Physics Notes Form 5
Physics Notes Form 5
1.2 MEASUREMENT
1.2.1 Physical quantities
Any measurable physical feature or property of an object is called its PHYSICAL QUANTITY, e.g.
temperature of a body, an area of a field, speed of a car, etc.
In Physics length, mass and time are known as Basic or Fundamental physical quantities.
Many other physical quantities (e.g. force, speed, velocity, voltage, etc) are related to these
fundamental physical quantities, therefore they are known as DERIVED PHYSICAL QUANTITIES.
(Even their units can be derived from those of fundamental quantities and hence are called derived
units) e.g.
SI unit of speed
Then SI unit of speed = SI unit of distance/SI unit of time
= m/s (read as metre per second)
1.2.2 INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM OF UNITS (Systĕme International d‟Unitĕs- SI UNITS)
This is an internationally agreed system of units used to measure physical quantities. (Originally known as
MKS system; M- metre, K- kilogram and S- second). Each quantity has its own SI unit.
FUNDAMENTAL PHYSICAL QUANTITIES AND THEIR SI UNITS
Physical symbol SI unit Symbol
quantity
length L, l metre m
mass m kilogram kg
time t second s
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1.2.5 LENGTH
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*Avoid start measuring from the dead end of a ruler since some parts of that end may be worn out and
so the end will not coincide with the zero mark of the ruler. The reader may start at, let say 10 cm
mark, and then subtract 10 cm from the obtained reading to get the actual length measured.
*A ruler can be read up to 1 decimal place in cm scale i.e. it is accurate to 0.1 cm.
2) VERNIER CALLIPER
A vernier calliper is used to measure length where an ordinary ruler cannot be used, e.g. measuring the
inside and outside diameter of a cylinder (test-tube).
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Vernier calliper has two scales; a) main scale, b) vernier scale and is accurate to 0.1 mm or 0.01
cm.
EXAMPLE
M.S = 5.3 cm
V. S = 8 x 0.01
cm = 0.08
Final reading = 5.3 + 0.08
= 5.38 cm
3) MICROMETER SCREWGAUGE
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This instrument measures very small lengths such as the diameter of a wire, thickness of a coin, thickness
of a sheet of paper.
HOW TO TAKE A READING FROM A MICROMETER
• Put the object between the spindle and anvil. Turn the thimble until the object is gripped very
gently. Fine adjustment can be obtained by turning the ratchet until a click sound is heard.
• To read the micrometer, first read the main scale on the sleeve. Sleeve reading (S) is given by
the value of the last visible mark on sleeve before the edge of the thimble. Note that sleeve
marks above the central horizontal line on the sleeve are full millimetre marks but those below
are half-millimetre marks.
• Then read the thimble scale. Thimble reading (T) is equal to the number of the thimble
division level with the sleeve scale central line multiplied by 0.01 mm.
• Final reading = sleeve reading + thimble reading
EXAMPLE
S = 18.00 mm
T = 42 x 0.01 mm
= 0.42 mm
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3) Human error- failure to read or interpret the printed scale correctly owing to lack of
experience or carelessness on the side of the reader.
PRECAUTIONS TO BE TAKEN TO AVOID ERRORS WHEN MEASURING LENGTH
• Zero the instrument before use (re-set the instrument to read zero), if necessary take the
appropriate measures to correct any zero error detected by either adding or subtracting its
value from the obtained reading.
• Place your eye right above the mark to be read in order to avoid parallax error.
• Before using a micrometer screwgauge, wipe clean the faces of the anvil and spindle to
remove any dust on them.
• Take several readings from different positions on the object and then find the average.
1.2.6 TIME
Time can be defined as is the interval between two events.
SI unit: second (s)
Other units: microsecond (μs), millisecond (ms), decisecond (ds), minute (min), hour (h), day,
year, etc.
Time can be measured with stopwatches or clocks. The electronic stopwatch can measure time precisely
up to 1/100 of a second (0.01 s)
A pendulum is a piece of a thread which is fixed at one end and tied to a metal ball (called a bob) on the
other end.
The bob of a pendulum is free to swing from one side to another.
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The amplitude (a) of a pendulum is the angle between the rest position and position of maximum
displacement.
The length (l) of pendulum is measured from the fixed position to the centre of the bob.
The period (T) of the pendulum is the time taken by the bob to complete one swing or oscillation, i.e.
the time taken by the bob to move from point A to C and back to A in the diagram below. Period is
measured in seconds
(s)
Period = total time taken/number complete swings(oscillations)
Frequency (f) is the number of completed oscillations generated in 1 second. The SI unit is hertz
(Hz) frequency = number of swings/total time taken
Therefore;
f = 1/T or T = 1/f
then 1 Hz = 1/s
Table of Results
Length Time for 20 Average time Period T/s T2/s2
l/cm oscillations t <t>/s
t1/s t2/s
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T2/s2
L/cm
Examples
The accuracy of a:-
• metre rule is 0.1 cm (0.01 mm)
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1.3 QUESTIONS
1. Complete the table below to show what property is measured by the instrument or what the
instrument can be used to measure the property stated. State the correct unit in each case.
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(a) (b)
(a) (b)
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The bob of the pendulum was pulled to position A and then was released. The period of the
pendulum was found to be 0.64 s.
(b) A student performs an experiment to determine the period of a simple pendulum. She uses a
stopwatch to record the time taken to produce 20 oscillations. The diagram below shows the
face of the stopwatch used.
6. A piece of metal pipe is 3 m long, and its internal and external diameters are 20.0 mm and 24.0 mm
respectively. Describe how you would obtain experimentally accurate values of these (i) the internal
and (ii) external diameters of the pipe.
7. Fig. 7.1 shows the face of an ammeter. The ammeter reads 0.2 A with no current passing through.
Fig. 7.1
c. Fig. 7.1 shows the same ammeter with current passing through.
Fig. 7.2
(i) What is the reading shown?
(ii)What is the correct value of the current passing through the ammeter?
2.0 MOTION
*Scalar quantity:- quantity with magnitude only, e.g. mass, distance, temperature, speed, etc.
*Vector quantity:- quantity with both magnitude and direction, e.g. velocity, acceleration, force,
displacement,etc.
a). SPEED
-is the distance travelled per unit time. Speed tells us how fast or slow an object is moving. Its SI unit
is metre per second (m/s) or (m s-1).
3600/1000
--------------------------------
> m/s
km/h
<---------------------------------
1000/3600
Mathematically speed is:
Speed = distance/time
b). VELOCITY
-is the distance travelled in a unit time in a stated direction, e.g. 60 km/h due north. Velocity is, in
fact, the speed in a specified direction. It tells us how fast or slow an object is moving and in what
direction.
Velocity = displacement/time
And
Average velocity = total displacement/total time taken
*NB: - Velocity and speed are not the same. Speed is a scalar whereas velocity is vector.
2.1.3 ACCELERATION
It is the rate of change of velocity with time. Acceleration is also a vector quantity. Its SI unit is metre
per second squared (m/s2) or (m s-2).
The body covers 5 m every second, this represents a constant speed of 5 m/s.
2.2.2 NON-UNIFORM SPEED
Distance travelled per unit time
varies. i) non-uniform increasing
speed
time/s 0 1 2 3 4
distance/m 0 5 10 30 50
The body moves a little further than the previous second every second.
Every second the object covers a little less distance than in the previous second.
2.2.3 UNIFORM VELOCITY
Both speed and the direction don‟t change i.e. the body travels with uniform speed and in the same direction
(in a straight line).
2.2.4 NON-UNIFORM VELOCITY
Either speed or direction changes (or both of them)
*Acceleration is zero for body travelling with steady speed in the same direction (uniform
velocity).However, acceleration is non-zero if the body travels with constant speed in a circular path.
-Even though the speed is constant (e.g. 5 m/s), the direction changes now and then. Therefore the
velocity is non-uniform and hence the acceleration is not zero.
a) increasing acceleration
time/s 0 1 2 3 4
velocity(m/s) 0 10 30 60 100
b) decreasing acceleration
time/s 0 1 2 3 4
velocity (m/s) 0 20 30 35 37
QUESTIONS - MOTION
1 Explain the difference between:
a) distance travelled and displacement
b) speed and velocity
2 Use the words in the list below to complete the paragraphs that follow. Each word may be used
once, more than once or not at all. acceleration average displacement distance
instantaneous scalar speed vector velocity
Quantities which have magnitude but no direction are called ................................ quantities.
Speed is a ........................... quantity. Velocity is a ............................ quantity.
If an object moves in unspecified direction, it has moved through a certain
............................................. If the direction is specified, it has undergone a
....................................................
The rate of change of ......................... of an object is called its acceleration. Acceleration is a
...................... quantity. The formula: (final speed – initial speed) / time gives the
..................................... of an object.
3 a) A millipede moves a distance of 3.0 m in 1.5 s. What is its average speed? b) A car travels
600 m in 30 s. What is its average speed?
4 A car has a steady speed of 8m/s.
a) How far does the car travel in the 8 s?
b) How long does the car take to travel 160 m?
5 a) A cyclist, rides 2 km east then 2 km north. The trip takes two hours in all.
Find : i) the average speed and ii) the average velocity.
b) A racing car completes a 5 km lap in 100 s. After this lap what is its i) displacement ii)
average speed and iii) average velocity?
6 Express a) speed of 130 km/h and b) speed of sound in air (which is about 330 m/s) in km/h.
7 What is meant by:
a) a speed of 100 km/h
b) an acceleration of +10 m/s2
c) an acceleration of -5 m/s2
8 A car takes 8 s to increase its velocity from 10 m/s to 30 m/s. What is its acceleration?
9 A motor cycle, travelling at 20 m/s, takes 5 s to stop. What is its average retardation?
10 An aircraft on its take-off run has a steady acceleration of 3 m/s2.
a) What velocity does the aircraft gain 4 s?
b) If the aircraft passes one post on the runaway at a velocity of 20 m/s, what is its 8 s
later?
A distance-time graph shows how the distance travelled varies with time. The gradient of the graph
represents the speed of the body
a) Uniform speed
The distance-time graph above is a straight line showing that the body is travelling with uniform
speed.
Grad = ∆s/∆t = y2 – y1 / x2 – x1
=60 - 20/ 6 - 2
= 10
In graph above the body is travelling with non uniform increasing speed since the graph is not a
straight line but instead is a curve. The gradient of the graph varies. The speed at any particular time
is found by calculating the gradient of the tangent to the curve at that time ii) Non- uniform
decreasing speed
In the speed- time graph above the body is moving with a uniform acceleration since the graph is a
acceleration = gradient = 0
time/s
The equations used to solve problems on motion when the acceleration of the body is uniform.
2.6 QUESTIONS
(For the questions below, assume that the motion is in a straight line and that the acceleration is
uniform)
1 A motor cycle travelling at 10 m/s accelerates at 4 m/s2 for 8 s.
a) What is its final velocity?
b) How far does it travel during the 8 s? 2 A car accelerates from 8 m/s
to 20 m/s in 10 s.
a) What is its acceleration?
a) State in which of the regions OA, AB, BC, CD, DE the car is i) accelerating ii)
decelerating iii) travelling with uniform velocity.
b) Calculate the value of the acceleration, deceleration or constant velocity in each region.
c) What is the distance travelled over each region?
d) What is the total distance travelled?
e) Calculate the average velocity for the whole journey.
7 The distance-time graph for a motor cyclist riding off from rest follows.
i) for a dropping
v = u + at becomes v = u +gt if the body drops from rest i.e. u =o, v = gt ---------
-----> (1) s = ut + ½ at2 becomes s = ut + ½ gt2 if u = 0, s = ½ gt2 (note s =
height) ------>(2)
v2 = u2 + 2as becomes v2 = u2 + 2gs if u = 0, v2 = 2gs ---------------------> (3)
* Same equations can be used for bodies thrown/moving vertically upwards but with g as -10 m/s2
NB:- i) velocity at the highest point is zero for any object.
ii) time for upward journey = time for downward journey to the
same level iii) a falling body would pass every point at same speed
it did on its way up.
Same as that one for an object falling in air except that the resistive force here is called
upthrust The sketch of the velocity-time graph for body falling in air or liquid is as shown
below;
3.2 INERTIA
-is the tendency of a body to resist any change in its state of motion i.e. to remain at rest if it is at rest
or to continue moving (with uniform velocity in a straight line) if already in motion. The larger the
mass of a body the larger its inertia and the more difficult to change its state of rest or uniform motion
or change the direction of its travel. Mass is therefore defined as the measure of the object‟s inertia.
When card is pulled away very quickly the coin will not move along with it but instead it drops into
the glass due to inertia.
3.3 WEIGHT
Definition: is the amount of force gravity acting on
object. Measuring instrument: spring
balance/forcemeter SI unit: newton (N).
Unlike mass, the weight of an object is not always constant, it depends on the gravitational pull on a
unit mass
(gravitational field strength) at a particular place. On Earth the gravitational pull on a unit mass is 10
N i.e. g = 10 N/kg
On the moon the gravitational pull on a unit mass is 1.6 N i.e. g = 1.6 N/kg.
Mathematically, weight is expressed as: W = mg
where W = weight in newtons (N)
m = mass in kilograms (kg) g=
gravitational field strength in N/kg.
3.4 QUESTIONS
1) Calculate the weight of a body of mass: i) 2 kg ii)
700 g Take g to be 10 N/kg.
2) A bag of coal has a mass of 10 kg on Earth. The acceleration
due to gravity is 10 m/s2 on Earth and on the moon is 1.6 m/s2.
3) A bag of sugar has a weight of 125 N on Earth. Calculate its mass. Take g to be 10 N/kg.
*For some objects, (e.g. a ring, retort stand, etc), the C.M lies outside the body of the object, instead it
lies in the air around the object.
Procedure
• Make three holes A, C and E on the cardboard.
• Suspend the cardboard through hole A from a nail clamped on a stand such that it swings
freely. When it comes to rest, its centre of mass will be exactly below point A.
• To identify the point, hang the plumbline from the same nail very close to the cardboard.
• Draw a line AB along the plumbline
• Hang the cardboard from another hole C and repeat the experiment and draw the line CD.
• The C.M lies at the intersection of the two lines.
• To check if the position of C.M is correct, one can hang the cardboard from the third hole E
and then draw line EF, it must also pass through that point.
3.5.4 STABILITY
This defines whether the object falls over easily or not. When the object is slightly displaced and
released, it will always return to its origin (and not topples over) if the vertical line passing through
the C.M. is still kept within the base of the object or the area enclosed by the base of the object (i.e. it
has not gone beyond the point of contact between the object and the surface it is resting on)
When an object is balanced or stable in its position, it is said to be in equilibrium. Its degree of
stability is determined by its position which can be defined as its state of equilibrium.
1) Stable equilibrium
2) Unstable equilibrium
3) Neutral equilibrium
1) Stable Equilibrium
A body is in a state or position in which when it is slightly displaced and released it returns to its
original position.
When an object in stable equilibrium is slightly tilted, its C.M rises and gain some P.E. When released
that extra P.e will be used to produce an anticlockwise moment about the point of contact that will roll
the object back to its original position.
2) Unstable Equilibrium
A body is in unstable equilibrium if it is positioned such that when it is slightly displaced and released
it will move further away its original position ( topples over).
3) Neutral Equilibrium
A state in which a body is positioned such that when it is slightly displaced and released it remains at
its new position.
4.0 DENSITY
4.1 Density is defined as the measure of the amount of mass contained in volume of an object. It is
usually expressed as mass per unit volume.
Density = mass/volume
D = m/V or ρ = m/V where ρ(Greek letter rho) =
density in kg/m3
m = mass in kg
V = volume in m3
SI unit: kilogram per cubic metre (kg/m3)
Other UNIT commonly used is gram per cubic centimetre (g/cm3)
1 g/cm3 = 1000 kg/m3
4.3 Experiment #2: Determining the density of an irregular shaped object e.g. a stone
- A beaker or measuring cylinder is placed under the spout and the displacement can is filled
with water until it overflows. The beaker is emptied and replaced.
- Find the mass m of the stone
- The stone is lowered with a thread into the can.
- Overflow is collected in a beaker and its volume is measured to give the volume V of the
stone. - Lastly the density of the stone is found using the equation using the equation ρ =
m/V.
The relative density of a substance is the ratio of the mass of any volume of the substance to the
mass of an equal volume of water.
Therefore the density of a liquid can be accurately measured using a density bottle.
4.5 Experiment #4: Measuring the density of a liquid using a density bottle.
Both the liquid and water have the same volume V since the same bottle was used for the whole
experiment.
= (m3 – m1/V)/m2 – m1 /V
= m3 – m1/m2 – m1
Relative density is a ratio so it‟s a number without units. However, its value is the same as that of
density of a substance in g/cm3
Ρm = mA – mB/ VA – VB
An object:-
4.9 A HYDROMETER
It is used to measure the density of the liquids directly. It consists of a thin hollow tube which is
weighed at the bottom with mercury or lead so that it can float upright. The tube has a scale marked
on it
The hydrometer floats at different levels/depths in different liquids, depending on their densities. It
sinks less in a dense liquid and sinks more in less dense liquid.
You read the mark level with the surface of the liquid.
Hydrometers are often used to test beer and milk to see if they have too much water
in them. A special hydrometer called lactometer, used for testing the purity of milk.
A small type of hydrometer enclosed in a larger glass tube fitted with a rubber bulb. It is used for
measuring the density of the battery acid. On squeezing the bulb and then releasing it acid enters the
glass tube and density can be read on the floating hydrometer.
*At constant temperature the densities of the objects made with the same material are the same
irrespective of their sizes (volumes)
4.10 QUESTIONS
1 Copy and complete the table shown below.
Length Width Height Volume of rectangular block
2 cm 3 cm 4 cm ...........
5 cm 5 cm ........... 100 cm3
6 cm ............. 5 cm 300 cm3
........... 10 cm 10 cm 500 cm3
b) Another room has only 60 kg of air in it. What is the volume of this second room?
3 A jeweller has a crown which he thinks is made of pure gold. He finds that it has a volume of 100
cm3 and has a mass of 1.8 kg.
a) Using these two values, what is the density of the crown?
b) The density of gold is 19.3 g/cm3. How can the difference be explained?
5.0 FORCE
5.1 A force is a push or pull exerted by one object on another.
Force is a vector; it has both magnitude and direction in which it acts.
SI unit: newton (N)
*One newton is a force which gives an acceleration of 1 m/s2 to mass of 1 kg.
Examples of forces
1. Gravitational force – an attractive force which any two masses pull one another with.
2. Weight – pulls object towards the centre of the Earth.
3. Friction – tends to stop movement of objects
4. Thrust of a (jet) engine – is a push or pull due to the jet engine
5. Centripetal force – acts on object moving in a circle
6. Tension – produced on a stretched material
7. Magnetic force – acts between magnets or between a magnet and magnetic material
8. Electric force – acts between charges
9. Air resistance/fluid friction/drag – slows down a body travelling through air
10. Upthrust – opposes movement of an object moving in a liquid
11. Force due to expansion/contraction
12. Reaction/normal force – acts on an object on any given surface. The force is normally
perpendicular to the surface and equal and opposite to the weight of the object. It is exerted
by the surface on the object.
5.2 EFFECTS OF FORCE
5.2.1 Effects of a force on the shape and size of an object
A force can or tends to change the shape and size of objects, e.g. i) lump of bostik would change
shape when pressed, ii) a inflated balloon changes size when more air is blown into it.
Some of the objects return to their original shapes and sizes when the external force which was
previously applied on them is removed. These objects are called elastic materials, e.g. rubber band,
steel spring, etc.
Other objects do not return to their original or sizes even when the force is removed. They will remain
permanently deformed. These are called plastic materials, e.g. plasticine, bostik, clay, etc.
Stretching a spring
LO
L
Procedure
• Suspend a steel spring from a retort stand as shown above
• Attach a pointer in a horizontal position to the end of the spring with some bostik.
• Place a metre rule vertically near the spring
• Suspend the mass hanger on the spring as shown above
• Adjust the height of the ruler such that the pointer is at a convenient reading, say around 30
cm, record this as initial scale reading.
• Add 100 g (1.0 N) loads one at a time and note and record the new scale reading after each
load.
• Record the observations in a table up to 500 g (5.0 N) and calculate the extension for each
load.
TABLE OF RESULTS
e = New reading L – Initial scale reading LO
Mass/kg Load F/N Scale reading/cm Extension e/cm F/e (N/cm)
0.0 0 54.0 - -
0.1 1 57.8 3.8 0.3
0.2 2 63.5 9.5 0.2
0.3 3 69.0 15.0 0.2
0.4 4 72.4 18.4 0.2
0.5 5 76.6 22.5 0.2
The graph above is a straight line showing that the extension of the spring is directly proportional to
the load i.e.
when the load is doubled the also doubles.
i.e. F α e then F = ke -------------> Hooke‟s law
where F = force applied in newtons (N) e=
extension of the spring in metres (m) k = constant of proportionality
known as force constant or spring constant in N/m *Force constant k:
• is defined as the amount of force require to give a spring a unit extension.
• is the measure of the stiffness or softness(strength) of a spring (very stiff spring has a high
value of k than a soft one).
• is measured in N/m, N/cm, N/mm, etc.
*Dividing the load by its corresponding extension always gives the same result. This means every 1N
increase in the stretching force produces the same extra
HOOKE‟S LAW
If you add more masses to mass hanger and take the corresponding extensions and draw a graph as
before, the graph will be a straight line a curve towards the end showing that towards end load and
extension were no longer proportional.
The spring behaves elastically only to point E. Then, the Hooke‟s law is obeyed only in the region
OE.
Therefore Hooke‟s law states:
“the extension of a spring is directly proportional to the load/force applied provided the elastic limit
of spring is not exceeded”.
Point E is known as elastic limit or limit of proportionality of the spring. This is point beyond which
the spring loses its elasticity, it would fail to return to its original length even when the load is
removed from it. Instead a permanent extension (deformation) OS will remain on the spring.
a) SERIES
N springs e = Nx
Then Hooke‟s law for N springs in series
For 1 spring F = ke
e = F/k; e = x
For N springs, e = Nx
Then e = N(F/k) e = NF/k -------------------->
total extension for springs in parallel.
b) PARALLEL
For 1 spring e = x
2 springs e = x/2
3 springs e = x/3
4 springs e = x/4
N springs e = x/N
QUESTIONS
1. What is the force constant of a spring which is stretched
a) 2 mm by a force of 4 N b) 4 cm by a mass of 200 g.
