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Science Department Year 8 into 9 Summer Recap & Intervention Work Name:_____________________________ _____ Instructions: Read through the key points for to recap your knowledge of each of the topics. Answer the quick quiz questions for each section (tick the correct answer). Science Department 1
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Page 1: Biology- Health & Lifestyle - Quick Quiz · Web viewWhat is the name of the piece of paper at the end of a chromatography experiment? Chromatogram Filtrate Residue Quiz Score: /14

Science Department

Year 8 into 9

Summer Recap & Intervention Work

Name:__________________________________

Instructions: Read through the key points for to recap your knowledge of each of the

topics. Answer the quick quiz questions for each section (tick the correct answer).

Remember to hand this booklet into your teacher when you return to school in September.

Science Department 1

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Record Sheet

Ask your parents to complete the page below as a record of the completion of your work.

Topic Task Completed Parent Signature Date

Health & LifestyleKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

Ecosystem ProcessesKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

Elements, Atoms & Compounds

Key Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

The Periodic TableKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

Separation TechniquesKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

The EarthKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

SoundKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

LightKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

Electricity & MagnetismKey Point pre-reading

Quick Quiz

Science Department 2

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Biology- Health & Lifestyle - Key Points

Nutrients are essential substances that your body needs to survive. They are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, vitamins, minerals, water and fibre.

Food tests are used to find out which nutrients a food contains.

To remain healthy you must eat a balanced diet. This means eating food containing the right nutrients in the correct amounts.

Underweight people often lack energy. They may also suffer from a vitamin or mineral deficiency, which can cause problems like a poor immune system.

Overweight people have an increased risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and some cancers.

During digestion large molecules like lipids and proteins are broken down into small molecules. They can then pass into the blood where they are used by the body.

Enzymes are proteins that can break large molecules into small molecules. They are biological catalysts – they speed up digestion without being used up.

Drugs are substances that alter the chemical reactions that take place inside your body.

Medicinal drugs have benefits.

Recreational drugs are taken for enjoyment.

If a person becomes dependent on a drug, they have an addiction.

A person with an addiction can suffer withdrawal symptoms if they stop taking the drug.

Alcoholic drinks contain the drug ethanol. This is a depressant, which slows down the nervous system.

Drinking large amounts of alcohol over a long period of time can cause stomach ulcers, heart disease and brain and liver damage. A person with an alcohol addiction is called an alcoholic.

Smoking causes breathing problems, cancer, heart attacks and strokes.

Tobacco smoke contains nicotine. This is a stimulant, which speeds up the nervous system. It is also addictive.

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Biology- Health & Lifestyle - Quick Quiz

1. What nutrient is found in pasta and rice?□ Lipids□ Carbohydrate□ Protein

2. What can happen if you don't eat enough?□ Obesity□ Starvation□ Diarrhoea

3. What can happen if you eat too much?□ Starvation□ Deficiency disease□ Obesity

4. Who needs more energy each day?□ Athletes□ Babies□ Teenagers

5. What are the correct units of energy?□ Joules□ Kilograms□ Calories

6. What does a deficiency in vitamin A cause?□ Scurvy□ Goitre□ Blindness

7. What does a deficiency in iron cause?□ Anaemia□ Rickets□ Scurvy

8. What is the main reason why we need protein in our diet?□ For energy□ To provide roughage□ For growth and repair

9. What are the nutrients needed for energy?□ Carbohydrate and fat

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□ Carbohydrate and fibre□ Fat and minerals

10. Which nutrient cannot be digested?□ Fibre□ Fat□ Protein

11. Which nutrients do not need to be digested?□ Protein, minerals and vitamins□ Minerals, vitamins and water□ Fat, minerals and vitamins

