Saturday, February 20, 2016
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Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Light:reflection
Sunday, February 14, 2016
Light : Basics
Remember light travels in straight lines (unless it goes past a star or black hole when they can be bent). In space light travels at 300,000,000 m/s around a million times faster than sound travels through the air. Luminous objects are light sources they give out light. Materials can be described as transparent (let's through all the light), translucent (let's through some light) or opaque (let's through no light). Remember the thickness of the material is important! One sheet of paper is translucent but 100 sheets will be opaque. We also need to know about reflection, refraction and dispersion which are coming in the next post.
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Speed
Speed measures how far we travel in a unit of time. This is why we measure it in miles per hour. Miles measure distance per means in every and hours measure time. Of course there are other units of speed as well such as kilometres per hour and meters per second which we use a great deal in common entrance physics. Fast and slow moving things might need different units. A rocket will move a certain number of kilometres per second (around 11 km/s to escape earth orbit) a glacier might move a few
centimetres/year. It would be silly to measure these movements in meters per second the numbers would be really big or really small and any calculations you do complicated.
So to measure speed we need to know the distance moved and the time taken. Then we divide the distance by the time. In other words:
Speed= distance / time
If you forget this just think of a speed you go in your car. 50 miles per hour. Miles (distance) per (divided by) hours (time).
I am on a train as I write this we are going 60 miles in 2 hours so the speed is
S=d/t
S=60/2=30 mph
Remember this will be our average speed. We stop at each station, speed up and slow down all the way so we won't go at 30mph exactly much of the time.
If my train was travelling for 4 hours at this average speed how far would it go?
Well the distance=speed x time
Distance =30 x 4 =120 miles.
This is because the speed tells us the distance we go each hour if I go 4 lots of 30 that is 120 miles.
So how long would it take my train to do 105 miles?
Here we do time=distance/speed
Time=105/30=3.5 hours.
Take care. Exam question setters love to put in traps. Look at this question.
A horse travels at 8m/s for two minutes how far does it go?
Here I have muddled up minutes and seconds. The first thing we must work out is how many seconds the horse is travelling for. 2x60=120 (as there are 60 seconds in one minute)
Now we can do
distance=speed x time
Distance=8 x120
Distance=960m
Thursday, February 4, 2016
Pressure
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Series and parallel circuits
Monday, February 1, 2016
Energy resources, alternative energy
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The alternative energy resources are called that because they offer a different way to generate our energy to the three fossil fuels, coal, oil and gas as well as nuclear energy. These 4 energy resources are often called 'non-renewable' resources as eventually the supply of them will run out. The alternative energy resources are renewable. That is to say they are renewed in a much shorter timescale.
We are going to cover the following alternative energy resources in this post: Biomass, Wind, Tidal and Hydroelectric in mountains, Wave, Solar and Geothermal.
All of these have the same advantages over fossil fuels. They do not cause the pollution that brings climate change or acid rain and they will not run out. They do come with their own problems however.
Biomass: in biomass a crop or waste is burnt to heat water into steam, replacing the coal, oil or gas in a traditional fossil fuelled power station. The steam is then used to spin the turbine which is connected to the generator. However, collecting enough fuel is difficult. Wood, which can be grown for this has a sixth of the chemical energy in it that coal does. It also takes away land from agriculture and other uses (some companies are developing a seaweed they hope to farm, dry and burn)
Putting turbines and generators very like wind turbines on the bottom of river estuaries is being talked about. I don't know that this is actually in use anywhere.
The problems are that building the dams is difficult and expensive. Also the tide only flows hard at certain times of day (but we can at least predict these due to the orbit of the moon). In between these peaks much less energy is generated. Damming a river also affects the wetland habitats around it and the migration of some fish.
Its not much use in the UK as there are not many areas with these hot rocks.