cannot explain observations 1 and 2 – if light were a wave, the emission of
electrons and their kinetic energy should be determined by the intensity of the light. This is explained
by the particle model of light, where an electron can only be liberated if the energy of an incident
photon exceeds its work function, φ:
h = Planck’s constant,
hf > φ f = frequency of incident electron in m,
φ = work function of metal in J.
After the photoelectron is liberated, its maximum energy and frequency are determined by
h = Planck’s constant,
hf = φ + Ek (max) f = frequency of incident electron in m,
φ = work function in J,
Ek (max) = maximum kinetic
energy of emitted electrons in J.
If photoelectron energy and incident frequency are plotted against each other, a number of things
can be calculated from the graph – the gradient is Planck’s constant, the x-intercept is the threshold
frequency, and the y -intercept is the work function.

3.2 Wave-particle duality


Diffraction and interference suggest that light is a wave, but the photoelectric effect suggest that
it’s a particle. It was therefore predicted that things which are classically thought of as particles (ie.
electrons) could exhibit wave-like properties as well. This is expressed by
λ = de Broglie wavelength in m,
h h = Planck’s constant
λ=
mv m = particle mass in kg,
v = particle velocity in m s−1

4 Mechanics
4.1 Newton’s laws of motion
1. Objects in motion stay in motion, and objects at rest stay at rest, unless acted on by an external
force.
2. The vector sum of the forces on an object are equal to its mass multiplied by its vector accel-
eration.
3. When one body exerts a force on a second body, the second body simultaneously exerts a force
equal in magnitude and opposite in direction on the first body.

7
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 5 MATERIALS

4.2 SUVAT
Variable excluded Equation
s v = u + at
u s = v t − 21 at 2
v s = ut + 12 at 2
a s = 21 (u + v ) · t
t v 2 = u 2 + 2as

5 Materials
5.1 Core vocabulary
· Brittle – fractures before undergoing plastic deformation.
· Ductile – can be drawn into wires.
· Hard – is resistant to being scratched or indented.
· Malleable – can be beaten into thin sheets.
· Elastic – returns to its original shape after being deformed.
· Plastic – does not return to its original shape after being deformed.
· Strong – withstands large static loads without failing.
· Tough – withstands large dynamic loads without failing.
· Stiff – resistant to deformation by tension or compression (i.e. Young’s modulus is high).

5.2 Hooke’s law


Hooke’s Law states that the extension of a spring is proportional to the force applied, as long as it
does not exceed its limit of proportionality (P).
F = force in N,
F = k∆L k = spring constant in N m−1 ,
∆L = exention in m.

Once the extension passes the elastic limit (E), deformation becomes permanent. F is the point at
which the material fractures.

8
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 6 WAVES

E
F
P
∆L / m

F /N

The gradient of the graph (up to P) is equal to k, and the area of the shaded region is equal to the
energy required to produce the corresponding extension, and conversely, the amount of energy stored
by the extended material.
E = energy stored in J, E = energy stored in J,
E = 21 F ∆L F = force in N, E = 12 k∆L2 k = spring constant in N m−1 ,
∆L = extension in m. ∆L = extension in m.
When springs are in series, they have an effective spring constant of K = k1 + k2 , and when in parallel,
1 1 1
= + .
K k1 k2

5.3 Young’s modulus


Young’s modulus is a property of a material that quantifies its stiffness.
σ = tensile stress in Pa, ε = tensile strain,
F ∆L
σ= F = force in N, ε= ∆L = extension in m,
A A = area in m2 . L L = length in m.
E = Young’s modulus in Pa,
σ
E= σ = tensile stress in Pa,
ε
ε = tensile strain.
The Young’s modulus of a material and the amount of work done per unit volume can also be found
as the gradient of and area under a graph of stress against strain.

6 Waves
6.1 Core vocabulary
· Progressive waves – waves whose oscillations travel and do not stay about a fixed point; this
type of wave transfers energy.

9
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 6 WAVES

· Transverse waves – waves whose oscillations are perpendicular to the direction of energy trans-
fer. (e.g. light).
· Longitudinal waves – waves whose oscillations are parallel to the direction of energy transfer.
(e.g. sound).
· Coherent – waves are coherent if they have the same frequency and wavelength, and have a
constant phase difference.

6.2 Phase difference


Two points are in phase if they are a whole wave apart – their oscillations will be in time with each
other. Two points are in antiphase if they are half a wavelength apart, and oscillate perfectly out of
time.
φ = phase difference in rad,
2πx
φ= x = point separation in m, (??)
λ λ = wavelength in m.

6.3 Polarisation
When the oscillations of a transverse wave are confined to one plane, the wave is said to be polarised.
The fact that light can be polarised was used to prove that EM waves are transverse.
Applications: Used for polarised sunglasses, which reduce glare from sunlight reflected off water.
Radio and TV broadcasts also use this to reduce interference.

6.4 Stationary waves


6.4.1 Superposition
When two waves of similar natures meet, the resultant wave depends on their amplitudes and relative
phase difference:
· If they are in phase, constructive interference occurs,
· If they are 180°/π rad out of phase and have the same amplitude, destructive interference occurs,
and they cancel out.
The Principle of Superposition states that the resultant displacement caused by two waves arriving
at a point is the sum of the two displacements caused by each wave at that instant.

6.4.2 Stationary wave formation


Stationary waves form when two waves of the same frequency travel in opposite directions, forming
nodes (points of zero displacement) and antinodes (points of maximum displacement).

10
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 6 WAVES

λ = 2`
First harmonic,
Fundamental frequency

λ=`
Second harmonic,
First overtone

λ = 23 `
Third harmonic,
Second overtone

λ = 12 `
Fourth harmonic,
Third overtone

In general, a standing wave with n antinodes and of length ` has λ = n2 `. The fundamental frequency
is given by
f0 = fundamental frequency in Hz,
c
f0 = c = wave speed in m s−1 , (?)
2`
` = wave length in m.
Additionally, for a string,

s f0 = fundamental frequency in Hz,


1 T ` = wave length in m,
f0 = T = tension in the string in N,
2` µ
µ = mass per unit length of string in kg m−1 .

6.5 Refraction
Definition: a change of direction caused by a speed change crossing between media.

6.5.1 Refractive index


Absolute refractive index (for an EM wave):

11
AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 6 WAVES

c n = refractive index (dimensionless),


n= c = speed of light in vacuum,
cs
cs = speed of light in medium in m s−1 .
Specific refractive index:

n2 n = refractive index,
n= n2 = absolute r.e. of medium 2,
n1
n1 = absolute r.e. of medium 1.
where the wave is passing from medium 1 to medium 2.

6.5.2 Snell’s Law


When passing from medium 1 to medium 2,

n1 sin θ1 = n2 sin θ2

where n are refractive indices, and θ are the angles between the path of the ray and the normal to the
surface. When n1 > n2 , the beam bends away from the normal, and then n1 < n2 , the beam bends
toward the normal.