12. What organ follows the stomach in the digestive system?□ Large intestine□ Oesophagus□ Small intestine

13. What is mainly absorbed in the large intestine?□ Water□ Digested food□ Fibre

14. Where is most digested food absorbed?□ In the stomach□ In the small intestine□ In the gullet

15. What is produced when proteins are digested?□ Sugars□ Fatty acids and glycerol□ Amino acids

16. What does lipase digest?□ Carbohydrates□ Proteins□ Fats

17. Where does digestion start?□ Mouth□ Stomach□ Small intestine

18. Where is bile produced?

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□ Anus□ Liver□ Stomach

19. What gives the small intestine a large surface area?□ Rich blood supply□ Thin walls□ Villi

20. When faeces are passed out of the body, this is called:□ Ingestion□ Egestion□ Indigestion

21. What does exercise decrease?□ Tidal volume□ Breathing rate□ The risk of a heart attack

22. What is the addictive substance in tobacco smoke?□ Nicotine□ Tar□ Carbon monoxide

23. Which of the main substances in tobacco smoke causes cancer?□ Carbon monoxide□ Carbon dioxide□ Tar

24. Which statement about drugs is correct?□ All drugs are medicines□ Most drugs have no effect on the body□ Alcohol and tobacco are legal drugs

25. Which part of the gas exchange system does asthma affect?□ The mouth□ The bronchioles□ The capillaries

26. What happens to the bronchioles during an asthma attack?□ The muscles in the lining relax□ The muscles in the lining contract

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□ Less fluid is produced

27. Which of these is an example of a stimulant?□ Alcohol□ Solvents□ Caffeine

28. Which drug is illegal?□ Heroin□ Caffeine□ Nicotine

29. Which drug is a depressant?□ Cocaine□ Alcohol□ Nicotine

30. What can be a long term effect of excessive alcohol?□ Weight gain□ Rash around the nose and mouth□ Increased risk of mental illness

Quiz Score: /30

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Biology- Ecosystem Processes - Key Points

Plants and algae are producers – they make their own food by photosynthesis.

Photosynthesis: carbon dioxide + water glucose + oxygen

Photosynthesis takes place in chloroplasts. Chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, which traps the light needed for photosynthesis.

Stomata allow gases to enter and leave a leaf. Guard cells open the stomata during the day and close them at night.

Plants need minerals for healthy growth. For example, nitrates are needed to make amino acids. Amino acids join together to form proteins, which are used for growth.

To transfer energy from glucose, aerobic respiration takes place inside mitochondria.

Aerobic respiration: glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water (+energy)

If no oxygen is present, energy can be transferred from glucose using anaerobic respiration.

Anaerobic respiration: glucose lactic acid (+energy)

Fermentation is a type of anaerobic respiration performed by microorganisms. It is used in bread and beer-making.

Fermentation: glucose ethanol + carbon dioxide (+energy)

Food chains show the transfer of energy between organisms. A food web is a set of linked food chains.

Toxic chemicals can build up in organisms in a food chain until they reach harmful levels. This is called bioaccumulation.

Interdependence is the way in which organisms depend on each other to survive, grow and reproduce.

Organisms can co-exist within a habitat as they each have a different niche.

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Biology- B2 2 Ecosystem Processes - Quick Quiz

1. What are the products of aerobic respiration?□ Carbon dioxide and water□ Lactic acid□ Oxygen and glucose

2. Where does respiration happen?□ Cell membrane□ Mitochondria□ Nucleus

3. What reaction occurs in yeast?□ Photosynthesis□ Ventilation□ Fermentation

4. What are the products of photosynthesis?□ Carbon dioxide and water□ Glucose and oxygen□ Lactic acid

5. What colour is chlorophyll?□ Black□ Blue□ Green

6. Where does photosynthesis take place?□ In the chloroplasts□ In the cell wall□ In the nucleus

7. What are the reactants of photosynthesis?□ Carbon dioxide and water□ Carbon dioxide and oxygen□ Glucose and oxygen

8. When do plants respire?□ During the day only□ During the day and night□ During the night only

9. When do plants photosynthesise?□ During the day and night

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□ During the night only□ During the day only

