A Level - Physics Notes
A Level - Physics Notes
Milo Noblet
June 2017
1 Particles
charge
Specific charge =
mass
A
In Z X notation: A = mass number (protons + neutrons), Z = proton number.
Isotopes — atoms with same proton number but different mass numbers.
When a neutron in the nucleus changes into a proton a β − particle is released and instantly emitted, along
with an electron antineutrino.
The existence of the neutrino was hypothesised to account for the conservation of energy in β − decay —
it went unproven until antineutrinos were detected.
• Gamma γ radiation is electromagnetic radiation emitted by an unstable nucleus with too much energy
following α or β emission. It has no mass and no charge.
• Annihilation — particle and corresponding antiparticle meet and their mass is converted to radiation
energy.
– 2 photons (γ) are produced to ensure a total momentum of zero following the collision
minimum energy of photon needed, hfmin = 2E0 where E0 is rest energy of particle
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• The antiparticle theory states for every particle there is a corresponding antiparticle that:
– annihilates the particle & itself if they meet — converting their total mass into photons
– has exactly the same rest mass as the particle
– has exactly opposite charge to the particle if the particle is charged.
• The electron’s antiparticle is the positron (β + ). Positron emission occurs when a proton changes into a
neutron in an unstable nucleus with too many protons.
A
ZX →A 0
Z−1 Y ++1 β + Ve
The weak nuclear force affects only unstable nuclei — it is responsible for neutron → proton (β − ) and proton
→ neutron (β + ) decay. In both, a particle and antiparticle are created but do not correspond.
• β + decay: p → n + β + + Ve
In electron capture a proton in a proton-rich nucleus turns into a neutron through weak force interaction
with an inner-shell electron.
p + e − → n + Ve
The same can happen when a proton & electron collide at very high speed. For an electron with sufficient
energy the overall change could occur as W− exchange from e− to p.
• Mesons — hadrons not including protons in their decay products ie π and K mesons.
Leptons do not interact through the strong force — they interact only through the weak, gravitational and
(if charged) electromagnetic interactions.
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• Lepton decays
– K → π, or µ + Vµ , or µ + Vµ
– π ± → µ + Vµ or µ + Vµ
– π 0 → γ (high energy photons)
– µ → e− + Ve
– µ → e+ + V
– Note that decays always obey conservation rules for energy, momentum & charge.
rest energy of products = total energy before − kinetic energy of products
• Muon µ decay: µ changes to Ve and e− created to conserve charge, and Ve to preserve lepton number
– eg µ− → e− + Ve + Vµ
– But µ− 6→ e− + Ve + Vµ even though charge conserved—because lepton number is not.
– Muon can change only into a muon neutrino (not antineutrino).
– Electron can only be created with an electron antineutrino
• Lepton number +1 for any lepton, −1 for any antilepton, 0 for non-lepton
1.5.1 Strangeness
Strange particles are produced through the strong interaction and decay through the weak interaction.
• For strangeness +1, need antistrange quark. For strangeness −1, need strange quark.
• Mesons are hadrons consisting of two quarks—one and antiquark.
– π 0 = any q—q combination — so can be strange
∗ π + = ud, π − = ud
– each pair of charged mesons is a particle-antiparticle pair
– antiparticle of any meson is a q—q pair thus another meson.
– hence only K are strange
∗ K0 = ds (+1 strange), K 0 = ds (−1 strange)
∗ K+ = us (+1 strange), K − = us (−1 strange)
• Baryons are also hadrons, but consist of three quarks — all of which are antiquarks in an antibaryon.
3
– proton = uud, antiproton = uud
– neutron = udd
– The proton is the only stable baryon — a free neutron decays into a proton, releasing an electron
and antineutrino (β − decay)
– but in weak interactions strangeness can change by 0, +1 or −1 (because strange particles decay in
the weak interaction)
4
2 The photoelectric effect
• If we shine light with high enough frequency on metals, photoelectrons are released.
– no photoelectrons emitted if the incident frequency < threshold frequency, fT
– rate of electron emission ∝ intensity
• The photoelectric effect could not be explained by wave theory as this states:
– for a certain frequency, energy ∝ intensity
– energy would spread evenly across the wavefront
– each free e− would gain some energy
– gradually each free e− would gain enough to leave
• No explanation for Ek depending only on f , or for the existence of fT
• could only be explained by the theory of ‘packets’ ie photons.
hc
E = hf =
λ
φ
For e− release, hf ≥ φ (work function) so fT =
h
hf = φ + Ek max
Stopping potential gives max Ek : e × Vs = Ek max
• In excitation electrons move up energy levels if they absorb a photon with sufficient energy to cover the
difference.
• If electrons emit photons, they can move down energy levels - de-excitation.
Energy of the photon emitted = hf = E1 − E2 (E2 lower level)
• If an electron is removed from an atom it is ionised — energy of each level in the atom is equal to the
energy required to ionise from that level.
– ground state = ‘ionisation energy’
Line spectra are evidence for the transitions between discrete energy levels in atoms. If we look at a tube of
glowing gas through a prism we see a spectrum of discrete lines, rather than continuous colours. The pattern
of wavelengths is unique to each element. The wavelength is linked to the energy of the photons released when
electrons de-excite.
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2.3 Wave-particle duality
• Interference and diffraction show light as a wave, but the photoelectric effect shows it as a particle.
• Electron diffraction shows the wave nature of electrons
– diffraction patterns showed when accelerated electrons in vacuo interact with the spaces in graphite
crystal
– following wave theory, the spread of the lines increased if wavelength increased. Slower electrons =
wider spacing.
h
de Broglie λ =
mv
• A vacuum photocell is a glass tube containing two metal plates — a photocathode and photoanode, when
light of frequency ≥ fT of the metal is incident on the photocathode, electrons are emitted from the
cathode and are attracted to the anode. A microammeter can measure the photoelectric current, which
is proportional to the number of electrons per second that transfer from the cathode to the anode
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3 Waves
• A progressive wave carries energy from one place to another without transferring any material.