2. The springs below are identical. If the extension produced in A is 4 cm, what are the
extensions in B and C?
3. Tom performed an experiment stretching a spring. She loaded masses on the spring and
measured the extension
Table of results
Extension/cm 0 4 8 12 16 20 24
Load/N 0 2 4 6 7.5 8.3 8.6
a) Describe what would happen to the spring if forces were applied to it until it reached point A
on the graph and then the forces are removed.
b) Describe what would happen if the spring was stretched to point B on the graph and then the
forces removed.
c) If a force of 10 N caused the spring to stretch by 5 cm what would be the extension of the
spring if 20 N was applied to it?
A) First law
It states that
“A body at rest will remain rest or if it is moving it will continue to move with constant velocity
(uniform speed in a straight line) unless an external force makes it to behave differently. It is also
known as law of inertia.”
B) Second law
It states that :-
“The acceleration a of a body is
C) Third law
It states that:
“if body A exerts a force on body B, body B will exert an equal and opposite force on body A called
the reaction force”
5.3 FRICTIONAL FORCE
5.3.1 Effects of friction on motion of a body
Friction – always acts in opposite to the direction of motion of a body and reduces the acceleration or
speed of the body.
Friction acts between solid surfaces as they move over each other and when objects move through
gases or liquids.
5.3.2 WHAT CAUSES FORCE FRICTION
It is caused by roughness of the two surfaces in contact, even surfaces which look or feel smooth are
rough when seen under a microscope. As a block of wood slides over the table the humps and hollows
on one surface tend to grip those on the other surface, this causes the frictional force
It is also caused by adhesion between the molecules on the surfaces in contact due to intermolecular
forces.
The friction which exists between the two objects when there is no movement is called static friction.
The object will start to move if the pulling/pushing force is increased beyond the value of the static
friction. Then the frictional force between the two surfaces when the object is moving is called
sliding/dynamic friction. Usually its value is less than the maximum value of the static friction.
Calculations involving frictional force
1. A car is acted upon by a forward driving force of 700 N which causes an acceleration. The
force of friction between the road and the tyres is 500 N. Calculate the resultant force on the
car.
F = FF - FR
= 700 N – 500 N
= 200 N
2. A car of mass 3 000 kg (including the driver) is travelling at a constant acceleration of 2 m/s 2.
The force of friction between the tyres and the road is 500 N. Calculate the a) resultant
force acting on the car b) forward driving force
Solutions
a) Data
m = 3000 kg, a = 2 m/s2
F = ma
= 3000 kg X 2 m/s2
= 6000 kg m/s-2
= 6000 N
b) Data
F = 6000 N, FR = 500 N
F = FF - FR
FF = F + FR
= 6000 N + 500 N
= 6500 N
M = Fx D M=Fxd
Moment of a force is a vector quantity, i.e. it has magnitude as well as direction. The direction is
either clockwise or anticlockwise, depending in which the force turns the object.
e.g
5.4.2 Experiment: To verify the principle of moments (law of moments/levers)
What do you notice about clockwise and anticlockwise moments when the ruler is balanced?
Answ: the clockwise moment = anticlockwise moment
This observation proves the principle of moments.
The principle of moments states that:
“when the body is in equilibrium the sum of the clockwise moments about any point is equal to the
sum of anticlockwise moments about the same point”
Therefore:
i) Force A + Force B + Force C + Force D = Force
C Then A + B + C + D – C = 0
To find the moment of a couple, you multiply the value of any of the two forces by the distance
between them
M = Fx + Fy
= F(x + y)
= Fd
5.6 QUESTIONS
Question 1
A student measures the acceleration of a trolley. The light sensors are connected to a computer which is
programmed to calculate the acceleration. The results obtained are recorded in a table as follows.
Force(N) 0 1 2 3 4 5
Question 2
A car has a mass of 900 kg. It accelerates from rest at a rate of 1.2 m/s2.
Question 3
The diagram below shows some of the forces acting on a car of mass 500 kg.
a) State the size of the total drag force when the car is travelling at a constant
speed.
b) The driving force is increased to 3000 N.
i) Find the resultant force on the car at this instant.
ii) Calculate the initial acceleration of the car.
Question 4
The manufacturer of a car gave the following information; Mass of car = 1000 kg. The car will
accelerate from 0 to 30 m/s in 12 seconds.
a) Calculate the average acceleration of the car during the 12 seconds.
b) Calculate the force needed to produce this acceleration.
Question 5
a). What constant braking force is needed to bring a car of mass 1200 kg to rest in
5 s when it is moving at 20 m s-1?
b). A car of mass 800 kg is moving at 25 m s-1. Calculate the force needed to bring
the car to rest over a distance of 20 m.
c). A body is initially in motion. If no external force acts on the body how will its
motion change?
Question 6
Question 7
Fig. 6.1 shows a car of mass 500 kg moving from rest with constant acceleration of 10 m/s2. Two forces
act on it, a forward force and a friction force.
Fig. 6.1
a). (i) Calculate the resultant force acting on the car. Show your working.
(ii) If the friction force is 2000 N, calculate the forward force acting on the car.
Show your working.
(iii)After some time, the car reaches a velocity of 20 m/s. How long did it take for
the car to reach this velocity?
Question 8
Fig. 7.1 shows a metal ball being dropped from the surface of oil in a tube of length 2 m. the ball has a
mass of 1 kg and it moves with constant acceleration of 5 m/s2.
Fig. 7.1
Question 8
Fig. 8.1 shows a model crane. The crane has a movable counterbalance.
a) Calculate the moment created by the force trying to undo the nut.
b) Suggest how you could increase the moment applied to the nut without
increasing the applied force.
10. The diagrams show forces acting on various beams. For each beam, the fulcrum
is at its midpoint. Which of the beams are in equilibrium? What happens in the
other cases? What is the upward force of the fulcrum on the beam in each case?
11. A 1 N weight is hung from the 5 cm mark of a metre rule. The rule balances on a
knife edge at the 30 cm mark. What is the weight of the rule?
12 The diagram shows a beam balanced with the fulcrum at the midpoint. How big
is the force X?
13. The diagram shows two beams balanced with the fulcrum at the midpoint. In
each case, what is the distance x?
VECTOR QUANTITY: expressed in terms of magnitude and direction, e.g. force, acceleration,
moment, velocity, etc.
5.7.2 Addition of vectors
1. Resultant of 3 N and 7 N forces at a right angle to one another.
i) GRAPHICAL METHOD
After drawing the vector diagram to scale, you measure the length of line that represents the resultant
and then use the chosen scale to find the resultant..
Length = 7.6 cm, therefore resultant = 7.6 N
Direction is obtained by measuring the angle between the resultant force and one of the forces, e.g.
23° to the
7N
R = 7.6 N, 23° to the 7 N
ii) Algebraically
Resultant R = 7.6 N
for direction trignometrical functions sinθ = OPP/HYP cosθ =
If two forces acting at appoint are represented in magnitude and direction by the sides of a
parallelogram, the resultant is represented in size and direction by the diagonal of the
parallelogram.
E.g. Find the resultant of forces of 3500 N and 2500 N acting at an angle of 60° to each other
Using parallelogram rule (graphical method)
Scale 1 cm : 500 N
Resultant force = 10.5 x 500 N = 5250 N Direction = angle between the resultant and the 3500 N
force (measure using a protractor) = 24°
ALGEBRICALLY,
Use cosine rule
C2 = a2 + b2 – 2abcosΦ
To find the direction, use sine rule
a/sin A = b/sin B = c/sin C
5.7.3 Resolving a force
When a single is converted into components it is said to be resolved. Components together have the
same effect as that of the single force.
Usually the components are at the right
angle to one another.
B
O
The components of the resultant force F are FX (OB) along the x-axis and Fy (OA) along the y-axis.
To find FX and FY
Using trigonometry
sinθ = OA/OC cosθ =
OB/OC sinθ = Fy/F
cosθ = Fx/F Fy = Fsinθ
Fx = Fcosθ
Fy = F sin Fx = Fcos30°
= 200sin30° Fx =
200cos30° = 100 N
= 173 N
5.7.4 QUESTIONS
Fig. 5.2
When a body A does work on body B, body A transfers energy to body B. The amount of energy
transferred from body A to body B is equal to the work done by body A on body B.
WORK DONE = ENERGY TANSFERRED
• Chemical energy
• Electrical energy
• Heat/thermal energy
• Sound energy
• Mechanical energy
• Light energy
• Nuclear energy
• Radiant energy – given out by source in form of wave, e.g light, microwave, sound, heat, etc
• At any moment the total energy is constant; P.E at the beginning = K.E at time the ball hits
the ground = sum of K.E + PE at intermediate positions.
• When the ball bounces, only rises to a lower height showing that it has less GPE now
compared to the previous maximum height. This is because some energy is lost during its
impact with the ground mainly as heat.
#2. A swinging pendulum
• Power stations are relatively cheap to build and operate compared to nuclear power station.
Disadvantages
ADVANTAGES
• Depends on rainfall
• Large areas of countryside must be covered with water, displacing people from their homes
and animals from their natural habitants.
3. WIND ENERGY
Wind is used to turn turbines / blades attached to magnets in generators called AEROMAGNETS.
. KE(wind) ------→ KE(turbines) -----→ KE(generator) --------→ electrical energy
ADVANTAGES
• Wind is free
• Give high power output
• Renewable
• Clean
DISADVANTAGES
• Unpredictable – wind may not be sufficient enough to turn the generator when electricity is
needed.
• High cost involved in implementing and maintaining.
• Power output is fairly low.
4. SOLAR ENERGY
We receive energy from the sun as radiant energy in form of electromagnetic waves. The source of
solar energy is the nuclear energy released through nuclear fission of the nuclei of hydrogen atoms.
Solar energy can be captured in several ways:-
• Solar furnances: an array of concave mirrors which concentrate the sun rays
producing very high temperatures of more than 3000 °C.
• Power generation reflectors are used to focus heat from the sun on tubes filled with
oil. The oil boils water and the steam is sent to the turbines which turns the generators
to produce electricity.
Heat (infrared from the sun) → internal energy (steam)→kinetic
(turbines)→kinetic(generators)→electrical
ADVANTAGES
• Clean
• Relatively cheap
• Renewable
DISADVANTAGES
Useful only in places where the sun shines continuously for long period;
sometimes the sun does not shine or not strong enough in some parts of the
country.
5. WAVE ENERGY
The rocking motion of the waves generate energy
ADVANTAGES
DISADVANTAGES
7. TIDAL ENERGY
Sea water is trapped at high tides behind the dams and released at low tides. The released H2O is used
to turn turbines
ADVANTAGES
Renewable
DISADVANTAGES
a). Fission – splitting of heavy nucleus (U-235) by hitting it with a neutron into nearly two equal
parts to release tremendous amount of energy and two to three more neutrons.
b). Fusion- union of certain light nuclei (e.g isotopes of hydrogen) into a heavier nucleus resulting in
the release of large amount of energy.
Uranium is the fuel in nuclear reactors. By the process of fission, the nuclear energy in uranium is
converted to large amount of heat energy.
Nuclear energy ----> heat---->k.e of steam ---> k.e of turbines----> k.e of generator---->electrical
energy
ADVANTAGES
• Can be dangerous
• High cost of building power station
• Non-renewable
• High cost of dismantling once they can no longer be used.
1. Biogas: cow dung ferments in a closed container can produce a gas that is used as fuel. This
gas burns and so it can be used in cookers.
2. Petrol and Diesel:- vehicles and borehole pumps are driven by engines that burn these fuels
3. Morupule Power Station:- coal is mined at Morupule and is burned in power station. The
heat is used to boil water and produce steam. The steam goes through the turbine and makes it
rotate. The turbine makes the generator rotate and produce electricity.
4. Wind power
5. Solar power
6.3 POWER
Power is the rate of doing work or transferring energy to other form/s.
Power = work done/time taken
P = w/t
OR
P = E/t
NB:- in real life, there is no machine that is 100 % efficient because there is always some energy lost
as heat as result of work done against friction between the moving parts of the machine.
6.5 QUESTIONS
1. A horizontal force of 50 N is applied onto a box which then moves a distance of 2 m. How much
work is done on the box?
2. A can of 500 g is lifted onto a shelf through a vertical height of 1.5 m. How much work is done?
3. A man pushes a box across the floor by applying a horizontal force of 100 N. The box travels with
a constant speed of 0.5 m/s.
5. A body of mass 5 kg falls from rest and has k.e of 1000 J just before it touches the ground.
Assuming there is no friction and using the value 10 m/s2 for the acceleration due to gravity.
Calculate the loss of potential energy during the fall.
6. A 100 g steel ball falls from a height of 1.8 m onto a plate. Calculate
8. Some workers on a building site have set up an electric winch in order to lift a bucket with
tiles up to the roof. The bucket and tiles weigh 500 N.
a) What is the minimum force that must be applied in order to lift the bucket
of tiles off the ground?
b) How much energy is spent in lifting the tiles 20 m from the ground to the
roof?
c) What energy transformations are taking place as the tiles are raised?
d) If the tiles are lifted 20 m in 10 s, what is the power of the winch?
e) If the winch is only 50 % efficient, how much energy must be fed into the
electrical motor to lift the tiles through the 20 m?
f) Suggest one or two reason why the system might be less than 100 %
efficient.
g) How can the efficiency of the system be improved?
9. In a certain ward in Serowe people use solar panels and windmills as energy sources.
a) What type of energy does the water have when it reaches the power-
station?
b) Some of the water‟s energy is wasted.
(i) Why is energy wasted?
(ii) What happens to the wasted energy?
c) The hydroelectric scheme is a renewable energy source. What is meant
by a renewable energy resource?
d) When water flows from the lake, potential energy is lost. How is this
energy replaced?
e) What advantages does a hydroelectric scheme have over a fuel-burning
power-station?
f) What environmental damage does a hydroelectric scheme cause?
11. At night time when most of us are asleep the demand for electricity is quite small. The
generators at the power stations, however, are still working as it is very wasteful and
inefficient to turn them off. In some power stations the excess electrical energy they are
manufacturing is used to pump water into dams. Then during the day the water is released
and used to drive generators when demand is high.
a) What weight of water can be pumped 50 m uphill if the surplus energy
from a generator is 2 MJ?
b) When released, how much kinetic energy will this have after it has fallen
(i) 25 m (ii) 50 m?
c) What assumptions have you made in order to answer (b) above?
d) Suggest why off-peak night-time electricity is cheaper than daytime
electricity.
13. To be a good pole vaulter it is essential not only to be strong and agile but also
to have good sprinting speed.
a) What kind of energy does a vaulter possess;
(i) before starting his run?
(ii) as he sprints down the runway? (iii) as
he clears the bar?
b) When a competitor has completed his vault where has all the energy
gone?
7.0 PRESSURE
7.1 Pressure is force per unit area
Pressure = force/area
P = F/A
SI unit :- pascal (Pa)
1 Pa = 1 N/m2
Pressure increase with:-
i). Increase in force
ii). Decrease in the area of contact
Examples
#1. A concrete block has a mass of 2600 kg. If the block measures 0.5 m by 1.0 m by 2.0 m. What is
the maximum pressure that it can exert when resting on the ground?
Data F = 26000 N, A = (0.5 X 1.0) m = 0.5 m2
P = F/A
= 26000 N/0.5 m2
= 52 000 N/m2
= 52 000 Pa = 52 kPa
#2. What force is produced if a force of 1000 Pa acts on an area of 0.2 m2.
Data F = 1000 N, A = 0.2 m2
P = F/A F = P(A)
=1000 N/m2 x 0.2 m2
= 200 N
#3. Explain why a tractor‟s big tyres stop sinking to far into the soft soil
Answ: Exert less pressure on the soil because of small area contact between the tyres and the
soil/ground
1. Pressure in a liquid increases with depth; the further down you go, the greater the weight of
the liquid above.
Water spurts out fastest and furthest from the lowest from the lowest hole.
The can of water has similar holes all round it at the same level. Water comes out as fast as far from
each hole. Hence the pressure exerted by the water at this depth is the same in all directions.
In the U-tube the liquid pressure at the foot of P is greater than at the foot of Q because the
left hand column is higher than the right one. When the clip is opened the liquid moves from
P to Q until the pressure in both is the same and the levels of liquid in both column are equal.
b.
The liquid is at the same level. This confirms that pressure at the foot of a liquid column
depends only on the vertical depth of the liquid and not the width or shape of the tube.
A liquid is incompressible therefore its volume cannot be reduced by squeezing. Pressure in a liquid is
therefore transmitted in hydraulic machines to magnify a force.
Pressure, piston A
PA = FA/AA
= 1.0 N/0.01 m2
= 100 Pa
FB = PBAB note: PB = PA
= 100 N/m2 x 0.5 m2
= 50 N
A force of 1.0 N is therefore magnified 50 times.
Note:
PA = PB
FA/AA = FB/AB FA = (AA/AB)FB; AA/AB =
force multiplying factor
Collapsing/crushing a can
If air is removed from the can it collapses because the pressure inside the can becomes or is less than
outside.
Magdeburg hemisphere
After removing (pumping out the air) it becomes very difficult to separate the spheres because air
pressure inside is less than outside.
In diagram (a) atmospheric pressure acts equally on both arms of the tube. The levels of the water
(liquid) inside therefore are the same. In diagram (b) arm one arm is connected to a gas cylinder
which exerts pressure to the liquid and it rises to the height h in the other arm.
Pressure of the gas = Atmospheric pressure + Pressure due to the liquid column h
P = PO + hρg
Pressure of the liquid column h is therefore equal to the amount by which the gas supply exceeds
atmospheric pressure.
b) Mercury Barometer
CYCLONE ANTICYCLONE
7.7 QUESTIONS
1. a) A thumb tack is squeezed between finger and thumb as shown in Fig. 1.1. Which experiences
the greater pressure, thumb or the finger? Explain your answer.
Fig. 1.1
b) A hippopotamus has very large feet. How do the large feet help the hippo to walk on
soft mud?
c) Why is a dam built thicker at the bottom than at the top?
2. Explain why air pressure decreases as height above the Earth increases.
3. Explain, in terms of pressure, how you are able to drink liquid by using a straw.
4. Fig. 4.1 shows a simple mercury barometer.
- Are electromagnetic in nature due to electric and magnetic forces between particles.
- Can either be attractive or repulsive depending on the distance between the particles. If the
particles come closer together than their normal spacing, the force is repulsive and is
relatively large to push them apart. If the separation of the particles is slightly more than their
normal spacing, the force is attractive and relatively large to push them back.
8.1.3 SOLIDS
• Particles are little further apart than those in solids Particles have no fixed positions.
• Have definite volumes but no definite shapes.
• Have slightly weaker intermolecular forces
• Particles are free to slide over each other in a random motion.
8.1.5 GASES
• Particles are much further apart (so gases are less dense and can easily be compressed)
• Particles are in continuous motion with high speed in all directions (random motion),
completely independent of one another.
• Intermolecular forces are negligible (almost non-existent) except during collisions.
• Have neither fixed volumes nor fixed shapes (always expand to fill the whole container).
*NB:- At any instant, different particles have different amount of kinetic energy. On heating, the
kinetic energy of the particles (also their average kinetic energy) increases.
The temperature of a substance is the measure of the average kinetic energy of its particles.
At any given temperature, particles of any two gases have the same kinetic energy but their average
speed are not the same.
8.2.2 Pressure of a gas in terms of molecular forces
Gases consist of large of particles in constant random motion. Gas pressure is a result of force exerted
on the surface of the container walls by the gas particles when they strike walls and rebound.
8.3 GAS LAWS
8.3.1 PRESSURE AND TEMPERATURE
The pressure of a gas increase with in temperature because the particles collide with the container
walls:- i) more frequently each second and ii) with greater force as the increase in temperature
increase their kinetic energy. P α T when volume is constant. --------------> Pressure law
P/T = a constant
Apparatus are set as shown above in a dark room. The smoke cell is filled with smoke from
smouldering paper and it is brightly lit.
On viewing through a microscope, the smoke particles (seen as pin point of light due to light reflected
by them) are seen to move at random (womble). Since there is no wind present in the box, the motion
of the smoke particles can only be due to the collision of air molecules with the smoke particles.
Explanation of Brownian motion using the kinetic theory
Brownian motion is due to the continuous bombardment of tiny smoke particles by numerous air
molecules which are too small to be seen.
The air molecules move with different velocities in different directions. The resultant force on the
smoke particles is therefore unbalanced and irregular in magnitude and directions. This causes the
smoke particles to move to a new position now and then when another unbalanced force acts on it. All
these result into the random motion of the particles.
8.5 QUESTIONS
1 Describe the spacing of molecules and their movement in solids, liquids and
gases. 2 What do each of the following statements tell you about the forces
between atoms?
a) It is not easy to stretch or compress a metal.
b) If the extension is not too big, a stretched copper wire regains its original length when the
stretching force is removed?
3 A gas is heated in a closed container. What happens to the temperature and to the pressure of
the gas? Explain your answer in terms of molecules.
4 A gas in a closed container is compressed to half its volume. Explain, in terms of molecules,
why the pressure doubles if the temperature is not allowed to change.
5 A bubble of air released from a diver‟s helmet under water rises to the surface. As it rises, its
diameter increases. Explain why. 6 Explain the following results.
a) A gas inside a container exerts a pressure on the walls of the container.
b) The pressure increases when the mass of the gas in the container is increased. 7
Some smoked-filled air is put into a clear plastic box and viewed through a
microscope.
a) Describe carefully what is seen through the microscope.
b) Use the molecular model of gases to explain what is seen.