θ2
n2
n1
θ1

6.5.3 Total internal reflection


If the angle of incidence is sufficiently large and the wave is moving from a more dense to a less dense
medium (i.e. n1 > n2 ), total internal reflection can occur if the angle of refraction (θ2 ) would be more
than 90°. The angle this occurs at is called the critical angle, is denoted by i or θc , and is given by
n1 i = critical angle,
sin i =
n2 n1 and n2 are refractive indices.

6.5.4 Fibre optics


Fibre optic cables consist of an optically dense core surrounded by a less optically dense cladding.
Light travels through the core; the cladding reflects light from within the core and protects the core
from scratches.
Advantages of using fibre optics over conventional wires:
· Immune to electromagnetic interference,
· Do not heat up,

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 6 WAVES

· Transmit signals more efficiently and need fewer repeaters,


· Do not corrode,
· Allow a higher bandwidth and transmit more data.
Issues with using fibre optics:
· Absorption reduces the strength of the signal, requiring repeaters to be used at certain intervals.
· Dispersion
– Modal dispersion occurs when multiple rays of light enter the fibre at different angles, and
take different times to reach the destination. Single-mode fibres only allow light to take
one path, and do not suffer from this effect.
– Material dispersion occurs because different wavelengths of light travel at different speeds
in the fibre. This can be counteracted by using monochromatic light
Both of these effects cause pulse broadening, where signals become spread out in the fibre.
This can cause binary digits to overlap and become muddled.

6.6 Interference
Waves can interfere with each other when two similar waves exist at the same point in space. For this
to happen, the waves must be coherent or have a constant phase difference. The pattern produced
depends on the phase difference.

6.6.1 Young’s double slit experiment


In this experiment, light, (preferably a laser, as its light is coherent and monochromatic) is shone
through two slits onto a screen. Bright maxima occur on the screen where the beams of light from
the slits are in phase (constructive interference) and dark minima are produced when the beams are
out of phase (destructive interference).

Subsidiary maxima occur within the outer maxima shown above. The equation governing this pattern
is
w = distance between maxima in m,
λD λ = wavelength in m,
w=
s D = distance to screen in m,
s = separation of slits in m.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 6 WAVES

6.7 Diffraction
Diffraction occurs when a wave passes through a gap or around an object. The greatest diffraction
occurs when the width of a slit is the same as the wavelength of the light diffracting through it.

6.7.1 Single slit diffraction


When light passes through a single slit and is projected onto a screen, it forms a pattern similar to a
double slit pattern. Its key features are:
· The central maximum is twice as wide as the others,
· The secondary maxima rapidly decrease in intensity as they get further from the center,
· Minima occur when the path difference between two waves arriving at the screen is a half multiple
of wavelength.
· Maxima appear approximately between minima.
A single slit can be used as a light source of coherent light for a dual-slit experiment.

6.7.2 Diffraction gratings


A diffraction grating is a series of tightly packed narrow slits that separates light into its constituent
wavelengths; they exhibit the same subsidiary maxima as double slits.
d = distance between adjacent slits in m,
θ = angle of order,
d sin θ = nλ
n = number of order,
λ = wavelength in m.
This formula can be derived as shown:

d
θ

Maxima occur when the path difference between two slits is exactly λ; the formula is self-evident from
the diagram above and some trigonometry.
Spectrometers use diffraction to analyse the wavelengths present in light.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 7 FURTHER MECHANICS

7 Further Mechanics
7.1 Circular motion
v

m
ω F r

When an object moves at a constant velocity in a circle, because it is constantly changing direction,
a force must be acting on it. The angular speed of an object is given by
ω = angular speed in rad s−1 ,
v v = linear speed in m s−1 ,
ω= = 2πf
r r = circle radius in m,
f = frequency in Hz.

The centripetal (towards the centre) acceleration is given by


a = acceleration in m s−2 ,
v2 v = linear speed in m s−1 ,
a= = ω2 r ω = angular speed in rad s−1 ,
r
r = circle radius in m.
The force required to hold the object in motion is given by
F = force in N,
m = mass in kg,
mv 2
F = = mω 2 r v = linear speed in m s−1 ,
r r = circle radius in m,
ω = angular speed in rad s−1 .

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 7 FURTHER MECHANICS

7.2 Simple harmonic motion

T
A
x
ω
v

Simple harmonic motion (SHM) is very similar to circular motion; it describes the motion of
pendulums and springs. It is defined by
a = acceleration toward center in m s−2 ,
a = −ω x2
ω = angular speed in rad s−1 ,
x = displacement in m.
This equation can be solved to give

x = displacement in m, v = linear speed in m s−1 ,


A = max. displacement in m, √ ω = angular speed in rad s−1 ,
x = A cos ωt v = ±ω A2 − x 2
ω = angular speed in rad s−1 , A = max. displacement in m,
t = time in s. x = displacement in m.
From these, the equations for maximum speed and acceleration can be easily derived:
vmax = max. speed in m s−1 , amax = max. acceleration in m s−2 ,
vmax = ωA ω = angular speed in rad s−1 , amax = ω A 2
ω = angular speed in rad s−1 ,
A = max. displacement in m. A = max. displacement in m.
The restoring force can also be found
for a spring, for a pendulum,
r T = tension in N, r T = tension in N,
m `
T = 2π m = object mass in kg, T = 2π ` = string length in m,
k g g = gravity in Nkg−1 .
k = spring constant in Nm−1 .

7.3 Resonance
The way an oscillator interacts with its surroundings varies.
· In damped oscillation, energy is lost to the surroundings.
– Under light and heavy damping, the amplitude of the oscillation slowly decays to zero.
– Under critical damping, no oscillation occurs, and the amplitude decays to zero immediately,
without crossing the zero displacement line.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 8 THERMAL PHYSICS

– Over-damping is the same as critical damping, but slower.


See section 12.2 for graphs.
· In free oscillation, there is no energy transfer with the surroundings. This occurs most notably
at the system’s resonant frequency.
· There can also be a driving force adding energy to the system. The system’s response to this
force is greatest when the driving frequency and the resonant frequency are the same.
Resonance is used by radios (their internal circuitry resonates at the same frequency as the broadcast
signal), and it is the effect responsible for shattering glass with sound. Damping can be used to prevent
certain types of damage – some buildings use dampers to avoid wind damage.
Lightly damped systems respond very strongly (have a large amplitude) at their resonant frequency;
this decreases with more damping.

