P2 Electricity and the atom Flashcards
What is current?
It is the flow electrical charge across a circuit. It will only flow if there is a potential difference. It is measured in amps.
What is potential difference also know as?
Voltage
Define resistance.
Anything which slows the flow down. Measured in ohms
The greater the resistance across a component the smaller the currant that flows.
A battery charger passes a 2.5A current through a cell over 4 hours. What is the total transferred charge?
4 hours = 4 X60 X60=14400 seconds
14400 X 2.5= 36000 columbs.
Define potential difference. Give the formula to find it.
The work done ( energy transferred Joules) per coulomb of charge.
How does a ammeter work?
It measures the currant going through a thing.
It must be placed in series.
How does a voltmeter work?
It must be placed in parallel around a component under test.
Why does resistance increase with temperature?
When a charge goes through a resistor, some of the electricity becomes heat energy and it becomes hot.
The heat energy means ions in the conductor vibrate more.It is more difficult for electrons carrying charge to get through because it is more likely that they will collide. Resistance increases.
Their is normally a limit to the amount of currant that can flow. More currant means more heat which means more resistance.
If a voltmeter reads 6v and a resistor 4 ohms, what is the current through the ammeter?
6 divided by 4= 1.5 As
Explain diodes.
It lets current flow freely in one direction but not the other.
( there is a very high resistance in the other direction)
It is used to regulate the potential difference.
Explain light-dependent resistors.
A LDR is a resistor that depends on the intensity of light.
In bright light resistance falls.
In darkness resistance is highest.
They can be used in automatic night lights and burglar detectors.
Explain a thermistor.
It is a temperature dependent resistor.
When hot resistance drops, when cool it goes up.
They are good temperature detectors.
What happens to current, voltage, resistance and cell voltage in a series circuit?
The potential difference is shared. The voltage always adds up to the voltage from the batteries.
Current is the same throughout the circuit. It only changes in parallel circuits.
The resistance is the sum of all the resistors.
Cell voltage adds up.
What happens to voltage and current in a parallel circuit?
Voltage is the same across all components. This means bulbs connected in parallel will all have the same brightness.
Current is shared between branches. The total current is equal to the total of all the currents through the separate components.
If two identical components are in parallel then the same current will flow through them.
Explain mains electricity.
It is approximately 230V.
It is AC meaning the currant is always changing direction at about 50Hz.
Batteries use DC.
Explain a cathode ray oscilloscope.
Plug in a AC current, you get a trace that goes up and down, positive to negative.
Plug in a DC current you get a straight line. The vertical height shows the voltage.
The gain dial controles many volts each cm represents on the vertical axis.
The time base dial controls how many milliseconds each division represents on the horizontal axis.
Describe the wires inside cables.
The brown wire is live. It alternates between positive and negative. Voltage. This carries power in
The blue wire is neutral. This carries power out.
The green and yellow earth wire has no voltage. it works with the fuse to prevent fire and shocks. It is attached to the wire casing of the plug and carries the electricity to earth.
How does the earth wire and fuse work?
If the live wire touches the metal case, a surge of currant will flow through the live wire, through the case and down the earth wire. This surge melts the fuse. This cuts off the live supply. This isolates the whole appliance.
What is the difference between circuit breakers and fuses?
Circuit breakers open a switch when the current gets too high.
They can be easily reset by flicking a switch. Fuses have to be replaced when they melt, but are cheaper.
Explain residual current circuit breakers.
The same current goes through the live and neutral wires. If someone touches the live wire, the neutral wire will have less currant. The RCCB will detect the difference and open a switch.
They work faster than fuses as they don’t waste time melting.
They work for small currant changes that might not melt a fuse.
What is the formula for electrical power?
Power(W)= currantXpotential difference.(V)
A hair dryer is rated at 230V and IKW. What is the current?
1000 divided by 230= 4.3
The hair drier should use a 5 amp fuse as it is a little higher.
Explain how static is produced through the build up of friction.
When certain insulating materials are rubbed together electrons will go from one to the other, resulting in one being positive and the other negative.
How is the direction of the electrons determined when two materials are rubbed together?
It will depend on the materials used, but the material that is the better insulator gets more.
For example when a polythene rod is rubbed with a duster, electrons go from the duster to the rod but if the rod is acetate they go from rod to duster.
What is the equation used to calculate energy transformed?
Charge times by potential difference.
What dis John dalton think about atoms?
In 1804 he said that matter was made of ting spheres that couldn’t be broken up and he felt each element was made up of a different type of atom.
What did J J Thomson think about atoms?
He could remove electrons from atoms proving that Dalton wasn’t quite right. He suggested that an atom was a sphere of positive charge with electrons stuck inside like a plum pudding.
Explain the Rutherford experiment.
In 1909 Rutherford and Marsden fired alpha particles at thin old foil. They thought the positively charged alpha particles would be slighty deflected.
However most just went through while one in every 8000 came straight back.
What does the Rutherford experiment show?
Most of the mass of an atom is concentrated in the centre in a nucleus. This must also have a positive charge as it repelled the positive alpha particles.
It also shows us that most of an atom is empty space.
What is the model of the atom?
There is a nucleus and electrons to around it producing the overall size. The proton and neutron has a mass if 1 and the electron a mass of 0.00005
What is an isotope?
An atom with the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons. They have the same atomic number but different mass number. An example is carbon-12 and carbon-14
They tend to be radioactive so they decay into other elements and produce radiation.
In decay, where does the radiation come from and what conditions can affect the rate?
It comes from the nuclei of the atom. It is a random process so it can’t be affected by things like temperature or chemical bonding.
Where can background radiation come from?
Naturally occurring unstable isotopes can be found everywhere. In air, food, building materials and in rocks.
Cosmic rays from space. They come mostly from the sun.
Radiation from man made sources. Fallout from nuclear weapons tests, nuclear accidents, or dumped nuclear waste.
What are the three types of radiation?
Alpha (looks like an a)
Beta( looks like a B)
Gamma. (Looks like a Y)
Explain alpha particles.
They are made of two neutrons and two protons.(like a helium nuclei)
Relatively big, heavy and slow moving.
Can be stopped quiet easily. Can be stopped by air.
As they are large, they are strongly ionising. They bash into other atoms and knock electrons off them, creating more ions.
Explain beta particles.
In between alpha and gamma in turns of properties.
Quite fast and small.
Penetrate moderately into materials before colliding. Can travel quite far into air.
Moderate ionising.
For every beta particle emitted, a neutron turns to a proton in the nucleus.
Is is just an electron.