8 The diagram shows the main parts of a bicycle pump with the end blocked up. When a
bicycle tyre is pumped up, the volume of the air trapped in the pump is reduced and its pressure is
increased.
a) Explain, in terms of the motion of molecules, why the pressure increases.
b) The volume of air in the pump at start of the stroke is 20 cm3, and the pressure of the air is
1.00 x 105 Pa. Calculate the pressure when the volume has been reduced to 8.0
cm3 assuming that no air has escaped from the pump and the temperature of the
air is constant.
c) In practice, the temperature of the air increases as it is compressed. Explain why this is so.
When the ball and the ring are at the same temperature, the ball fits into the ring and can pass through
easily.
The gauge consists of a slot that fits in the length of the bar and a circular hole that fits in the diameter
of the slot when both the gauge and bar are at the same temperature.
Procedure:
- Fit the bar into the slot and the hole on the gauge when both the gauge and bar are at room
temperature to check if the bar fits in.
-Heat the bar strongly over the Bunsen burner for a couple of minutes. Try to fit it into the slot and
hole on the gauge after being heated.
Observation: the bar does not fit into the slot as well as the hole.
Observation: The bar once again fits into the gauge (through the slot and the hole)
8.6.2 IN LIQUIDS
Liquids expand when heated. They expand more than solids because the molecules are not tightly
bound together as those in solids.
If we start with water that is warmer than 4 °C, as the water cooled to 4 °C it contracts as any liquid
would do. But surprisingly as it is cooled from 4 °C to 0 °C it expands. Water therefore has a
minimum volume (and maximum density) at 4 °C.
As the water freezes at 0 °C it expands even more. This is why the water pipes burst in very cold
weather.
The unusual expansion of water between 4 °C and 0 °C helps the fish to survive in a frozen pond.
The water at the top cools first, contracts and becomes denser and sinks to the bottom. The less dense
water rises to the surface to be cooled, become denser and then sinks as well. When all the water is 4
°C, the circulation ceases. If the temperature of the surface water falls below 4 °C the water becomes
less dense and remains at the top and eventually forming a layer of ice of 0 °C. The temperatures in
the pond are then as shown above.
*NB:- When water is heated from 0 °C to 4 °C instead of expanding it contracts and also reaches its
minimum volume at 4 °C. From 4 °C upwards it expands as we would expected.
8.6.4 IN GASES
GASES also expand when heated. They expand much more than solids and liquids. This is because
gas molecules have negligible attractive forces between them since they are far apart.
8.6.5 Experiment to compare the expansion of water (liquid) and air (gas)
Two identical flasks A and B are filled with water and air. Flasks A and B are at the same time placed
into warm water in a small bowl C.
The water level in flask A is seen to rise very slowly but the coloured pellet in flask B rises up the
capillary tube rapidly. This shows that air expands more faster than water.
Roughly the relative order of magnitude of expansion of solids, liquids and gases is 1 : 10 : 100
respectively
A). Bimetallic strip – it is a device based on the different expansion of solids. It consists of two metal
strips of equal size but different rates (amount) of expansion, e.g. iron and brass. The strips are
riveted or welded together. On heating, the bimetallic strip bends with brass on the outside of the
curve and iron inside. This is because the brass expands more than iron for the same temperature
rise.
Bimetallic strip is used in thermostats to work as electric switch. Thermostats are useful to
control automatically temperature of:
C). Shrink fitting – This is method to fit axles in gear wheel. An axle which is slightly too large to fit
into the gear wheel is cooled in liquid nitrogen. The axle contracts until it can easily fit into the
gear wheel. Then when the axle warms up later, it expands and this produces a very tight fit
between the wheel and the axle.
D). Liquid-in-glass thermometer:- mercury or alcohol expand when heated (or contract when
cooled). This fact is used to measure temperature.
E). Hot air balloon:- propane gas expands and becomes lighter when heated. It fills up a balloon
which will then because of the density difference between the propane inside and air outside
will rise upwards and fly around.
1). When railway tracks were laid with the ends of individual rails closely and firmly fixed together
with no gaps between, expansion made the tracks buckle.
To allow for expansion and avoid destruction, gaps are left between the end of one rail and the
next.
The rails are tapered at each end, then each end overlaps with the end of the next rail. As the rails
expand or contract their ends slide over one another.
One end of the bridge is supported on the rollers and the other end is fixed. As the bridge expands the
end on the rollers can move slightly, enough to avoid any damage to the bridge.
3). Telephone and power-lines:- are hung slightly slack ( too loose) if they are put up in summer to
allow for safe contraction in winter or at night without pulling the poles down or the wire
snapping (breaking). If they are put up in winter, they are tightened up a bit so that they do not
become loose (slack) when they expand in summer or during the day.
4). Tyre bursting:- more common during very hot days. It is caused by the expansion excessive
expansion of air inside the tyre.
5). Water pipe bursts:- due to expansion of water as it freezes.
6). Creaking noises in the roofs of buildings:- caused when the corrugated iron sheets slide over each
other as they expand or contract.
7). Freezing of water in the car radiators:- car radiator should have anti-freeze added to it to lower
the freezing point of water.
8.6.8 QUESTIONS
1. A student sets up the apparatus as shown below. When the student holds his hands on the flask, air
bubbles flow out from the bottom of the tube. Explain this, mentioning in your answer the
behaviour of the air molecules. When the student removes his hands from the flask, water
goes up the tube to a point than it was before. Explain why this happens.
2. The diagram shows electricity cables that have been put up between their poles on a day when the
weather was quite warm
3. Explain why
(a) thick glass vessels often crack if placed in very hot water.
(b) a stubborn screw lid on a jar can often be unscrewed after being warmed in hot water.
(c) a bimetallic strip bends when heated
(d) water pipes likely to burst during a very cold weather
4. The diagram shows a bimetallic strip. Given that brass expands more than iron, draw diagrams to
show how the strip will appear:
(i) When the bimetallic strip is heated the heater is switched off. Explain why.
(ii) How would you use the control knob to make the heater switch off at a higher
temperature?
6. The diagram shows a warning system containing a bimetallic strip. The bimetallic strip has two
metals X and Y firmly joined together.
(i) lamp B lights when the temperature of the strip increases by 20 °C.
(ii) lamp A lights when the temperature falls by 20 °C.
(b) State what effect moving the metal contacts nearer to the bimetallic strip would have on the
warning system.
7. A glass bottle was heated. State whether the following properties were unchanged, decreased or
increased.
(a) mass of the bottle
(b) density of the bottle
(c) external diameter of the bottle (d) volume inside the bottle.
Main features:-
Heat is transferred to the liquid inside bulb by conduction and radiation through the glass wall. After
some time the heat will reach the liquid. The heat is transferred through the liquid by convection. The
glass and the liquid will begin to expand. The liquid rises up the column of the capillary bore because
it expands faster than the glass.
Thermometric liquid
1) Alcohol
Its expansion is about six times that of mercury
Has lower freezing point (about -122 °C) so can be used in very cold
temperature region.
Disadvantages
Disadvantages
This is a process of marking a scale on a thermometer. Calibrating a thermometer in degrees celsius (Celsius
scale of temperature) involves several stages.
(a) First, the lower and upper fixed points must be marked on the scale. Fixed points are standard
temperatures which their values are known and fixed. Lower fixed point (or ice point) is
defined as the temperature at which pure ice melts at sea level and its value is taken to be 0
°C. The upper fixed point (steam point) is the temperature of steam above boiling water at
standard atmospheric pressure of 760 mmHg and is taken to be 100 °C.
(b) Determining the fixed points experimentally
(i) LOWER FIXED POINT (L.F.P)
- Place the thermometer in crushed pure melting ice placed in a funnel above a beaker.
- The mercury thread falls and eventually stabilises at one point. That point represents the L.F.P.
- Mark on the stem against the level of the mercury thread and label it 0 °C.
- Next, place the thermometer in the steam above boiling water in a flask.
- Allow the mercury thread to rise until it stabilises at a particular point.
That point represents U.F.P.
- Mark against the level of mercury thread on the stem and label it 100 °C.
(c) Measure the distance between L.F.P and U.F.P and divide the space into 100 equal divisions. Each
division is equal to 1 °C.
NOTE: When using a thermometer without scale marks but only with lower fixed point and
upper fixed point marked, one may use the following equation to find the value of temperature
for any given length of the column.
θ = Xθ – X0 / (X100 – X0) x ∆T
Examples #1.
A student puts the bulb of an unmarked liquid-in-glass thermometer into melting ice, then into steam
above boiling water and finally into sea-water. Each time she waits until the liquid level is steady and
then marks the level. The diagram shows the liquid levels measured from the bulb. What is the
temperature of the sea-water?
Example #2.
Find temperature X
Example #3
Find temperature X
Θ = Xθ – X-10/(X110 – X-10) x ∆T
X = 9 – 2/(14 -2) x 120
= 7/12 x 120
= 70 °C
B. CLINICAL THERMOMETER
Clinical thermometer is designed to measure human temperature. It has the following features:-
•Thin-walled glass bulb
•Narrow capillary bore
•Constriction in the capillary just above the bulb Short temperature range (35 °C – 42
°C).
• Vacuum above the mercury
EXPLANATION OF PURPOSE OF DIFFERENT FEATURES
A vacuum – allow free movement of the mercury inside the capillary bore.
Glass bulb with thin wall allows heat to pass quickly into the mercury. Even though the glass bulb of a
clinical thermometer is smaller than that of a laboratory thermometer, but in relation to its bore, it is
large and this improves its sensitivity.
Narrow capillary makes the thermometer sensitive to small changes in temperature.
Constriction prevents mercury from falling back into the bulb when removing the thermometer from the
body, before a reading is taken. The mercury above will be trapped and this allows the nurse to take
accurate reading from the thermometer. When the reading is taken the thermometer is shaken/flicked
carefully so that mercury moves back into the bulb.
Short temperature range- this is so because the normal body temperature is 37 °C and does not vary
much from this value. With a few degrees marked on the scale, the distance between unit degrees is
greater and this makes the thermometer very sensitive and easy to read accurately.
Lastly the stem of the clinical thermometer is specially shaped, it has a triangular cross-section. This
shape produces a lens effect which would magnifies the bore and make it more visible for easy reading.
Uses only mercury because it is quick responding since it has a low specific heat capacity and great
conductivity.
Question :- Why should we not put a clinical thermometer inside boiling water?
Answer :- Temperature of boiling water is 100 °C but the maximum temperature that can be read by a clinical
thermometer is only 42 °C. So if sterilized in boiling water, the large expansion of mercury will cause the
thermometer to break.
SENSITIVITY OF A THERMOMETER:- refers to its ability to detect even small changes in temperature. It can
also be defined in terms of the distance between unit degrees marked on the scale. For a very sensitive
thermometer, the degrees are far apart and are close together for less sensitive thermometer. Sensitivity depends
on the following:-
Bulb :- if the bulb is small, heat will be distributed quickly throughout the whole liquid and the liquid
will expand quickly. But the bulb needs to be large in relation to the size of the bore for higher
sensitivity.
Thermometer A with a large bulb and a narrow bore is more sensitive than thermometer B with a small
bulb but wide bore.
Thickness of the glass wall:- bulb should be made of thin walled glass for heat to easily reach the liquid
in the bulb
C D
Thermometer C with a thin glass wall responds quickly because heat passes quickly through the thin glass
to the liquid inside. Thermometer D with a thick glass wall responds slowly because heat passes slowly
through the thick glass to the liquid.
Width of the bore:- for higher sensitivity the bore of the thermometer should be very thin (narrow) so
that a small expansion of the liquid can result in a larger change in the position of the level of the
mercury (length of mercury thread) inside the thermometer.
Note: Mathematically, sensitivity can be expressed as change in the length of the mercury column per unit
temperature increase.
e.g. If a column of a thermometer increases by 10 mm for every 2 °C increase in temperature, what is
the sensitivity of the thermometer? Sensitivity = 10 mm/2 °C = 5 mm/°C
RANGE OF A THERMOMETER:- is the temperature interval (value of the lowest temperature and
highest temperature) that can be measured by a thermometer. e.g. A clinical thermometer; range = 35 °C
– 42 °C
A laboratory thermometer; range = -10 °C – 110 °C
The range of the thermometer also depends on the size of the bulb and the width of the bore:- If the bore is small
relative to the size of the bore, the thermometer will be able to measure a wide range of temperature. The range of
a thermometer is also affected by the length of the stem. Thermometers with long stem have large ranges whilst
those with shorter stems have smaller ranges.
Summary of the effects of bulb size and bore width on range and sensitivity
Range Sensitivity
To use the thermometer, one junction X (cold junction) must be put into melting ice. The other junction Y (hot
junction) is placed into the body of substance of which its temperature is to be measured, e.g. warm water.
Difference in temperatures at the two junctions induces an e.m.f (voltage) across the junctions which causes the
current to flow through the circuit. This will result with a deflection on the sensitive galvanometer.
Note:
• The deflection is greater when the temperature difference is greater.
• If the temperature of both junctions is the same then no voltage is produced.
Advantages of a thermocouple
i) A thermocouple responds quickly to temperature changes, because metal wires are good conductor
of heat and also only a small part can be put into a substance, it can quickly attain the temperature of
of the substance.
ii) A thermocouple can be used to measure very high and very low temperatures (-200 °C – 1500 °C),
e.g. used to measure high temperature inside blast furnaces and car engines.
T = θ + 273
E.G.
Absolute zero Melting point Boiling water
#2 Convert a) 50 °C to K
b) 100 K to °C
T = θ + 273
= 50 + 273
= 323 K
8.7.6 QUESTIONS
1. The scale on a thermometer used for measuring the temperature includes two fixed points. What are the
values of these?
Explain why the length of the mercury thread changes when the temperature rises?
2. (a) A clinical thermometer, used to measure human body temperature has a constriction just above the
bulb, why is the constriction necessary?
(b) The thermometer temperature is 35 °C – 42 °C, why is the range made to be so small?
(c) How is the thermometer made very sensitive?
5. The scale of a mercury-in-glass thermometer is linear. One such thermometer has a scale extending from
-10 °C to 110 °C. The length of that scale is 240 mm.
(a) What is meant meant by the statement that the scale is linear?
(b) Calculate the distance moved by the end of the mercury thread when the temperature of
the thermometer rises
(i) from 0.0 °C to 1.0 °C
(ii) from 1.0 °C to 100 °C.
6. A mercury thermometer is calibrated by immersing it in turn in melting ice and then boiling water. The
column of the mercury is respectively 2.0 cm and 22.0 cm long. What would be temperature reading when
the column is 7.0 cm long?
8.8.2 Melting
Melting is a process in which a substance changes its state from solid to liquid and the reverse process
(liquid to solid) is called freezing or solidification.
When a pure solid melts it stays at the same, definite temperature is called its melting point and it also
solidifies at the very same temperature (now it would be called its freezing point). During melting or
freezing, the temperature does not change even though the substance continues to gain or lose (heat)
energy. The energy gained is used to re-arrange the particles/molecules/atoms of the substance.
The heat absorbed by the substance during melting or given out during solidification is called latent
heat of fusion. The energy is used to overcome the attractive forces between the particles that keep
them in their fixed positions. Latent heat changes the state of the substance without change in the
temperature (“latent” literally means hidden)
8.8.2 Boiling
Boiling is a process in which the substance changes state from liquid to gas and the reverse process is
called condensation (gas -----> liquid).
If the energy is supplied to a liquid, e.g. water, its temperature rises until it boils. During boiling the
temperature of water remains constant. The temperature at which a liquid turns into a gas by boiling is
called its boiling point. As water turns into steam, the energy supplied does not cause a rise in
temperature instead is used to enable molecules to break the attractive forces holding the particles
together. The energy absorbed and used to change a liquid to a gas without changing the temperature
of the substance is called latent heat of vaporisation. The latent heat of vaporization is given out
during condensation to change a gas to a liquid.
1) BOILING CURVE
When ice at a temperature below 0 °C, say -10 °C is allowed to warm up slowly, its temperature will
rise to 0 °C and remain constant until all the ice has melted. The temperature will begin to rise up to
100 °C where it remains constant until all the water has vapourised into steam and the temperature of
the steam will rise above 100 °C.
BOILING
MELTING
2 COOLING CURVE
We can also plot a graph of temperature against time (boiling curve) when the steam of temperature
above 100 °C.
condensation
Water + steam
water Freezing/solidification
8.9 Evaporation
8.9.1 It is the process in which a liquid changes into a gas at a temperature below its boiling point.
All molecules do not have the same energy. During evaporation, molecules with greater
energy than others and are nearer to the surface escape into the space above the liquid
*Liquids which evaporate and boil at low temperatures are called volatile liquids.
At higher temperature, molecules gain more energy and move faster and time for them to reach
the surface decrease. Therefore a larger number of molecules can escape from the surface. b).
Surface area
If the surface area is large, more molecules will evaporate because more molecules are near the
surface and also there is more room for them to escape.
c). Humidity
When the humidity is high (i.e. water vapour is present in air in greater proportion) the molecules
which escaped from the liquid collide with the water molecules in the atmosphere, so some of the
escaped liquid molecules will return into the liquid.
If wind blows over the surface of the liquid, the escaped molecules from the surface of the liquid will
be rapidly carried away by the draught and thus reducing the possibility of their return into the liquid.
During evaporation, the high energy molecules escape from the liquid leaving the low energy
molecules behind. Therefore the average kinetic energy of the remaining molecules decreases. This
lowers the temperature of the liquid because the temperature of a substance is proportional to the
average kinetic energy of its molecules.
i). Cooling our bodies- your body sweats in hot weather, as the sweat evaporates it takes in latent
heat from your body and cools it, this helps get rid of excessive internal energy.
Refrigerator has sealed system of thin pipes with compressor, a condenser and an evaporator. A
volatile liquid (such as Freon or ammonia) known as refrigerant is pumped through the coiled pipes
around the freezer compartment in the top of the refrigerator. The refrigerant evaporates and takes
latent heat from its surroundings, producing cooling inside the refrigerator. A pump is used to draw
the vapour (so reducing its pressure, loweing its boiling point and encouraging further evaporation
and removing more from the refrigerator) and then forces it into the heater exchanger at the rear of the
refrigerator. Here the vapour is compressed. It liquefies, giving out latent heat of vapourisation into
the surrounding air. The liquid, now at room temperature, returns to the coils, returns to the coils in
the freezer and the cycle is repeated.
It works in the same way, but on a larger. The refrigerant liquid evaporates in the coil inside the
building and extracts latent heat from the air in the room, cooling it down. The resulting vapour then
condenses under pressure in the coil outside the house releasing the latent heat to the outside air.
During boiling, the average k.e. of particles is high enough for some groups of particles to form
separate bubbles of vapour throughout the liquid, these bubbles will be seen moving rapidly and will
burst at the surface during boiling. At the boiling point, some of the particles near the surface gain
enough energy to escape from the liquid. These escaping particles form vapour above the surface of
the liquid. This is evaporation.
Both processes involve a change in state from liquid to gas, but evaporation is not the same as boiling.
A). Differences
Boiling Evaporation
2). Occurs at only one temperature – boiling 2). Occurs at all temperatures
point
3). Occurs throughout the whole body of the 3). Occurs only at the surface
liquid
4). Bubbles seen 4). Nothing visible happens (no bubbles)
6). Boiling point increases with increase 6). Rate of evaporation decrease with
pressure increase in pressure
B). Similarities
8.10 QUESTIONS
1. A boy has been swimming in a pool. He comes out of the water onto hot sunshine but he feels cold
until he has dried himself. Why did he feels cold when he was still wet?
2. Table shows the melting points and boiling points of four substances. Which state are the
substances in at room temperature (say 15 °C)?
Substance Melting point / °C Boiling point / °C
A -73 -10
B -39 357
C 17 118
D 29 669
3. A large piece of ice is taken from a refrigerator has a temperature of -2 °C. Its temperature is
measured as it is warmed. Sketch a graph to show how its temperature changes with time until
the water is boiling.
4. The diagram below is the outline of a heat pump system. A suitable refrigerating liquid or its
vapour is circulated round a loop of pipes. In one part of the loop (the compressor) the vapour
condenses into liquid; in another part (the expansion valve) the liquid evaporates. Explain
what transfer of thermal energy (heat) occurs (i) when a liquid evaporates and (ii) when
a liquid condenses.
5. The graph shows how the temperature of a pure substance changes as it is heated.
(b) On the graph, mark with an X any point where the substance exists as both a liquid and
gas at the same time.
(c) i) All substances consists of particles. What happens to the average kinetic energy of
these particles as the substance changes from a liquid to a gas. ii)
Explain, in terms of particles, why energy must be given to a liquid if it is to change to a
gas.
6. The graph below shows how the temperature of some liquid in a beaker changed as it was heated
until it was boiling.
(b) State and explain what difference, if any, there would be in the final temperature if the
liquid was heated more strongly.
∆T α 1/m
ii. The temperature change differs from material to material. For any one material (e.g. water, iron,
mercury, copper, etc.) exists a constant, C. For objects of the same mass;
∆T α 1/C
The constant C is called heat capacity of an object. Heat capacity, C, is the quantity of heat which is required to
raise the temperature of an object by 1 °C or 1 K.
SI Unit is joule per celsius (J/°C or J °C-1) OR joule per kelvin (J/K or J K-1).
From the definition, mathematically heat capacity can be expressed as:-
C = Q/∆T
c= (Q/∆T)/m
Problems
#1Find the specific heat capacity of the liquid given that:
i. energy transferred = 12 209 J
ii. mass of liquid = 0.8 kg
iii. original temperature = 26.8 °C iv.
final temperature = 33.0 °C
Q = mc∆T
c = Q/m∆T
= 12209/(0.8(33.0 – 26.8))
= 301 600 J
#2. Calculate the heat required to raise the temperature of 10 kg of brass from 10 °C to 90 °C. Specific heat capacity
of brass = 377 J kg-1 °C-1.
Answ:
Data:- m = 10 kg, T i = 10 °C, Tf = 90 °C, c = 377 J kg-1 °C-1, Q=?
Q = mc∆T
= 10 x 377 x (90 – 10)
= 301 600 J
#3 A kettle containing 1 kg of water (c = 4200 J kg-1 °C-1) is placed on top of an electric heater of power 1000 W.