– transverse — direction of oscillation is perpendicular to direction of energy transfer
– longitudinal — oscillation is parallel to energy transfer
• displacement — how far a point on the wave has moved from the undisturbed position
• Superposition occurs when two or more waves pass through each other — the displacements due to each
wave combine.
– Principle of superposition: ‘when two or more waves cross, the resultant displacement equals the
vector sum of the individual displacements’
3.1 Interference
• Interference can be constructive or destructive — matching displacements are constructive, opposite are
destructive. If the crest and trough are not of the same magnitude of displacement the destructive
interference will not be total.
• For interference to occur the two waves must be coherent — having ‘the same wavelength and frequency,
and a fixed phase difference’
• Interference type depends on path difference
– Constructive interference: path difference = nλ
– Destructive interference: path difference = (n + 12 )λ
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3.2.1 Explaining stationary waves
• When in phase the two progressive waves reinforce each other to create a larger wave
1 λ
• 4 of a cycle later the waves have moved 4 in opposite directions so are now in antiphase & cancel each
other out
1
• After another 4 of a cycle they are back in phase with the same resultant as before, but reversed.
The points of zero displacement remain in constant positions throughout. Between these points (nodes) the
stationary wave oscillates.
• Phase difference:
– 0 / 2π if two particles are between adjacent nodes or separated by an even number of nodes
– π if separated by an odd number of nodes
In a stationary wave all particles except those at the nodes vibrate at the same frequency. The amplitude
varies from zero at nodes to maximum at antinodes (whereas in a progressive wave it would be the same for all
particles).
Phase difference between two particles is nλ where n is the number of nodes between the particles — for a
progressive wave phase difference = 2πd
λ
The key condition is that the time taken for a wave to travel along the string and back should be equal to
the time taken for a whole number of cycles of the vibrator.
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Figure 1: Diffraction grating derivation (a-levelphysicstutor.com)
3.4 Diffraction
• The gap needs to be similar in width to the wavelength. If it is much bigger then there will be no
diffraction. Less diffraction occurs when waves pass through a wide gap than a narrow gap.
– Diffracted waves spread out more if:
∗ gap is made narrower, or
∗ λ is much larger
λ
width of central fringe ∝
slit width
• Thanks to the single-slit effect, Young’s (double slit) fringes follow the same intensity distribution as for
diffraction through a single slit
• θ (angle of diffraction, between beam and zero order) is equal to angle between wavefront and plane of
slits so sin θ = nλ
d where d is the spacing of the two slits
d sin θ = nλ
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• Increasing λ = fringes more spread out, increasing d = less spread out. θ < 90◦ as sin 90◦ is the maximum
possible.
• X-ray λ similar to the atom spacing in a crystalline structure, so X-rays form a diffraction pattern when
directed at thin crystal — the spacing can be found from the diffraction pattern: ‘X-ray crystallography’
– Diffraction gratings are used in spectrometers for studying the spectrum of light from any source and
to measure light wavelengths very accurately.
d
• Maximum number of orders produced is given by λ rounded down to nearest integer.
• Number of maxima observed is 2n + 1 where n is the greatest order
– glowing gas in a vapour lamp or discharge tube emits light at specific wavelengths so its spectrum
consists of narrow vertical lines. The wavelengths are characteristic of the element that produced
the light
• Line absorption
– continuous spectrum with dark lines at specific wavelengths. Pattern of dark lines is due to the
elements in the glowing gas — these elements absorb light of the same wavelengths they can emit so
the transmitted light is missing these wavelengths. The atoms of the gas that absorb light then emit
the light subsequently, but not necessarily in the same direction as the transmitted light.
3.5 Refraction
• Absolute refractive index is a measure of optical density
c
n=
cs
so the smaller the n of a substance, the greater the speed of light in that substance
• Refractive index between two media, 1 n2 is a ratio of the speed of light in material 1 to that in material 2
c1 n2
1 n2 = =
c2 n1
We can assume n at an air—substance boundary is the absolute n of a substance.
n1 sin θ1 = n2 sin θ2
• When a wave passes from a dense medium into a less dense medium, it bends away from the normal as it
speeds up. The reverse is true.
– If light is incident at θc to the normal then the ray will exit along the flat surface
– But if the angle of incidence is greater than θc , total internal reflection occurs.
– Note that TIR will only occur at a boundary of higher n to lower n
• rearranging Snell’s law:
n1
sin θc = =1 n 2
n2
• TIR is useful in fibre optics.
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– The core of the fibre has a high refractive index, but is surrounded by cladding of lower refractive
index, which helps to protect the core from scratches (which could allow light to escape) and decreases
θc to ensure TIR occurs.
• There are several issues encountered with fibre optics
– Absorption — loss in amplitude as light travels along the fibre. Can be reduced by increasing purity
of the glass or using repeaters at frequent intervals.
– Modal dispersion — light enters the fibre at different angles so can take different paths through the
fibre, which results in pulse broadening. Can be mitigated by using monomode fibre.
– Material dispersion — different wavelengths of light travel at different speeds through the glass
(higher n for that λ, lower the speed). Using monochromatic light sources mitigates this issue.
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4 Mechanics
4.1 Vectors
• Scalars have magnitude only, whereas vectors have both magnitude and direction.
• Resolving vectors by calculation:
– Horizontal component: X = R cos θ
– Vertical component: Y = R sin θ
Note θ measured from the horizontal.
