Science Revision Guide Sheet
Science Revision Guide Sheet
Biology:
Sensitivity: Organisms can sense stimuli in the internal or external environment, detect changes in environment
Respiration: Organisms convert chemical energy in food into kinetic energy, energy released for metabolism
MRS. GREN
Cells:
Cell structure:
- Nucleus (Both): Contain DNA which instructs the cell how to divide
- Cytoplasm (Both): Contain mostly dissolved substances and water; a place for chemical reactions to
occur
- Cell membrane (Both): a thin partially permeable membrane that separates the cytoplasm from the
outside; controls what goes in and out of the cell
- Cell wall (Plant): Has thick cellulose that protects the cell
- Vacuole (Plant): Stores cell sap made up of water; hold the shape of the cell
- Mitochondria (Both): The powerhouse of the cell; site of respiration
- Chloroplast (Plant): Site of photosynthesis, contains chlorophyll
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Osmosis: The passive net movement of water molecules down the concentration gradient through a semi-
permeable membrane from a high to low water potential
1. Water potential
- Proportion of water to solute
- More solute = less water (and vice versa)
- Concentrated solution: has more solute, has less water in total
- REMEMBER: water potential is opposite of the concentration of solute
2. Cells vs osmosis
- Animal cells vs osmosis:
+ Animal cells will become cytolyzed (burst) when being low water potential (due to water entering the
cell and it fills up)
+ Animal cells will become flaccid when being high water potential (due to water leaving the cell and it
shrinks)
+ Plant cells will become turgid (firm up) when being low water potential but can’t burst because the
cell wall prevents that
+ Plant cells will become plasmolyzed (cell membrane tears away from cell wall) when being high water
potential
- Tonicity:
- Factors affecting:
+ Temperature: higher temp => higher movement of molecules => more diffusion
Diffusion: the net movement of gas particles down the concentration gradient from a high concentration to a
low concentration
Active transport: The net movement of particles up a concentration gradient from a low concentration to a
high concentration that requires energy
3.2: Food tests (all of these test for the presence of the substances)
3.3: Enzymes
Overview
- Definition: proteins that act as biological catalysts that speeds up the rate of reaction in metabolic
reactions like breakdown large molecules, building large molecules, or change one molecule to another.
- Base unit: protein and amino acids
- Since it’s a catalyst, it is not used up in the reaction
- Can be denatured
- Each enzyme has a certain shape that bonds with a certain substrate
- Purpose: breakdown large molecules, build large molecules or change one molecule to another
- Enzymes often end with ‘ase’ after the substrate
Enzyme activity:
4.1: Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis:
- Process of plants making carbohydrates from raw materials using light energy
- Done in the presence of sunlight and chlorophyll
- Stored as starch
- Turn into cellulose to make cell walls
- Used in respiration
- Stored as fructose
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Plant nutrition:
4.2: Leaf
Leaf structure:
Leaf adaptations:
Xylem:
Phloem:
5.2: Transpiration
Transpiration:
- Loss of water from plant leaves by evaporation of water at the surfaces of mesophyll cells followed by
diffusion of water through the stomata
- Water as an excess of photosynthesis diffuses out of the stomata
- Use of capillary action and water potential gradient
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Translocation:
6.1: Diet
Main nutrients:
Enzymes:
- Bile: not an enzyme; emulsify fats to increase surface area; neutralizes acid when entering duodenum
Nutritional needs
6.2: Digestion
Types of digestion:
Alimentary canal:
Digestion:
1. Food enters the mouth, and gets chewed and turned into bolus; amylase in the saliva breaks down
starch
2. Bolus moves down the esophagus and gets pushed by “peristalsis” through esophagus
3. The bolus of food enters the stomach; gets mixed with gastric juice; pepsin get to work; HCL acid kills
bacteria
4. Food enters the duodenum via the sphincter; water is first absorbed; pancreatic juice and bile gets
introduced