It takes 5 min for the water temperature to rise from 20 °C to 90 °C. Find:
a. the energy released by the heater
b. the energy absorbed by the water. Account for any losses in energy
Answ:
a) Data:- P = 1000 W, t = 5 min = 300 s, Q=?
Q = E = Pt
= 1000 x 300
= 300 000 J
b) Data:- m = 1 kg, c = 4200 J kg-1 °C-1, Q = ?
Q = mc∆T
= 1 x 4200 x (90 – 20)
= 294 000 J
6000 J of energy are lost to the surroundings and cointainer by conduction, convection and
radiation.
#4 If 2 kg of water cools from 70 °C to 20 °C, how much thermal energy does it lose?
Answ:
DATA:- m = 2 kg, Ti = 70 °C, Tf = 20 °C, c = 4200 J kg-1 °C-1, Q =?
Q = mc∆T
= 2 x 4200 x (70 – 20)
= 420 000 J.
#5 In an experiment, 920 000 J of energy is transferred to 2 kg of iron (c = 460 J kg -1 °C-1). The initial
temperature of iron is 25 °C. What is the final temperature of the iron?
Answ:
Data:- Q = 920 000 J, m = 2 kg, T i = 25 °C, c = 460 J kg-1 °C-1
Q = mc(Tf – Ti)
Tf = (Q/mc) + Ti
= 920 000/(2 x 460) + 25
= 1000 + 25
= 1 025 °C
2. A beaker of oil and a beaker of water are heated on the same electric hot plate. The beaker of oil has a
lower thermal capacity than the beaker of water. What can you say about how the temperatures change?
3. The heat capacity of a thermocouple is mall. Give two advantages which result from this.
5. Calculate the energy lost by 2.5 kg of steam at 100 °C when it condenses, cools down to 0 °C and solidifies
at that temperature.
Specific latent heat of steam = 2 260 000 J/kg
Specific latent capacity of water = 4200 J/(kg °C)
Specific latent heat of water = 336 000 J/kg
6. A heater raises the temperature of 1.25 kg of water by 20 °C in 30 seconds. The specific heat capacity of
water is 4200 J/(kg °C). Calculate an approximate value for the power of the heater. Use this value for the
power to calculate M, the mass of water boiled away each second when the temperature reaches 100 °c.
Assume that the specific latent heat of vapourisation of water is 2.26 x 10 6 J/kg. Explain whether the actual
rate at which water is boiled away is greater than or less than M
7. Explain why a drink is cooled more by ice than by the same mass of water at 0 °C.
8. It takes 80 000 J of heat to raise the temperature of 500 g of porridge from 20 °C to 50 °C. Calculate the
specific heat capacity of porridge.
9. An experiment was conducted to measure the specific latent of fusion. Ice was placed in a funnel and
heated for a fixed time. The water from the melted ice was collected in a beaker as shown in the diagram.
The mass of the empty beaker was 50 g.
A 100 W heater was used to heat the ice for 2 min. After the jeater was switched off the mass of the
beaker and the melted ice was 83 g. Use the results to calculate a value for Lf, the specific latent heat of fusion
-1
of ice. Explain why your answer is different from the accepted value of 340 J g .
There are three common methods or ways by which heat can be transferred, viz:- (i)
Thermal conduction
(ii) Convection
(iii) Thermal radiation
8.13.2 Conduction
This is flow of heat through a substance from places of higher temperature to those of lower temperature without
any movement/flow of the substance (matter) as a whole. It is a main method of heat transfer in solids and heat
can be conducted in all directions.
NB: Conduction can take place in all the three states of matter but at different rates.
When one end of a metal rod is heated, the particles (atoms/molecules) in portion nearest to the source of heat,
gain more kinetic energy and start to vibrate faster and more vigorously. These atoms collide with the neighbours
and pass on some of their energy during those collisions. The neighbours will also begin to vibrate faster and will
in turn transmit the energy to the surrounding atoms. The chain process continues until all the particles are
affected and the whole substance is heated even the farthest parts.
Experiment #1: To demonstrate that different metals conduct heat at different rates
Procedure:
Observation
When the rod is passed through the flame several times, paper over the wood scorches (burns) but not that over
brass.
Explanation: The brass conducts heat away from the paper very quickly, and prevents it from reaching the
temperature at which it can burn. But the wood conducts heat away slowly and hence more heat builds on the
paper, enough to make it burn.
Note: Metal objects below body temperature feel colder to touch than those made of non-metals because metals
conduct heat away from the hand faster.
Procedure:
i) Wrap an ice cube in a metal gauge and place it at the bottom of a boiling tube filled with water.
ii) Heat the water at the top using a low Bunsen flame.
Observation: The water starts to boil at the top before all the ice at the bottom has liquefied (melted). Reason:
Heat is slowly conducted from the top of the boiling tube to the bottom of the tube. Therefore the ice melts very
slowly. This shows that water is a poor conductor of heat.
Note:
i) Metals are good conductors of heat because they have a large number of free moving electrons.
As the electrons travel over the piece of metal, they take some heat with them. So in metals heat is
transferred by electrons and also by the vibrations of the atoms.
ii) On the other hand insulators conduct heat slowly because they have very few free moving electrons
and also their particles are less closely packed together and so they collide less frequently.
iii) Conduction of heat requires a medium and hence it cannot take place in a vacuum (therefore this
means a vacuum is the best insulator/worst thermal conductor)
Poor conductors of heat are mostly non-metals (e.g. air, wood, glass, water, etc). They are used where heat is to
be insulated. Poor conductors are used to make:-
i) The handles of cooking utensils, soldering, soldering iron, laundry iron and many other heating
appliances ii) Clothes – cloth is made up of fibres. The fibres trap small pockets of air. The trapped
air helps to reduce heat loss by conduction.
b). Other materials which trap air like fur, polystyrene, fibre glass, foam/sponge are used for lagging to insulate
water pipes, hot water cylinders, oven, refrigerators and also used in house roof insulation and cavity wall
insulation to prevent or reduce the rate of heat flow in our house. And air trapped between two window
panes is used in double glazing insulation method in our homes.
8.13.3 Convection
It is the transfer of heat through fluids (liquids and gases) by the upward movement of warmer, less dense parts
of fluid. This movement is actually caused by the difference in densities in different parts of the fluid. When a
fluid, (e.g. water or air) is heated, it expands and becomes less dense than the colder surrounding fluid.
Therefore it floats or rises upwards and is replaced by colder dense fluid which sinks down to take its place.
That fluid will be heated too and in turn rises upwards. At the top, the warm fluid cools, becomes denser and
begins to sink down where it will be re-heated and rises again. Thus, a circulating movement sets up in the
liquid until the whole fluid is at the same temperature. These circulating parts of the fluid are called convection
currents.
*Convection can also be used to cool a substance. When fluid is cooled, molecules contracts and becomes
denser. The cool, dense fluid sinks and is replaced by warmer fluid which will be cooled and sinks as well. And
this produces convection currents which cool the liquid.
Observation
Purplish stream of water is seen rising upwards to the top. At the top the stream changes its direction of motion
and now sinks to the bottom.
*This movement is represented by the arrows drawn on the diagrams above. The arrows also show the direction
of the convection current.
Discussion
The liquid nearest to the heat source expands. This lessens its density. The less dense liquid floats and rises up.
More dense, cold liquid moves in to take its place.
The arrows on the diagram show the direction followed by the smoke.
Explanation:
The air around the candle flame becomes hot and expands. It becomes less dense and rises. Cool, denser air
moves over to the candle to take the place of the air that has risen up. This causes cool air from outside to enter
the box carrying the smoke with it.
Application of convection
- The cold water comes into the system at the bottom and is heated by the heat element
- Water expands, becomes less dense and rises up
- It is replaced by more cold water to heated and the convection current is set to heat all the water in
the tank.
- The hot water pipe is near the top because hot water would always be at the top.
- If the water cools whilst at the top, it sinks to the bottom to be heated again.
- Overflow pipe is included to prevent build up of vapour which will increase pressure inside the
tank and cause some explosions or cause some airlocks inside the water pipes.
8.13.4 Radiation
This is a way of transferring heat in form of invisible heat waves. This is how heat travels from the sun
to the Earth. The heat waves (radiant heat) are called infrared radiation (E.M WAVES) Note:
• Heat can be transferred by radiation through a vacuum or a transparent medium
• All objects give out some infrared radiation and the hot objects give out more radiation
compare to cool ones.
• Warm or hot objects (at higher temperature than the surrounding) will emit the radiation
whereas cool objects (at lower temperature) will usually absorb the radiation from the
surrounding.
Experiment #1: Investigating good and bad absorbers of radiant energy (infrared)
- The apparatus are set up as shown above with a pin attached to back each of the above two
objects (one with dark/black surface and the other with bright/shiny/silver surface). The candle
should be equidistant from both objects for equal radiation to either object.
Observation:
The pin attached to the dark surface fall off first showing that the dark or black surface absorbs
radiant heat from the candle more quickly than the bright surface.
Conclusion: Dark surfaces are good absorbers of radiation whilst bright (shiny, white or silvery)
surfaces are bad absorbers.
In fact the dull black surface is the best absorber while a white or silvery polished surface is the
worst absorber because it is a good reflector of radiation.
- The two flasks in the diagram above with boiling water are allowed to cool.
- It is observed that temperature falls more rapidly for the thermometer in the flask with a dark
(black) surface and slower for the thermometer in a flask with a bright/shiny surface.
- This shows that blackened surface loses heat more quickly than the silvered or shiny one.
Conclusion: dark colours emit radiant heat more quickly than bright colours, i.e. dark surfaces
are good emitters of radiant heat whereas bright surface a bad emitters. The best emitter is a
dull black surface while a silvery polished surface is the worst. However, all surfaces emit
more radiation as they get hotter.
*NB: Dark surfaces are both good absorbers and bad emitters of radiation. Generally good absorbers
are also good emitters whereas bad absorbers are bad emitters as well.
Diagram 1 Diagram 2
During a daytime the land gets hotter than the sea. The warm air rises upwards and is replaced by
cool air that blows from the sea towards the land. This sets up some convection currents known as
Sea Breezes (diagram 1).
But, at night the land loses heat faster than sea. Now the warmer air over the sea rises and then is
replaced by cool air that blows from the land to the sea and sets up convection currents that will
be called Land Breezes (diagram 2).
2. Cyclones
- Usually air above warm parts of sea will be warmed as well.
- The warm air rises up carrying moisture high into the atmosphere.
- The rotation of Earth causes the airflow to spin.
- This huge spinning mass of moist air is called a cyclone.
- The cyclone causes wet cloudy weather with strong winds.
- If the winds become very strong (120 – 130 km/h) the storm is called a hurricane or a
typhoon.
3. Greenhouse Effects
The Earth‟s atmosphere contains a small amount of carbon dioxide gas. This has similar effect to the
glass in a greenhouse (read more on this), it allows short wavelength infrared from the Sun to pass
through and get absorbed by the Earth. The Earth becomes warm and now radiates long wavelength
infrared radiation. This radiation is absorbed by carbon dioxide and water vapour in the atmosphere
and causes the atmosphere to become warmer. The atmosphere reflects some of the energy back to the
Earth. This process is called greenhouse effect and it helps to keep the Earth warmer.
But extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere as a result of burning of fossil fuels may add to this effect
and lead to global warming.
4. Global warming
It results in the temperature of the atmosphere and sea (Earth). That increased temperature causes
melting of the polar ice-caps. This melting results in the rise of the seal level leading to flooding of
coastal areas. Global warming can also lead to some changes in the Earth climate which will cause the
disappearance of some species of plants and animals.
It is designed to keep liquids hot or cold by reducing heat transfer to or from the liquid by the aid of the
following features:
Feature of flask Reduces transfer of heat by ........... Explanation
Silvered inner and outer walls radiation Silvered surfaces are bad absorbers
and emitters of radiated heat
Vacuum between walls Conduction and convection Conduction and convection cannot
occur through a vacuum
Stopper or lid Convection and evaporation The stopper traps a layer of air
above the liquid, preventing
convection and evaporation
(i) a solar panel containing a coiled copper tube/pipe and blackened layer on the background. Copper is used
because is a good conductor of heat and also it does not corrode. The tube is coiled to increase the surface
area to increase amount heat absorption. The black surface increases amount of radiation energy
absorbed from the sun as a black colour is a good absorber.
(ii) a glass cover – to trap the radiation energy within the panel.
(iii) the pipe carrying heated water from the panel enters at the top of the storage tank. This allows
the heated water to circulate in the tank by convection.
8.13.8 QUESTIONS
1. The metal rod has one end placed in a fire. Explain how heat gradually travels along the rod to a
person‟s hand at the other hand at the other end.
2. Why does the door handle feel colder than the wooden door in a cold weather?
3. The rods A and B are the same thickness but made of different metals. They are coated with wax
and fixed with their ends through the wall of a can. Hot water is poured into the can, and after a
short time it is found that the wax has melted as far as Y on rod B but only as far as X on rod A.
Explain why the wax melts further along B than along A.
4. Heat energy can be transferred from one place to another by the three processes; conduction,
convection and radiation.
(a). Which one of these processes is used to transfer energy by means of the infra-red part of the electromagnetic
spectrum?
5. In a double-glazed window, two panes of glass are separated by a few centimetres . Why does this
reduce the heat loss through the window?
6. Why are loosely knitted clothes likely to keep a person warmer during the cold months?
7. Explain how heat energy is transferred through a container of soup cooking on an electric stove.
When the soup has heated sufficiently, the stove is switched off and the soup cools. Explain how the
soup loses heat.
8. A person seating on a beach on a hot sumer‟s day is feels a cool breeze blowing from the water (sea
breeze).
(b) Late at night the same person feels a breeze blowing in the opposite direction (from land to the
sea). Explain why the direction of the breeze often reverses late at night.
• A wave can also be created along a slinky spring by fixing one end and moving the other back and
forth. The compressions (regions where the coils are close together) and rarefactions (where the coils
are further apart) which travel along the spring form waves.
Amplitude (a): height of the crest or the depth of the trough from the undisturbed position of the medium. SI unit
is a metre (m).
Period (T): time taken to produce one complete wave or cycle. SI unit: second (s).
Period = total time taken/no. of complete waves (cycles).
Frequency (f): number of complete waves generated in one second. Its SI unit is hertz (Hz). If a source vibrates
such that it produces 2 waves in one second, we say that its frequency is 2 waves per second which is 2 Hz. The
frequency of wave is the same as that of the source.
Wave fronts: lines joining points on different waves produced by same source at the same time OR lines drawn
to represent the positions of the crests on a wave.
• A circular wavefronts are used to represent circular waves (ripples) and are concentric. Circular waves
can be produced by a single point source(e.g. a finger or vibrating dipper in a ripple tank)
• Straight wavefronts are used for straight water waves and are parallel. Straight waves can be produced
using a vibrating bar or a ruler.
v = fλ
where v = wave speed in m/s
f = frequency in Hz λ
= wavelength in metres
PROBLEMS
#1 The speed of sound wave in air is 330 m/s. What is wavelength of a sound wave of frequency 170 Hz?
Data : v = 330 m/s, f = 170 Hz, λ = ?
v = fλ
λ = v/f
= 330 m s-1/170 Hz = 1.94 m
#2 Determine the speed of a wave with a frequency of 1.0 kHz and wavelength of 0.2 m?
Data: f =1.0 kHz = 1000 Hz, λ = 0.2 m, v=
? v = fλ
= 1000 Hz x 0.2 m
= 200 m/s
9.2 WAVE GRAPHS
There are two ways of representing waves; plotting
• a displacement- distance graph
• a displacement- time graph
displacement- distance graph
wavelength = 2.0 cm
amplitude = 5.0 cm
In a displacement – distance graph, one complete cycle represent one wavelength.
Displacement – time graph
This graph can be used to find the period (T) of a wave. One complete cycle represent the period (T).
Period T = 2.0 s
Frequency f = 1/2.0 s =0.5 Hz
Amplitude a = 3.0 cm.
9.3 TYPES OF WAVES
• transverse wave
• longitudinal wave
Transverse wave: a wave in which the displacement or vibrations of the particles are perpendicular to the
direction of the wave travel.
Examples of transverse
- waves on a spring or string
- water waves
- all electromagnetic waves (radio waves, infrared, light, ultraviolet, x-ray, gamma rays)
Longitudinal wave: a wave in which the displacement particles is parallel to the direction of the wave travel (in
the same direction as the direction of the wave travel).
Wavelength is equal to the distance from the centre of one compression (or rarefaction) to the centre of the next.
Examples of longitudinal waves
- A flat/plane surface is placed a short distance from a vibrator. Waves are then produced. The straight
wavefronts are reflected from the boundary as shown below
The angle at which wavefronts bounce off the barrier is equal to the angle at which they meet the surface
The angle of incidence = the angle of reflection
Circular wavefronts are reflected as shown below. Notice that the reflected waves seem to be coming from an
imaginary source behind the boundary and the reflected waves are the mirror image of the incident waves. The
distance from the real source to the barrier is the same as from the imaginary source to the barrier.
Refraction: if a small glass is placed in the centre of ripple tank the depth of the water here is reduced. As
the water waves enter this region we can see that the wavelength changes because the speed changes but the
frequency remains the same. The wavelength will increase when the wave enters the deeper water again
indicating that the speed has increased.
The ratio of the speed (velocity) v1 of waves in deep water to the speed v2 water in shallow water is known as
refractive index.
Notice that if the boundary between shallow and deep water is at an angle to the direction in which water waves
are moving, the direction of the wave of travel will change. The wave is said to have been refracted or
undergone refraction.
The waves bend towards the normal as they enter shallow water and are slowed down. They bend away from the
normal as they leave shallow water and enter deep water.
9.5 DIFFRACTION
When waves enter/pass through an opening (gap), they often spread out even to regions that are not directly in
front of the entrance. When the waves spread through a gap or around an obstacle, this effect is called
diffraction.
When a wave is diffracted, its wavelength does not change. However, the size of its wavelength affects how
much it is diffracted.
Note: a) if wavelength is similar to the size of the gap, the waves are strongly diffracted.
b) If the wavelength is much smaller than the size of the gap, the waves are weakly diffracted.
c) If the gap is much wider, diffraction is also weaker (see diagram (a) above).
9.6 QUESTIONS
1. How is a wave produced? Give two examples of different ways of producing waves.
2. What is the difference between the longitudinal and transverse waves? Give two examples for
each.
3. What is meant by a compression and rarefaction in a spring?
4. What is the speed of a wave of frequency 400 kHz with wavelength 2.0 m?
5. Water waves are produced with a frequency of 4 Hz, by hitting the water surface with the tip
of a pencil. If the waves travel 20 m in 10 s, what is:-
Fig. 7.0
On the diagram use arrows to show:
10. The diagram below shows waves being produced in a ripple tank by a wave machine.
- Join pin holes of P1 and P2 to produce an incident ray and those of P 3 and P4 to trace a reflected ray.
Draw the normal and measure the angle of incidence and angle of reflection.
Both experiments can be repeated using different values of i including i = 0 (where the incident ray is along
the normal).
Laws of reflection
1. The incident ray, normal and reflected ray all lie on the same plane (so they can be shown on the same
flat sheet of paper)
2. The angle of incidence i is equal to the angle of reflection r (i = r)
3. A ray along the normal (where i = 0) will be reflected along its own path, i.e. back along the normal.
10.2 FORMATION OF IMAGES BY PLANE MIRRORS
One application of reflection is in locating the images formed by/on mirrors. When an object is placed in front
of a plane mirror, incident rays from the object to the mirror can be drawn. The reflected rays are also drawn
and are extended backwards to locate the image position. The image will be formed where the imaginary rays
meet.
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE
IMAGE The image formed is:
• Virtual (cannot be formed on the screen)
• Same size as the object
• Upright/erect
• Literally inverted
• Same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of the mirror
The image formed will be along the same axis with the object. Therefore a line drawn joining to the object
should cut the mirror at the right angle.
10.3 CURVED/SPHERICAL
MIRRORS Two types:
- Concave mirror
- Convex mirror
i) CONCAVE MIRROR
It curves inwards; the reflecting surface is inside
When parallel rays (beam) of light strike a concave mirror, the rays are reflected (with i = r) such that they
converge to cross at the point called a focus. If the point is on the principal axis is called the principal focus (F).
When parallel rays strike a convex mirror, the rays are reflected such that they diverge/spread out. If the
reflected rays are extended backwards, they cross at focus behind the mirror. This principal focus behind the
mirror is said to be virtual because they rays do not actually originate from or pass through the point, they only
appear to diverge from or pass through the point. (But for the concave mirror the principal focus is said to be
real because the rays actually pass through the point).
Definition of terms
Centre of curvature C: is the centre of the sphere of which the mirror appears to be part of. It is in front of a
concave mirror and behind for a convex mirror.
Radius of curvature r: the distance from the centre of curvature to the pole P (centre of the mirror)
Principal axis: is the line joining the pole P to the centre of curvature C
Focal length f: is the distance from the principal focus to the centre of the mirror P (distance FP in the diagram
above).
Focal length = half the radius of curvature
f = r/2
Following rays are needed to locate the images formed by curved mirrors
i). A ray parallel to the principal axis is reflected through the principal focus.
ii). A ray through the centre of curvature strikes the mirror normally and is reflected back along its own path
(NB: radius of curvature is perpendicular to the surface where it meets the mirror). iii). A ray through the
principal focus is reflected parallel to the principal axis. 10.4 USES OF MIRRORS
a) Plane mirrors
Besides everyday use in our homes to look at oneself when dressing, doing make-ups or seeing through
awkward angles, plane mirror have other uses in a laboratory, e.g.
Periscope can be used to see over the top of an obstacle which otherwise blocks the direct view. b)
Curved mirrors
- concave mirrors are used as reflectors in headlamps of vehicles, hand torches, searchlights, etc.
Reflected rays from these parabolic (curved) surfaces can travel long distances without becoming
weak. But the bulb should be at the principal focus F of the mirror.
- Concave mirror can be used by a dentist to see teeth inside the mouth and can also be used when
shaving and doing make-ups.
- Convex mirrors can be used as security mirrors in shops
- Convex mirror also used as rear view mirror in vehicles because they give wide field of view.
