OCR (A) Physics A-Level: Module 4 - Electrons, Waves and Photons
OCR (A) Physics A-Level: Module 4 - Electrons, Waves and Photons
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Definitions and Concepts for OCR (A) Physics A-level
Conductors: A material that allows the flow of electrical charge. Good conductors
have a larger amount of free charge carriers to carry a current.
Conventional Current: The flow from positive to negative, used to describe the
direction of current in a circuit.
Electrolytes: Substances that contain ions that when dissolved in a solution, act
as charge carriers and allow current to flow.
Electron Flow: The opposite direction to conventional current flow. Electrons flow
from negative to positive.
Insulators: A material that has no free charge carriers and so doesn’t allow the
flow of electrical charge.
Quantisation of Charge: The idea that charge can only exist in discrete packets
of multiples of the elementary charge.
Semiconductors: A material that has the ability to change its number of charge
carriers, and so its ability to conduct electricity. Light dependent resistors and
thermistors are both examples.
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4.2: Energy, Power and Resistance
Diode: A component that allows current through in one direction only. In the
correct direction, diodes have a threshold voltage (typically 0.6 V) above which
current can flow.
Electromotive Force: The energy supplied by a source per unit charge passing
through the source, measured in volts.
Filament Lamp: A bulb consisting of a metal filament, that heats up and glows to
produce light. As the filament increases in temperature, its resistance increases
since the metal ions vibrate more and make it harder for the charge carriers to
pass through.
I-V Characteristics: Plots of current against voltage, that show how different
components behave.
Ohmic Conductor: A conductor for which the current flow is directly proportional
to the potential difference across it, when under constant physical conditions.
Ohm’s Law: The current and potential difference through an ohmic conductor
held under constant physical conditions are directly proportional, with the constant
of proportionality being resistance.
Power: The rate of energy transfer in a circuit. It can be calculated as the product
of the current and the potential difference between two points. It is measured in
Watts.
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Resistivity: A measure of how difficult it is for charge to travel through a material.
It is proportional to the object’s resistance and cross-sectional area, and inversely
proportional to the object’s length. It is measured in Ohm metres.
Resistor: A device that has a fixed resistance and follows Ohm’s law.
Internal Resistance: The resistance to the flow of charge within a source. Internal
resistance results in energy being dissipated within the source.
Lost Volts: The difference between a source’s emf and the terminal voltage. It is
equal to the potential difference across the source’s internal resistance.
Parallel Circuit: Components are said to be connected in parallel when they are
connected across each other (separate loops).
Series Circuit: Components are said to be connected in series when they are
connected end to end (in one loop).
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Terminal PD: The potential difference across the terminals of a power source. It is
equal to the source’s emf minus any voltage drop over the source’s internal
resistance.
4.4: Waves
Coherence: Waves with the same frequency and constant phase difference.
Constructive Interference: The type of interference that occurs when two waves
meet in phase. The wave amplitudes are superposed.
Destructive Interference: The type of interference that occurs when the two
waves are in antiphase. When one wave is at a peak and one is at a trough their
addition results in a minimum point.
Frequency: The number of waves that pass a point in a unit time period. It is the
inverse of the time period.
Intensity: The power transferred per unit area. It is proportional to the square of a
wave’s amplitude.
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Interference: The superposition of the amplitudes of waves when they meet.
Longitudinal Waves: A wave with oscillations that are parallel to the direction of
energy propagation. Sound waves are an example of a longitudinal wave. They
cannot travel through a vacuum.
Period: The time taken for a wave to complete one full cycle.
Progressive Waves: Waves that transfer energy from one point to another
without a transfer of matter.
Refractive Index: A material property that is equal to the ratio between the speed
of light in a vacuum, and the speed of light in a given material.
Stationary Wave: A wave that stores, but does not transfer, energy.
Superposition: When two waves meet at the same point in space their
displacements combine and the total displacement at that point becomes the sum
of the individual displacements at that point.
Total Internal Reflection: An effect that occurs in optical fibres, where full
reflection occurs at the inside boundary of the fibre, meaning no radiation passes
out. The angle of incidence must be greater than the critical angle for this to occur.
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Wave Speed: The product of a wave’s frequency and wavelength.
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