5. Food is further broken down; absorbed by villi; assimilated to cells
6. Waste products like fiber moves to the large intestine; remaining water is absorbed; pushed to the
rectum and out
Function of HCL:
Absorption:
- Moving of digested molecules through the walls of the small intestine into the blood
- Done by villi (singular “villus”)
- Villis are finger-like projections with in-folds that increase surface area of small intestine
- Epithelial cell: contains micro villi that further increase surface area
- Goblet cells: produce mucus that protect the villi
- Blood vessels (arteriole, venule, blood capillary): assimilate digested food that diffused into villi,
transport glucose, amino acids and
- Lacteal: branch of lymphatic system, transport lipids and fatty acids
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6.3: Teeth
Teeth types:
Structure:
Tooth care:
Dental decay:
7.1: Blood
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Blood components:
- Plasma: Makes up more than half of blood; mostly water to dissolve nutrients
- Red blood cell: Contain hemoglobin; carries oxygen; has a concave disc and no nucleus to carry more
oxygen
- Platelets: Made in bone marrows; made blood-clots
- Phagocytes: a type of white blood cell; consume pathogens (distorted blob), carries out phacocytosis
- Lymphocytes: a type of white blood cell; produce antibodies (circle)
Blood vessels:
7.2: Heart
Heart:
Heart structure:
Blood flow:
Double circulation:
+ Higher pressure
Heart Diseases:
Respiratory system:
- Nasal cavity: area inside the nose where air is entered and exited
- Trachea (wind pipe): tube that connects lungs to nasal cavity; lined with rings of cartilage
- Larynx (voice box): hollow tube right above the trachea; responsible for making sounds
- Bronchus and bronchioles: structures that branch out from the trachea into alveoli; lined with rings of
cartilage
- Diaphragm: muscle that move the lungs
- Pleural cavity: filled with pleural liquid; lubricate the lungs from the thorax walls
- Ribs: bones to protect the lungs
- Intercostal muscles: muscles that move the ribs
- Alveoli: air sacs for gas exchange
Cleaning system:
+ Goblet cells: cells that produce mucus to trap dust and bacteria
+ Ciliated cells: cells that wafts the mucus up and into esophagus to be swallowed and digested by
stomach acid
Gas exchange:
Inhale Exhale
1) Intercostal muscles contract 1) Intercostal muscles relax
2) Ribs move up and out 2) Ribs move down and in
3) Diaphragm contracts; turns into flat shape 3) Diaphragm relax; turns into dome shape
4) Thorax cavity gets bigger 4) Thorax cavity get smaller
5) Air pressure inside the body is lower than outside 5) Air pressure inside the body is higher than outside
6) Air flows into the lungs 6) Air is forced out
7) Oxygen diffuses into the blood capillaries
8) CO2 and water vapor diffuses into the alveoli
Air composition
- Inhale/Inspired air:
+ Oxygen: 21%
+ CO2: 0.04%
- Exhale/Expired air:
+ Oxygen: 16%
+ CO2: 4%
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Breathing:
- Breathing rate: breath out CO2 faster, create a steeper CO2 gradient, faster diffusion
- Breathing depth: more O2 per breath taken
8.2: Respiration
- Muscle contraction
- Protein synthesis
- Cell division
- Growth
- Maintenance of body temperature
- Metabolism
Respiration:
+ Anaerobic: does not require oxygen to break down nutrients and release energy
Aerobic respiration
- Equation:
Anaerobic respiration:
- Lactic acid
- Ethanol
Oxygen debt:
- Glucose is fully metabolized in to water in aerobic respiration, all energy is transferred in ATP
- Glucose is only partially metabolized in anaerobic respiration, only some of the energy is transferred
Sensitivity:
Neuron:
Axons: extension of the cytosol that extends out the furthest, can be thought of as “tail”
Dendrite: shorter more branch like at the head or “cell body”
Synapses: gap or connection between 2 nerve ending from different neurons
Myelin sheath: Optimize the travel of impulses
Schwann cell: Create myelin sheath; keep the neuron healthy
Types of responses:
Reflex actions: involuntary actions that does not have to be thought about, rapid, automatic
Involuntary actions: actions that does not require conscious control
Voluntary actions: actions that require conscious control and or decision making
Reflex arcs:
The receptors get stimuli and send “nerve impulse” to the “sensory neuron”