10.5 QUESTIONS
1. For each of the following cases find the angle of incidence and the angle of reflection
2. A ray of light strikes a mirror surface with angle of incidence of 60°. Draw a diagram to show the
reflected ray plus the normal to the surface. If the angle of incidence was 0°, what would the angle of
reflection be?
3. On the diagram below, draw two rays to locate the image of the object seen by the observer.
4. A girl holding a ball of diameter 30 cm stands 1 m in front of a large flat mirror. Where and how large
is the image of the ball?
5. A boy walks towards a plane mirror with a speed of 0.5 m/s. Does the boy‟s image appear to move
towards or away from him? At what speed does the image move?
6. Is the image formed by a periscope upright or inverted?
7 A photographer wishes to take picture without being noticed. He attaches two plane mirrors to his camera.
Which arrangement of mirrors will allow the photographer to take pictures of someone behind the camera?
O – point of incidence
NN‟ – normal
(line) AO –
incident ray OB
– refracted ray
i – angle of incidence
r – angle of refraction
Some of examples of effects of refraction in everyday life
1) A stick appears bent or broken at the interface when partly immersed in water.
1) A ray moving from a less (optically) dense medium to a more (optically) medium ( e.g. air to glass)
will bend towards the normal.
2) A ray moving from a more dense medium to a less dense medium will bend away from the normal.
• Place a glass block above a plain sheet of paper and trace its outline.
• Direct a thin ray of light from the ray box towards the glass block.
• Trace the incident and emergent rays onto the plain paper.
• Remove the glass block and trace the refracted ray by joining the incident ray to the emergent ray
where they enter and leave the glass block.
c) glass prism
PROCEDURE:
• Place the glass block on the sheet of plain paper and draw its outline. Remove the glass block.
• Draw a normal at point O.
• Using a protractor draw a line AO such that the angle AON (i = angle of incidence) = 30° Place two
pins P1 and P2 on the line AO.
• Replace the glass block onto the outline and view images of the pins P1 and P2 from the side BC. Then
place two others pins P3 and P4 such that they are in line with images of P1 and P2.
• Remove the glass block and join the pins P3 and P4 to meet the line BC at point D.
• Join O and D to make line OD and measure the angle MOD (r = angle of refraction).
• Calculate sini and sinr.
• Repeat the experiment for values of i = 40°, 50°, 60° and 70°.
• Plot a graph of sini against sinr and determine the refractive index of the glass by finding the gradient
of the graph line.
11.2 REFRACTIVE INDEX (n) AND SNELL‟S LAW
Experiments show that:
- when the angle of incidence i increases so does the angle of refraction r but the two are not directly
proportional to each other.
- the graph of sini against sinr is a straight line passing through the origin indicating that for any light ray
passing from one medium to another, the sine of angle of incidence is proportional to sine of angle of refraction.
i.e. sini α sinr
which follows that:
sini/sinr = a constant
sini/sinr = n
-----------------------------> Snell‟s Law
Where n is proportionality constant called the refractive index of the second medium with respect to the first
medium (or specific boundary between two media but when the first medium is air it is just called refractive
index of the second medium). The refractive index of a boundary can be simply defined as the ratio of the sine of
the angle of incidence to the sine of the angle of refraction for any ray that it refracts. It indicates the extent to
which the second medium will bend the light. In the graph of sini against sinr, refractive index is represented by
the gradient of the graph.
Snell‟s law states that:
“The ratio of the sine of angle of incidence to the sine of angle of refraction for a given pair of
media is a constant”
*NB: Refractive index can also de defined as the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to the speed of light in a
medium.
n = speed of light in a vacuum/speed of light in a medium
3.3 LAWS OF REFRACTION
1. The incident ray, refracted ray and the normal all lie in the same plane
2. Snell‟s law: the ratio of sine of angle of incidence to the sine of angle of refraction for a given pair of
media is a constant.
11.4 APPARENT AND REAL DEPTH
When light moves from water to air, it will bend away from the normal. Due to the refraction of light, an object
at the bottom of the pool of clean water (or just the bottom of the pool) will appear closer to the surface, i.e. the
light rays from the object will appear to be coming from a point much closer to the surface. The depth which the
object appears to be is called the APPARENT DEPTH while the actual depth of the pool is called the REAL
DEPTH.
The ratio of the real depth to the apparent depth is equal to the refractive index n of water
Sinic = 1/n
A right angled glass can be used as shown in (a) above to turn light thru 180° in a rear reflectors in bicycles or
cars as well as in cats eyes (roadside reflectors).
Two right angled prisms can be used to turn light through 90° in a periscope.
OPTICAL FIBRES
These are thin, flexible rods of glass (or transparent plastic). When light ray is shone into the fibre it bounces
from one edge (side) of the optical fibre to the other by total internal reflection. Light can be transported over
large distance with very little loss of light intensity.
a) Telecommunications:
Nowadays, telephone signals (messages) can be transmitted from one telephone to another by sending light
signals through optical fibres instead of using electricity carried through copper cables. Telephone systems that
use optical fibres instead cables are more efficient and much faster.
b) Endoscope
Doctors can see inside patients‟ bodies using optical fibres in an instrument called an endoscope. A very small
camera is attached to one end of an optical fibre. This end is pushed down the throat and into the stomach. The
other end is attached to a television near to the patient. The doctor can see pictures of the inside of the stomach
on the television screen.
MIRAGE
It is an optical illusion which results when air near ground or road surface is much warmer than the one high up.
It is caused by the progressive refraction of the light ray from sky as it passes through different layers of air.
Near the road surface, the light ray will meet the warmer air at an angle greater than the critical angle and suffers
total internal reflection. The reflection of light produces an image of the sky which will appear as pool of water
on the road to an observer driving along the road.
11.6 QUESTIONS
1) A ray of light travels from air into water at an angle of incidence of 60°. Calculate the angle of
refraction, given that the refractive index of water is 1.33.
2) A light ray travelling through air strikes water at an angle of 40° to the surface. Given that the
refractive index for water is 1.33, find a) the angle of refraction (b) the angle of deviation.
3) Use a diagram to explain why a drinking straw appears bent when partially immersed in a glass of
water.
4) A pond of water of water (n = 1.33) is 2 m deep. What is the apparent depth of the pond when a person
looks vertically downwards from above?
5) State two necessary conditions for light to be totally internally reflected.
6) If the refractive index of water is 1.33, how deep will a pond really be if it appears to be 6 m when
looking vertically downwards?
7) Draw a ray diagram to show how a right-angled prism can be used to turn a light ray through:
(a) 90° (b) 180°
8) Draw a diagram to show how two right-angled prisms can be used, in place of two mirrors, in a
periscope. Show the path of the light rays as accurately as you can.
9) What advantages do optical fibre cables have over copper cables in communication systems?
10) The diagram shows rays of light in semi-circular glass block.
a) Explain why the ray entering the glass at A is not bent
12) Copy the diagrams below and complete the paths of the rays.
13). A ray of light is directed at a rectangular glass block (see Fig. 13.0 below). Copy the diagram and complete
it by drawing the ray which emerges at C. Name what is happening at A and at B.
14 The diagram shows a long block of glass over an object O. Light from O reaches the top surface of the glass
at X, Y and Z.
12.0 LENSES
12.1 Introduction
Lenses are usually used in various optical instruments to produce images. A lens would bend or refract a light
ray to produce an image. They often have spherical surfaces. There are two types of lenses, namely
i) Convex/converging lens
ii) Concave/diverging lens
A converging lens is thicker at the middle and thinner at the edges and it bends light inwards.
On the other hand a concave is thinner at the middle and thicker at the edges and it spread out light.
When a parallel beam of light passes through a convex lens the rays bend inwards and converge or meet at a
point known as a FOCUS. When the rays pass through a concave lens and are parallel to its axis, they are bend
outwards (spread out or diverge). The point from which the rays appear to diverge it is the principal focus of the
lens.
*NB:- for a convex lens the rays actually converge at the principal focus so it is said to be real.
DEFINING TERMS
A simple method of determining the focal length of a convex length is by focusing the image of an object which
is far away from the lens on a wall/screen. The distance from the lens to the screen on which the image is
formed is approximately the focal length of the lens.
PLANE MIRROR METHOD
A more accurate method involves the use of a plane mirror which reflects rays from an illuminated object (cross-
wire) in front of the lens. The lens position is adjusted until a real image is formed next to the object.
i) Ray I: A ray parallel to the principal axis is refracted through the principal axis after leaving
the lens. ii) Ray II: A ray through a principal focus F, when it leaves the lens , it is refracted parallel to
the principal axis. iii) Ray III: A ray through the optical centre passes straight through the lens
undeviated (not refracted).
EXAMPLES
Case I: Object beyond 2F‟
Image is:- real, inverted, same size as the object and at 2F.
Image is at infinity.
Image is:- virtual, enlarged, erect (upright) and behind the object
The Lens:- focuses the image of the object on a light sensitive photographic film placed at the back of
the camera. The lens is moved in or out to make focusing adjustment.
The Shutter:- opens and shuts quickly to let a small amount of light into the camera.
The film: is kept in darkness until the shutter opens. It is coated with light sensitive chemicals which
are changed by different shades and colours in the image. When the film is processed, the changes are
fixed and a negative is developed. The negative is later used to print the photographs.
The diaphragm:- is a set of sliding plates between the lens and the film. It controls the aperture
(diameter) of the hole through which light passes. In bright scenes, a narrow aperture is used but in
dark a wider aperture is necessary.
*NB: i) For closer object, the lens must be moved further away from the film.
ii) For very distant object, the film needs to be at F.
3) SLIDE PROJECTOR
A slide projector uses a convex lens to form a large, inverted, real image on the screen. The object is a brightly
lit piece of transparency (slide) with a picture/information on it.
The projection lens: forms the image on the screen. To get a large image the lens has to be a long way
from the screen. The focusing adjustments are made by moving the lens backward and forward in its
holder.
The transparency or slide: must be upside down to get an upright picture (image) on the screen. The
slide must be positioned just outside the principal focus F of the lens in order to obtain an enlarged
image on the screen.
The condenser lens system: a special convex lenses arrangement which helps to concentrates the light
on the slide so that it is very bright and evenly lit.
The lamp: produces light that illuminates the object (slide) in order to produce a bright/sharp image on
the screen.
Concave mirror: reflects light to the condenser lens system.
4) PHOTOGRAPHIC ENLARGER
-Uses the same principles as the slide projector. The only difference is that with the photographic enlarger the
screen is a film which is coated with light sensitive chemicals e.g. silver salts.
12.4 LENS EQUATION
For any diagram there is a relationship between image distance, the object distance and the focal length of the
lens and is given by:-
12.6 QUESTIONS
1. Fig. 1.0 shows three parallel rays of light reaching the front surface of a converging lens. Copy the diagram
and continue the rays to show what happens to them as they pass through the lens and into the air on the
other side.
2. Where must the object be placed for the image formed by a convex lens to be
3. A lens has a focal length of 4 cm. An object 2 cm high is placed 8 cm from the centre of the lens.
Where is the image formed? Describe the image: is it real or virtual, upside-down or upright, enlarged,
same size or smaller? What happens to the size and position of the image if the object is moved further
away from the lens?
4. The diagram shows an object O in front of a converging lens. The points marked F are focal
points of the lens.
a) Draw two rays from the top of the object in order to locate the position of the image.
b) The image is upright. State two other characteristics of the image.
5. Lenses are used in many optical devices. Copy and complete the table below about the images
formed by some optical devices.
Optical device Nature of image Size of image Position of image
Projector Magnified
Magnifying glass Behind the object
camera Real
6. An object is placed closer to a converging lens than its principal focus. The figure shows an
incomplete ray diagram for the formation of the image.
Copy and complete the ray diagram and draw the image formed.
7. The diagram shows a converging lens forming a real image of an illuminated object. State two
things that happen to the image when the object is moved towards F.
8. a) An object 1 cm high is placed 3 cm from a thin converging lens with a focal length of 5 cm.
Draw a ray diagram to find the position of the image.
b) What is meant by magnification? How is the magnification in (a) above?
c) Name one application of a converging lens used in this way.
Electromagnetic waves have some similar characteristics but have different wavelengths and frequencies. They
are produced by the movement of electrons in the materials. An E.M wave is a wave consists of electric and
magnetic field (force) vibrations/oscillations which travel perpendicular to each other as well as the direction of
the wave travel.
All E.M waves do not need medium to travel through. They can all travel through a vacuum.
They all travel at the same speed in space which is the speed of light in a vacuum (c = 3 x 10 8 m/s)
They are all progressive transverse waves. Therefore they exhibit interference, diffraction, reflection
and polarization.
They obey the wave equation
C= fλ
They can carry energy from one place to another and can be absorbed by matter and cause heating and
other effects.
*NB: The space occupied by each type of wave in the E.M spectrum is called a BAND.
13.3 COMPONENTS OF E.M SPECTRUM (E.M WAVES)
a) GAMMA RAYS
Source: nuclei of radioactive elements (e.g. cobalt-60) and cosmic rays
Wavelength: 10-12 m
Detectors: photographic film, cloud chamber, Geiger Muller tube
Properties: - very penetrating
-transmit more energy than x-rays
- ionize gases
Uses: -used in radiotherapy to treat cancer cells and destroy tumours inside the body
-used to find flaws in metals
-used to sterilize medical equipment & dressings
- used to irradiate food to kill germs in them
Sideeffects: - harmful to humans in excess; damage body cells(cause mutation and cancer) and can cause
sterility.
b) X-RAYS
Source: produced when high energy electrons are fired at a metal in x-ray tube.
Wavelength: 10-10 m
c) ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
Sources: - sun (U.V is the sun rays that gives suntan)
-Mercury vapour lamps – created by passing the current through mercury vapour in fluorescent
tubes
Wavelength: 10-8 m
e) INFRARED
Sources: sun, warm and hot objects (e.g. heters, grills, etc.), remote controllers
Wavelength: 10-4 m
Detectors: special photographic film, phototransistor, sensitive thermometer, thermopile
Properties: All objects give out infrared radiation; the hotter the object is the more radiation it gives out.
-causes heating when absorbed by matter
f) RADIO WAVES
Sources: microwave oven (microwaves)
-Tv and radio transmitters using electronic circuits and aerials
Wavelength: 1 cm – 1 km
Detectors: aerials connected to radio and tv sets, mobile (cellular) phones, satellite dishes, radar
Properties: -They have the longest wavelengths and lowest frequencies.
Uses:
• Microwaves: are high frequency radio waves (but have shortest wavelength amongst radio waves).
They are used in RADAR (Radio Detecting And Ranging) to find the position of aeroplanes.
Microwaves are also used for cooking- water particles in food absorb the energy carried by
microwaves.
• UHF (Ultra High Frequency) and VHF (Very High Frequency) waves
UHF- used in tv transmissions
VHF- used in local radio transmissions
Short, Medium and long radio waves:
Medium and long waves are used to transmit over long distances because their wavelengths allow them
to diffract around obstacles such as buildings, hills, etc.
Communication satellites above Earth receive signals carried by high frequency short
waves. These signals are amplified and re-transmitted to other parts of the world. 13.4
QUESTIONS
1) This is a list of types of waves:
gamma infrared microwaves radio ultraviolet visible x-rays choose
from the list the type of wave that best fits each of these descriptions.
a) stimulates the sensitive cells at the back of a human eye.
b) necessary for a suntan.
c) used for rapid cooking in an oven.
d) used to take a phograph of the bones in a broken arm.
e) emitted by a video remote control unit.
2) Gamma rays are part of electromagnetic spectrum. Gamma rays are useful to us but can also be very
dangerous.
a) Explain how the properties of gamma rays make them useful to us.
b) Explain why gamma rays can cause damage to people.
c) Give one difference between microwaves and gamma rays.
d) Microwaves travel at 300 000 000 m/s. what speed do gamma rays travel at?
3) Write down the parts of the electromagnetic spectrum in order of increasing wavelength.
4) The spectrum of electromagnetic waves can be divided into several regions, in order of increasing
frequency, the diagram below shows this. Name the regions represented by the letters A and B. What
common properties are shared by the waves from each region?
14.0 SOUND
14.1 INTRODUCTION
Sound is produced by vibrating objects such as drums, turning forks, loudspeakers, ticking clock, etc. As the
object vibrates back and forth, the particles around it are compressed (squashed) and rarefacted (stretched). This
compression-rarefaction process continually repeats itself while the vibration continues. The series of
compressions and rarefactions form a sound wave.
In a compression, particles are squashed together and hence this is a region of high pressure whilst in a
rarefaction particles are further apart, stretched over relatively larger space and therefore this is a low pressure
region.
*A sound wave can also be defined as a form of radiation consists of series of pressure variations propagating
through a medium
Sound waves are longitudinal i.e. the vibrations of the particles are parallel to the direction of the wave travel.
Definition;
a) Wavelength (λ) of a sound wave:- the distance between two successive compressions or rarefactions.
b) Speed (v) of a sound wave is the distance travelled by the wave in one second.
c) Frequency (f) of a sound wave:- number of complete waves produced in a second or number of complete
oscillations (vibrations) made by the source in one second.
To find the speed of the sound, divide the total distance travelled by the time taken recorded by the stopwatch
v = 2s/t
The sound of the bell fades when the air is removed from the jar. If the jar is completely evacuated, no sound is
heard even when the hammer continues to hit the gong. The sound returns when air is let back into the jar.
14.3 TYPES OF SOUND WAVES
Different sounds have different frequencies.
Infrasonic waves | audible sound waves | ultrasonic waves/ultrasound
20 Hz 20 kHz
i) Infrasonic waves(infrasound):- have frequencies below 20 Hz e.g. earthquake/seismic waves and can
be detected by dogs.
ii) Audible sound (waves) – sound that can be detected by human ears. Their frequency ranges from 20 Hz
to 20 kHz.
iii) Ultrasonic waves (ultrasounds) - have frequencies higher than 20 000 Hz (20 kHz). They can be
detected by bats. A bat emits and receives ultrasonic waves and this helps them to navigate at night and judge
the distance of obstacles ahead.
d) Used to detect flaws in metals using the idea of echo-sounding. A pulse of ultrasound is sent through the
metal. If there is a flaw (tiny gap) in the metal, two pulses are reflected back to the detector; one from the
flaw and the other from the far end of the metal.
Sound A has a higher pitch than sound B because has higher frequency. With a higher frequency more waves are
produced and the waves are closer together.
NOTE: i) A high-pitched sound also has a short wavelength while a low-pitched sound has a longer wavelength.
ii) Musical notes are said to be octave apart if the frequency of one is twice that of the other. b)
Loudness
The loudness of a sound depends on the amplitude of the sound wave. Quiet sounds (notes) have small
amplitude, loud sounds have larger amplitude. The loudness of sound is measured in decibels (dB).
Sound B is louder than sound A because the wave has a larger amplitude. *The
greater the amplitude, the louder the sound.
c) Timbre
The timbre of a sound describes the purity or quality of sound. Pure note (e.g. one emitted by a turning fork) has
only one frequency but other notes consist of a main or fundamental frequency with others, called overtones
(which are usually weaker and with frequencies which are exact multiples of the fundamental frequency). The
number and strength of the overtones decides the quality of a note.
Sound B is a pure note from a turning fork. Sound A is produced from a piano. The two sounds have almost the
same pitch (main frequency) and loudness but differ in quality because sound A is actually a combination of
several different sounds with slightly different frequencies.
Note:
The frequency (pitch) of a note produced by a vibrating material (e.g. string) depends on:
i) length of the material; short strings produce high notes and therefore halving the length doubles the
frequency ii) tension in material: tight wires produce high notes iii) mass per unit length; thin strings give
high notes.
14.5 ECHO AND REVERBERATIONS
14.5.1 ECHO
Sound is reflected when it meets some kind of obstruction such as a wall, high cliff or the bottom of an ocean.
The reflected sound (wave) is called an echo. In ships, echo can be used to find how deep the ocean is or to
detect the shoals of fish.
A pulse of sound is transmitted to the sea bed and is reflected back to the boat. The time interval between
transmitting and receiving the pulse is measured. Then the depth of the sea is calculated using the total distance
travelled by the pulse which is twice distance to the obstruction.
Example:
A sound pulse is transmitted from the boat, and 10 s later an echo is received. How deep is the ocean? (The
speed of sound in water is 1500 m/s).
Data: v = 1500 m/s, t = 10 s, d = depth of sea = ?, total distance travelled by pulse = 2d
v = 2d/t
d = (v x t)/2
= (1500 x 10)/2
= 7500 m
14.5.2 Reverberations
When playing a musical instrument, e.g. piano, in an enclosed area (e.g. inside a hall), some of the sound of the
piano will be reflected off the walls of the hall. You will hear the direct sound first, then early reflections and
then multiple reflections all in a very short time and this will cause the sound to die off gradually over some
time. This effect is called reverberation. A reverberation can also be obtained when a sound is reflected from a
surface which is nearer than 15 m, here the echo joins the original sound and then the sound seems to be
elongated or prolonged.
The shape and size of the hall will affect the amount of reverberations reaching the listener. These factors are
called the acoustics of the hall. Rooms with good acoustics are very important when recording music or when
designing conference centres. Optimum reverberations are desirable but too much causes confusion.
14.6 NOISE POLLUTION
Unpleasant sound which may be even harmful to people is called noise. Sound is unpleasant if it is very loud or
has a very high frequency. Noise can damage the ears, cause loss of concentration and if very loud result in
sickness and temporary deafness.
Ways of reducing unwanted noise (noise pollution)
• Designing quieter engines and better exhaust systems.
• Using sound-insulating materials such as carpets, curtains and double-glazed windows in our houses
• Tractor drivers, factory workers and other people regularly exposed to noise often have to wear ear
protectors.
• Where practical keep as much greater distance away from the source of the noise as possible.
14.7 PROBLEMS
Q1. A ship searching for fish emits sound waves which are reflected from the sea bed. If the speed of sound in
is known and the time that elapses before the echo is heard is measured, it is possible to calculate how deep
the water is at that point.
a) What will the operator hear if a shoal of fish swims under the ship? How could the operator very roughly
assess how deep the shoal is?
b) Suggest one way in which the detector might be receiving a false signal (i.e. there are no fish below).
c) If sound waves travel through water at 1500 m/s,
i) how deep is the sea-bed if echo is heard after 1 s? ii) how quickly is
an echo heard if a shoal of fish swims 250 below the ship?