8 Thermal Physics
8.1 Thermal energy transfer
The thermal energy of a system is defined as the sum of the kinetic and potential energies of its
constituent particles. Their kinetic energies are distributed in a bell curve, with a peak at the average
energy of the system.
At absolute zero, the particles have no energy, so clustering occurs with systems that have very
low energy, and the peak of their energy distribution is higher. The temperature of a system can be
changed according to the following equation:
Q = energy in J,
m = mass in kg,
Q = mc∆θ
c = specific heat capacity in J K−1 ,
∆θ = change in temperature in K.
When a material changes state, work must be done to change its atomic structure. A certain amount
of energy must enter the system for this to happen, but the system’s temperature will not change –
the potential energies, not the kinetic energies, or the molecules are changing.
Q = energy in J,
Q = ml m = mass in kg,
l = specific latent heat in J kg−1 .
The value of l is different for different materials and state changes. Changes between solid and liquid
(melting and freezing) are referred to as fusion, and changes between liquid and gas (boiling and
condensing) are referred to as vaporisation.

8.2 Ideal gases


The temperature of a gas is linked to its pressure an volume by the ideal gas equation

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 8 THERMAL PHYSICS

for moles, for molecules,


p = pressure in Pa, p = pressure in Pa,
V = volume in m3 , V = volume in m3 ,
pV = nRT n = number of moles in mol, pV = NkT N = number of molecules,
R = molar gas constant, k = Boltzmann constant in J K−1 ,
T = temperature in K. T = temperature in K.
(Note: k = R/NA , where NA is Avogadro’s number.)
This is an amalgamation of three laws,
· Boyle’s Law, that pV is constant at constant T,
· Charles’ Law, that V /T is constant at constant p,
· the pressure law, that p/T is constant at constant V.
For a gas to change volume at a constant pressure, work must be done (and usually ends up as heat).
This energy is equal to the pressure multiplied by the change in volume (W = p∆V ), and can therefore
be taken as the area underneath a graph of volume against pressure.

8.2.1 Kinetic theory of gases


The equations above arose from experimental evidence, but the kinetic theory of gases was derived
from theory, using mathematics, before sufficiently powerful measurements were available.
· Ancient Greek and Roman philosophers such as Democritus had ideas about gases, some of
which turned out to be close to the truth.
· Robert Boyle was the first to discover his law in 1662; Jacques Charles was second, in 1787.
The pressure law was formulated by Guillaume Amontons in 1699 and Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac
in 1809.
· Daniel Bernoulli laid the foundations for kinetic theory by using it to explain Boyle’s law.
· Robert Brown discovered Brownian motion in 1827, which supports the kinetic theory.
· Kinetic theory wasn’t accepted until the 20th century, when Einstein used it to make predictions
about Brownian motion. Brownian motion strongly supports the kinetic theory, because fast-
moving particles in a fluid explain what Brown observed very well.

Q u A
` m

Imagine a cuboid container with volume V and sides of length ` containing N particles each of mass
m.
· Say particle Q moves directly towards wall A with velocity u. Its momentum approaching the
wall is mu. It strikes wall A. Assuming the collisions are elastic, it rebounds and heads in the
opposite direction with momentum −mu. Its change in momentum is then 2mu.
· Assuming Q does not collide with any other particles, the time between its collisions with A is
2`/u, and the number of collisions per second is u/2`.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

· Its rate of change of momentum is therefore −2mu × (u/2`).


· According to Newton’s second law, rate of change of momentum is equal to force, so the force
exerted on Q by A is −mu 2 /`.
· There are many particles in the box, each with a different value of u. The total force exerted on
m 2
u + u22 + · · · .

wall A is given by F =
` 1
· From this, the mean squared speed can be defined as ū 2 = u12 + u22 + · · · /N.


· Substituting into the equation for force, F = Nmū 2 /`.


Nmū 2
· The pressure on A is then given by the force divided by its area: p = .
V
· The particles are actually moving in all three dimensions. Their overall speed can be found using
Pythagoras as c 2 = u 2 + v 2 + w 2 , where u, v , and w are their velocities in the x, y , and z
dimensions.
· For all particles c̄ 2 = ū 2 + v̄ 2 + w̄ 2 , and because the velocities are randomly distributed, ū 2 ≈
v̄ 2 ≈ w̄ 2 , so c̄ 2 = 3ū 2 .
· Substituting into the equation for pressure above,

p = pressure in Pa,
V = volume in m3 ,
pV = 13 Nmcrms
2
N = number of molecules,
m = molecular mass in kg,
crms = root mean squared speed in m s−1 .

A large number of assumptions must be made for this theory to hold:


1. All molecules are equal, and their velocities are distributed randomly.
2. Collisions between the molecules and the container are perfectly elastic.
3. The molecules have negligible size compared to the container.
4. The molecules obey Newton’s laws.
5. The duration of collisions is negligible compared to the duration between collisions.
To calculate the average kinetic energy of each molecule, the equation above and the ideal gas equation
can be equated and rearranged to the form 12 mcr2ms as below.

for molecules, for temperature,


Ek = kinetic energy in J, Ek = kinetic energy in J,
n = number of moles in mol, Ek = 32 kT k = Boltzmann constant in J K−1 ,
3 nRT
Ek = R = molar gas constant, T = temperature in K.
2 N T = temperature in K,
N = number of molecules.

9 Fields
9.1 Gravitational fields
Gravity is the attractive field that acts between all objects with mass. It is defined by the equation

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

F = force in N,
Gm1 m2 G = the gravitational constant,
F =
r2 m = masses in kg,
r = separation in m.
Gravity is much weaker than the other fundamental forces – between protons, it is weaker than the
electrostatic force by a factor of around 1036 .
F
Gravitational field strength defines the force per unit mass (it can also be defined as g = m ) felt
in an object’s field:
g = gravitational field strength in N kg−1,
GM G = the gravitational constant,
g= 2
r M = object mass in kg,
r = separation in m.

9.1.1 Gravitational potential


The gravitational potential at a point is the amount of gravitational potential energy a unit mass at
that point would have. It has a value of zero at an infinite distance from the mass, and is negative
because work would have to be done to reach this zero point.
V = gravitational potential in J kg−1 ,
GM G = the gravitational constant,
V =−
r M = mass in kg,
r = separation in m.
Work must be done to change an object’s gravitational potential energy:
∆W = work done in J,
∆W = m∆V m = mass in kg,
∆V = change in gravitational potential in J kg−1 .
Objects can, however, move without changing gravitational potential if they stay a constant distance
from the mass exerting the field. In this case, they move along an equipotential surface, which has the
same gravitational potential across it, and no work must be done (against gravity) to move between
points on it.
g can also be defined as the gradient of gravitational potential with respect to distance, and is
sometimes referred to as potential gradient.
g = gravitational field strength in N kg−1 ,
∆V
g=− ∆V = change in gravitational potential in J kg−1 ,
∆r ∆r = change in distance in m.

