IB Physics HL Definitions
Rayleigh criterion
2 points will be resolvable if the first minimum of the diffraction pattern of one source overlaps the central maximum of the diffraction pattern of the second source.
Polariser
A device that makes polarized light from an unpolarised beam.
Magnetic flux
A measure of the strength of a magnetic field over a given area/ number of field lines.
Analyser
A polariser used to detect polarised light.
Fuel enrichment
A process where you increase percentage of U-235 to make fission more likely.
Nucleon
A proton or a neutron.
Optically active substance
A substance that rotates the plane of polarisation of light that goes through it.
Specific Latent Heat
Amount of heat needed to change the state of 1 kilo of a substance WITHOUT a change in temperature.
Mole
Amount of substance that has the same number of molecules as the number of of molecules as the number of atoms in 12g of C-12.
Nuclide
An atom with a particular nucleus configuration.
Isotope
An element with the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons.
Newton's First Law
An object continues in uniform motion in a straight line/ at rest unless a resultant force acts.
Forced oscillation
An oscillation that occurs & stays , Where an object is forced to oscillate by an external force.
Newton's universal law of gravitation
Any point mass attracts every other point mass with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to their separation².
Impulse
Change in momentum.
Isobaric
Constant pressure: Work done is area under line.
Isothermal
Constant temperature: Work done= area under curve.
Isochoric
Constant volume: no work is done.
Displacement (SHM)
Distance away a particle is from its equilibrium position.
Degraded energy
Energy transferred to surroundings that can no longer do useful work.
Magnetic field strength
F=BILsinø Direction: 90° to field lines.
Work
Force X distance moved in direction of force.
Pressure
Force per unit area.
One dimensional standing wave
Happens when a wave reflects back from a boundary along the route it came.
Brewster's angle
Happens when the transmitted ray is 90° to the reflected ray. The angle gives us the angle of incidence needed for plane-polarized light.
Solar heating panel
Heat goes through glass pane & is absorbed by black pipes with running water in them.
Stress analysis
If polarised white light is shone on plastic, you can see the stress points where the coloured lines are.
Elastic Collision
KE is conserved and objects bounce off with the same speed it did before in opposite directions.
Photovoltaic cell
Light hits semiconductors & electrons are released/ moved; creating an electric field.
Polarized light
Light with waves that vibrate in 1 plane.
Molar Mass
Mass of 1 mole of the substance.
Amplitude (SHM)
Maximum displacement of a particle from its equilibrium position.
Inelastic Collision
Maximum loss of KE, objects stick together & momentum is still conserved.
Law of conservation of momentum
Momentum of object in system stays the same in a closed system.
Simple Harmonic Motion
Motion where the acceleration of an object is proportional to & in the opposite direction to displacement. a = -ω2x
Adiabatic
No heat transfer: compression/ expansion. Work is done on/ by gas
Avogadro's Constant
Number of molecules in 1 mole = 6.022 × 10²³
Frequency (SHM)
Number of oscillations produced per second.
Explosion
Objects move away from each other, internal energy becomes KE.
Transverse wave
Oscillations are at 90° to direction of energy transfer/ wave motion.
Longitudinal wave
Oscillations are parallel to direction of energy transfer/ wave motion.
Constructive/destructive interference
Phase difference is 0/ out of phase& path difference is a whole 'n' of wavelength/ a fraction of it.
Trough
Point on a wave with maximum negative displacement.
Crest
Point on a wave with maximum positive displacement.
Displacement
Position of an object relative to its starting position.
Damping
Process where the energy of an oscillating system decreases with amplitude by a dissipative force acting in the opposite direction.
Velocity
Rate of change of displacement.
Speed
Rate of change of distance.
Acceleration
Rate of change of velocity.
Efficiency
Ratio of work out: energy put in.
Compression
Region (on a wave) where particles are closer together than they would be in their equilibrium state.
Rarefaction
Region (on a wave) where particles are further apart than they would be in their equilibrium state.