Q2. A microphone is connected to an oscilloscope (CRO). When three different sounds A, B and C are made in
front of the microphone, these are the waveforms seen on the screen.
Write down two differences in the way they sound. Explain your answers as fully as you can.
Q4. A man standing on a beach 340 m from a tall cliff hears his echo after 2 s.
a) What is an echo?
b) Explain how echoes can be used to discover the depth of water under boat.
c) Using the information above calculate the speed of sound in air
d) What are ultrasonic waves?
e) Give at least two uses of ultrasonic waves.
Q5. Sound X: frequency 10 000 Hz.
Sound Y: frequency 30 000 Hz.
Upper limit of human hearing: 20 000 Hz.
a) (i). What is the upper limit of human hearing in kHz?] (ii). Which of the
above sounds is an example of ultrasound?
b) Ultrasound can travel through some human tissues and can be reflected by
different layers in the body. (i). Describe one example of how ultrasound is used in
hospitals.
(ii). For producing medical images, why does doctors prefer to use ultrasound if they can, rather than X-
rays?
(iii). Describe one example of the industrial use of ultrasound.
Q6. (a) Draw a diagram of a wave. Label both its amplitude and its wavelength.
(b) Your diagram represents a sound wave. What would you hear if; i.
the wavelength got shorter? ii. the amplitude got larger?
Q7. The diagram below shows a travelling sound wave.
a) Draw a second sound wave which is the same loudness as the first but a higher frequency.
b) Draw a third wave which has the same pitch as the first but represents a quieter sound.
c) The sound wave in the above diagram was created in 1/10 s. What is the frequency of this sound?
15.0 MAGNETISM
Magnet is an object that attracts certain objects which are made from magnetic materials.
Magnetic materials: are materials attracted by a magnet e.g. iron, cobalt, nickel and alloys such as steel, alnico
and alcomax. These magnetic alloys usually contain iron, cobalt, nickel and aluminium. These materials
(magnetic materials) are also called ferromagnets.
Non-magnetic materials: substances that cannot be attracted by a magnet. These include copper, brass, zinc, tin
and non metals (e.g wood, glass, etc)
- the end where stroking ends will have an opposite polarity to the stroking
pole ( and the end where stroking started will have the same polarity as the
stroking pole).
* if the same the same poles are used, similar poles will be formed at the ends of the
magnetic material and this will not be a proper magnet.
2) Electrical method: The industrial way of making magnets is by making use of the magnetic field created
when current flows through a conductor. The magnetic material is placed inside a solenoid (a long coil of
insulated copper wire) through which D.C (direct current) is passed. The current is switched on and off,
when the material is removed it would be found to be magnetized. (The coil should be placed in the N-S
direction).
To determine the polarity, the right hand grip rule is used. The fingers are placed such that they follow the
direction of current around the coil and thumb will point to the North pole.
ii) Magnets can be demagnetized by heating them strongly and then leave them to cool placed in the E-W
direction.
iii) can also be demagnetized by hammering (whilst lied in the E-W direction)
15.5 MAGNETIC SATURATION
Magnetic materials such as iron and steel have individual atoms which act like atomic magnets or magnetic
dipoles. The neighbouring atoms set themselves with their magnetic axis parallel. The grouping of atomic
magnets or atomic dipoles with parallel axes is called magnetic domain.
In an unmagnetised material, the magnetic domains will point in different directions and hence the material as a
whole will show no polarity. When a magnetic material is magnetized, the domains are re-aligned such that most
of them have their axes pointing in the same direction. There is a maximum level of the magnetization which is
called magnetic saturation. This happens when the atomic dipoles in all magnetic domains have been re-aligned
and their magnetic axes are parallel and pointing in the same direction.
i) iron filings:- place a sheet of paper over the magnet. Sprinkle iron filings onto the paper and tap the paper a
bit. The iron fillings turns around in the direction of the magnetic lines of force. They form a pattern showing
magnetic field lines around the magnet.
ii) plotting compass: the bar magnet is placed on top of a sheet of paper. Place the plotting compass at the
end of the bar magnet. When the compass has settled mark on the paper the ends of the needles of the
compass. Move the compass to a new position so that its other end is over the last mark previously made.
Mark another dot where the needle is pointing. Repeat the procedure until the compass reaches the other end
of the magnet (expt. Pg 223 GCSE). Join the dots to form a single line from one end of the magnet to the
other.
PATTERNS OF ELECTRIC FIELD
Field lines always move from north to south. They never cross each other. And where the lines are closer
together shows areas with stronger magnetism (magnetic force).
There is a neutral point X between the poles where the field cancel out each other.
15.7 MAGNETIC PROPERTIES OF STEEL AND IRON
Both iron and steel can be induced to form magnets.
EXPERIMENT 1
Each pin or clip magnetises the one below it by induction and unlike poles so formed will attract. When the
chain of iron nails is removed from the magnet, it will collapse. When the chain of the steel paper clips is
removed from the magnet, the clips will remain attached to each other. These indicate that magnetism induced in
iron is temporary while magnetism induced in steel is permanent
Conclusion: steel is a hard magnetic material i.e. it is very hard to magnetize steel but once magnetized steel
will not lose its magnetism easily.
Iron is a soft magnetic material i.e. iron can be magnetized easily but it will lose its magnetism easily.
EXPERIMENT 2
Attach a strip of soft iron and a strip of steel to the N pole of a magnet.
Dip the free ends of the strips in iron filings
More filings stick to the soft iron. So the induced magnetism in the iron is slightly greater. When the strips are
detached from the magnet, most of the filings fall from the soft iron but few fall from the steel. This shows that
the induced magnetism in soft iron is temporary but magnetism induced in steel is permanent. 15.8 USES OF
MAGNETS
1). Permanent magnets
They are used in construction of electric motors, bicycle dynamos, generators, loudspeakers, electricity meters,
microphones and can also be used as door catches.
2). ELECTROMAGNET
This is a temporary magnet made by winding a coil of wire around a soft iron.
The soft iron will only be magnetized when current flows through the coil. When there is no current flowing, the
soft iron will lose its magnetism. Steel is not suitable to be used as a core since it is a hard magnetic material.
With steel the electromagnet will keep its magnetism even when the current is switched off.
*NOTE:
1. Without the iron core, an electromagnet would be much weaker. The core concentrates the magnetic
field into a small volume of space and hence producing a stronger electromagnet.
2. The strength of the electromagnet can be increased by:
• Increasing the current
• Increasing the turns in the coil
• Using an U-shaped core so that the poles of the electromagnet would be close to each other.
Uses of Electromagnet
1. Large electromagnets are used for lifting heavy magnetic materials in scrap-yards. A crane moves the
material to its new place and when the current is turned off, the material is released from the
electromagnet.
2. Electric bell
It consists of an electromagnet that repeatedly switches itself on and off very quickly.
When the press-button switch is pressed, the current flows through the electromagnet, which pulls the
springy metal together with the hammer so that it hits the gong and the sound is made. This movement, at the
same time, separates the contacts and switches off the circuit. The hammer goes back, the contacts close again,
the current flows once more and the electromagnet pulls the hammer across again, this goes on and produces
continuous sound until the circuit is switched off.
When the switch S in the input circuit is closed, the current flows through the electromagnet. This pulls one end
of the iron armature towards electromagnet and cause the other end to push and close the contacts at C and
completing the output circuit. As a result, a current flows through the motor.
4). Reed switch
When the current moves through the coil, the magnetic field created would magnetize the reeds (thin strips
inside the glass tube). The current flows such that the ends of the two reeds develop opposite poles and then
the reeds will attract each other thereby completing the circuit connected to their other ends (AB). The reeds
separate once they the current in the coil is turned off.
Reeds switches are also operated by permanent magnets.
In the above diagram, a burglar alarm is activated by a reed switch. When the door is closed the magnetic
fields from the two bar magnets cancel out each and the reed switch remains open. But once the door is
opened with the switch closed, the reeds would be magnetized by the magnet in the door frame. The ends of
the reeds will be induced with opposite ends, they will attract, and completing the circuit and this will
causes the alarm bell to ring.
When someone speaks into the microphone (mouthpiece) on the other end of the line a varying electric
current is set up having the same frequency as the sound waves. Similar current will be fed to the
earpiece on the other end, when this varying current passes through the coil in the earpiece, the
magnetic force on the diaphragm also varies. Therefore the diaphragm (made of magnetic substance)
moves to and fro in step with the current. This sets the air nearby into vibration and sound waves are
set up.
Iron is said to be more permeable to magnetic field than air is. Therefore magnetic field lines appear to be drawn
into the iron and concentrated through it and none through the air inside the iron. Then anything inside the iron
ring would be shielded or screened from magnetic field. This effect is known as magnetic screening or shielding.
Magnetic shielding is put to practical use when used to protect delicate measuring instruments which could be
affected by magnetic fields by enclosing them in thick-walled soft-iron boxes.
15.10 QUESTIONS
1. A student has a piece of metal that he thinks is a magnet. He holds it near another magnet and it is
attracted. The student says this proves that his metal is a magnet. Explain why the student is wrong.
2. A, B, C and D are small blocks of different materials. The table below shows what happens when two
of the blocks are placed near one another.
Use one of the phrases below to complete the sentences that follow. Each word may be used once,
more than once or not at all.
a) Block A is ......................
b) Block B is .......................
c) Block C is ......................
d) Block D is ......................
3. What is the diference between a magnetically hard material and a magnetically soft material? Give an
example of each.
4. a) What is a magnetic material? Give three examples of magnetic materials.
b) Name three non-magnetic metals.
5. Study the magnets in the diagram below. What would happen in each case?
c). Two magnets, like the magnet shown above, were used to get the pattern of the lines
shown below.
Describe what you would do with the two magnets so that you got this pattern.
a) The solenoid in the diagram above behaves like bar magnet. Mark its polarity.
b) An iron rod is placed in the solenoid. What happens to it when the current is
i) Switched on ii)
Switched off
c) How would your answers in (i) and (ii) above change if the rod were made of steel?
d) What is purpose of the core in the electromagnet?
e) Give one use of an electromagnet.
12. The figure below shows a circuit that includes an electrical relay, used to switch on a motor
M.
16.0 ELECTRICITY
*Static electricity/electrostatics – charges at rest/ not moving.
Electrostatic charges can be induced and easily detected in insulators (non-metals) because these kinds of
materials do not allow charges to flow through them. Metals are generally good conductors so it is difficult to
induce electrostatic charges in them.
*Current electricity – moving/flowing charges (electrons)
16.1 STATIC ELECTRICITY
All materials are made out of molecules which themselves are groups of atoms. The atoms contain electrically
charged particles being protons and electrons. Normally an object is electrically neutral since it has an equal
number of positive and negative charges. The two charges can be separated by rubbing objects together.
16.1.1 Electrostatic charging by friction: illustration
The force of friction between two objects can cause electrons to be transferred from one object to the other. One
object will gain extra electrons and become negatively charged. And the other one will become positively since
it would have lost some electrons and remained with excess positive charges.
A B
A polythene strip will be negatively charged and the cloth will be positively charged
B. cellolose acetate strip will be positively charged and the cloth will be negatively charged.
Explanation: when polythene is rubbed, electrons from the cloth are transferred to the polythene making the
polythene negatively charged and the cloth will be positive because there will be a deficit of electrons.
On the other hand when perspex (cellulose acetate) is rubbed with the cloth it loses some electrons to the cloth
and remains short of electrons and with more unbalanced protons and as a result the Perspex rod becomes
positively charged and the cloth negatively charged because it would have some extra electrons (negative
charges).
There are two types of charges, namely positive(+) and negative (-).
Now bring a piece of rubbed polythene close to the hanging cellulose acetate strip.
A charge can be build up on an uncharged object by holding a charged object close to it as shown below.
These charges that would appear on an uncharged object due to a charged object nearby are called induced
charges.
A metal sphere is being charged by induction and ends up with an opposite charge to that on the rod. Note
the two never actually touched.
16.1.4 GOLD-LEAF ELECTROSCOPE
An instrument used for detecting the presence of an electric charge. It consists of a metal rod on top of
which there is a metal cap (plate). The rod is insulated from the case. A thin gold leaf is attached to the
bottom of the rod.
When a positively charged rod is brought near the top plate, the leaf rises. This so because the positively charged
rod attracts free electrons in the brass rod (stem) upwards so that the plate has an excess of negative charges.
The lower rod and the leaf are left with an excess of positive charges. The leaf diverges from the stem because
they are both positively charged. On removal of the charged, the leaf falls as the extra electrons in the top plate
move back down the stem.
The leaf also rises if a negatively charged rod is brought near the top plate. This time, the rise of the leaf occurs
because free electrons in the top plate are pushed downwards (repelled) by the negatively charged rod.
2. Charging an electroscope
a. Charging by contact
An electroscope can be charged by rubbing (pressing) a charged insulator firmly across the edge of the
top plate. The charge on the rod is shared with the electroscope.
b. Charging by induction
A positively charged rod is brought near the top plate. This attracts electrons upwards, leaving a
positive charge on the leaf and the stem. When the top plate is touched with a finger, the electrons on
the plate remain because they are held there by the attraction of the positively rod. The electrons flow
in from Earth to replace the missing electrons on the leaf. The charged on the leaf is neutralised. The
leaf collapses. The finger is removed, followed by the rod. This leaves a net negative. The leaf rises as
the finger is removed.
*an electroscope can be discharged by touching it with a finger or connecting it to the earth. This earths
the electroscope. Earthing is a process of sharing charges with the Earth.
The SI unit of electric charge is a coulomb. A charge of one coulomb is the charge on 6 x 10 18 electrons
1 C = 6 x 1018 electrons
And this means that the charge on one electron is 1.6 x 10 -19 C.
The symbol for electric charge is Q and the symbol for the coulomb is C.
PROBLEMS.
In a chemical reaction, a copper atom loses two electrons to become a copper ion. a) calculate the charge on this
ion.
16.1.6 DISCHARGING
A charge can be build up on an object through friction. The charge can be discharged to the Earth by contact
with a conductor. The charge stored can also be released to the nearest object with a neutral charge or by
bringing discharging object with opposite charge.
e.g. when sliding out of a car, friction between the seat and clothes causes a charge on the person. When the
person touches the car body the charge passes from his body to the car, giving a slight shock.
*NB: an isolated charged insulator will slowly become discharged. The charge on the insulator is neutralized by
ions (charged particles) in the air.
The Van de Graaff generator produces a large and continuous supply of electric charge. In this machine a rubber
belt rubs against a plastic roller and becomes charged. The charge is carried on the moving belt up to the metal
dome, where it is collected. A large quantity of charge therefore builds up on the dome.
*woollen threads attached to the dome will repel each other strongly after the generator has been running for a
while.
*when a metal sphere, connected to Earth with lead, is brought near the metal dome, electric sparks are
produced. This occurs as charges from the dome pass through the air to sphere and then to the earth. This
discharges the dome. LIGHTNING
Friction between particles rubbing against each other in a large cloud can build up a large charge on the cloud.
When the charge becomes very large it may discharge through the air to the earth or to the neighbouring clouds
and this would be in a form of flash of lightning, therefore lightning is an electric discharge between the Earth
and a highly charged clouds. Lightning conductors
A lightning conductor is a thick copper strip fixed to the outer wall of a building or a tall pole near the building.
The top of the rod ends are sharp spikes. At the bottom of the strip there is a copper plate buried in the ground.
Thunderclouds contain a large quantity of negative charge on their underside and positive charge on their tops.
When pass over a building it induces a build-up of opposite charge (positive charge) on the roof. If the electric
field (voltage) between the opposite charges is strong enough, there may be a spark of lightning as the charges
flow through the air towards each other.
With a lightning conductor, the sharp spikes at the top reduce the chance of a lightning strike. By effect of action
at points, the conductor let charges on the building leak away before a spark can occur and some of the charges
flow even up to the clouds and cancel out some of the negative charge on the clouds, making it less likely that
the lightning will strike. However, if a flash does occur it is less violent and the conductor gives it (negative
charge) an easy path to the ground.
a) Separation of conductors
b) Earthing
While the rod is still kept at its position, the sphere is earthed by touching with hand -
electrons flow out to earth.
Charges are evenly distributed around the sphere when the rod and the earth (hand) are removed.
Examples:- plastics (e.g. PVC, polythene, Perspex, etc.), glass, rubber, dry air, sulphur and oil.
Conductors – metals are good conductors of electricity since they have free electrons in their outermost shells. A
conductor cannot be charged as the charge will flow easily through it.
Examples:- most metals (e.g. silver, copper, aluminium), carbon, graphite, acid solutions, salt solutions
Semi-conductors:- are in-between materials. They are poor conductors when cold but much better conductors
when warm, e.g. silicon, germanium
Water, human body, earth and air are called poor conductors – they conduct very slowly
16.1.11 QUESTIONS
c) the negatively charged balloon is brought up to the surface of a ceiling. The balloon sticks to the ceiling.
Explain how and why this happens.
a) Which ends up with more electrons than normal, the comb or the hair?
b) Why does the hair become positively charged?
Q7. a) Give an example of where electrostatic charge might be a hazard.
b) How can the build-up of electrostatic charge be prevented?
Q8. In the diagram below, a charged rod is held close to a metal can. The can is on an insulated stand.
Q10. a). A girl rubs a Perspex ruler on her sleeve. He holds it near water flowing from a tap. The water moves
towards the ruler. Explain?
b). What difference would it make if the ruler were made of polythene?
Q11. Use words from the list below to complete the following sentences. You can use them mire than once.
attract(s) duster electrons insulators like negatively opposite positively protons
repel rod
A polythene rod is rubbed with a duster. ____________ leave the ____________ and move to the
______________. The polythene becomes ______________ charged and the duster ____________ charged.
Conductors allow ______________ to travel through them but __________ do not.
A positively charged object attracts tiny pieces of paper to it. It __________ electrons in the paper. This leaves
the surface of the paper _____________ charged. They stick together because ________ charges ___________.
Q12. Fig. 12.1 shows two positively charged conducting spheres mounted on rods made of a good electrical
insulator.
Fig. 13.1
The two small spheres are pulled apart, using their insulated handles, and then taken well away from the large
sphere, as shown in Fig. 13.2.
Fig. 13.2
a) The charge on the large sphere has been drawn in for you. On Fig. 13.1 and fig. 13.2 draw in the
charges, if any, on each of the smaller spheres.
b) Explain why energy is needed to separate the two small spheres.
Q14. An electrically charged sphere C brought near a small uncharged conducting sphere S suspended as
shown in Fig. 14.1. S is attracted towards C until it touches the surface of C and then repelled to the
position shown in Fig.14.2
a) i. Explain carefully why S is first attracted towards C. ii. Explain why S is repelled after touching the
surface.
b) On Fig. 141.2 mark and label each force acting on S.
c) When a Bunsen flame is passed beneath S, the sphere falls back towards C. Suggest why this happens?
16.2.1 ELECTRIC CURRENT: The amount of charge passing through a given point in a conductor per unit
time
OR
The rate of flow of charge in a circuit.
Current = charge/time
I = Q/t
Q = It
------------------------->Coulomb‟s law
e.m.f = W/Q
The SI unit of e.m.f is a volt (V). A battery with an e.m.f of 1 volt (1 V) gives 1 J of energy to a coulomb of
charge which it drives around a circuit.
1 V = joule/coulomb
1 V = J/C
USING A VOLTMETER TO MEASURE E.M.F
To measure the e.m.f of a cell or a battery of cells, connect a voltmeter in parallel with the cells without any
other components in the circuit. This kind of connection is known as open circuit. The red (+) terminal of the
voltmeter is connected to the +ve of the battery and the black (-) terminal of the voltmeter to the –ve terminal of
the battery.
V = W/Q or V = E/Q
In an electric circuit, chemical energy in the battery is converted into electrical energy in the electrons. Some of
this energy is used up in passing through the lamp. Therefore there is p.d across the lamp.
The p.d is measured with a voltmeter. The voltmeter is connected in parallel across the components of the circuit
where we want to measure the potential difference.
Voltmeters must not be connected in series with other components in a circuit or else it will change the current
through the circuit because they have very high resistance. On the other hand the ammeters, which are connected
within the circuit, must have very low resistance
16.2.4 RESISTANCE
- Is the measure of the ability of a conductor to oppose the flow of current/ electrons.
- Current can pass easily through components with a low resistance but it cannot flow easily through
components with a high resistance (very good conductors have almost no resistance and insulators have
extremely high resistance)
- All electrical components have a certain amount of resistance.
- Resistance (R) is measured in ohms (Ω), kilohms (kΩ), megaohms (MΩ)
FIXED RESISTORS
- Are special components (materials) designed to have a certain resistances. They are used to control the
amount of current in a circuit.
Resistors are colour coded to show their resistance. This consists of three or four coloured bands around the
resistor. The first three bands indicate the value of the resistance in ohms. Bands 1 and 2 are the digits of the
value, and band 3 represents the number of zeroes following the first two digits. The fourth band on the resistor
shows the tolerance of the stated value.
*NOTE:
• To decide which is the first, remember that the fourth band, if present, will either be gold or silver (or
on rare occasions pink)
• The following may help you to recall the colour codes and their values;
(Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Violet Gives Willingly) OR
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
(Black Birds Roaming On Your Garden Bring Very Great Woes)
VARIABLE RESISTORS
The resistance of a variable resistor is not fixed. It can be changed or set to different values. They are used in
circuits when the current through the circuit needs to be varied.
A rheostat is a variable resistor consists of a coiled length of resistance wire with either end attached to a
terminal. A third terminal is attached to a sliding contact which can be moved along the length of the coil. By
moving the sliding contact along the coil, the amount of wire through which the current passes can be changed
and hence the resistance changes.
MEASUREMENT OF RESISTANCE
The resistance of a conductor can be found using a voltmeter and an ammeter. A conductor of unknown
resistance is connected in series with an ammeter and a rheostat which is used as a variable resistor. The
voltmeter is connected across the ends of the conductor.