• Finding the resultant vector
Y
– θ = arctan X
√
– R = X2 + Y 2
• Free-body diagrams should contain all forces acting on an object but not any forces exerted by the object
itself.
• Three coplanar forces acting on a body in equilibrium will form a closed loop — triangle of forces.
• On an inclined plane the weight of the object acts straight down, but the normal reaction at a right angle
to the plane. Friction acts against the object sliding down the plane. Note that the angle between mg
and the normal to the plane (ie the reaction force) is the same as the slope angle.
4.2 Moments
moment = force × pependicular distance from the line of action of the force to the pivot, unit: N m
The principle of moments says ‘for a body to be in equilibrium, the sum of the clockwise moments about any
point must equal the sum of the anticlockwise moments about that point’
• A couple is a pair of coplanar forces of equal size acting parallel to each other but in opposite directions
• The centre of mass of a body is the point through which a single force on the body has no turning effect.
– If a body is in stable equilibrium, when displaced then released it returns to its original position
because c.o.m. is directly below the point of support when the body is at rest.
– A plank on a drum is in unstable equilibrium — if displaced slightly then released the plank will
roll off the drum because the c.o.m. is directly above the point of support when in equilibrium — so
weight acts to take it further away from equilibrium position.
– An object will topple if the line of action of its weight passes beyond the pivot
width of base
in order for an object to tilt: moment > mg ×
2
4.3 Motion
• On displacement—time graphs gradient = velocity
• On velocity—time graphs gradient = acceleration & area under graph = displacement
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4.3.2 Projectile motion
• In suvat equations, a = g. g always acts downwards ie negative.
• Horizontal and vertical components of motion must be thought of separately
– vertical motion — constant a due to g being constant
– horizontal motion — constant speed until projectile lands
• If a projectile is launched at an angle we need to resolve the initial velocity into vertical and horizontal
components
X = R cos θ
Y = R sin θ
• resistance ∝ speed
• Friction/drag acts in the opposite direction to the motion of the object and converts kinetic energy to
heat & sound energy. It increases with speed
• Lift acts perpendicular to fluid flow
• The terminal velocity occurs where the driving force is constant and there is a resistance force which
increases with speed
– Maximum speed is affected by the magnitude of the driving force, and the magnitude of the resistance
force.
∆V ∆(mv)
F = ma = m = therefore F ∆t = ∆(mv)
∆t t
• The impulse, defined as F × t, thus equals the change in momentum. It is also the area under a
force—time graph.
• all objects fall at the same rate regardless of mass (but resistance does play a part)
3. ‘If body A exerts a force on body B, then body B exerts an equal but opposite force on body A’ — aka every
action has an equal & opposite reaction.
4.4 Energy
work done = force × distance moved
Note that force is not always in the same direction as the movement eg for a sled being pulled by a string, only
the horizontal force causes the motion.
horizontal: W = F s cos θ
vertical: W = F s sin θ
• Area under a force—displacement graph tells us the work done
∆W E
P = = = Fv
∆t t
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4.4.1 Conservation of energy
‘Energy cannot be created nor destroyed, it can be transferred from one form to another, but the total energy in
a closed system cannot change’
1
Ek = mv 2
2
Ep = mgh
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5 Materials
mass, m
density, ρ = unit: kg m−3
volume, v
• Hooke’s law states extension of a stretched object ∝ force
F = k∆l
– This only applies up to the elastic limit, after which the material will be permanently stretched.
– This plastic deformation results in a non-zero intercept on a F —∆l graph, but the gradient of such
a graph remains the same as the forces between bonds are identical.
for springs in parallel, effective k = k1 + k2 . . . + kn
1 1 1 1
for springs in series, = + ...
effective k k1 k2 kn
• Elastic — returns to original shape and size when force is removed
• Plastic — material is permanently stretched
1 1
Elastic strain energy, E = F ∆l = k∆l2
2 2
The Young modulus is a property of a material — it measures stiffness.
stress Fl
Young modulus, E = = unit: Pa, N m−2
strain A∆l
• The gradient of a stress—strain graph is thus equal to the Young modulus.
• Looking at a stress—strain graph, there are three key points: the limit of proportionality, after which the
relationship is no longer linear, the elastic limit, past which plastic deformation occurs, and the yield point
— after this point, the material suddenly starts to stretch without extra load.
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6 Electricity
Q = It, so current=rate of flow of charge
W = QV , so potential difference is the energy per unit charge
V = IR, for an Ohmic conductor I ∝ V . A shallower gradient on I—V graph = increased resistance
• An Ohmic conductor as a straight line I—V graph
• A silicon diode conducts no current until V ≈ 0.7 V, after which current flows with very little resistance
- the graph should be an almost-vertical line.
• A filament bulb gives an S-curve: greater resistance at higher voltages as the filament heats up due to
increased current flow.
• The unknown-resistor circuit consists of a variable resistor in series with the unknown resistance, an
ammeter and a voltmeter in parallel with the unknown resistance. It can be used to determine the
resistance of the unknown resistor.
6.1 Resistivity
resistivity, ρl = RA unit: Ω m
Superconductors have a resistivity of 0 Ω m. These are certain materials, which must be cooled below a
‘transition temperature’.
Uses include power transmission lines, strong electromagnets, and very high speed electronic systems.
6.2 Power
E V2
P = = IV = = I 2R
t R
E = V It
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7 Circular motion
θ
Angular speed, ω = = 2πf unit: rad s−1
t
2πr
Linear velocity, v = = 2πf r = rω
T
v2
Magnitude of centripetal accelleration is given by a =
r
mv 2
Using F = ma, F = = mrω 2
r
so mv 2 ≥ mg or alternatively mrω 2 ≥ mg
mv 2
Tension in the string at the top = − mg
r
mv 2
Tension in the string at the bottom = + mg
r
mv 2
Keeping a car on a humpback bridge requires weight to equal the centripetal force ie mg ≥ r .
