Fundamentals of Physics Flashcards

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1
Q

physical quantity

A

property of an object or phenomenon that can be measured

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2
Q

International System of Units (SI)

A

standard system of units used by scientists which consists of 7 base units

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3
Q

6 base units used at A Level

A

metre (m)
kilogram (kg)
second (s)
ampere (A)
kelvin (K)
mole (mol)

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4
Q

degrees celsius to kelvin

A

add 273

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5
Q

prefix: peta

A

P
10^15

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6
Q

prefix: tera

A

T
10^12

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7
Q

prefix: giga

A

G
10^9

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8
Q

prefix: mega

A

M
10^6

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9
Q

prefix: kilo

A

k
10^3

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10
Q

prefix: deci

A

d
10^-1

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11
Q

prefix: centi

A

c
10^-2

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12
Q

prefix: milli

A

m
10^-3

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13
Q

prefix: micro

A

µ
10^-6

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14
Q

prefix: nano

A

n
10^-9

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15
Q

prefix: pico

A

p
10^-12

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16
Q

prefix: femto

A

f
10^-15

17
Q

derived quantity

A

a quantity that comes from a combination of base units

18
Q

derived unit

A

a unit used to represent a derived quantity
eg N for force

19
Q

newton N in base units

A

kgms^-2

20
Q

joule J in base units

A

kgm^2s^-2

21
Q

how to find base units

A

use equations expressing derived quantities as base quantities and replace the quantities with the units (ignore any numeric values that do not have units eg 1/2 in Ek=1/2mv^2)

22
Q

homogenous

A

identical

23
Q

true value

A

value that would be obtained in an ideal measurement

24
Q

(measurement) error

A

difference between a measured value and the true value of a quantity being measured

25
Q

random error & how to correct

A

measurement errors where measurements vary unpredictably

cannot be corrected, but effect can be reduced by taking multiple measurements and calculating mean

26
Q

systematic error & how to correct

A

measurements differ from true value by a consistent amount each time

find the value by which the measurements differ from the true value and add value to recorded measurements

27
Q

zero error

A

type of systematic error: measuring device does not read zero when it should

28
Q

accuracy

A

how close a measurement is to the true value - the closer, the more accurate

29
Q

precision

A

how close repeated measurements are to each other - the closer, the more precise

30
Q

uncertainty

A

an interval in which the true value of a measurement can be expected to lie

31
Q

absolute uncertainty

A

+/- half the range

32
Q

percentage uncertainty

A

(absolute uncertainty) / (mean value) * 100

33
Q

adding / subtracting uncertainties

A

add the absolute uncertainties of each value

34
Q

multiplying / dividing uncertainties

A

add percentage uncertainties of each value

35
Q

raising uncertainties to a power

A

when a value is raised to n, percentage uncertainty is multiplied by n

36
Q

resolution

A

smallest change a measuring instrument can detect

37
Q

reading a micrometer

A

Read the sleeve measurement (resolution 0.5mm) then read the thimble measurement (resolution 0.01mm) and add the thimble measurement that aligns with the sleeve scale line to the sleeve measurement

38
Q

reading a vernier caliper

A

read the cm value either lined up with (or if not lined up, to the left of) the zero line on the vernier scale. Them find the vernier scale line that best lines up with a line on the cm scale, and add this vernier scale measurement to the already attained cm measurement