9.1.2 Orbits
Characteristics of an object’s orbit can be found by equating the equation for force by gravity and the
equation for force in circular motion. This reveals that T 2 ∝ r 3 , or that the time period of a satellite
is unaffected by its mass.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

In a circular orbit, satellites remain on the same equipotential at all times, and never change speed,
and so do no net work. Satellites in elliptical orbits exchange potential energy for kinetic energy and
back again, but also do no net work.
Synchronous satellites orbit with the same period as their planet. Geostationary satellites are
synchronous satellites in the same plane as the equator, and so remain above the same point on the
Earth at all times. For the Earth’s time period and mass, geostationary satellites orbit 42,000 km
from the center of the Earth, or 36,000 km above the Earth’s surface.
Low-orbit satellites orbit under 2,000 km above the surface, and have a number of advantages.
They are cheaper to launch, require less powerful communications equipment, and can be used to take
detailed pictures of the Earth. However, their low orbit means that they move very fast, and large
numbers of them are needed for constant coverage. Their orbits usually pass over the north and south
poles, so they cover all parts of the Earth.

9.1.3 Escape velocity


It can be derived from the equations for kinetic energy and gravitational potential energy that the
escape velocity, or the velocity required to fully escape a planet’s gravitational pull, is given by

r v = escape velocity in m s−1 ,


2GM G = the gravitational constant,
v= (?)
r M = planet mass in kg,
r = distance in m.

9.2 Electric fields


Electric fields are very similar to gravitational fields. They both follow the inverse-square law, and both
allow spherical force-exerting objects to be treated as points. Electric forces, however, can be both
attractive or repulsive, whereas gravity only attracts. Coulomb’s law states that:
F = force in N,
1 Q1 Q2 ε0 = permittivity of free space,
F =
4πε0 r 2 Q = charge in C,
r = separation in m.
Permittivity is a measure of how much a medium supports the formation of an electric field; its value
in a vacuum is ε0 . Electric field strength is defined the same way as it is for gravity:
E = electric field strength in N C−1 ,
1 Q ε0 = permittivity of free space,
E=
4πε0 r 2 Q = charge in C,
r = separation in m.
The field strength in a uniform field (such as one between two plates, shown below) is given by the
equation
E = electric field strength in N C−1 ,
V
E= V = potential difference between plates in V,
d d = distance between plates in m.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

+ 400 V
d
0V

Similarly to gravitational fields, the work done to move a charge is defined by


∆W = work done in J,
∆W = Q∆V Q = charge in C,
∆V = change in electrical potential in V.
When a charged particle enters an electric field, the field exerts a force on it, changing its path, and
causing it to move in a parabola. As such, electric fields can be used to separate charged particles
from uncharged ones, for applications such as spectrometers.

9.2.1 Electrical potential


As with gravitational fields, electrical potential is given by
V = electrical potential in V,
1 Q ε0 = permittivity of free space,
V =
4πε0 r Q = charge in C,
r = distance in m.
E, V, and r can be related graphically:

V E

E
∆V
r r
E = electic field strength in N C−1 , Z E = electric field strength in N C−1 ,
∆V
E= V = electrical potential in V, ∆V = E dr r = distance in m,
∆r r = distance in m. ∆V = change in electrical potential in V.

9.3 Capacitance
A capacitor is an electrical component consisting of two parallel conducting plates and either a gap or
a dielectric in between. Capacitance is defined as the ability of an object to store electric charge.
C = capacitance in F,
Q
C= Q = charge in C,
V V = voltage in V.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

9.3.1 Dielectrics
A dielectric can be used to increase capacitance. It consists of polar molecules, which, when an electric
field is passed across the capacitor, create their own opposing electric field. This reduces the voltage
across the plates, and increases the capacitance. This effect is governed by two equations:
C = capacitance in F, ε1 εr = relative permittivity,
A = plate area in m2 , εr = ε1 = permittivity of material
Aε0 εr ε0
C= ε0 = permittivity of free space, ε0 = permittivity of free space.
d εr = dielectric constant,
d = plate separation in m.

9.3.2 Energy stored


Charge accumulates on the plates of a capacitor, which gives them the ability to store energy. Graph-
ically, this is represented by the area under a graph of charge against voltage, or:
E = energy in J,
1 Q2 Q = charge in C,
E = 21 QV = 12 CV 2 = V = voltage in V,
2 C
C = capacitance in F.

9.3.3 Charging and discharging


Capacitors charge and discharge exponentially:

discharging: charging:
Q = charge in C, Q = charge in C,
Q0 = maximum charge in C,   Q0 = maximum charge in C,
t t
Q = Q0 e − RC t = time in s, Q = Q0 1 − e − RC t = time in s,
R = resistance in Ω, R = resistance in Ω,
C = capacitance in F. C = capacitance in F.
Q can be substituted for V. The equation for I is the same for charging and discharging, and has the
same form as the Q/V discharging formula. RC, sometimes τ, is called the time constant, and is the
time taken for the capacitor to charge/discharge to around 37% of its ultimate value. Conversely, the
time taken for a capacitor to charge/discharge to half of its ultimate value is around 0.69RC.

9.4 Magnetic fields


Magnetic fields are closely related to electric fields, and exert forces on objects that are themselves
magnetic.
F = force in N,
B = magnetic flux density in T,
F = BI`
I = current in A,
` = length in m.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

They can be related to gravitational and electrical fields by defining B as force per unit current-length
F
(B = I` ).
The tesla is the unit used to measure magnetic flux or field density, and is defined as the strength
of a magnetic field that exerts 1 N of force on a 1 m long wire carrying 1 A. The force, the current,
and the magnetic field are all at right angles to each other:

F
B
I

Keep in mind that this rule applies for conventional current, and is reversed for flow of charge.

9.4.1 Moving particles


When a charged particle moves in a magnetic field, it experiences a force at right angles to its motion
according to the following equation:
F = force in N,
B = magnetic flux density in T,
F = BQv
Q = charge in C,
v = velocity in m s−1 .
This is the condition for circular motion, so a charged particle in a magnetic field will tend to move in
a circle. Combining the equation above and the equation for circular motion gives
r = radius in m,
mv m = mass in kg,
r= v = velocity in m s−1 , (?)
BQ
B = magnetic flux density in T,
Q = charge in C.
A cyclotron is a type of particle accelerator that uses this phenomenon. It consists of two large
semicircular electrodes; particles enter the cyclotron, and move in a circular path around one electrode.
They accelerate due to the potential difference between the electrodes, move faster through the second
electrode, and the process repeats. Their radius increases as their velocity increases, so the fastest-
moving particles at the edge are siphoned off.

9.4.2 Magnetic flux


Magnetic flux, measured in webers, is a measure of total magnetic flux:
Φ = magnetic flux in Wb,
Φ = BA B = magnetic flux density in T,
A = area in m2 .
A current is induced in a coil of wire in a magnetic field. A measure of this is flux linkage:

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 9 FIELDS

NΦ = flux linkage in Wb,


B = magnetic flux density in T,
NΦ = BAN
A = area in m2 ,
N = number of turns.
NΦ is referred to as flux linkage. Magnetic flux is only felt at its fullest when the coil and field are at
right angles to each other, so for a coil rotating in a field:
NΦ = flux linkage in Wb,
B = magnetic flux density in T,
NΦ = BAN cos θ A = area in m2 ,
N = number of turns,
θ = angle to field.