2
Support force from the road = mg − mv
r .
17
8 Simple harmonic motion
∆t
Phase difference in radians = 2π
T
∆t is the time between successive instants where the two objects are at maximum displacement in the same
direction.
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Figure 4: Variation of energy with displacement
8.4 Damping
• Light damping — T independent of amplitude so T remains constant as amplitude decreases. Amplitude
gradually decreases by the same fraction each cycle.
• Critical damping — the system returns to equilibrium in the shortest possible time without overshooting
• Heavy damping — so strong that the displaced object returns to equilibrium much more slowly than if
the system is critically damped — no oscillation occurs.
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9 Gravitational fields
A force field is a region in which a body experiences a non-contact force. A force field can be represented as a
vector, the direction of which must be determined by inspection.
• Gravity is a universal attractive force which acts between all matter.
Gm1 m2
magnitude of a force between point masses, F = where G is the gravitational constant
r2
• A gravitational field can be represented by field lines — also known as lines of force. This is the path
followed by a small mass placed close to a massive body.
– Note that for a radial field, the field lines point towards the centre. In a uniform field eg close to the
Earth’s surface, field lines act straight down — parallel to each other and evenly spaced.
• The gravitational field strength, g, is the force per unit mass on a small test mass placed in the field.
F
g=m
GM
• In a radial field, the magnitude of g = r2
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9.2.1 Kepler’s 3rd Law proof & derivation
For an object in orbit around mass M:
GM GM
1. r2 = rω 2 so r3 = ω2
2π GM 4π 2 4π 2 3
2. Combining with T = ω gives r3 = T2 , or T 2 = GM r
9. Hence a graph of log T against log r has gradient 1.5 and positive y-intercept of √2π
GM
GM m
Hence to be in orbit, Ek =
2r
GM
Potential energy is calculated from gravitational potential: Ep = − ·m
r
GM m GM m
The total energy is the sum: ET = + (− )
2r r
GM m
ET = −
2r
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10 Electrostatics
1 Q1 Q2
Force between point charges in vacuo, F =
4πε0 r2
• ε0 = permittivity of free space
– air can be treated as a vacuum when calculating force between charges
– for a charged sphere, charge may be considered to be concentrated at the centre
• Electric fields can be represented by field lines — the direction of which is positive to less positive.
– An electric line of force is the path along which a free positive charge would tend to move.
• Electric field strength at a point in an electric field is the force exerted by the field by a unit positive
charge placed at that point
F
electric field strength, E = unit: N C−1 or V m−1
Q
Therefore the force exerted on charge Q at a point is given by F = EQ
V
magnitude of field strength in a uniform field, E =
d
– This can be derived from the work done moving a charge between the plates: F d = Q∆V
1 Q
field strength in a radial field, E =
4πε0 r2
The electric potential of a positively charged particle increases as it moves to a point at higher potential
— it gains energy from work having to be done to move it against electrostatic repulsion.
Potential difference between two points in an electric field is equal tot eh work done in moving a unit pos-
itive charge from the point at lower potential to the point at higher potential.
• The potential gradient at any position in an electric field is the change in potential per unit change of
distance in a given direction.
∆V
electric field strength, E = −potential gradient = −
∆r
10.1.1 Graphical representations of E and V with r
1
• E—r graph follows an inverse-square law as E ∝ r2 , but there is no electric field strength inside the
charged sphere itself.
– Hence graph starts at r rather than 0, and rapidly approaches 0.
– ∆V can be found from the area under this graph as E = − ∆V ∆r
1
• V —r graph is constant from 0 to r, then falls at a rate lesser than E—r graph as V ∝ r
Relative strength: electric forces in a hydrogen atom are approximately 1039 times stronger than the gravi-
tational forces acting.
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11 Capacitance
A capacitor is any device used to store charge. The capacitance of an isolated conductor is the ratio of charge
stored to the change in electric potential.
Q
capacitance, C = unit: Farad, F
V
ε0 εr A
For a parallel plate capacitor, C =
d
If a capacitor is charged to V by Q then the area under a V —Q graph gives the work done.
1 1 1 Q2
work done, W = QV = CV 2 =
2 2 2 C
11.2 Discharging
t
Charge left on a capacitor t s after it starts discharging, Q = Q0 e− RC
For a discharging capacitor the graphs of charge, voltage and current against time all have the same shape, so
this formula works for V and I too.
1
The time constant is t taken for Q to fall to of its previous value. T = RC
e
From this, we can calculate that the time for charge or voltage to half in value is 0.693RC.
11.3 Charging
The rate of charge leaving from or arriving on a capacitor depends on how much charge is already there. More
work needs to be done to push electrons onto a partially charged capacitor than an empty one.
t
For a charging capacitor, Q = Q0 (1 − e− RC )
The graphs of Q and V against t show that charge & voltage increase rapidly at first, but the rate of change
decreases as a maximum is approached. This means this equation works for V as well as Q, but not I (which
looks the same for both a charging and discharging capacitor). Note that these don’t work if current is kept
constant!
Increasing R leads to a shallower charging or discharging curve which takes longer to reach its maximum
or minimum. R decreases the current — decreasing the rate of flow of charge.
Q
I=
t
If a polarised molecule is placed in an electric field, the two ends respond differently to the field, moving
in opposite directions, rotating the molecule until it lines up with the field.
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12 Electromagnetism
12.1 Magnetic flux density
Force on a current-carrying wire when field is perpendicular to current, F = BIl
• Fleming’s left hand rule can be used to calculate the direction in which the wire will move.
– thumb — thrust
– first finger — field
– second finger — current
The strength of a magnetic field is given by its flux density, B, which is measured in Tesla, T.
