Friday 17 January 2014

Nuclear fission and Nuclear fusion,DENSITY

Nuclear fission and Nuclear fusion

• There are two fissionable substances in common use

 in nuclear reactors, uranium 235 and plutonium 239.

• Nuclear fission is the splitting of an atomic nucleus.

• For fission to occur the uranium 235 or plutonium 239

 nucleus must first absorb a neutron:









     neutron







• The nucleus undergoing fission splits into two smaller

 nuclei and 2 or 3 neutrons and energy is released.

• The neutrons may go on to start a chain reaction, AS ABOVE.

• Nuclear fusion is the joining of two nuclei to form a larger one.

• Nuclear fusion is the process by which energy is released in stars.

. DENSITY

•  Density of an object = its mass divided by its volume,     

 Density  =  mass  /  volume                                                                       ρ =  m  / V                                      

      (kg/m3)      (kg)         (m3)

• You should be able to describe an experiment to measure the density of an object

  involving measurements of its mass, and its volume.

RADIOACTIVITY

 Radioactivity

• Know the relative masses and relative electric charges

  of protons, neutrons and electrons.

• In an atom, number of electrons = number of protons

 in the nucleus. The atom has zero net electrical charge.










• Atoms may lose or gain electrons to form ions.

• Atoms of a particular element have the same number of protons.

• Atoms of different elements have different numbers of protons.

• Atoms of the same element which have different

 numbers of neutrons are called isotopes.

• The number of protons is called the atomic number.

• The number of protons and neutrons is called the mass number.

• Know the effect of a and ß decay on radioactive nuclei.

• Know the origins of background radiation

electric power

Electrical Power

• Electric current is the rate of flow of charge.

• When an electrical charge flows through a resistor,

 electrical energy is transformed into heat energy.

power = energy transformed / time taken

• Power, voltage and current are related by the equation:

power = voltage x current

(watt, W) (ampere, A) (volt, V)

Energy, voltage and charge are related by equation:

energy transformed = voltage × charge

(joule, J) (volt, V) (coulomb, C)

charge = current × time

(coulomb, C) (ampere, A) (second, s)

STATIC ELECTRICITY,ELECTRIC CURRENT&mains electricity

 Static electricity

• When materials are rubbed against each other they can

become electrically charged. Negatively charged electrons

are rubbed off one material onto the other.



• The material that gains electrons becomes negatively charged.

The material that loses electrons has an equal positive charge.

• Two charged bodies will exert a force on each other.

• Like charges repel, unlike charges attract.

• Electric charges move easily through metals.

• The rate of flow of electric charge is called the current.

   current I   =  charge / time

• A charged body can be discharged by connecting it to earth

with a conductor. Charge then flows through the conductor.

The greater the charge on an isolated body the greater the potential

difference between the body and earth. If the pd is high enough a

spark may jump to earth.

• Electrostatic charges can be useful, eg in photocopiers

and smoke precipitators

Electric Current



• Current-potential difference graphs are used to show how

current through a component varies with pd across it.


                                 A resistor               A filament lamp                  A diode

• The current through a resistor (at a constant temperature)

is proportional to the voltage across the resistor.

• Voltage = current × resistance

                      (volt, V) (ampere, A) (ohm, O)

• The resistance of a filament lamp increases as the

 temperature of the filament increases.

• The current through a diode flows in one direction only.

The diode has a very high resistance in the reverse direction.

• The resistance of a light-dependent resistor (LDR)

 decreases as light intensity increases.

• The resistance of a thermistor decreases as the temperature increases.

• The current through a component depends on its resistance,

 the greater the resistance the smaller the current.

• The voltage from cells in series is the sum of the voltage of each cell.

• For components connected in series:


- total resistance = sum of the resistance of each component

- there is the same current through each component

- the total voltage of the supply is shared between the components.

• For components connected in parallel:




- voltage across each component is the same

- the total current through the whole circuit is the sum

 of the currents through the separate components.


 Mains electricity

Cells and batteries supply current which always passes in

 the same direction. This is called direct current (d.c.).

• An alternating current (a.c.) is one which is constantly

changing direction. Mains electricity is an a.c. supply.

In the UK it has a frequency of 50 cycles per second (50 Hz).

• UK mains supply is about 230 volts.

• Know the structure of electrical cable.

• Know the structure and wiring of a three-pin plug.




• If an electrical fault causes too great a current, the circuit

 should be switched off by a fuse or a circuit breaker.

• When the current in a fuse wire exceeds its rating the

 fuse will melt, breaking the circuit.

• Appliances with metal cases are usually earthed. The earth

wire and fuse together protect the appliance and the user

• The live terminal of the mains supply alternates between

positive and negative potential with respect to the neutral terminal.

• The neutral terminal stays at a potential close to zero

 with respect to earth.

WORK,ENERGY,POWER,MOMENTUME

Work, Energy, Power

• When a force causes a body to move through a distance,

 energy is transferred, and work is done.

work done = force × distance moved in direction of force

     (joule, J) (newton, N) (metre, m)

• Work done against frictional forces is mainly changed into heat.

• Squashed materials have elastic potential energy stored in them.

• The kinetic energy of a body depends on its mass and its speed.

      kinetic energy = ½  x  mass  x  v2

(joule, J) (kilogram, kg) (metre/second)2 , (m/s)2 )

• Gravitational Potential Energy GPE depends on height and weight:

    GPE  =  weight  x  height  ,   GPE  =  m g h

   (Joule J,  Newtons N,  metres m)

•  Power  =  work done /  time taken

     P = Work / t   or  Energy / t ,  units are Watts

Momentum

• momentum = mass X velocity

(kilogram metre/second, kg m/s) (kilogram, kg) ( m/s)

• Momentum has both size and direction.

• When a force acts on a body a change in momentum occurs.

• Momentum is conserved in any collision/explosion,

provided no external forces act


















  • force = change in momentum / time taken for change

FORCE

 Forces


• can you sketch a velocity-time graph for a body at terminal velocity.


• The faster a body moves through a fluid the greater

the frictional force which acts on it.

• A body falling through a fluid will initially accelerate

due to gravity, eventually the resultant force on the body

will be zero, and it will fall at its terminal velocity.

• at terminal velocity Weight down = Friction up

• weight = mass × gravitational field strength

(newton, N) (kilogram, kg) (newton/kilogram, N/kg)

• Whenever two bodies interact, the forces they exert

on each other are equal & opposite.

• A number of forces acting on a body may be replaced by

a single force which has the same effect as the original set

of forces. The single force is called the resultant force (here in red):







• If the resultant force acting on a stationary body is zero,

it is either at rest, or moving at a steady speed.

• If the resultant force acting on a stationary body is not zero,

the body will accelerate in the direction of the resultant force.

• Resultant force = mass × acceleration

(newton, N) (kilogram, kg) (metre per second squared m / s2 )

• When a vehicle travels at a steady speed the frictional

forces balance the driving force (zero resultant force).

• Stopping distance = braking distance + thinking distaNCE


• A driver’s reaction time is affected by tiredness, age, drugs, or alcohol.

• A vehicle’s braking distance depends on the brakes, tyres, the road, and weathe

MOTION

 Motion


The slope or gradient of a distance-time graph represents speed.

• The velocity of a body is its speed in a given direction.

• Average velocity = total distance / total time