9.4.3 Electromagnetic induction


According to Faraday’s law, the emf induced in a coil is proportional to the rate of change of flux
linkage, i.e. more emf is induced if the coil moves faster:
ε = induced emf in V,
∆Φ N = number of turns,
ε=N
∆t ∆Φ = change in flux linkage in wb,
∆t = time in s.
For a coil rotating in a magnetic field:
ε = induced emf in V,
B = magnetic flux density in T,
A = area in m2 ,
ε = BANω sin ωt
N = number of turns,
ω = angular speed in rad s−1 ,
t = time in s.
Lenz’s law states that the induced emf will always oppose the direction of the movement that caused
it:

9.4.4 Alternating current


For a sinusoidal alternating current, its stated voltage is usually its peak voltage, or maximum dis-
placement. However, for most of its cycle, the voltage does not have this value. A better measure of
voltage and current is using root mean squared values:
V0 Vr ms = rms voltage in V, I0 Ir ms = rms current in A,
Vr ms = √ Ir ms = √
2 V0 = peak voltage in V. 2 I0 = peak current in V.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 10 NUCLEAR PHYSICS

Other relationships still hold:


Pr ms = rms power in W,
Pr ms = Vr ms Ir ms Vr ms = rms voltage in V,
Ir ms = rms current in A.

9.4.5 Transformers
Transformers use Faraday’s law to exchange voltage and current, according to the following relation-
ship:
Ns Vs N = number of turns
=
Np Vp V = voltage in V.
However, this equation only holds for a perfect transformer. Eddy currents in real transformers are
looping currents caused by magnetic flux in the transformer’s core. They generate heat and an
opposing magnetic field, which reduces overall magnetic field strength. Transformer efficiency can be
calculated as the ratio of input power to output power:
e = efficiency,
Is Vs
e= × 100% I = current in A,
Ip Vp
V = voltage in V.
Transformers are used to transmit power efficiently – power losses are proportional to the square of
current, so this can be reduced by exchanging a high current for a high voltage.

10 Nuclear Physics
10.1 Atomic structure
· The Greek philosopher Democritus was the first person to propose atomic theory, in the 5th
century bce. He believed they are identical, and gave them a name meaning “indivisible”.
· In 1804, John Dalton proposed a similar idea based on chemistry. He believed that each element
is a different kind of atom, and that they are indivisible.
· In 1897, J. J. Thomsom discovered that electrons could be removed from atoms of any element,
which contradicted Dalton’s theory. He modelled atoms after plum pudding, with the electrons
distributed throughout.
· Rutherford’s scattering experiment was the first to suggest that charges within a nucleus are
clustered, which led to the proposal of the nuclear model of the atom.

10.1.1 Rutherford scattering


In 1909, Ernests Rutherford and Marsden conducted an experiment to test the “plum pudding” model.
They fired a beam of alpha particles at a thin gold foil; the model predicted that there should be very
minimal deflection due to the diffuse charges. Instead, most of the alpha particles were not deflect at
all, whilst a small but significant portion were deflect at angles as large as 180 degrees. This suggested
the following conclusions:

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 10 NUCLEAR PHYSICS

· Since the alpha particles were able to go through the foil, most of the atom must be empty
space.
· At the center of the atom, there must be a very positively charged nucleus, capable of deflecting
alpha particles.
· The nucleus must be very small, as only a small number of particles were deflected.
· Most of the atom’s mass must be in the nucleus, because it was able to deflect the particles.
The closest approach of an alpha particle to a gold nucleus can be estimated by equating the electrical
potential energy of the gold nucleus and alpha particle to the alpha particle’s initial kinetic energy:
Ek = initial kinetic energy in J,
1 79e · 2e
Ek = ε0 = permittivity of free space, (?)
4πε0 r
r = closest approach in m.
The values 79e and 2e are the charges of the gold nucleus and the alpha particle respectively.

10.2 Radiation
Nuclei emit several types of radiation, including
· Alpha (α) radiation consists of 42 He2+ nuclei ejected from larger nuclei at high speed. Alpha
particles have a large charge and mass, so is very ionising, and can be stopped by paper or a few
cm of air. It can be blocked by smoke, and is therefore used in smoke detectors.
· Beta (β) is an electron or positron. Its smaller mass and charge give it a smaller ionisation
potential, and β − particles can be stopped by around 3 cm of aluminium. β + particles annihilate
on contact with electrons, and consequently have a very short range. Alpha and beta radiation’s
strong ionisation make them very hazardous to humans if sources are ingested.
· Gamma (γ) radiation consists of photons with wavelengths less than 10 pm; they are very weakly
ionising and have a very long range, requiring several cm of lead to be stopped.
The type of radiation being emitted by a radioactive source can be determined by seeing what material
stops it.

10.2.1 Uses of radiation


Radiation can be used to determine the thickness of a known material. This is used in industrial
settings to adjust the separation of rollers.
As it is less ionising, gamma is the type of radiation predominantly used in medicine. Radionuclides
with a short half life, usually bonded to an organic molecule, are injected into a patient; where the
molecules gather can be measured using a detector such as a PET scanner. It is also used in cancer
treatment to destroy tumours. This can, however, have side effects such as burns and infertility, and
is a long-term hazard to medical staff.

10.2.2 Background radiation


Radiation is ever-present. Some sources of background radiation include:
· Primarily radon gas, which is released from rocks. Rocks in the ground and in buildings are also
slightly radioactive.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 10 NUCLEAR PHYSICS

· Cosmic rays, usually emitted from stars. They start out as high-energy protons, but produce
radiation when they collide with other particles in the atmosphere.
· Living things, which contain carbon-14 and potassium-40. Levels of these isotopes stay roughly
constant while an organism is alive, but they cease to be replenished after it dies, so their rates
of occurrence can be used to determine how long something has been dead.
· Radiation from medical and industrial equipment; this is, in almost all situations, negligible.

10.2.3 Gamma radiation intensity


Gamma radiation is emitted in all directions by a source, so its intensity at any point it proportional
to the surface area of the sphere with the source at its center and the observer on its surface. This
is an inverse-square relationship:
1 I = intensity in W m−2 ,
I∝
x2 x = distance from source in m.
This can easily be tested by measuring the count rate for a gamma source at various separations.

10.2.4 Safety
When handling radioactive sources, minimising exposure is important. This can be achieved by:
· Pointing directional sources away from you at all times.
· Handling the source with tongs, and never touch it.
· Staying as far away as possible from it except for when necessary.