Flux density is a vector — its direction is along a tangent to the field line at that point. Its magnitude is
represented by the density of magnetic field lines.
One Tesla is defined as ‘the flux density of the field that produces a force of 1 N on a unit length of conductor
carrying a current of 1 A perpendicular to the field.’
• Note that for a magnetic field, field lines always run North—South
• The right hand grip rule gives the direction of field lines where the thumb points in the direction of current
flow
N J
– represents current flowing into the page, and current flowing out of the page. Imagine a dart
flying.
Magnetic flux passing through area A perpendicular to a field, φ = BA unit: Webers, Wb
If area is not perpendicular to the field then φ = BA cos θ where θ is the angle to the normal to the area, or
φ = BA sin θ where θ is to the plane of the area. Consider the graphs and where you would expect a maximum
to occur.
magnetic flux linkage = N φ where N is the number of turns cutting the flux
mv 2
so for a charged particle in a magnetic field, BQv = = mrω 2
r
The cyclotron is an application of this phenomenon (magnetic deflection). Two D-shaped electrodes are sepa-
rated by a small gap in an evacuated chamber placed in the uniform magnetic field of a large electromagnet.
Charged particles produced by an ion source at the centre enter one D and move in a circular path due to
the field. A high-frequency alternating current is connected between the Ds, with frequency such that its po-
larity reverses at the same rate as the particles cross from one D to another. The energy is of the particle is
increases every time it crosses from one D to the other, the radius of orbit increases as energy increases and the
beam finally emerges tangentially from the cyclotron.
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12.3.2 Faraday’s Law
‘The magnitude of the induced emf is proportional to the rate of change of flux linked with that circuit, or the
rate at which magnetic flux is cut’
∆
Combined with Lenz’s Law: εind = − (flux linkage)
∆t
The induced emf is therefore a sine wave with peak value BAN ω. The faster the coil is rotated, the greater the
peak. This very much depends on when timing starts however, so consider maxima. Note that maximum εind
occurs where dφ
dθ is greatest ie wires are cutting the most field lines.
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13 Thermal physics
• Internal energy is that of an object’s molecules due to their individual movements and positions
• It is increased through:
– energy transfer by heating
– work done on the object eg by electricity
• If the internal energy is constant:
– there is no energy transfer by heating and no work is done
– or energy transfer by heating and work done balance each other out
• The first law of thermodynamics:in general, when work is done on or by an object and/or energy is
transferred by heating:
– the change of internal energy of the object = the total energy transfer due to work done and heating
– the directions of the energy transfers are important in determining whether there will be a decrease
or increase in internal energy
• The internal energy of the object is the sum of the random distribution of the kinetic and potential energies
of its molecules.
• Celsius
– 0 ◦ C — ice point, temperature of pure melting ice
– 100 ◦ C — steam point, temperature of steam at standard pressure (100 kPa)
• Absolute scale
– 0 K — absolute zero (−273 ◦ C)
– 273 K — triple point of water, where ice, water and water vapour coexist in thermodynamic equi-
librium (ie objects at same temperature so no energy transfer by heating)
• Absolute zero is the minimum temperature any object could have — an object at 0 K has minimum
internal energy regardless of its composition.
• A graph of gas pressure against temperature will always pass through the x-axis at absolute zero.
energy, Q = mc∆T
For continuous flow heating one must consider the energy supplied per second.
When a liquid becomes a gas the molecules gain enough energy to overcome the bonds holding them close
together. The energy needed to vaporise a liquid is the latent heat of vaporisation.
Latent heat is then released when a vapour condenses as its molecules slow down.
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In general much more energy is needed to vaporise a substance than to melt it.
During a change of state the potential energies of the particle ensemble are changing but not the kinetic energies.
p
• Pressure law: p ∝ T =⇒ T = constant for fixed m and constant V
– pressure of a gas at constant volume increased by raising its temperature — raises average speed of
molecules and so impacts on the container walls are harder and more frequent: raising pressure.
13.4.1 Moles
• Avogadro’s constant, NA , is the number of atoms in 12 g of Carbon-12.
1
• One atomic unit (au) is 12 the mass of a Carbon-12 atom.
• 1 mol of a substance of identical particles is the quantity of the substance that contains NA particles.
• Molar mass of a substance is the mass of 1 mol of the substance
mass of substance
number of moles =
molar mass
number of molecules = NA × number of moles
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• An ideal gas is one which obeys Boyle’s Law.
pV
combining gas laws: = constant for fixed m of ideal gas
T
pv
For 1 mol of any ideal gas, =R
T
• Graph of pV against T for n mol is a straight line through absolute zero and has gradient nR
∆momentum = 2mv
s 2l1
2. Time between collisions: v = t = t
2l1
time between collisions, t =
v
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13.6 Molecules and kinetic energy
For an ideal gas its internal energy is due only to the kinetic energy of the molecules of the gas
1 2
total Ek of all the molecules 2 m(c1 + c22 . . . c2N ) 1
kinetic energy of a molecule = = = m(cRM S )2
total number of molecules N 2
The higher the temperature of a gas the greater the mean kinetic energy of a molecule of the gas.
3
for an ideal gas, mean Ek of a molecule = kT
2
3
total Ek of n mol of ideal gas = nRT = (internal energy)
2
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14 Nuclear physics
• Rutherford used α radiation, fast-moving positively-charged particles, to probe the atom. A beam of α
was directed at a thin sheet of metal foil.
– Expectation: beam might be scattered slightly if positive charge was spread throughout each atom
– Reality: some particles bounced back
∗ some α passed straight through, with about 1 in 2000 being deflected
∗ around 1 in 10 000 were deflected through angles of more than 90◦
• This could be explained by assuming every atom had a ‘hard centre’ much smaller than the atom itself.