Sensory neuron sends impulse to the “relay neurons” in the spinal cord
Relay neurons can either send impulse to the brain or straight to the “motor neuron” as an effector
The path of impulse travelling through these 2 neurons are called “reflex arcs”
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Retina:
Iris:
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Focusing light:
Close Far
Ciliary muscle Contracts Relaxes
Suspensory ligaments Slacken Tightens
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9.3: Hormones
Endocrine glands:
Tropism:
Plant hormones:
. Plant grow up
None None Plant grow straight
9.5: Homeostasis
Skin:
Epidermis: top layer; made with cells below and constantly rise
Dermis: lower layer; much thicker, touch and pressure sensor
Cornified layer: made up of dead epidermis cells filled with keratin; hard and waterproof; protect
lower layers
Melanin: pigments that absorb sunlight in the epidermis
Hair follicle: sections of epidermis that dips; keratin hair grows from that
Sweat glands: produce sweat (water, salt, urea); regulate body temp; excreted through sweat pores
Adipose tissue: fat; energy reserve; insulator
Blood vessels, nerve endings and receptors
Hypothalamus:
Blood sugar:
Asexual reproduction:
Sexual reproduction:
Easy to spread beneficial mutation Non-beneficial genes are not spread as widely
Faster Evolution occurs efficiently
Produce more offspring
Flower structure:
Sepal: base of the flower; protect flower when it was a bud; green
Petal: colorful to attract insects; have guidelines running vertically; guide insects to the nectary
Nectary: produce nectar for insect to drink
Stamen: consist of anther at the top and filament at the bottom; male reproductive organ
Anther: contain pollen grains with the male gametes inside
Carpel: consist of stigma, style, ovary and ovule; female reproductive organ
Stigma: catch pollen grains
Style: transport pollen grain down to the ovary
Ovary and ovule: contain female gamete
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Pollination:
+ Animals poop
+ Wind
+ Water
Fertilization:
When the male gamete (pollen nucleus) fuses with the female gamete (ovule nucleus)
Once the pollen land on the stigma, it grows a tube
The pollen grain travels down the tube and fuse with the ovule
One pollen grain fertilize 1 ovule
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Seeds:
Gamete:
Sperm Egg
Size Very small Large for a cell; 0.15 – 0.2mm
Mobility Very mobile, use whipping motion from the flagellum Immobile, moves by fluid from oviduct
Numbers 300 million per ejaculation 1 per menstruation from puberty to menopause
Adaptations . Flagelum for swimming . Stores energy for the embryo
. Acrosome: contains enzyme that digest the egg outer . Zone pellucida: becomes impenetrable once 1 sperm
layers has entered the egg to prevent “polyspermy”
. Nucleus: contain genetic information
. Mitochondria: energy for swiming
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Menstruation:
Menstruation:
Day 8 – 14: uterus lining gets repaired; follicles develop; dominant follicle (the one that will release the egg)
will finish develop after the end of menstruation
Day 15 – 28: ovulation; dominant follicle burst into corpus luteum; egg travels down oviduct; hormones are
produced by the corpus luteum
+ Form a zygote
Intercourse
Erection: when blood is pumped to stiffen up the penis; close the distance to the vagina
Intercourse: when the penis penetrates the vagina
Ejaculation: when the semen is pushed out of the urethra
Sperm must swim to the egg after ejaculation using their tail (flagellum)
Head of sperm will enter egg, egg close of all the other sperm cells
Fertilization: when the nucleus of sperm fuses with the egg
Development:
- Amnionic fluid:
- Amniotic sac: thin membrane that suspends the amniotic fluid and prevent entry of bacteria
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11.3: HIV/AIDS
Preventing STI:
- Abstaining sex
- Have 1 sexual partner
- Test for STI
- Vaccinate
- Use condoms and dental dams: never reuse condoms; never use oil based lubricant with condoms
- Male circumcision
- Increased awareness/education
12.1: Chromosomes
Chromosome sets:
Mitosis:
Meiosis:
- Reduction division in which the chromosome number is halved from diploid to haploid resulting in
genetically different cells