10. What are the cells near the top of leaves called?□ Palisade cells□ Root hair cells□ Red blood cells

11. What does xylem carry?□ Water□ Blood□ Carbohydrates

12. What do stomata do?□ Stop carbon dioxide diffusing into leaves□ Allow oxygen to diffuse into leaves□ Allow carbon dioxide to diffuse into leaves

13. How are root hair cells adapted?□ Huge surface area□ Lots of chloroplasts□ Have no cell wall

14. What does a food chain always start with?□ A top predator□ A herbivore□ A producer

15. Which is the secondary consumer in this food chain: grass -> grasshopper -> frog -> hawk?□ Grass□ Grasshopper□ Frogs

16. What does an omnivore eat?□ Meat only□ Plants only□ Meat and plants

17. What is a habitat?□ The place where an organism lives□ All the conditions that surround an organism□ All the populations of different organisms

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18. What is likely to happen to the population of slugs if the population of thrushes decreases?

□ It will increase□ It will decrease□ It will stay the same

19. What is likely to happen to the population of thrushes if the population of voles increases?

□ It will increase□ It will decrease□ It will stay the same

20. What is likely to happen to the population of foxes if the population of rabbits decreases?

□ It will increase□ It will decrease□ It will stay the same

21. What do the arrows in a food chain show?□ How many organisms are present□ What eats what□ The transfer of energy

Quiz Score: /21

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Chemistry – Elements, Atoms & Compounds – Key Points

All materials are made up of one or more elements.

Elements are substances that cannot be broken down.

There are 92 elements that exist naturally.

The Periodic Table lists all the elements.

Every element has its own chemical symbol.

An atom is the smallest part of an elements that can exist.

Every element is made up of one type of atom. All the atoms of an element are the same.

The atoms of one element are different to the atoms of all other elements.

The properties of a substance are the properties of many atoms, not just a single atom.

A compound is a substance made up of atoms of two or more elements, strongly joined together.

The properties of a compound are different to the properties of the elements that is it made from.

A molecule is a group of two or more atoms that are strongly joined together.

A chemical formula shows the relative number of atoms of each element in a compound.

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Chemistry – Elements, Atoms & Compounds – Quick Quiz

1. Which of these is the smallest particle?□ An atom□ A molecule□ A speck of dust

2. Which of these is the correct symbol for magnesium?□ MG□ mg□ Mg

3. Which statement about atoms and molecules is correct?□ Elements always exist as separate atoms□ Elements always exist as pairs of atoms called molecules□ Elements and compounds can exist as molecules

4. How many different atoms are there in a compound?□ One□ Always two□ Two or more

5. Approximately how many elements are there?□ 100□ 4□ 1,000,000

6. Which one is a compound?□ Water□ Hydrogen□ Helium

7. Which of these contains two carbon atoms and six hydrogen atoms?□ CH4

□ C2H6

□ C2H4

8. Which of these contains four hydrogen atoms?□ CH3OH□ H2O□ H2O2

9. How many atoms are there in total in a molecule of sulfur trioxide, SO3?□ Two

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□ Three□ Four

10. Why does air not have a definite formula?□ It contains different amounts of water depending on where you are□ It depends on the temperature□ It is not a compound

11. Does this show an element, a mixture or a compound?

□ Compound□ Mixture□ Element

12. Is water an element, compound or mixture?□ Element□ Compound□ Mixture

Quiz Score: /12

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Chemistry – The Periodic Table – Key Points

In the Periodic Table, metals are on the left of the stepped line, and non-metals are on the right.

Most metals have high melting points. They are good conductors or heat and electricity. They are shiny and have high densities. They are malleable, ductile and sonorous.

Most non-metals have low melting points. They are poor conductors of heat and electricity. In the solid state they are dull and brittle.

Metal oxides are basic. Those that dissolve in water form alkaline solutions. Non-metal oxides are acidic.