– most of the atom’s mass is concentrated in a small region, the nucleus
– the nucleus must be positively charged as it repels α particles which approach it too closely
• Rutherford also showed |Q| on a nucleus = Ze where e is the charge on an electron and Z is the element’s
proton number.
• The diameter of a nucleus is of the order 10−15 m
14.1.1 Experiments
• Ionisation — the ionising effect of each type can be investigated with an ionisation chamber (containing
air at atmospheric pressure) and a picoammeter
– ions created in the chamber are attracted to the oppositely charged electrode where they are dis-
charged — as a result of the ionisation electrons pass through the picoammeter
– IpA ∝ number of ions per second
– α most ionising, γ least as no charge
• Cloud chamber — due to the ionisation of saturated air α or β particles leave a track of minute droplets
– α: straight tracks radiating from the source which are easily visible. Those from the same source are
all of the same length.
∗ α from the same source have the same range in air as each other as the are always emitted
with the same Ek — each α and the nucleus that emits it move apart with equal and opposite
momentum.
– β: wispy tracks that are easily deflected as a result of collision with air molecules. Harder to see as
they are less ionising.
∗ β particles have varying ranges in air because a Ve or Ve is emitted as well — the nucleus, β and
Ve or Ve share the energy released in variable proportions.
• Geiger—Muller tube
– sealed metal tube containing argon gas at low pressure. Mica window allows α and β to enter, and
γ can also enter through the tube wall.
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– metal rod down the centre is positive and the tube wall negative
– ionising radiation enters, ionising gas along its track. Negative ions go to the rod, and positive to
the wall. Ions accelerate and collide with other ions, resulting in more ions
– in a short time many ions are created and discharged at the electrodes, giving a pulse of charge which
results in a voltage pulse which is recorded.
• Absorption
– α: absorbed completely by paper or thin metal foil; range of a few centimetres in air
– β: around 5 mm of metal; range approx. 1 m in air
– γ: several centimetres of lead needed; unlimited range in air but follows the inverse square law
In electron capture a proton-rich nucleus can captures an inner-shell electron, causing a proton in the nucleus
to change into a neutron with the emission of an electron neutrino at the same time. The inner shell vacancy
is then filled by an outer shell electron, resulting in emission of an X-ray photon.
A
ZX +0−1 e →A
Z−1 Y + Ve
In γ emission no change occurs in the number of protons or neutrons of a nucleus. A γ photon is emitted if a
nucleus has excess energy after it has emitted an α or β − particle.
• Dose equivalent is measured in Sieverts, Sv, and is the dose due to 250 kV X-rays that would have the
same effect.
• Background radiation occurs naturally due to cosmic radiation and from radioactive materials in rocks,
soil and the air. It varies with location due to local geological filters. Other sources of background radiation
are air travel, nuclear power, weapons tests, and medical use of radioactivity (the largest man-made BG
source)
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• ALARP is ‘as low as reasonably practical’ — risks are always reduced by increasing distance from the
source and decreasing the time of exposure.
– If a source emitting only α is in a sealed container which absorbs all the radiation, then the container
gains thermal energy equal to the energy transferred from the source
∆N
= −λN
∆t
A = λN
∆N
N = N0 e−λt (note applies for A, m, C (corrected count rate) and too)
∆t
The decay constant, λ, is the probability of an individual nucleus decaying per second
∆N
probability per unit time = N
= λ, unit: s−1
∆t
ln 2
T 21 =
λ
32
• Argon
40
19 K →0−1 β +40
20 Ca + Ve
– effective T 21 of 40
19 K is 1250 million years — age of rock can be calculated from proportion of argon-40
to potassium-40
– for every N potassium atoms present, if there is 1 argon atom there must have originally been N + 9
potassium atoms
∗ 1 decayed to 40
18 Ar and 8 into
40
20 Ca + N remaining
∗ can then use N = N0 e−λt
14.6 N —Z graph
Neutron number N against proton number Z for all isotopes. Graph shows that stable nuclei lie along a belt
curving up with an increasing N :Z ratio from 0 to N = 120, Z = 80 approx.
• for light isotopes (0 < Z < 20) stable nuclei follow the line N = Z — they have equal neutrons to protons.
• as Z increases beyond 20, stable nuclei have more neutrons than protons so N :Z increases. Extra neutrons
bind nucleons together without introducing repulsive electrostatic forces.
• α emitters occur Z > 60, most with more than 80 protons and 120 neutrons. N :Z> 1 but nuclei too large
to be stable as the strong force is less than the electrostatic force of repulsion between the protons.
• β − emitters left of the stability belt with high N :Z
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• β + emitters right of stability belt with low N :Z
• α emission moves the parent nucleus diagonally down and left on graph
• β − — down and right
• β + — up and left
Many radioactive isotopes decay to form another which might itself be unstable. Unstable daughter nucleus may
then decay again. Thus an unstable nucleus before becoming stable may undergo a series of isotopic changes
where each change involves an emission of α or β. Naturally occurring radioactive isotopes decay through a
series of such changes with one or more of the changes having a very long T 12
This can be represented by decay arrows on an N —Z graph — but note that it will not move away from
the stable belt.
β − emitters are manufactured by bombarding stable isotopes with neutrons, and β + by bombarding with
protons of sufficient Ek to overcome electrostatic repulsion from nucleus.
• this happens if the daughter nucleus is formed in an excited state after the previous decay state. Excited
state is usually short-lived and the nucleus moves to its ground state either directly or via one or more
lower-energy excited states.
• On a nuclear energy level diagram diagonal lines represent decays and vertical lines are dropping energy
levels due to γ photon emission.