Internal resistance
Resistance if a source (of power).
Enhanced greenhouse effect
Rising global temperatures due to greenhouse gases being put into the atmosphere because of human activities
Moderator
Slows down fast neutrons to increase the chance of more reactions. (So they don't pass through the nuclei)
Newton's Second Law
The acceleration of an object is proportional to and in the same direction as its resultant force.
Electronvolt
The amount of energy an electron gains by moving through a potential difference of 1 volt.
Doppler Effect
The change in perceived frequency because the source or observer is moving.
Ohm's Law
The current through a wire is proportional to the p.d. across it; as long as the temperature is constant.
Mass defect
The difference in mass between a nucleus and its separate nucleons.
Lenz's law
The direction of an induced current is such that it'll oppose the change causing it.
Kinetic Energy
The energy an object has due to it's motion
Change in GPE
The energy an object has due to its position above the Earth.
Binding energy
The energy needed to break up a nucleus into its constituent nucleons.
Thermal Capacity
The energy needed to increase the temperature of an object by 1K.
Specific Heat Capacity
The energy needed to increase the temperature of of 1 kilo of an object by 1K.
Surface heat capacity
The energy needed to raise the temperature of a unit area of a planet's surface by 1K.
Electric field strength
The force per unit charge experienced by a small test charge placed in the field.
Gravitational field strength
The force per unit mass experienced by a small test mass placed in the field.
Phase Difference (SHM)
The fraction of an oscillation that one wave moves behind another.
Coefficient of volume expansion
The fractional change in volume per degree change in temperature.
Natural frequency
The frequency that a system naturally oscillates at.
Unified atomic mass
The mass of ½ of the nucleus of a C-12 isotope.
Energy density
The mean energy liberated per kg of a fuel.
Intensity
The power per unit area received by an observer from a wave.
Electromotive force (emf)
The power supplied by the supply per unit current.
Linear Momentum
The product of mass and velocity.
Magnetic flux linkage
The product of the magnetic flux and the number of turns in a given coil.
Electric current
The rate of flow of electrical charge.
Emissivity
The ratio of power emitted by a body to the power emitted if it was a black body.
Albedo
The ratio of reflected: incident radiation.
Resistance
The ratio of voltage across the material to the current flowing through it.
Wavelength
The shortest distance between 2 points on a wave that are in phase.
Faraday's law
The size of an induced emf is proportional to the rate of change of flux linkage.
Wave speed
The speed at which wave fronts pass a stationary observer.
Radioactive half life
The time taken for the total number of nuclei (of a radioactive substance) to halve.
Binding energy per nucleon
The total binding energy for the nucleus divided by the total number of nucleons
Electric potential energy
The work done moving a charge from infinity to a point in an electric field.
Electric potential
The work done per unit charge in bringing a positive test charge from infinity to that point in the field.
Control rod
This absorbs neutrons to control chain reactions.
Heat exchanger
This allows the nuclear reactions to occur in a place that is sealed off from the rest of the environment. The thermal energy is transferred to heat water, and the steam that is produced turns the turbines.
Period (SHM)
Time taken for a complete oscillation.
Stefan- Boltzmann law
Total power radiated ∝ T⁴ OR P= σAT⁴.
Standing waves
Transfer no energy. They have the same amplitude and are in phase. Happens when a wave & its reflection interfere (or just 2 waves)
Newton's Third Law
When 2 objects react, the exert equal and opposite forces on each other.
Principle of superposition
When 2 or more waves of the same type meet, the total displacement at a point on a wave is the displacements of the individual waves added at that point.
Resonance
When the frequency of a driving force matches the natural frequency of oscillation.
*Gravitational potential energy
Work done in moving an object from infinity to that point.
Electric potential difference
Work done per unit charge in moving a positive charge from one point in the (electric) field to another.
Gravitational potential
Work done per unit mass in bringing a test mass from infinity to that point in the field.