- Produce 4 genetically varied haploid daughter cells
- Chromosomes are copied and split 4 ways
- Each daughter will receive a separate alleles
- Used in gamete production
12.3: Inheritance
Dominant: allele that always affect phenotype regardless of the other allele
Recessive: allele that only affects phenotype when the other allele is also recessive
In a homozygous dominant or heterozygous, the phenotype is always affected by the dominant allele
Only in a homozygous recessive, the phenotype is affected by the recessive allele
Carrier: organism inheriting a recessive allele in a heterozygous gene but does not show that
Codominance: sometimes there are 2 alleles that are codominance and shows their same trait together
(blood group AB)
- Pedigree charts: shows the relationship between generations and the phenotypes present
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Sex determination:
12.4: Variation
Types of variation:
Mutation:
- Process:
1) Species produce offspring, more than enough to sustain population
2) Limited resource => competition
3) Variation means that some will possess advantageous characteristics
4) They survive and pass their genes down to future generations
5) The fittest/most advantageous are “selected”
- Evolution: change in adaptive features of a population over time because of natural selection
- Adaptation: by which populations become more suited to their environment over many generations
Ecological terms:
Energy flow:
Energy is lost between all the trophic levels, higher means less energy
+ This is why there are less organisms the further top of the food chain
Types of consumers:
Ecology diagrams:
Food chain: diagram showing the energy flow within an ecosystem, starting with a producer
Food web: network of interconnected food chains
Trophic level: the position of the organism inside a food chain/web or pyramid
Carbon cycle:
Nitrogen cycle:
- Types of bacteria:
+ Nitrogen fixing (lighting can also do this): convert nitrogen gas in the atmosphere into nitrates in
the soil
- Process:
7. Some nitrates that isn’t consumed in step 2 gets denitrified into atmospheric nitrogen
Deforestation:
+ Less transpiration
+ Leeching: water washes away the minerals from the exposed soil
+ Soil erosion: Soil gets washed away due to a lack of tree roots
Polluting water:
- Chemical waste
- Discarded trash
- Untreated sewage: provide food for decomposing bacteria; consume all oxygen
Eutrophication:
Chemistry:
Changing state:
- Evaporation: molecules have enough energy to escape surface of the water, cools it down; happens only
at the surface
- Boiling point: temperature at which the liquid boils; does not cool down the liquid
- Melting point: temperature at which the liquid melts
Diffusion:
- the random net movement of particles down the concentration gradient from a high concentration to a
low concentration
- Smaller molecular mass, greater rate of diffusion
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2.1: Measuring
- Time: stopwatch/clock
- Temperature: thermometer
- Mass: balance/scale
- Volume: measuring cylinder, burette, pipette, displacement
2.2: Chromatography
What is chromatography:
Interpreting a chromatogram:
Rf value:
Crystallization:
Filtration:
Simple distillation:
Fractional distillation:
- Same as before, but the vapor goes to a fractionating column filled with beads
- Those with a lower boiling point travel up higher
- The condenser can be set at a point where the vapor will travel to
- Vapor condensed back into liquid
Physical Chemical
Same chemical formula Maybe change chemical formula
Change state of matter Produce new substance
Reversible Sometimes reversible
Particles:
Solutions:
Atom structure:
Periodic table:
Atomic mass:
- # of protons + # of neutrons
- # of protons might not be equal to # of neutrons
- Isotopes: different version of the same element (same # of protons, different # of neutrons)
3.4: Bonding
Electron configuration:
- Number of electrons usually equals the number of protons, therefore the atom is neutral
- Electrons are found at energy levels/shells
- Each shell have a maximum electron capacity
- Octet rule: 2, 8, 8
- The first shell can hold a maximum of 2 electrons
- The second shell can hold a maximum of 8 electrons, and so on
- These are just maximum numbers, some shells are not filled all the way
Ions:
Ionic bonding:
Covalent bonding:
Ionic Covalent
Melting, boiling points Higher Lower
Solubility . Soluble in water Mostly insoluble
. Insoluble in carbon compounds
Electrical conductivity Only in liquid state None, some react with water to
create ions
Macromolecules:
Diamond Graphite
4 covalent carbon bonds 3 other carbons, arranged in hexagonal lattice
High boiling and melting point Weak bonds
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- Silicon dioxide:
Unit 4: Stoichiometry
Road map:
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Unit 5: Electrochemistry
Electrolysis:
Anode Cathode
Type of ion attracted Anion Cation
Charge Positive Negative
Reaction Reduction Oxidation
Products Non-metals and oxygen Metals and hydrogen
- Process:
1) Ions go to their respective electrode
2) Anions lose electrons, get reduced
3) External circuit pumps electrons to the cathode
4) Cations gain electrons, get oxidized
- For the electrolysis of aqueous compounds, the one lower in the reactivity series will be discharged
(produced)
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Electroplating:
Aluminum extraction:
+ 2O 2- <= O2 + 4e-
+ C + O2 => CO2
+ Al 3+ + 3e- => Al
Exothermic Endothermic
Energy change Release Absorb
E reactant vs E product Greater Less
E reactant – E product Positive result Negative result
Factors affecting:
Acid Bases
Contain H+ ions Contain OH- ions
Taste sour Taste bitter, soapy
Proton donor Proton acceptor
Electron pair acceptor Electron pair donor
Ph < 7 Ph > 7
Turns blue litmus red Turns red litmus blue
Controlling acidity:
- Air: acid rain causes erosion, harm soil, plant, and water
- Water: treated with slake lime to prevent pollution
Ph scale:
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- Ph scale from 0 - 14
- Concentrated: contains more substance proportional to the solution
- Dilute: contains less substance proportional to the solution
- Aqueous solution: dissolved in water
- Acid has ph < 7
- Bases has ph > 7
- 7 is neutral (like water)
8.2: Oxides
Metals Non-metals
Metals + Oxygen => Metal Oxides Non-metals + Oxygen => Non-metal oxides
Metal oxides are solid Non-metal oxides are gas
Metal oxides + water => metal hydroxide Non-metal oxide + water => acid
Basic Acidic
Amphoteric oxides:
. Insoluble in excess
Chromium . Green precipitate . Grey-green precipitate
. Insoluble in excess . Insoluble in excess
Copper . Light blue precipitate . Light blue precipitate
. Insoluble in excess . Dissolve in excess; dark blue
Iron (II) . Green precipitate . Green precipitate
. Insoluble in excess . Insoluble in excess
Iron (III) . Red-brown precipitate . Red-brown precipitate
. Insoluble in excess . Insoluble in excess
Zinc . White precipitate . White precipitate
. Dissolve in excess; colorless . Dissolve in excess; colorless
Solubility rule:
Soluble Insoluble
Sodium, potassium, ammonium compounds
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All nitrates
All chlorides except Silver and lead
All sulfates except Barium, calcium, lead
Sodium, potassium, ammonium carbonate All other carbonates
Sodium, potassium, calcium hydroxide All other hydroxides
Groups:
Periods:
Group 1:
Group 7:
- Called Halogens
- Have a charge of -1
- Chemical property: toxic; diatomic molecules; low boiling, melting points; poor conductors of heat and
electricity
- Elements become less reactive going down
- Increasing boiling and melting point going down
-
Group 8:
Properties:
Metal Non-metal
Lustrous (shiny) Dull
Hard and strong Soft and brittle
Malleable Brittle
Ductile Brittle
Denser Less dense
Good heat and electrical conductor Poor heat and electrical conductor
Sonorous Poor sound conductor
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Properties Use
Aluminum (Al) . Low density . Aircraft manufacturing
. Good electrical conductors . Food containers
. Resistance to corrosion
Copper (Cu) . Ductile and malleable . Electrical cables and wires
. Good electrical conductors
Zinc (Zn) . . Galivanize iron or mild steel
Alloy:
Corrosion:
Prevention of corrosion:
+ Store in oil
Reactivity series:
Displacement reaction:
Metal oxide + more reactive metal => new metal oxide + less reactive metal
Carbon displacement:
Blast furnace:
+ C + O2 => CO2
+ CO2 + C => CO
- Iron purification:
11.1 Water
Water uses:
Industrial Home
. Cooling . Hygiene
. Hydroelectric . Cooking
. Solvent . Washing
