OCR Gateway Physics - P1

Description

GCSE GCSE Flashcards on OCR Gateway Physics - P1, created by Rattan Bhorjee on 04/04/2015.
Rattan Bhorjee
Flashcards by Rattan Bhorjee, updated more than 1 year ago
Rattan Bhorjee
Created by Rattan Bhorjee about 9 years ago
309
30

Resource summary

Question Answer
OCR Gateway Physics - P1 _____________________________________________
When a substance is heated... Its particles gain Kinetic Energy (KE)
Temperature is a measure of... The average KE of particles in a substance. The hotter something is, the higher its temperature, and the higher the average KE of its particles.
If there's a difference in temperature between two places... Then energy will flow between them.
Specific Heat Capacity tells you... How much energy an object can store.
When a substance is melting or boiling... The energy is being used for breaking intermolecular bonds rather than raising the temperature. These are represented by flat spots on heating graphs.
Specific Latent heat is... The energy needed to change state without changing temperature. E.g. The SLH of melting is the amount of energy needed to melt 1 kg of material without changing its temperature.
Conduction occurs mainly in solids because... The particles are tightly compacted together, meaning they can easily conduct energy. If they vibrate faster than others particles, they pass on their extra KE to neighbouring particles. This process continues throughout the solid and gradually the extra KE is spread throughout the solid, causing a rise in temperature.
Conduction of heat is the process where... Vibrating particles pass on extra kinetic energy to neighbouring particles.
Metals conduct heat really well because... Some of their electrons are free to move inside the metal. Heating makes the electrons move faster and collide with other free electrons, transferring energy.
Most non-metals don't have free electrons so... They warm up more slowly, making them good insulators. E.g. Saucepan handles
Convection only occurs in... Liquids and Gases
Convection occurs when... the more energetic particles move from the hotter region to the cooler region - and take their heat energy with them.
Convection can't happen in solids because... The particles can't move, they just vibrate on the spot.
Radiation is different from conduction and convection in three ways: 1. It doesn't need a medium to travel through, so it can occur in a vacuum. 2. It can only occur through transparent substances, like air glass and water. 3. The amount of radiation emitted or absorbed by an object depends to a large extent on its surface, colour and texture.
Grills heat food by... Infrared radiation. The heat is absorbed by the surface particles of the food, increasing their kinetic energy. The heat energy is then conducted or convected to more central parts.
To cook food, microwave ovens use... Radiation. However, they use microwaves instead of infrared waves. Microwaves penetrate about 1 cm into the outer layer of the food where they're absorbed by water or fat molecules, increasing their KE. The energy is then conducted or convected to other parts.
Things that emit energy are called... Sources
Things that transfer and waster or lose energy are called... Sinks
Waves have three components: 1. Amplitude (the displacement from the rest position to peak or trough). 2.Wavelength (the length of a full cycle of the wave. E.g. trough to trough). 3. Frequency (the number of complete cycles or oscillations passing a certain point per second).
Frequency is measured in... Hertz (Hz). 1 Hz is 1 wave per second.
All waves can be... (3) 1. Reflected 2. Refracted 3. Diffracted
Total Internal Reflection can only occur when... The light ray travels through a dense material such as glass, towards a less dense substance such as air. If the angle of incidence is big enough (bigger than the critical angle), the ray doesn't come out at all, but reflects back into the material.
Total Internal Reflection depends on... The Critical Angle
Diffraction is... Waves spreading out
Refraction is the principle that... Changing the speed of a wave can change its direction.
There are seven types of EM waves, which way do you use to remember it? Raving - Radio Waves Martians - Microwaves Invade - Infra Red Venus - Visible light Using - Ultra Violet X-ray Guns - Gamma Rays
The properties of EM waves depend on... (2) Frequency & Wavelength
Light signals can be sent through Fibre Optics by... Bouncing waves off the sides of a very narrow core, protected by outer cladding. The ray of light enters the fibre so that it hits the boundary between the core and the outer cladding at an angle greater than the critical angle for the material. This causes total internal reflection of the ray within the core.
Advantages of Fibre Optics (3) 1.Using light is a very quick way to communicate. 2. Multiplexing means that lots of different signals can be sent down a single optical fibre at the same time. 3. As a digital signal, there's little interference.
Lasers produce a... Narrow, intense beams of monochromatic light.
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

OCR Physics P2 revision cards
Alex Howard
P2 Quiz
Leah Firmstone
GCSE Physics P7 (OCR) - Light, Telescopes, and Images
Josh Price
GCSE Physics P7 (OCR) - Astronomy
Josh Price
GCSE Physics P7 (OCR) - Sun, and Stars
Josh Price
GCSE Physics P7 (OCR) - Mapping the Universe
Josh Price
Forces and their effects
kate.siena
GCSE Physics P7 (OCR) - Astronomy Community
Josh Price
Physics Revision
Tom Mitchell
Waves
kate.siena
P1 - The Earth in the Universe
franimal