10.3 Radioactive decay


energy
60
27 Co

1.49 MeV β

1.33 MeV γ
60
28 Ni

Radioactive nuclei decay in a random, unpredictable fashion, but in large enough numbers, their be-
haviour can be statistically quantified.
As the chance of decaying is the same for all radioisotopes (of the same type), the rate of decay of
a sample is proportional to the number of atoms in the sample, where the constant of proportionality
is the specific isotope’s decay constant:
∆N
∆t = activity in Bq,
∆N
= −λN λ = decay constant s−1 ,
∆t N = number of nuclei.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 10 NUCLEAR PHYSICS

Instead of the decay constant, half-life is used for most purposes. Half-life and the decay constant
can be related by solving the equation above:
A = activity in Bq, ln 2 T1/2 = half life in s,
T1/2 =
−λt A0 = initial activity in Bq, λ λ = decay constant in s−1 .
A = A0 e
λ = decay constant,
t = time in s.
Calculations with the decay constant and half life can be done in any unit of time, as long as the units
are consistent throughout the calculation.
Different half-lives can be useful or dangerous in different ways.
· Short half lives are useful in medicine. Technetium-99m has a half-life of 6 hours, so stops
harming the body relatively quickly after it is injected, and decays into a much more stable
isotope.
· Radiocarbon dating uses carbon-14, with a half-life of around 5730 years, to date dead organisms.
It is only able to produce accurate results for time periods similar to its half life.
· Long-lived radioisotopes can be dangerous, because they remain radioactive for a long time, and
must be stored. Several of these are produced as the by-products of nuclear fission.
For a nucleus to be stable, it must have a very particular ratio of protons to neutrons.
· Neutron-rich nuclei tend to undergo β + decay and neutron-deficient nuclei tend to undergo β −
decay.
· Excessively heavy nuclei of both types decay by α emission.
· γ emission occurs when a nucleus has too much energy. This usually occurs after it has decayed
through another process or captured an electron.
The neutron requirement for stability increases faster than the number of protons increases: consider
12 238
6 C and 92 U.

10.4 Nuclear radius


Protons and neutrons bunch together in the nucleus with roughly uniform density. The radius of
the nucleus ranges from about 2 fm for hydrogen to about 12 fm for uranium. The radius can be
approximated using
R = radius in m,
1/3
R = R0 A R0 = a constant (1.25 fm),
A = atomic mass number.

10.5 Mass defect


A bound nucleus is in a lower energy state than its constituent parts if they were free. Therefore,
when a nucleus forms, it releases some energy. Energy and mass are equivalent, and this means that
nuclei are lighter than the sum of their parts. The difference between their predicted mass and their
actual mass is called the mass defect, and it has the same value as the binding energy of the nucleus.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 10 NUCLEAR PHYSICS

Binding energy per nucleon / MeV


2 3
H

6
238
U
8 56
Fe

0 50 100 150 200 250


Nucleon number

Nuclei are most stable when the greatest binding energy is holding them together. The isotope with
the most binding energy (per nucleon) is iron-56. To become more stable, larger nuclei undergo fission,
and smaller nuclei undergo fusion.

10.5.1 Nuclear fusion


In nuclear fission, two small nuclei join together to make a larger nucleus, such as two hydrogen atoms
fusing to form a helium atom: 2 H +1 H →3 He + γ. This releases a large amount of energy, but to
overcome the electrostatic repulsion between the two hydrogen nuclei, it requires a large amount of
energy to initiate as well. This process generates energy in stars.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 10 NUCLEAR PHYSICS

10.6 Nuclear reactors


control rods

steam generator

turbine
fuel rods
moderator/coolant

shielding

10.6.1 Structure
· The key component of a nuclear reactor is the fuel rods. These contain pellets of enriched
uranium-235. When the uranium nuclei split, they release neutrons.
· The neutrons enter a moderator, which is usually water or salt. The moderator slows down
the neutrons with elastic collisions, which increases their likelyhood of being captured by other
uranium nuclei, causing them to split and release more neutrons.
· In this way, a chain reaction is occurring inside the reactor. The speed of the reaction can be
adjusted using the control rods, which absorb neutrons, and are commonly made of boron.
· In an ideal situation, each decay causes exactly one further decay. This usually happens when
there is a critical mass of uranium present. If there is less than the critical mass, the reaction
eventually dies, and if there is more, the reactor becomes supercritical and explodes.
· The heat generated by the fission is removed by a coolant, which is usually also the water being
used as a moderator. In a steam generator, the coolant transfers its heat to other water, which
boils to become steam, and drives a turbine. It is important that the coolant, which can become
radioactive, never leaves the reactor.
· The shielding around the reactor prevents radiation from escaping.

10.6.2 Induced fission


Sufficiently large nuclei (atomic numbers 83 and above) have a constant random chance of undergoing
spontaneous fission. In a nuclear reactor, this is sped up by bombarding the nuclei with neutrons. This
is only able to happen if the neutrons are travelling sufficiently slowly, which is why the moderator is
required in nuclear reactors. The two daughter nuclei have a higher binding energy than the parent,

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

and the difference is released as energy. In a nuclear reactor, the most common fission reaction is
1
0n +235 92 141 1
92 U →36 Kr +56 Br + 30 n + γ

10.6.3 Safety
A large number of measures are taken to avoid accidents with nuclear fuel.
· Fuel rods are handled remotely by robots to avoid humans being exposed to their radiation.
· Shielding prevents radiation from spreading from the reactor, and can sometimes contain a
meltdown.
· The control rods are set up in a fail-safe system, so if the system operating them becomes
damaged, they fall into the reactor under gravity and shut down the chain reaction.
· Nuclear waste, before it can disposed of, must be cooled. This is usually done on-site by robots
in pools of coolant. After it has cooled, it must be stored securely for several times its half-life.
Some fission by-products are very long lived, and no permanent solution to this problem exists
yet. One of the current best solutions involves turning the waste into a glass-like substance in
a process called vitrification, storing this in casks, and burying the casks.

11 Astrophysics
11.1 Telescopes
11.1.1 Refracting telescopes

fo fe

A standard refracting telescopes uses two converging lenses with focal lengths fo for the objective lens
and fe for the eyepiece lens. Its overall magnification can be calculated as
M = magnification,
fo θi
M= = f = focal distances in m,
fe θo
θ = angles of object and image.
Refracting telescopes, however, have a number of important issues:
· Chromatic aberration: Dispersion causes different wavelengths of light to refract different
amounts when they enter the lenses. This causes refracting telescopes to form several separate
images, each in a different colour.
· Lenses with few enough defects to be used in telescopes are difficult to make.
· The lenses must be supported from their edges, which can cause them to bend and distort the
image.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

· To have a high magnification, lenses must have a long focal distance, and must be installed in
a very long telescope.

11.1.2 Reflecting telescopes

Reflecting telescopes us a large concave parabolic mirror to form an image. In Cassegrain arrangement,
a smaller objective mirror reflects the image into an eyepiece lens.
High-quality mirrors are much easier to build than equivalent lenses, and can be supported from
below, making reflecting telescopes a better choice in most circumstances. However, they suffer from
spherical aberration, which occurs when the mirror is not parabolic enough, and causes light to
converge on different points, distorting the image.