The rheostat is altered to give a series of different values of I and corresponding values of voltage.
VOLTMETER READING AMMETER READING I V/I (V/A)
V(V) (A)
1.6 1.7 0.12 0.14 13.3 12.1
1.9 2.2 0.16 0.18 11.9 12.2
2.6 0.20 13.0
The graph is straight line passing through the origin (0,0). This indicates that the voltage and current are directly
proportional to each other. The gradient of graph is constant and it represent the resistance of the conductor.
The ratio V/I = a constant. The value of the constant is equal to the resistance of the conductor.
Gradient = R = ∆V/∆I
R = V2 – V1/ I2 – I1
R = V/I ---------------------> OHM‟S LAW
OHM‟S LAW
Ohm‟s law defines the relationship between the voltage across a component, the current flowing through the
component and the resistance of the component.
The ohm‟s law states that;
“the amount of electric current passing through a conductor is directly proportional to potential difference
provided the temperature and other physical quantities remain the same”
V α I ; R = a constant
V = IR -------------------------------------------> ohm‟s
law It can also be expressed as:
I = V/R OR R = V/I
RESISTANCE, LENGTH AND CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA
The resistance of a conductor is directly proportional to its length and inversely proportional to its crosssectional
area. This means when the length is doubled, the conductor will double its resistance but when its cross-section
is doubled its resistance will be halved. Therefore;
• Short and thick conductors have low resistance
#2. A wire of length 0.40 m and a diameter 0.60 mm has a resistance of 1.5 Ω. Find the resistivity of the
material it is made of.
DATA
l = 0.40 m d = 0.60 mm = 0.0006 m R = 1.5 Ω ρ=?
R = pl/A
ρ = RA/l A = πr2 = π(d2/4) = π(0.0006 m)2/4 = 2.8 x
10-7 m2 = 1.5(2.8 x 10-7)/0.40 = 1.06 x 10-6 Ωm
INTERNAL RESISTANCE
The energy supplied per unit charge is not all used in the external circuit. There is some energy which is needed
to overcome the internal resistance and drive the charge across the battery or cell.
In above diagram, the voltage drop across the resistor will be less than the e.m.f. This is because some energy
has been used to drive the charge through /across the cell.
r = (E – V)/I
Where E= e.m.f
→ E – V = Ir
E – IR = Ir
E = IR + Ir
PROBLEMS
#1. A cell of unknown e.m.f (E) and internal resistance of 2 Ω is connected to a 5 Ω resistor. If the terminal p.d
(V) is 1.0 V, Calculate the e.m.f of the cell?
Data
R=5Ω r=2Ω V = 1.0 V I=? E=?
I = V/R
= 1.0 V/5 Ω
= 0.2 A
THEN E = I(R + r)
= 0.2 A(5 Ω + 2 Ω)
= 1.4 Ω
#2. A battery of e.m.f 4.0 V and internal resistance of 5 Ω is connected to a resistor of 1.5 Ω. Calculate the
terminal p.d.
Answ
Data
E = 4.0 V r=5Ω R = 1.5 Ω V=?
V = E – Ir
= 4.0 – 0.6(5)
= 1.0
16.2.5 I/V GRAPHS – Graphs showing the relationship of current and voltage drop across a
conductor.
1) Ohmic conductors
The current through the conductor is directly proportional to the voltage across the ends of the conductor
provided the temperature and other physical properties are constant – OHM‟S LAW
The inverse of the graph here is equal to the resistance of the conductor.
a) Diode
Voltage is not proportional to current
Curve getting steeper- therefore the resistance decrease with increase in current.
Note: if the voltage is increased in the other direction, the current will be almost zero since a diode
allows the current to flow only in one direction. This means a diode has a small resistance when
connected in one way but a very large resistance when the voltage is reversed. b) Filament lamp
Filament lamps or light bulbs are designed to produce light and therefore heat. Any current passing
through the filament will make it hot and increase its resistance. A light bulb is therefore non-
ohmic for the whole range of possible currents
The graph bends over as V and I increase. Then this means the gradient (I/V) decrease and hence
the resistance (V/I) increases and makes the filament hotter.
c) Thermistor
A thermistor is an electrical component which is used in temperature-operated circuits such as the
circuits used to control air conditioning units. It is a non-ohmic resistor, its resistance decreases as
the current increases.
The graph bends up, this means the inverse of the resistance (I/V) increase and therefore the resistance (V/I)
decreases.
Under normal working conditions a resistor is ohmic, its resistance does not depend on the current or voltage
applied to it. If too much current flows through the resistor, it will become hot and its resistance will start to
increase. This resistor has become non-ohmic
Therefore, in general, when the temperature increase the resistance of metals will also increase. The resistance of
some conductors will also change when they are bent or placed under pressure.
16.2.6 QUESTIONS
a). What is the resistance of its element?
b) Why does the element need to have resistance?
Q4. A 6 V supply is applied to 1000 Ω resistor. What current will flow?
Q5. Use ohm‟s law to calculate the following:
e) The resistance of a wire which under a potential difference of 6 V allows a current of 0.1 A to flow.
f) The resistance of a heater which under a potential difference of 230 V allows a current of 10 A to flow.
Q6. Explain clearly the difference between electromotive force of a cell and potential difference across a lamp.
Q7.a) If the current through a floodlamp is 5 A, what charge passes in i) 1 s ii) 10 s iii) 5 minutes?
b) What is the current in a circuit if the charge passing in each point is i) 10 C in 2 s, ii) 20 C in 40 s iii) 200
C in 2 minutes?
Q8. The p.d across the lamp is 12 V. How many joules of electrical energy are changed into light and heat
when:
Series circuit
Components are in series when they are connected into a continuous line, end to end such that the same current
flows through each component
i) The current that flows through components in series is the same and equal at each and every point.
ii) All the components will share the e.m.f. according to their resistances. The largest voltage drop
will be across a component with the largest resistance. The sum of the potential difference in series
circuit is equal to the terminal potential difference across the source.
i) The branches will share the main current I according to the resistance of each branch. The largest
current will flow through a branch with the smallest resistance. The sum of the current through the
branches is equal to the main current.
I = I1 + I2 + ........ ----------> (2)
ii) The potential difference across the components connected in parallel is equal and also the same as
the terminal difference across the source.
Then
E = VIt
P =VI
= 240 V x 5 A
= 1200 W
c) Data; V = 240 V, I = 5 A, t = 5 minutes =330 s, P = 1200 W, E =?
E = VIt E = Pt
= 240 V x 5 A x 330 s OR = 1200 W x 330 s
= 396 000 J = 396 000 J
#2: A 220 V, 10 A electric motor takes 20 seconds to lift aload of bricks to the top of a building 15 m above the
ground. Each brick has a mass 0f 1.5 kg.
a) What energy changes occur as the bricks are lifted?
b) How much electrical energy is supplied to the motor in 20 seconds?
c) Assuming the motor is 100 % efficient, how many bricks can be lifted in a single load?
Ans:
a) Electrical energy ----------> gravitational potential energy
b) Data; E =?, I = 10 A, V = 220 V, t = 20 s
E = VIt
= 220 V x 10 A x 20 s
= 44 000 J
c) Total electrical energy converted = total GPE
44 000 J = mgh
44 000 J = 15 m x 10 N/kg x total mass m of bricks
m = 44 000 J/15 m x 10
N/kg m = 293 kg
number of bricks = m/mass of a single brick = 293 kg/1.5 kg
= 195
bricks
2. Neutral wire (blue or black)- completes the circuit by providing the return path to the supply (or
mains). The neutral wire is earthed at the electricity substation, therefore it is at 0 V
*Although the neutral wire carries electric charge there is no danger of electric shock if it is touched
since it is at the same potential as a person who stands on the floor.
3. Earth wire (green and yellow) or (green)- this wire is for safety purposes. One end of the Earth wire is
connected to the metal case of the appliance. The other end is connected via the wall sockets and metal
pipe to Earth box outside the house.
The earth wire provides a path of almost zero resistance from the case of the appliance to the earth. If the
live wire accidentally touches the metal case of the appliance, a large current will flow through the earth
wire and the fuse melts, isolating the appliance.
Without an earth wire, the case would become live anyone touching it would receive a dangerous shock.
Function: to prevent excessive current to flow through an appliance. Too high current may cause some electric
fire or accident.
Fuse is a wire made from a metal with a low melting point. If a fuse is part of a circuit, it will eventually melt if
the current is too excessive and the circuit will break. But excessive current may flow through an appliance even
if a fuse there if a short circuit is present.
*Fuses must be connected into the live wire. This ensures that when the fuse melts, the appliance is no longer
“live”.
Fusing Rating
Fuses are rated according to the amount of current required to melt/blow it. E.g. 1 A fuse will melt if a current of
1 A flows through it, a 5 A fuse will melt if a current of 5 A flows through it, etc. Fuse rating are always whole
number integers. The plugs are usually fitted with either 3 A, 5 A or 13 A.
It is vital that the correct fuse is installed into an appliance. The fuse rating should be greater than the normal
operating current of appliance, but as close to it as possible- so that the fuse will be blown as soon as the current
gets too high.
Example
An electrical kettle is labelled 230 V 2300 W. Work out whether a 3 A, 5 A or 13 A fuse is needed.
Ans: First, calculate the normal operating current P
= 2300 W V = 230 V I=?
P = VI
I =2300 W/230 V
= 10 A
If the normal operating current is 10 A, a 13 A fuse should be fitted.
#2 DVD PLAYER: 100 W, 240 V
I = 100 W/240 V
= 0.4 A
So a 3 A fuse is ideal.
*Note: 1) The DVD player would still work with a fuse of 13 A. But if a fault develops, the current will continue
to flow without the fuse blowing and this might cause the appliance to overheat and catch fire.
2) For currents higher than 13 A, circuit breakers are used instead of fuses. Circuit breakers operate
electromagnetically and can be reset by flicking a switch (they do not have to be replaced like fuses)
THREE-PIN PLUG
*It is important to ensure that wires are correctly connected in both plugs and the sockets. The power point
switch is placed in the live side of the circuit
*The sheath of the cable (not the wires themselves) is clamped to keep the connections safe (intact) if ever the
cable is pulled or tugged.
*The fuse is chosen to suit the circuit which it protects.
DOUBLE INSULATION
Some household appliances, e.g. radios, have plastic cases and their cables do not have an earth wire. They have
only the live and neutral wires. There is no risk getting an electrical shock from a plastic case since plastic is an
electrical insulator. This is described as double insulation because:
The live and neutral wires are covered in an insulated sheath,
The appliance itself is covered by an insulated case.
FEATURES OF A HOUSE CIRCUIT
a) PARALLEL CIRCUITS:- House circuits e.g. lights are connected in parallel so that appliances receive
the full mains supply of 240 V and also that they can operate independently (e.g each bulb can have its
own switch and also if one bulb breaks, the others will remain on unlike in a series circuit where all
would turn off).
b) SWITCHES AND FUSES:- are always connected in the live wire. If they were connected in the neutral
wire, the appliance would remain „live‟ even when the switch is off or the fuse is blown
c) STAIRCASE CIRCUIT:- The light is controlled from two places by the two-way switches.
d) RING MAIN CIRCUIT:- the wiring system in which the live and neutral wires run in two complete
rings/loops round the house and the power sockets each rated at 13 A, are tapped off from them USES
OF ELECRICITY
1. Lighting
• Filament lamp – has a small coil of tungsten wire which becomes hot when current flows
through it.
• Fluorescent lamp – current is passed through mercury vapour which emits ultraviolet light
which in turn makes the powder on the glass give out visible light.
2. Heating:- heating elements are made from nichrome wire which has a high resistance. Heating
elements are used in electric fires, kettles, irons, cookers, ovens, etc.
3. Machines:- electric machines such as drills, saws, lawn-mowers, cassette recorders, fans, washing
machines, etc all use electric motor which is operated by electricity.
4. Communications:- there are various electric powered communication devices, e.g. telephone,
cellphone, fax, radio, television, telex, computer, etc.
5. Security: many security systems such as smoke sensors, automatic gates, remote controlled locks,
burglar alarm, etc operate on electricity.
COST OF ELECTRICITY
Electrical metres (joule-meter) are included in our houses to measure the amount of electrical energy consumed
by the household. The household is charged for the electrical energy they consumed. Electricity supply
companies (e.g. B.P.C) measure electrical energy consumed in kilowatt-hours (kWh) or simply „units‟.
1 kWh = 1 unit
1 kWh is the measure of the amount of the electrical energy consumed for 1 hour (3600 s) at the rate of 1 kW
(1000 W) or the energy used by an appliance rated 1 kW in 1 hour. i.e. 1 kWh = 1000 W x 3600 s
= 1000 J/s x 3600 s
= 3 600 000 J
1 kWh = 3.6 MJ
Then;
cost of electricity = total electrical energy consumed in kWh x cost per kWh
Example:
a) How much energy is used by a 3 500 W heater which is on for 30 minutes
b) How much will it cost to run the heater if one unit of electricity costs 5 thebe Ans:
a) P = 3500 W (3.5 kW), t = 30 minutes (1/2 h), E=?
E = Pt
= 3.5 kW x ½ h
= 1.75 kW or 1.75 units
b) E = 1.75 kW, cost per kW = 5 thebe
Total cost = E x cost per kW
= 1.75 kW x 5 thebe/kW
= 8.75 thebe
= P0.09
ELECTRICAL HAZARDS AND DANGERS
1. DAMP CONDITIONS: Water can conduct current. And also our bodies‟ resistance is lower if it is wet
and hence a great amount of current will flow through it. Therefore if electrical equipment gets wet or
touched with wet hands, there is a risk someone being electrocuted (getting an electric shock).
2. OLD, FRAYED WIRING AND DAMAGED INSULATION:- broken strands mean a wire will have a
higher resistance at one point. When current flows through it, there might be more heat produced,
enough to melt the insulation and cause a fire.
Damaged insulation can cause ;i) an electrical shock to a person touching the exposed „live‟ wire, and
ii) a short circuit if the bare wires touch.
SHORT CIRCUIT: results if the „Live‟ wire touches the neutral wire. The current by-passes the
appliance and the current can increase to such a high value that it can cause an electric fire especially if
there is no fuse.
To prevent this, always inspect your cords more frequently and replace worn or damaged cables.
3. OVERHEATING OF CABLES: caused by passing a high current on a wire designed for a low current.
Overheating can cause the insulation to melt or burn and can cause fires.
4. OVERLOADING OF SOCKETS: connecting many appliances in one socket can lead to overheating of
cables and hence cause electric fires.
FINDING A FAULT
When an appliance stops working it may be due to a fault that is easy to rectify. Before calling a technician it is
wise to try to diagnose the fault.
You may follow the steps below;
1. Check that the appliance is switched on.
2. Check that the power is on. Do other appliances work?
3. Check the fuse. If it is blown, replace it. If the new fuse blows, check for a short circuit.
4. Check that the plug is correctly connected, with no loose wires or untidy strands of wire sticking out.
5. Check that the cable connection to the appliance is firm.
6. Check that the insulation is in good condition. If it looks worn or torn replace it with a similar cable.
*NB:- If after checking all the above, the appliance is still not working, engage a trained technician.
16.2.11 QUESTIONS
Q1. What is meant by the statement „the e.m.f. of a battery is 12 V‟? When the battery is in use, the
p.d. between the terminals is found to be 11.5 V. What reasons might there be for that?
Q2. An electric heater has a label attached to it, as shown below.
Explain the meaning of the following terms used on the label; (i) 240 V (ii) 50 Hz (iii) power: 2 kW.
Q3. You have a selection of fuses available: 1 A, 2 A, 3 A, 5 A, 7 A, 10 A, 13 A. Which would be the most
suitable fuse for (i) a TV set labelled 230 V, 140 W, (ii) an electric fire labelled 230 V, 2 kW, (iii) a
kettle labelled V, 750 W?
Q4. An electric motor is raising a load of weight 5000 N at a steady speed of 0.5 m/s. The motor works from a
250 V supply. How much work is done in 1 second?
Q5. A 720 W kettle boils some water in 10 minutes. How much will this cost if 1 unit of electricity is charged at
10 thebe? How long will a 60 W lamp run for the same cost?
Q6. a)Why should wires with damaged insulation be replaced?
b) Often, the plug used to connect an appliance to a wall socket has a fuse fitted inside it. Explain the
reason for this.
c) An appliance which has metal parts, for example an electric kettle, should be earthed. Explain why this
should be done.
d) In some countries it is illegal to have power sockets in a bathroom, to stop you using hairdryers. Why
would it be foolish to use a hairdryer near to a washbasin?
Q7. The diagram below shows the inside of a three-pin plug.
a) What is A?
b) What is B?
c) What is C?
d) What is D?
The student‟s results are shown in the table below.
p.d./V 0 2 4 6 8 10 12
Q11. An electric lamp is marked 250 V, 100 W and an immersion heater is marked 250 V, 2 kW.
a) Calculate the current in each device when operating normally.
b) Explain why the filament of the lamp is made to have a larger resistance than the heating element of the
immersion heater.
c) Suggest a reason why the filament is made of a metal with a much higher melting point than that of the
element.
d) The heat capacity of the filament of the lamp is very small. State one reason why this is an advantage.
e) Explain why the wire connecting the immersion heater to the supply remains cool even when the heater
has been in use for some time.
When a wire is moved across a magnetic field, an E.M.F is induced between the ends of the wire. One end of the
wire becomes positively charged and the other end becomes negatively charged. If the wire forms part of a
complete circuit, the EMF makes (induced) current flow.
In the above diagram, first the wire is held at rest between the poles of the magnet and the galvanometer
observed. The wire is then moved in each of the six directions shown Observations:
a. There is deflection on the galvanometer only when the wire is moving upwards (direction 1) or
downwards (direction 2) indicating flow of current in the circuit.
b. No deflection on the galvanometer when the wire is moving in other directions (3, 4, 5 & 6), showing
that there is no current induced in those cases.
c. Explanation of observations
• An EMF is induced in a conductor (e.g. wire) only when it crosses (cuts) magnetic field lines and this
cause a current to flow if the conductor is part of a complete circuit.
• There is no induced EMF or current when the wire is not moving or is moving parallel to the lines.
*Hold the thumb and the first two fingers of the right hand at the right angles to each other. Then according to
the fleming‟s right hand rule the First finger points in the direction of the magnetic Field, the thuMb points in
the direction of the Motion and then the seCond finger shows the direction of the Current.
The induced EMF (and current) can be increased by:
• Moving the wire faster
• Using a stronger magnet
• Increasing the length of wire in the magnetic field, e.g by looping or coiling the wire through the
several times.
The above facts are summed up by Faraday‟s Law. The law states that:
„The size of induced EMF (or current) is directly proportional to the rate at which the conductor cuts the
magnetic field lines‟
2). Bar magnet and coil
An EMF can also be induced in the conductor when a bar magnet is pushed in and out of a coil. If the coil is part
of a complete circuit the induced EMF (VOLTAGE) drives a current round the circuit.
When the N pole is moved into the coil, the galvanometer register current, its needle is seen to be deflected to
the right.
When the magnet is held still inside the coil, the needle returns to its zero position. This shows that no current is
flowing because there is no movement therefore no magnetic field lines are being cut.
When the bar is pulled out of the coil, the needle is deflected to the left. This shows that moving the magnet in
the opposite direction reverses the current direction.
*NB:- 1) the similar results as the above can be obtained by moving a coil of wire over a stationary magnet.
2) But if the S pole of a magnet, rather than the N pole, is used the direction of the current also reverses
and opposite results will be obtained for diagrams (a) and (b) above. The size of the induced EMF (and hence
of current) can be increased by:-
- moving the coil or magnet faster
- using a stronger magnet
- increasing the number of turns on the coil (this increase the length of wire cutting through the
magnetic field).
LENZ‟S LAW
The direction of the induced current through the coil can be found by using the Lenz‟s law.
Lenz‟s law states that:
„The direction of the induced current is in such direction as to oppose the change producing it‟.
According to the Lenz‟s law, in (a) the induced current should flow in a direction which makes the coil behaves
like a magnet with its top as a N pole. Then the incoming magnet is repelled and the downward motion is
opposed.
But when the magnet is removed, the top of the coil should be a S pole so that the removal of the magnet will be
opposed as the N pole is attracted and the current will thus flow in the opposite direction to that when the
magnet is pushed in.
16.3.2 A simple a.c. generator (alternator)
a). In a simple a.c. generator (alternator) the coil is rotated by the shaft.
b). the slip rings rotate with the coil. When the coil is rotated, it cuts magnetic field lines so a voltage is
generated. This makes a current flow. As the coil rotates, each side travels upwards, downwards, upwards....
and so on through the field. So the current flows backwards, forwards..... etc. Therefore it is a.c. c). the current
passes to the outside circuit via carbon brushes which press against the side of each slip ring.
A typical graph that shows how voltage (or current) varies over one complete rotation
Note: . a). The current is greatest when the coil is horizontal because it will be cutting field lines most rapidly.
But current is zero when the coil is vertical since it will be along the field lines and no cutting
happens. Also the current will change the direction when in a vertical position.
b). increasing the speed of rotation increases the frequency of an a.c. generated. Frequency of an a.c. is
the number of complete cycles it makes in each second. For the mains supply a.c.‟s frequency is 50
Hz.
The voltage (or current) from the generator can be increased by: a).
using a stronger magnet
b). increasing the number of turns in the coil.
c). winding the coil on a soft-iron armature and using a bigger coil
An a.c. generator becomes a direct current one if the slip rings are replaced by a commutator (which contains
two half-rings known as split rings). The carbon brushes are arranged such that as the coil goes through the
vertical, changeover of contact occurs from one half of the split ring of the commutator to the other and the
commutator reverses the voltage induced and so one brush is always positive and the other negative. And this
ensures that current to the outside circuit always flows in the same direction.
Just like in an a.c. generator, when the coil rotates, a current is produced by electromagnetic induction and the
current passes to the external circuit through the brushes in contact with the commutator. Although the induced
is d.c. it varies in value unlike the d.c from the battery.