Physical properties describe things you can observe and measure.

Chemical properties describe how substances take part in chemical reactions.

You can use the arrangement of elements in the Periodic Table to explain and predict patterns in physical and chemical properties.

In the Periodic Table, the horizontal rows are periods.

In the Periodic Table, the vertical columns are groups.

Going across periods and down groups, there are patterns in the elements’ properties.

Group 1 elements react vigorously with water to make hydroxides and hydrogen. The reactions get more vigorous from top to bottom of the group.

Going down Group 7, melting and boiling points increase. The colours of the elements get darker. They are reactive.

In a displacement reaction a more reactive element displaces a less reactive element from its compound.

Group 0 elements are called the noble gases. They are unreactive.

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Chemistry – The Periodic Table – Quick Quiz

1. Which statement about elements is correct?□ Most elements are metals□ Most elements are non-metals□ There are about the same number of metals and non-metals

2. Where are the metals found in the periodic table?□ On the left□ On the right□ Scattered all over

3. Which of the following is a general property of non-metals?□ Shiny□ Good conductor of heat□ Poor conductor of electricity

4. Which of the following is a general property of metals?□ Brittle□ Strong□ Poor conductor of heat

5. An element sinks in water and makes a ringing sound when hit. It is most likely to be:□ A metal□ A non-metal□ An alloy

6. Which of these is an element in group 2?□ Sodium□ Aluminium□ Calcium

7. Which element from this list will be most similar to neon?□ Zinc□ Argon□ Fluorine

8. Who developed the modern periodic table?□ Isaac Newton□ Dmitri Mendeleev□ Gregor Mendel

9. What is produced when magnesium burns in air?□ Magnesium oxide

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□ Magnesium hydroxide□ Magnesium carbonate

10. What term can be used to describe non-metal oxides?□ Acids□ Alkalis□ Bases

Quiz Score: /10

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Chemistry – Separation Techniques – Key Points

A mixture is made up of substances that are not chemically joined together.

In a mixture, the substances keep their own properties. You can change the amounts of the substances.

A pure substance has a sharp melting point. An impure does not.

A solution is a mixture of a liquid with a solid or gas. All parts of the solution are the same. You cannot see the separate substances.

In a solution, the substance that dissolves is called the solute.

In a solution, the liquid in which the solute dissolves is called the solvent. Solvents include water, propanone and ethanol.

When a substance dissolves, solvent particles surround the solute particles.

A saturated solution is a solution in which no more solute can dissolve.

The solubility of a substance is the mass that dissolves in 100g of water. Every substance has its own solubility.

The solubility of a substance varies with temperature.

Substances that cannot dissolve in a certain solvent are insoluble in that solvent.

Filtration separates a liquid from an insoluble solid. It also separates a solution from a solid that is mixed with is, but not dissolved.

You can separate a solute from its solution by evaporation.

You can separate a solvent from its solution by distillation.

You can separate substances in a mixture by chromatography if all the substances are soluble in the same solvent.

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Chemistry – Separation Techniques – Quick Quiz

1. What is the name of the process that occurs when salt is added to water and then stirred until the solid is no longer visible?□ Filtration□ Evaporation□ Dissolving

2. In a solution of copper sulfate, what is the solvent?□ The water□ The copper sulfate□ The mixture

3. What name is given to a substance that contains two types of atom that are not chemically joined together?□ Element□ Compound□ Mixture

4. In a salt solution, what is the solute?□ The water□ The salty water□ The salt

5. Which is the best way to get salt from salty water?□ Evaporation□ Filtration□ Distillation

6. Pure water can be separated from inky water by simple distillation because:□ Water and ink have different boiling points□ Water evaporates leaving the ink particles behind□ Ink evaporates leaving the water behind

7. What is the correct order for obtaining salt from a mixture of sand and salt?□ Dissolving in water - filtration - evaporation□ Evaporation - filtration - dissolving in water□ Filtration - dissolving in water - evaporation