11.1.3 Resolving power


Resolving power, or the Rayleigh criterion, is a measure of how much detail a telescope can see.
Specifically, it is defined as the minimum angular distance between two objects for the telescope to be
able to distinguish them as two not one.
θ = minimum angular resolution in rad,
λ
θ≈ λ = wavelength in m,
D D = aperture diameter in m.
The collecting power of a telescope is a measure of how much energy falls in it, and is proportional to
its area, or radius squared.

11.1.4 Charge-coupled devices


Charge-coupled devices (CCDs) are used by telescopes (and most cameras) to capture images digitally.
They differ from human eyes in an number of ways:
Human eye CCD
Quantum efficiency 1% 80%
Detectable spectrum visible light infrared, visible, UV
Resolution 500 mpx. 50 mpx.
Spatial resolution 100 µm 10 µm
Additionally, human eyes do not require extra equipment, but CCDs produce digital images, which can
be stored, copied, and edited.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

11.1.5 Non-optical telescopes


Radio telescopes are similar in structure to Cassegrain telescopes. They have a large collecting dish, but
instead of an objective mirror and eyepiece lens, they have an antenna and an amplifier. Radio waves
have much longer wavelengths than optical light, so they typically have a much worse Rayleigh criterion,
and are less capable of capturing a clear image. To overcome this, radio telescopes are combined
together in giant networks that function as a single telescope, and have much better resolutions.
The atmosphere is opaque to most electromagnetic wavelengths, with the exception of visible light
and radio waves. Infrared telescopes are usually situated in very dry areas at high altitude, because IR
radiation is mostly absorbed by water vapour, whereas UV and X-ray telescopes must be attached to
planes, balloons, or satellites.
Infrared telescopes need to be kept very cold so their own radiation doesn’t interfere with the
images they are trying to collect.

11.2 Star classification


11.2.1 Luminosity
Luminosity is a measure of the amount of energy emitted by an astronomical object per second; the
Sun has a luminosity of about 426 W. Intensity is a measure of the power per unit area received by an
observer (usually the Earth), and is measured in Wm−2 .
Assuming that a star radiates energy in all directions equally, its intensity decreases according to
the inverse-square law:
I = intensity in W m−2 ,
P
I= P = power in W, (?)
4πd 2 d = distance in m.

11.2.2 Apparent magnitude


A star’s magnitude is a measure of how bright the star appears, and is therefore influenced by the
star’s luminosity and distance from Earth.
Hipparcos, a Greek astronomer, assigned stars numbers based on their apparent magnitude: 1 for
the brightest, and 6 for the dimmest.
In the 19th century, this was redefined as a logarithmic scale, so that a magnitude 1 star would be
exactly 100 times brighter than a magnitude 6 star. Some stars were badly classified, and there are
some very bright objects with apparent magnitudes that are less than one.
A difference of 1 in apparent magnitude corresponds to a difference of 1001/5 , or 2.51 times.
I2 I = intensities in W m−2 ,
≈ 2.51m1 −m2
I1 m = apparent magnitudes. (?)

11.2.3 Parsecs
A parsec is a unit of length in astronomy, defined as the distance at which 1 AU (astronomical unit,
the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun, equal to around 150 million km) subtends an angle

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

of 1 arcsecond (a sixtieth of a sixtieth of a degree). A parsec is approximately equal to 3.26 light


years.

11.2.4 Absolute magnitude


The absolute magnitude of an object is defined as its apparent magnitude if it were 10 pc from Earth.
m = apparent magnitude,
d
m − M = 5 log M = absolute magnitude,
10 d = distance in pc.

11.2.5 Black body radiation


A black body is a theoretical object that absorbs all wavelengths of radiation and can emit all wave-
lengths of radiation. Stars can be modelled as black bodies.
The wavelengths emitted by black bodies cluster to short wavelengths, and the higher the temper-
ature of the body, the higher the peak. The temperature can be calculated from the peak wavelength:
λmax = peak wavelength in m,
λmax T = 2.9 × 10−3
T = temperature in K.

11.2.6 Stefan’s law


According to Stefan’s (or the Stefan-Boltzmann) law, the luminosity of a black body depends on its
surface area and temperature:
P = power in W,
σ = Stefan’s constant,
P = σAT 4
A = surface area in m2 ,
T = temperature in K.
Luminosity can be calculated using the star’s intensity and distance from Earth.

11.2.7 Spectral classes


For historical reasons, star classification by temperature is out of order.
Class Colour Temperature / K Absorption spectra
O blue 25 000 − 50 000 He+ , He, H
B blue 11 000 − 25 000 He, H
A blue-white 7 500 − 11 000 H, ionised metals
F white 6 000 − 7 500 ionised metals
G yellow-white 5 000 − 6 000 ionised and neutral metals
K orange 3 500 − 5 000 neutral metals
M red < 3 500 neutral metals, TiO
As a mnemonic: “Oh Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me”

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

The Balmer series is a group of lines (frequencies) in hydrogen’s absorption spectrum. They are
produced by electrons de-exciting to the first excitation (n = 2) state. Balmer lines are only produced
at some temperatures – if the temperature is too high, most electrons will de-excite to n = 3, and if
it is too low, most remain in the ground state. Balmer lines are most prominent in A-class stars, but
also occur in the B class and weakly in the O and F classes.

11.2.8 Stellar evolution


· Stars are born when a cloud of gas becomes dense enough to initiate hydrogen fusion. The
energy this releases exerts radiation pressure on the inside of the star, which prevents gravity
from fully collapsing it.
· Initially, stars have a core that is full of hydrogen. After all of the core hydrogen is fused into
helium, the outward radiation pressure stops; the core contracts, and the outer layers expand,
turning the star into a red giant.
· The core continues to contract until it becomes dense enough for helium to start fusing, at
which point the radiation pressure restores balance. The heat this generates allows hydrogen in
the star’s shell to start fusing.
· When the helium in the core runs out, the process repeats – carbon and oxygen are formed in
the core, and helium in the shell is burned.

11.2.9 The Hertzsprung-Russel diagram


The lifecycle of a typical sun-like star is illustrated on the diagram below.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

-10

supergiants

-5

Absolute magnitude

0 red giants

ma
in s
equ
enc
e
5 Sun

white dwarves
10

15
O B A F G K M

Spectral class

11.2.10 Stellar death


· Small stars, such as the Sun, will not have a heavy enough core to fuse carbon and oxygen. When
radiation pressure stops balancing the star, the core contracts until it is balanced by electron
degeneracy pressure, forming a white dwarf. The outer layers are ejected to form a planetary
nebula.
· Larger stars have denser cores, and burn their fuel faster. They can become supergiants, and fuse
elements up to iron. When their cores become full of iron, which can’t be fused, they collapses
and then rebound as supernovae, which are responsible for the creation of the remaining elements
up to uranium. Supernovae are also a source of gamma ray bursts.
– If a star is massive enough (1.4 to 3 solar masses), its collapsing mass can overcome
electron degeneracy pressure, causing all of the electrons in the core to be captured by
protons. This forms a neutron star, a sphere roughly 20 km across composed entirely of
neutrons, and with a density of around 4 × 1017 kgm−3 .
– In the largest stars (more than 3 solar masses), the neutrons will continue to collapse until
they form a black hole, a body with an escape velocity greater than the speed of light. The
region within which this occurs is bounded by the Schwarzschild radius:
Rs = Schwarzschild radius in m,
2GM G = gravitational constant,
Rs =
c2 M = black hole mass in kg,
c = speed of light.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