– diagnostic uses include monitoring blood flow through the brain and use with the γ camera
• As θ of detector to zero-order beam increases, intensity decreases then increases slightly before increasing
decreasing again
34
• scattering of the electrons by the nuclei occurs due to their charge — same as α deflection but attraction
rather than repulsion — causes intensity to decrease as θ increases
• diffraction of the electrons by nuclei causes intensity maxima and minima to be superimposed on the
scattering effect. Happens provided the de Broglie λ ≤ dimensions of nucleus. These superimposed
intensity variations are on a much smaller scale.
• angle of the first minimum from the centre, θmin , is measured and used to calculate diameter of the nucleus
provided that the wavelength of the incident electrons is known.
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14.9.2 Nuclear stability
The binding energy of each nucleon is different — binding energy per nucleon of a nucleus is the average work
done per nucleon to remove all nucleons from a nucleus. Hence it is a measure of nuclear stability — the nucleus
with more binding energy per nucleon is more stable.
• A graph of average binding energy per nucleon against nucleon number A shows a sharp increase up to
8.7 MeV/nucleon between A = 50 and A = 60, and then a slow, much shallower decrease.
– nuclei in the range A = 50 to A = 60 are the most stable.
• energy is released in:
– fission: large unstable nucleus splits into two fragments which are more stable than original. Binding
energy per nucleon increases.
– fusion: small nuclei fuse together to make a larger nucleus
∗ fusion product has more binding energy per nucleon than the smaller nuclei so binding energy
per nucleon also increases in fusion — provided A / 50
• change in binding energy per nucleon is ≈ 0.5 MeV in fission and can be more than 10× as much in fusion.
Nuclear fusion can only occurs if the two nuclei that are to be combined collide at high speed — must overcome
the electrostatic repulsion between the two nuclei so they can become close enough to interact through the
strong force.
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14.10.1 Safety features
• Reactor core is thick steel — withstand high pressure & temperature. Absorbs β, some γ and neutrons
from core
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15 Electronics
15.1 Discrete semiconductor devices
15.1.1 MOSFET
• Enhancement mode MOSFETs are voltage operated, have very large input resistance (> 50 MΩ) and
large current gain.
• To obtain a drain current, Vgs is applied between the gate and source.
– however, the metal oxide layer is very thin, and a MOSFET is susceptible to destruction by electro-
static charges accumulating on the oxide layer between the gate and source
• In some circuits. a high value resistor is placed from the gate of an n-channel MOSFET to 0 V: this helps
prevent static charge from building up on the gate when there is no input, which could lead to damage or
transient signals being passed.
15.1.3 Photodiode
• A photodiode is a semiconductor diode which conducts only when light is incident on its P—N junction.
When connected in reverse bias it is working in ‘photoconductive’ mode.
• The depletion region at the P—N junction has a potential difference across it when reverse biased. When
photons incident on the depletion region electron—hole pairs are formed
• Electric field due to potential difference sweeps holes to the anode and pairs to the cathode such that a
‘reverse photocurrent’ flows. This is proportional to light intensity
38
• Photodiodes can be manufactures with spectral responses in different parts of the electromagnetic spec-
trum. A photodiode is most responsive at the peak of a graph of relative response against wavelength.
photocurrent generated
photosensitivity = , unit: A W−1
power incident
Photodiodes in photoconductive mode have many applications eg in optical fibre communications, light meters,
smoke detectors, photocopiers.
• A scintillator is a material that produces a flash of light when a particle such as an ion, electron, α or
high-energy photon passes through.
• If coupled to a photodiode then the number of light pulses can be detected & amplified and the energy of
the particle through the scintillator measured.
• A single particle event depositing energy in the scintillator may typically produce a few thousand photons;
this is the ‘light yield’ and is the number of photons per MeV
• For maximum efficiency the spectral response of the photodiode needs to be matched as closely as possible
to the wavelength produced by the scintillator
total E of light photons produced in scintillator
scintillator efficiency = (×100)
E deposited in scintillator by incident particles/photons
• A Hall sensor can be used to detect the position and attitude of an object in three dimensions — requires
attaching a magnet to the object. If the magnet is at an angle then this changes the component of B
normal to the sensor, which changes the output Hall voltage.
• Hall sensors can also be used in tachometers to measure rotational speeds of wheels or machinery. Such
tachometers can work at frequencies of 100 kHz or more which means they can measure very fast rotational
speeds.
– advantage that they do not make physical contact with the shaft so there are no frictional forces
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15.2 Analogue and digital signals
15.2.1 Analogue to digital conversion
• When sampling an analogue signal we must do so at at least twice the highest information frequency so
that information is not missed (Nyquist frequency)
• Number of bit sin each measurement gives the resolution
• Increasing sample rate & resolution will increase quality of conversion
• Quantisation is the number of available voltage values — when a sample is taken the snapshot is rounded or
‘quantised’ — the difference between the analogue and digital value is the ‘approximation’ or ‘quantising’
error.
Noise consists of random voltage fluctuations at different frequencies in the signal — due to interference from
electronic processing systems as well as external sources.
Each time a signal is amplified the noise is too — eventually it may be impossible to communicate due to
the noise.
Psignal
signal to noise ratio in dB = 10 log
Pnoise
Noise can be removed from a digital signal thanks to the fact they consist of two discrete voltage levels. A
device such as a Schmitt trigger could be used to recondition the noisy digital signal eg in a regenerator.
Sensors are devices that detect and respond to a certain type of analogue input. They are transducers —
as well as detecting a physical quantity they convert such quantities into an electrical signal.
• sensitivity is the amount of change in output quantity with unit change in input quantity
• resolution — smallest change in physical property that can be measured as a ratio of the actual value
measured
• response time is how long it takes to completely respond to a change in input
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15.3 Analogue signal processing
15.3.1 LC resonance filters
For this spec, need only to know of the parallel inductor—capacitor filter.