. Irrigation . Drinking
11.2: Air
Air composition:
- 78% nitrogen
- 21% oxygen
- Remaining 1% = CO2, Ne, He, H2, CH4, Kr
- 0.04% CO2
Air pollutants:
Catalytic converters:
Reduction of NOX
Greenhouse gases:
Haber process:
+ Exothermic
+ 200 atm
+ Iron catalyst
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Fertilizers:
Obtaining sulfur
Uses:
Chemical Uses
Sulfuric acid . Act catalyst to clean metals
. Car batteries, soap, detergents, fertilizers
. Acid drain cleaners, paints & dyes
Sulfur . Make rubber more flexible
Sulfur dioxide . Kill bacteria
. Decolorize wood pulp to make papper
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Contact process:
1. Stage 1
- Burn sulfur in the air
- Get oxygen
S + O2 => SO2
2. Stage 2
- Pressure: 2 atm
- Temperature: 450 C
- Catalyst: Vanadium Oxide
3. Stage 3
- Make into oleum to prevent a fine mist if absorb straight into water
Making lime:
Lime uses:
Hydrocarbons:
Naming hydrocarbons:
- For other chemicals attached to the main hydrocarbons: add number in the front indicating the
position of the carbon (Ex: 1, Chloroethane; an ethane molecule with a chlorine bonded to the first
carbon)
- For the double or triple bonds of alkenes and alkynes: add the number with dashes after the prefix
(Ex: But-1-ene; the double bond is at the first carbon)
- Always goes from the side where the carbon is the closest because it is the same molecule flipped
14.2: Alkanes
Concept:
Properties:
Combustion of alkanes
1. Complete
- When there is sufficient oxygen
- Reactant: fuel, oxygen
- Product: water, carbon dioxide
2. Incomplete
- When there is insufficient oxygen
- Reactant: fuel, insufficient oxygen
- Product: carbon particulate/carbon monoxide/carbon dioxide, water
14.3: Alkenes
Concept:
Properties:
Cracking:
Addition reaction
- Halogen
- Hydrogen
- Water
14.4: Alcohol
Concept:
Producing ethanol:
+ Pressure: 60 – 70 atm
- Fermentation:
1) Add sugar, water and yeast
2) Fermen between 15 and 35 degrees without oxygen
3) Yeast contains enzyme to catalyze the reaction:
Function of ethanol:
Concept:
Properties:
- Weak acid
- Dissociate partially
- Turns blue litmus red
- React with base to form salt and water
Polymers:
+ Addition
+ Condensation
Addition polymerization:
Esters:
Condensation polymerization:
14.7: Fuel
Crude oil:
- Coal, oil, natural gas are all fossil fuel that burns to produce carbon dioxide
- Natural gas mainly contain methane
- Petroleum (gasoline): a mixture of different hydrocarbons that have to be separated using fractional
distillation
Physics:
Unit 1: Motion
1.1: Measurement
Length:
Volume:
Density:
Pressure:
Weight:
Mass vs Weight:
Speed:
Distance-time graphs:
Speed/velocity-time graphs:
Acceleration:
Force:
- Hooke’s law measures the force required to elastically deform and object
- Must stay within the elastic region
- Force = spring constant (K) x distance
- Every object has a different K value; how elastic or inelastic the object is
- Extension load graph: Graph showing the force and extension of an object
- Limit of proportionality: point where Hooke’s law does not apply
- Elastic limit: point which the object will not return to its original shape
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Moment:
Forms of energy:
- Thermal energy: energy from heat (average kinetic energy of the molecules)
- Electrical energy: energy required to move charged particles through a conductor
- Light: radiation energy in the form of a wave or photons
- Sound: vibration of particles in a longitudinal wave
Energy transfer:
- Energy cannot be created or destroyed, can only be transferred from 1 form to another
- Energy in = energy out + losses
- Efficiency % = useful energy out / total energy in x 100
Power:
Sources of energy:
- Renewable sources: sources of energy that are not limited in supply can be regenerated
- Nonrenewable sources: sources of energy that are limited in supply and cannot be regenerated quickly
3.1: Thermometers
Thermal expansion:
Fixed points:
- Properties:
+ Low melting point/high boiling point; used over a long range of temperatures
+ Use a different liquid with greater boiling point and lower melting point
- Increase sensitivity:
Thermocouple:
Conduction:
Convection:
Radiation:
Unit 4: Waves
Waves:
Wave structure:
- Wavefront: a line where the vibrations are in phase and same direction from the source; perpendicular
to the wave direction