Supermassive black holes, with masses hundreds of times that of the sun, are found at the
centres of many galaxies – Sagittarius A∗ is at the center of the Milky Way, and has a mass
of around 4.2 × 106 Suns.
· A type Ia supernova occurs when a white dwarf in a binary star system leeches matter from
its partner. When it reaches about 1.4 solar masses it collapses into a supernova. All type
Ia supernovae have roughly the same mass, so they all have roughly the same peak apparent
magnitude, and as such, are referred to as standard candles. A graph of absolute magnitude
against time shows a sharp peak with a maximum at around −19.5, which slowly decays to about
−16 after 40 days.
· In 1998, observation of type Ia supernovae in distant galaxies revealed that the expansion of
the universe is accelerating; it had previously been assumed that gravity would be slowing this
process down. A candidate explanation for this is the presence of dark matter and energy, which
are hard to observe.

11.3 Cosmology
11.3.1 Doppler effect
The Doppler effect causes the wavelengths of waves to change when the source and observer are
moving relative to each other. Objects moving away form us appear slightly red-shifted and objects
moving towards us appear slightly blue-shifted due to this effect.
z = Doppler shift,
f = frequency in Hz,
∆f ∆λ v
z= =− = λ = wavelength in m,
f λ c v = recessional velocity in m s−1 ,
c = speed of light.
(v  c)
In binary star systems, the movement of spectral lines caused by the Doppler effect can be used to
determine the period of their orbit. Each star will produce its own version of each line, and when the
two spectral lines are the same (ie. not shifted), it means the stars are not moving relative to the
observer. This occurs twice in each full rotation. Stars detected by this method are referred to as
spectroscopic binaries.

11.3.2 Quasars
Quasars were discovered in the 1950s, and were originally thought to be very bright stars (quasar is
short for quasi-stellar object), but they have several characteristics that set them apart. They are
very strong radio wave emitters, occasionally shoot out jets of gas, and show very redshifted Balmer
absorption lines.
They are the most distant observable objects, with a luminosity on the order of 1040 W and at
distances of tens of thousands to tens of billions of light years.
The current consensus is that quasars are active black holes at the centres of galaxies; the energy
is emitted by the accretion disk of matter that surrounds them.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 11 ASTROPHYSICS

11.3.3 Hubble’s law


Distant astronomical objects appear redshifted, indicating that the universe is expanding. Hubble’s
law estimates the rate of expansion:
v = recessional velocity in km s−1 ,
v = Hd H = Hubble’s constant,
d = distance in Mpc.
There is disagreement over the value of H – estimates typically range from 50 to 100.

11.3.4 The Big Bang


The expansion and cooling of the universe suggests that in the past it was smaller and hotter. This
observation informs the Big Bang theory, that the universe started out as a very hot and dense
singularity.
· The abundance of helium is further evidence for this; in the early universe, it would have been
hot enough for hydrogen fusion to occur, which is where the disproportionately large amount of
helium in the universe came from.
· Cosmic microwave background radiation is radiation that was emitted by the very hot early
universe. Since then, it has been redshifted to microwaves from where it was emitted.

11.3.5 Exoplanets
Exoplanets are very difficult to detect because they emit no light of their own, are very small, and are
always outshone by the star that they orbit. Other techniques must be used to detect them:
· Radial velocity method: Planets do not perfectly orbit their stars; instead, both orbit their
common center of mass. The red- and blue-shift of the star as it moves towards and away from
the Earth can be used to calculate the planet’s minimum mass.
· Transit method: When exoplanets pass between the Earth and their star, the intensity of the
star dips. This can be used to calculate the planet’s radius.

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 12 APPENDIX

12 Appendix
12.1 Data and units
Quantity Symbol Value Units
speed of light in a vacuum c 3.00 × 108 m s−1
permeability of free space µ0 4π × 10−7 H m−1
permittivity of free space ε0 8.85 × 10−12 F m−1
magnitude of the electronic charge e 1.60 × 10−19 C
the Planck constant h 6.63 × 10−34 Js
gravitational constant G 6.67 × 10−11 N m2 kg−1
Avogadro constant NA 6.02 × 1023 mol−1
molar gas constant R 8.31 J K−1 mol−1
the Boltzmann constant k 1.38 × 10−23 J K−1
the Stefan constant σ 5.67 × 10−8 W m−2 K−4
the Wien constant α 2.90 × 10−3 mK
gravitational field strength g 9.81 N kg−1 , m s−2
absolute zero -273.15 °C
angstrom Å 10−10 m
astronomical unit AU 1.50 × 1011 m
light year ly 9.46 × 1015 m
parsec pc 2.06 × 105 AU
3.08 × 1016 m
3.26 ly
Hubble constant H (approx.) 65 km s−1 Mpc−1
atomic mass unit u 1.661 × 10−27 kg
931.5 MeV
electron rest mass me 9.11 × 10−31 kg
5.5 × 10−4 u
electron charge/mass ratio e/me 1.76 × 1011 C kg−1
proton rest mass mp 1.67(3) × 10−27 kg
1.00728 u
proton charge/mass ratio e/mp 9.58 × 107 C kg− 1
neutron rest mass mn 1.67(5) × 10−27 kg
1.00867 u

Astronomical data
Body Mass / kg Mean radius / m
Sun 1.99 × 1030 6.96 × 108
24
Earth 5.97 × 10 6.37 × 106

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 12 APPENDIX

Units Particle masses


Unit Symbol Dimensions Name Symbol Rest energy / MeV
force N kg m s−2 photon γ 0
energy J kg m2 s−2 neutrino νe , νµ negligible
power W kg m2 s−3 electron e± 0.510999
charge C sA muon µ± 105.659
voltage V kg m 2 s−3 A−1 π-meson π± 139.576
capacitance F kg−1 m−2 s−4 A2 π 0
134.972
resistance Ω kg m2 s−3 A−2 K-meson K± 493.821
magnetic field T kg s−2 A−1 K0 497.762
strength proton p 938.257
neutron n 939.551

SI prefixes SI base units


Letter Name Order Symbol Name Measure
T tera 12 m metre length
G giga 9 kg kilogram mass
M mega 6 s second time
k kilo 3 A ampere electric current
c centi −2 K kelvin temperature
m milli −3 mol mole amount
µ micro −6 cd candela luminous intensity
n nano −9
p pico −12
f femto −15

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AQA A-Level Physics Notes 1.67262 12 APPENDIX

12.2 Damping graphs


Light damping Heavy damping

Over-damping Critical damping

42

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