The current is maximum when the coil is horizontal and minimum (or zero) when the coil is vertical.
Bicycle dynamo
It uses the principles of electromagnetic induction to generate electricity in bicycles. The driving wheel of the
dynamo presses against the tyre of the bicycle. When the tyre rotates, it turns the driving wheel of the dynamo
and causes a cylindrical permanent magnet to turn as well. The turning permanent magnet reverses the
magnetism through the soft-iron core every time the coil is rotated by 180°. This change in the magnetic field
through the core induces an a.c. in the coil wire (stator coil). The size of the current produced can be increased
by increasing the speed of the bicycle.
16.3.4 MUTUAL INDUCTION
This involves the induction of current in one circuit, whenever it cuts a magnetic field produced by another
circuit i.e current induced in a circuit due to the changing magnetic field of another circuit.
Observation:- when switch S is closed, the galvanometer needle deflects and returns to zero. When opening the
switch the needle deflects to the opposite direction and back to zero.
Explanation:- when closing the switch, the current in the primary coil (coil A)sets up a magnetic field which is
linked up to the secondary coil, inducing the current in it. The needle returns to zero as the current reaches a
constant value and the magnetic field is not changing. When opening the switch current is turned off. The
magnetic field changes as the magnetic field lines cutting coil B die, this induces current in B. A soft iron core
can be placed between the coils. It will trap the magnetic field lines so that all of them cut the coil B.
16.3.5 TRANSFORMERS
A transformer is a device which makes use of mutual induction to change voltages (and is frequently used in
home to step down the mains voltage of 230 V to 6 V or 12 V). It consists of two coils of insulated wire
wounded on an iron core. The coil connected to the a.c. input is called the primary coil and the coil that provides
the a.c. output is called secondary coil.
If the alternating voltage is applied to the primary coil, the a.c. produces a changing field in the core. This
changing magnetic field induces an alternating current in the secondary coil.
*Note:- 1). The purpose of the iron core is to ensure that all the magnetic field lines generated in the primary
coil is made to pass through all the turns of the secondary coil.
2). A transformer can only operate on a varying voltage. A D.C. voltage in the primary coil will not
produce any change in the magnetic field so with D.C. no current is induced in the secondary coil. Two types
of transformers
1). Step-down transformer
2). Step-up transformer
1). Step-down transformer- has fewer turns on the secondary coil than on the primary coil. Therefore it
produces a smaller voltage in the secondary coil(less output voltage).
2). Step-up transformers- have more turns on the secondary coil than on the primary coil, so their
output/secondary voltage is greater than the input voltage.
The relationship between the number of turns and voltage in the secondary and primary coils can be given by the
equation:-
Primary coil voltage/secondary coil voltage = number of primary turns/number of secondary turns
VP/VS = NP/NS
TRANSFORMER EQUATION
If no energy is wasted in a transformer, the power (energy per second) delivered by the output coil will be the
same as the power supplied to the input.
Then, since P =VI, we can have the transformer equation as;
Input voltage x input current = output voltage x output current
V1I1 = V2I2
Note: V α 1/I
This follows that a transformer which increases the voltage will reduce the current in the same propotion, and
vice versa.
ENERGY LOSSES IN A TRANSFORMER
All transformers waste some energy because of the following factors
1). Resistance of the copper coils.
Copper coils are not perfect electrical conductors. Whenever some current flow through them, some
electrical power/energy is used to overcome their resistance and this energy will then be given out as
useless heat to the surrounding. Therefore, their resistance need to be kept low, so thick copper wire should
be used where possible.
2). Eddy currents
The core is itself a conductor, so the changing field induces current called eddy current in it. The eddy
currents also cause heating effects. To reduce this, core is laminated i.e. it is made of thin sheets of iron (or
mumetal) instead of a solid block, which are insulated from each other to have a high resistance.
3). Leakage of field lines
All the lines produced by the primary coil may not cut the secondary coil, especially if the core has an air
gap or badly designed.
*Large transformers have to be oil-cooled to prevent overheating.
TRANSMISSION OF ELECTRICAL POWER
1). Power for the a.c. mains is generated in power stations and then transmitted through long –distance
cables. A network of overhead cables, supported on pylons, which connect power station/s to consumers is
called a National Grid. Power from the grid is distributed by a series of substations. These contain step-
down transformers which reduce voltage in stages to level needed by consumers.
2). A.C or D.C?
Electric power is generally transmitted as a.c. This is so because a.c. can be easily and cheaply stepped up
or down using a transformer. A transformer does not work with D.C.
3). High or Low voltage?
Transmission cables have significant resistance, especially when they are hundreds of kilometres long. This
means energy is wasted because of the heating effect of the current.
e.g. What is the power wasted in the cable when 10 kW is transmitted through a cable of resistance 0.5 Ω
at a) 200 V b) 200 000 V
NOTE:- Power loss, P = I2R
a). at 200 V
I = P/V = 10000/200 = 50 A
Then Power loss P = I2R = 502(0.5) = 1250 W
b). at 200 000 V
I = P/V = 10000/200000 = 0.05 A
THEN, P = I2R = 0.052(0.5) = 0.00125 W
From the calculations, it is demonstrated that less power is wasted from a cable if power is transmitted
at high voltage. Then a transformer can be used to increase the voltage, and reduce the current and this
means thinner, lighter and cheap cables can be used.
If a current is passed through a straight wire, it produces a weak magnetic field as shown below.
Rule for field direction: the right-hand screw rule- Imagine gripping the wire with your right hand so that your
thumb points in the direction of the current. Your fingers then point in the direction of the field.
NOTE:
i). The field lines are in circles.
ii) The field lines are shown closest together near to the wire, because the field is strongest there, and lines get
further apart away from the wire where the field is weaker.
iii). If the current is increased, the field is made stronger. iv).
If you reverse the current direction, this reverses the field. b).
Field due to a circular coil
The field lines pattern is as shown below;
a). The field is like that around a bar magnet, with magnetic poles at the ends of the coils.
b). If you increase the current, this makes the field stronger.
c). If you put more turns on the coil, the field is stronger
d). If you reverse the current direction, this reverses the field.
Rule for poles: Imagine gripping the coil with your right hand so that your fingers point the same way as the
current, your thumb then points towards the N pole of the coil.
*NB: when using the rules described above, remember that:-
a). the current direction is from the + to the – (use the conventional current)
b). the magnetic field direction is the direction the N end of a compass needle would point.
16.4.0 MOTOR EFFECT
If a wire that is carrying an electric current is put in a magnetic field, the wire experiences a sideways force and
moves. This effect is used to make the electric motor work in devices such as loudspeakers, electric drill, etc
Demonstration
A flexible wire is supported in the strong magnetic field of a C-shaped magnet. When the switch is pressed,
current flows in the wire which jumps upwards.
Explanation: when a current flows through the coil of wire, it creates a magnetic field, which interacts with the
field produced by the two permanent magnets. The two fields exert a force that pushes the wire at right angles to
the permanent magnetic field.
The field lines due to the wire are circles and their direction is as shown above. The dotted lines represent the
field lines of the magnet and their direction. The resultant field of the two fields is as shown in the diagram b.
There are more lines below than above the wire since both fields act in the same direction but in opposition
above. If you imagine that the lines are like stretched elastic, those below will try to straighten out and in so
doing will exert an upwards force on the wire. To increase the strength of the force; i). Increase the current
ii). Usea stronger magnet iii). Increase the length of wire in the field.
If you reverse either the current or the field, the force is reversed
Fleming‟s left hand rule:
This is the rule used to work out the direction of the force or thrust on the wire. It works like this:
Hold the thumb and the first two fingers of your left hand at right angles. The First finger is pointing in the
direction of the Field and the seCond finger in the direction of Current, then the Thumb points in the direction of
the Thrust(Motion).
(When using this rule, remember that (i) the current direction is from + to – and the field lines run from N to
S.)
Examples:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
d) When the coil reaches the vertical position, the brushes are in line with the gaps in the commutator and
no current flows for a moment. But the inertia keeps the coil rotating to overshoot the commutator halves
and change contact from one brush to the other. This reverses the current as well as the directions of the
forces on the two sides. This helps the coil to rotate in one direction (either clockwise or anticlockwise) The
turning effect on the coil can be increased by:
a). increasing the current
b). using a stronger magnet
c). increasing the number of turns on the coil
d). increasing the area of the coil. 16.4.2
Practical motors
- They have several coils with each set at a different angle and each with its own pair of commutator pieces.
This increases the turning effect and also gives a smoother running.
-The coils contain hundreds of turns of wire wounded on a iron core called armature. The armature gets
magnetised and increases the strength of magnetic field
-The poles of the magnet are curved to create a radial magnetic field. This keeps the turning effect at
maximum for most of the coil‟s rotation.
16.4.3 Moving-coil loudspeaker
In the loudspeaker, the magnet is specially shaped so that the wire of the coil is at the right angle to its radical
field. The loudspeaker is connected to an amplifier which gives out an alternating current, this current flows
backwards, forwards, backwards, .......... and so on, causing a force on the coil which is also backwards,
forwards, backwards....... All these cause the cone to vibrate and creates sound waves.
16.4.4 Microphone
The moving-coil microphone contains a thin metal foil diaphragm. There is a small coil attached to the rear of
the diaphragm. This coil is situated in a magnetic field provided by a cylindrical permanent magnet. Sound
waves cause the diaphragm and coil to vibrate. As the coil moves in the magnetic field a current is induced in it.
This varying current can be amplified and heard in a loudspeaker.
Meters for measuring current and voltage frequently have a coil which is pivoted in a magnetic field. a).
Current enters and leaves the coil by hair springs above and below it.
b). When current flows, it produces a magnetic field that would interact with the field due to the permanent
magnet. This would produce a couple on the coil (as in an electric motor) and cause it rotate and turns along
with the pointer attached.
c). As the coil turns and twist the spring, the springs would try to stop the coil turning. The coil turns until the
turning effect of the forces due to the current balance the turning effect of the spring. The greater the
current in the coil, the coil would turn further and the greater the deflection shown by the pointer.
d). The soft-iron cylinder/drum produces a radial magnetic field which makes the coil deflection proportional
to the current and this gives a linear scale.
16.4.6 QUESTIONS
Q1. Give three examples of actions that cause an induced e.m.f to be set up in a coil of wire.
Q2. Fig. 2.1. shows a magnet being pushed into a coil of wire, which is connected to a galvanometer. Which of
the following statements is/are correct?
Fig. 2.1
Fig. 4.1.
Q5. i) The diagram below shows a bar magnet, and a coil of wire connected to a sensitive ammeter.
As the magnet was pushed slowly into the coil the ammeter pointer moved 10 divisions to the right.
What would you expected to happen
Show the position of the galvanometer needle in each of the following cases:
Q6. Fig. 6.1. shows a structural diagram of bicycle dynamo. Study the diagram and answer the following
questions:
Q8. The filament of table lamp is connected to a 250 V, 50 Hz mains supply by two wires. One wire is the live
wire and the other is the neutral.
a) Use the axes in Fig. 8.1 to sketch a graph which shows the variation with time of the voltage of the live
wire during one cycle. The zero of the voltage scale is earth voltage.
Fig. 8.1
b) On the axes in Fig. 8.2 show the corresponding variation of voltage of the neutral wire.
Fig. 8.2
Q9. Fig. 9.1 shows the essential parts of a moving-iron ammeter.
Fig. 9.1
a) Explain why the needle deflects when a steady current passes through the coil.
b) Explain why the direction of the deflection is unchanged when the direction of the current is reversed.
c) State and explain what would be observed when the steady current is replaced by an alternating current
with a frequency of 50 Hz.
The coil of an ammeter has a resistance of 0.5 Ω. A resistor of resistance 0.25 Ω is connected between the
terminals of the ammeter, and a current of 2 A passes as shown in fig. 9.2
Fig. 9.2
d) Calculate the effective resistance of the coil and the resistor when connected as shown in f.g. 9.2.
e) Calculate the potential difference between the points A and B.
f) Calculate the current in the coil of the ammeter.
*Ionization occurs when a radioactive emission such alpha particle knocks electrons out of the surrounding
molecules or atoms leaving them as charged ions. Alpha particle is the most ionizing radiation because it has the
greatest size and mass.
*Penetration power: all the three radioactive emissions can penetrate materials because their sizes are much
smaller than the spaces separating the atoms in materials, even in solids. Beta particles are more penetrating
than alpha particles because they are much smaller. Gamma radiation is the most penetrating because it is an
electromagnetic wave without mass or size.
• Alpha particles will be attracted towards negatively charged plates because they are positively charged.
• Beta particles are attracted towards positively charged plates because they are negatively charged.
226
e.g. 88 Ra -------------------> 86222Rn + 2
4
He
238
92 U ------------------> 90234Th + 2
4
He
*Note: when an element decays by emission of an alpha particle it turns into an element with chemical
properties similar to those of an element two places earlier in the periodic table.
(b) Beta (β) decay
In a beta decay, a neutron changes to a proton and an electron. The proton remains in the nucleus but the
electron escapes at high speeds in form of a beta particle. The new nucleus has the same mass number but its
atomic number increases by one.
A A 0
Z X------------------------------> Z+1 Y + -1 e
(parent nuclide) (daughter nuclide) (β-particle)
14 14 0
e.g. 6 C ----------------------------> 7 N + -1 e
40 40 0
19 K ------------------------> 20 Ar + -1 e
*Note: When an element disintegrates by emission of β-particle it turns into an element with properties similar
to those of an element one place later in the periodic table.
(c) Gamma radiation
After emitting α-particle or β-particle, some nuclei are left still in an excited state, i.e. has surplus energy and
therefore unstable. So such nucleus emits this energy as γ-radiation/rays. When a nucleus undergoes gamma
decay, it keeps the same atomic number Z and the same mass number A. The gamma radiation only carries away
energy so that the nucleus becomes more stable.
Note: Cobalt-60 and Radium-226 are common gamma emitting nuclides.
Detection of radioactive emissions
Most methods of detection depend on the fact that all three radiations can ionize air molecules.
a) Photographic paper or film: Radiation can affect photographic film in much the same way as light or
X-rays.
b) The gold-leaf electroscope: a charged electroscope discharges if a radioactive isotope is moved to the
cap. The radioactive emissions ionize the surrounding air molecules. If the electroscope is negatively
charged, the positively charged ions are attracted to the cap and the charge on the electroscope is
neutralized. If the electroscope is positively charged the electrons which were removed from the air
molecules are attracted to the electroscope.
c) Geiger-Muller tube
G.M tube contains argon gas that ionizes when radiation passes through, thereby creating ions and
electrons. The positive ions move towards the cathode and negative electrons move to the anode. This
produces some electric current which will be fed to a scaler or ratemeter.
Scaler- counts pulses and shows total received in a certain time.
Ratemeter – gives counts per seconds. Some have a loudspeaker which would give a „click‟ per each
count.
Other detectors are i) spark counter, ii) ionization detector and iii) cloud chamber
17.1.3 HALF-TIME
Some isotopes decay much more rapidly than others. Scientists measure the decay rate of an isotope in the form
of half-lives.
Half-life is defined as the time taken for half the original number of radioactive nuclides to decay or the time
taken for the activity of a radioactive isotope to fall to half its original value. This time is the same no matter
what the original activity is.
Example: Thoron gas is radioactive and has a half-life of 52 s. the table shows how the amount of thoron is
halved every 52 s.
Time/s 0 52 104 156 208
*very unstable nuclides decays quickly than one with greater stability but in every case the rate of radioactive
decay is proportional to number of nuclei present.
Rate of decay α N
Rate of decay = λN where N = number of nuclei present
λ = is a constant
EXAMPLES
Isotope Type of emission Half-life
Sodium-24 15 hours
Strontium-93 8 minutes
Barium-143 12 seconds
If the curve falls from 80 counts/s to 40 counts/s in 10 min, then from 40 counts/s to 20 counts/s in the next 10
min, from 20 to 10 counts/s in the 3rd 10 min and so on, half-life is then 10 min.
*If count rate is N at time t1 and has fallen to N/2 at time t2 then half-life t1/2 is t2 – t1. Similarly, if the count
rate has fallen to N/4 at time t3, the half-life is t3 – t2.
If at the beginning there are N undecayed nuclei, after 1 half-life there will be N/2, after a second half-life there
will be ½ x N/2 = N/4, after third half-life there will be ½ x N/4 = N/8 undecayed nuclei, etc.
1. Thickness gauges: Radioactive isotopes help manufacturers to check and carefully control the thickness
of product like duplicating machines paper.
• a radioactive isotope is placed on one side of the material and a detector on the other side.
• The amount of particles (radiation) reaching the detector is monitored closely by the machine
operator or control unit. If the thickness of the material (paper) increases, fewer particles will reach
the detector and visa versa
*The isotope has to be chosen to suit the requirements of the manufacturer. For example, an alpha
emitting isotope would be suitable choice for a paper factory and a beta source would be more suitable
for a steel mill. Gamma sources are not suitable since gamma is a very penetrating radiation.
2. Sterilization of surgical equipment: Surgical equipment is placed in sealed bags and then exposed to
short bursts of gamma radiation. The gamma rays kill any microbes inside the bag and the contents will
remain sterile until the bag is opened.
• Penetrating gamma rays from cobalt-60 are used to kill cancer cells in the body.
3. Long-life fruits and vegetables: Many fruits are also exposed to short bursts of gamma radiation. The
gamma rays kill any micro-organisms which may be inside the fruit, reducing the chances of the fruit rotting
whilst on the shop shelves.
4. Medical tracers- some isotopes are used as tracers to see the performance of specific organs in the body
such as kidneys or the thyroid gland. The patient will be given a liquid containing iodine-123, a gamma
emitter and a detector would then be used to measure the activity of the tracer to find out how quickly iodine
becomes concentrated in the gland.
5. Radioactive isotopes can be used as tracers to detect leaks in underground pipes for gas, water and
sewage. A small amount of gamma radiation source is injected into the pipe and the leak can later be
detected with Geiger-Muller tube.
6. In Agriculture isotopes can be used:- i) as tracers to find how fertilisers and other nutrients are used in
plants. ii) to alter genes in seeds to produce genetically modified plants with superior qualities to natural
plants.
7. Carbon dating: this technique is used by historians and archaeologists to estimate age of historic
artefacts and also it is used by geologists to estimate the age of rocks and fossils.
17.1.5 Dangers of Radiation
• The danger from alpha particles is slight.
• Large doses of beta and gamma rays can cause radiation burn
• Gamma rays can penetrate deep into the body and destroy cells inside the body or cause cells to
multiply uncontrollably forming cancer or damage chromosomes causing genetic defects (mutation).
17.1.6 Safety handling and storage of radioactive isotopes
Even when a radioactive material emits low levels of radiation, (e.g. materials used in school laboratories), it
must be handed with extreme care.
Handling:
• Burn low-level waste or bury it in the ground or release it into the sea
• High-level waste in steel drums are buried in disused mines or granite caves or bedded in concrete and
dumped in deep oceans. Or stored at special factories for re-processing.
17.1.7 Background Radiation
It is low level radiation that is always present around, mainly because of radioactive materials in the ground and
air. Every person on Earth is exposed to this form of radiation. Major sources are:
• Rocks
• Soils and underground water
• Cosmic and solar rays
• Food and drinks
• Man-made radiation
• Buildings
Aluminium (3 mm) 87 6 γ 81
A beam of neutrons is directed at the uranium atom. If a neutron strikes a nucleus of U-235, this splits into two
roughly equal parts, and shoots out two or three neutrons as well. If these neutrons hit other U-235 nuclei, they
make them split and give out more neutrons. And so on. This process is known as a chain reaction.
235 1 144 90 1
92 U + 0 n -------> 56 Ba + 36 Kr + 2 0 n
If the chain reaction is uncontrolled, huge numbers of nuclei are split in a very short time. The heat builds up so
rapidly that the material bursts apart into an explosion. This happens in a nuclear (atomic) bomb. If the chain
reaction is controlled, there is a steady output of heat. This happens in a nuclear reactor.
A NUCLEAR REACTOR
In nuclear reactors, fission is carried out in a controlled way. Reactors use naturally occurring uranium, U-235
and U-238 but only U-235 undergoes fission with slow neutrons. Neutrons from the fuel rods go into graphite
core, where they collide with graphite atoms and lose K.E. The graphite is called a moderator because it slows
down the neutrons. The neutrons then pass into fuel rod (which consists of uranium) and cause fission. The
boron steel rods control the rate of fission by absorbing some neutrons. The heat generated by nuclear fission
warms a coolant fluid which circulates through the moderator. The coolant may be water or gas CO 2 . The heat
is used to turn water into steam. The steam drives the turbines and generates electricity.
17.2.2 Nuclear fusion
In fission a heavy nucleus split in two to release energy. On the other hand in nuclear fusion the opposite is done
to produce large amounts of energy.
Nuclear fusion is the combination of two light nuclei to form a heavier nucleus, e.g. two nuclei of hydrogen-2
(deuterium) can be combined to form a nucleus of helium-3.
2 2 3 1
1 H + 1 H --------------> 2 He + 0 n
For two nuclei to fuse, they must be brought sufficiently close to each other. But it is difficult to do this as they
repel each other with large electrical force. To overcome this repulsion, the nuclei have to be heated to high
temperature (e.g. 108 K) so that they gain enough K.E.
• The sun obtains its energy from nuclear fusion. In the sun the temperature is about 10 million °C and
the hydrogen-2 atoms have enough energy to fuse.
• Uncontrolled fusion on Earth can result with hydrogen bomb. Initial high temperature required is
obtained by using an atomic (nuclear) bomb to trigger off fusion. A hydrogen bomb releases much
more energy than an atomic bomb.
E = mc2
where c2 = speed of light, 3 x 10 m/s
E.G:- When radium decays into radon, about 1/40 000 0f the mass of each decaying atom disappears. Calculate
the energy released from 1 g (1/1000 kg) when it decays to radon.
Data: m = mass disappearing = (1/400 000) x (1/1000 kg) = 1/(4 x 10 7) = 2.5 x 10-8 kg
c = 3 x 108 m/s
E = mc2
= 2.5 x 10-8 x (3 x 108)2
= 2.25 x 109 J