- Amplitude: maximum displacement of points on a wave
- Crest: highest part of a TRANSVERSE wave
- Trough: lowest part of a TRANSVERSE wave
- Compression: where vibrations of a LONGITUDINAL waves are close
- Rarefaction: where vibrations of a LONGITUDINAL waves are far
- Rest position: undisturbed position of particle or fields when not vibrating
- Displacement: distance from a certain point to rest position
Wave equations:
4.2: Light
Reflection:
+ Upright
+ Virtual image
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Refraction:
Electromagnetic spectrum:
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Wave Uses
Radio waves . Long range communication
Microwave . Satellite communication
. Microwave heating
Infrared . Optical fiber communication
Visible light . Taking photos or videos
Ultraviolet . Detecting security ink
. Sterilization
X – ray . Photograph bones
. Scanning of items through customs
Gama ray . Sterilization
4.3: Lens
Lens:
- Principal axis: a line that goes through the middle of the lens
- Focal point: where light converge to or diverge from the principal axis
- Focal length: distance between center to of the lens and focal point
- Converging (convex):
- Diverging (concave)
Image:
- Real:
+ Always inverted
+ Can be projected
- Virtual:
+ Always upright
Sound waves:
- Longitudinal
- Carries matter; required a medium
- Mechanical wave: wave that uses matter and need a medium (like sound waves)
- Sound can’t travel in a vacuum
- Sound travel fastest in solids
- Human hearing range: 20 – 20 000 Hz
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Effect of changing:
Unit 5: Magnetism
Magnets:
Magnetic field:
- Soft iron:
+ Used in electromagnet
- Steel:
Making magnets:
- Induced magnetism:
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Electric charges:
Unit charge:
Electric field:
Static electricity:
Ammeters:
- Analogue:
+ Range: 0.1 – 5 A
- Digital:
Voltage:
- Electromotive force: electrical work done by source that moves the charge around a complete circuit
- Potential difference: electrical work done by current going through 2 points
- Both measured in Volts (V) using a Voltmeter
- Voltage = current x resistance
Voltmeters:
- Analogue:
+ Range: 0.1 – 5 V
- Digital:
Resistance:
Types of resistors:
Series Parallel
Structure Component in 1 closed loop Components in a separate branches
Current . Stays the same wherever in the circuit . Get split along the branches
. More voltage = more current . Split not evenly
. More components = more resistance = less current
EMF . Total EMF = sum of individual EMF . Total EMF = EMF 1 = EMF 2
Potential . Total EMF = sum of individual PD . PD across each branch is the same
difference . PD gets split to each component . Total PD = PD 1 = PD 2 …
Resistance . Total resistance = sum of individual resistance . Total resistance less than smallest individual resistance
Total resistance . Total resistance = R 1 + R 2 …. + R n . Total resistance = 1/(1/R1 + 1/R2 …. + 1/Rn)
Unit 7: Electromagnetism
- A current when interacting with an external magnetic field will produce a force
- This happens when the current is perpendicular to the conductor
+ Make sure that the angle between the current and magnetic field is 90 degrees
Motor:
- Process:
2) The force will make the positive go down and the negative side go up
4) The commutator swap the contact of the brushes every 180 turn
Induced EMF:
- Relative movement between the conductor and the magnet
- Happens also for a fixed conductor and a changing magnetic field
- Factors affecting:
+ Number of coils
+ Strength of magnetic field
+ The speed of the movement
+ Size of the coil
AC generator:
- Graphs:
7.4: Transformer
Transformer:
- Transformer’s roles:
- Advantages:
Radiation particles:
- Beta particles are deflected more in an electric field because they are lighter
- Alpha and beta particles are deflected in opposite directions in a magnetic field
Radioactive decay:
Background radiation:
8.3: Safety
Effect of ionizing radiation:
- Cell death: gamma radiation can destroy cells; often used to treat cancer cells but can be harmful to
normal cells
- Tissue damage: large scale cell death can cause tissue damage
- Mutations: radiation can cause changes in the DNA sequence; lead to cancer and uncontrolled mutation
- Acute radiation: cause skin burns; damage immune system white blood cells