• inductor stores energy in the form of a magnetic field. Its action can be explained Faraday’s & Lenz’s
Law: εind ∝ − dφ
dt
– unit is the Henry. 1 H when current changing at 1 A s−1 induces 1 V across coil. 1 H =
1 kg m2 s−2 A−2
• energy is constantly being exchanged between the magnetic field of the inductor and the electric field of
the capacitor such that the LC network can be said to oscillate.
Energy response At the resonant frequency, f0 , energy stored in the circuit is at a maximum and the voltage
across the LC circuit is at its peak. The voltage response curve is the same shape as energy.
Bandwidth, fB , is given by the range of frequencies between the 50% energy (or power) points, or the points
where voltage response is √12 of the maximum.
f0
Q factor =
fB
High Q filters have sharper peaks while low-Q have shallower/gentler graphs.
For an op-amp, Vout = AOL (V+ − V− ) — but thanks to the massive differential gain of the op-amp a very
small difference between the inputs will send it into saturation. This means an op-amp can be used as a
comparator — giving a high or low output depending on which input is higher (V+ ≥ V− =⇒ Vout ≈ +VS ,
V− ≥ V+ =⇒ Vout ≈ 0 V or − VS )
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15.4 Controlling the op-amp
15.4.1 Inverting amp
Derivation of the inverting op-amp equation
– since AOL is massive we can regard V− as 0 V — virtual earth (so close to 0 V that it can be
considered such)
∗ A virtual earth point is not actually connected to 0 V, but because one op-amp input is connected
to 0 and the difference between the op-amp inputs must be as small as possible due to negative
feedback, the V.E.P. ends up being so close to 0 V it is considered 0 V.
• Assuming no current draw by input as infinite input resistance (ideal op-amp) ∴ IRin = IRf
– So from V = IR:
Vout Vin
=− (negative sign as inverting input) = ACL
Rf Rin
• This is now the ‘closed loop gain’ as a feedback loop exists from output to input. Negative feedback as it
reduces the gain.
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15.5 Digital signal processing
15.5.1 Combinational logic
Be aware of Boolean algebra & logic gates.
Ā.B + A.B̄ = A ⊕ B
Connecting D to Q̄ makes the flip-flop ‘toggle’ with each rising-edge clock pulse divide-by-two counter.
Putting toggling flip-flops in series with the clock to the previous Q̄ creates a binary up-counter. Q to clock
would be a down-counter.
Modulo-n counter A modulo-n counter counts up to a chosen number. This is done by detecting the binary
state of the number using external logic gates and sending the output of this to the reset pin.
Binary coded decimal counter A binary coded decimal counter is a case of the modulo-n that counts from
0 to 9 and then resets. Thus goes through a sequence of 10 states.
Johnson counter This is a ‘shift register’ — connect the D-type flip-flops together so the Q of one feeds the
D of the next, when clocked at simultaneously the data is then shifted along the flip-flops sequentially.
Specifically in a ‘Johnson’ counter, the Q̄ output of the last flip-flop is fed back to the first D. The data
pattern contained within the register will recirculate as long as the clock pulses are applied. An n-stage John-
son counter will give a count sequence of length 2n before the pattern is repeated.
The most significant binary bit will be the furthest right flip-flop (changes least)
15.5.3 Astable
The astable can be used as an oscillator to provide a clock pulse. Its frequency and therefore time period are
adjusted using an external RC network.
It can be difficult to obtain an even mark:space ratio, but using a divide-by-two counter will ensure this where
needed.
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15.6 Data communication systems
15.6.1 Transmission media
• Transmission-path media include metal wire, optical fibre, electromagnetic wave (free space)
• Radio waves can travel through ground wave, or by sky wave where signals are refracted through the
ionosphere and ‘bounce’ around the Earth. Longer wavelengths can also diffract around the Earth’s
surface.
• Uplink and downlink channels need to be on separate frequencies so that receives are not desensed.
– Satellite uplink & downlink use microwave frequencies (those in the GHz range). Band C (3.4 to
7 GHz) hosts fixed telephony, broadcast radio and business networks, while encrypted government
& military communications are sent on band X (7 to 8.4 GHz) and high bit-rate transmission such
as television and videoconferencing is found on the Ku and Ka bands (10.7 to 31 GHz).
– The downlink is on a lower frequency than the uplink, which helps reduce the attenuation of the
relatively weak downlink — the higher the frequency, the greater the attenuation of a radio wave in
the atmosphere.
15.6.2 Multiplexing
Multiplexing is a way of transmitting multiple signals along a medium so as to maximise the available bandwidth.
In time division multiplexing, multiple signals are sent along the same medium (on the same frequency, where
applicable) by dividing them in the time domain. Each signal is sampled periodically and converted to a stream
of digital bits, which are transmitted in their own specific time slot. The receiver then combines the data and
decodes it to obtain the original signal.
15.6.3 Modulation
In AM, the frequency of the carrier is kept constant but its amplitude is varied in phase with the amplitude of
the information signal. The frequency of the information signal is represented by how often these variations in
amplitude occur.
information amplitude
modulation depth = × 100
carrier amplitude
The target modulation depth is 80%. Over 100% is ‘overmodulated’, and if modulation depth is too small the
signal to noise ratio is reduced and quality suffers.
When two frequencies are mixed together, we get ‘side’ frequencies at the sum and difference of these signals.
AM bandwidth = 2fM
AM circuitry is simpler and therefore cheaper than FM, but AM is more susceptible to noise, as noise adds
unwanted energy to a signal — affecting the amplitude, while no information is contained in the amplitude of
an FM signal.
FM bandwidth = 2(fM + ∆f )
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