8. Which method is usually used to separate coloured substances from each other?□ Simple distillation□ Evaporation□ Chromatography

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9. How could you separate iron filings from a mixture of iron and sulfur?□ Using a magnet□ By adding water and filtering□ By distillation

10. In filtration, what name is used to describe the solid left in the filter paper?□ Filtrate□ Residue□ Distillate

11. If you wanted to make pure drinking water from sea water, what process would you use?□ Filtration□ Distillation□ Evaporation

12. Crude oil can be separated into several liquids that have different boiling points. What is the name of this process?□ Simple distillation□ Chromatography□ Fractional distillation

13. In chromatography, where are the spots of coloured substances placed?□ Randomly on the piece of paper□ In a vertical line on the paper□ On a horizontal line on the paper

14. What is the name of the piece of paper at the end of a chromatography experiment?□ Chromatogram□ Filtrate□ Residue

Quiz Score: /14

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Chemistry – The Earth – Key Points

Everything we use comes from the Earth’s crust, atmosphere, or oceans.

The Earth consists of the crust, mantle, outer core and inner core.

The atmosphere is the mixture of gases around the Earth. It is mainly nitrogen and oxygen, with smaller amounts of argon and carbon dioxide.

Sedimentary rocks form as a result of weathering, erosion, transport, deposition and compaction or cementation.

Sedimentary rocks have separate grains. They are porous. Most are soft.

Igneous rocks form when liquid rock freezes. They consist of crystals. They are non-porous, hard and durable.

Metamorphic rocks form when heating, high pressure or both change existing rock. They consist of crystals. They are non-porous.

The rock cycle shows how materials in rock are recycled over millions of years.

Huge forces in the Earth push rocks upwards to form mountains, this is called uplift.

Carbon stores include the atmosphere, oceans, sedimentary rocks, fossil fuels and organisms.

The carbon cycle show how carbon compounds enter and leave carbon stores.

The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is increasing because of deforestation and burning fossil fuels.

Extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere causes climate change.

Recycling involves collecting and processing materials that have been used to make new objects.

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Chemistry – The Earth – Quick Quiz

1. What is at the centre of the Earth?□ The mantle□ The core□ The crust

2. What is the core of the Earth made from?□ Zinc and carbon□ Iron and nickel□ Oxygen and silicon

3. What is the solid, outermost part of the Earth made from?□ The mantle□ The atmosphere□ The crust

4. Which layer of the Earth is a liquid?□ The inner core□ The outer core□ The mantle

5. What gas makes up most of the atmosphere?□ Nitrogen□ Oxygen□ Argon

6. What percentage of the atmosphere is oxygen?□ 21%□ 16%□ 33%

7. What percentage of the atmosphere is carbon dioxide?□ 5%□ 1%□ 0.04%

8. What is the formula of nitrogen?□ N□ N2

□ N3

9. How much water is in the air?□ It varies depending on the weather

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□ 1%□ 5%

10. Which gas is present in the atmosphere that is needed by all animals in order to survive?□ Nitrogen□ Oxygen□ Argon

11. What does the presence of tiny crystals in a piece of igneous rock tell you about it?□ The molten rock cooled very quickly□ The molten rock cooled very slowly□ The molten rock cooled deep underground

12. Which one of these rocks is an igneous rock?□ Marble□ Limestone□ Basalt

13. What is magma?□ Salt crystals in sedimentary rock□ Molten rock□ Bubbles of gas

14. Which of the following is the order for forming sedimentary rocks?□ Sedimentation - cementation - compaction□ Compaction - sedimentation - cementation□ Sedimentation - compaction - cementation

15. Only one of these rocks is a sedimentary rock. Which one?□ Shale□ Slate□ Granite

16. Where are the oldest layers of rock usually found in a cliff made from sedimentary rock?□ At the top□ In the middle□ At the bottom

17. Which statement about metamorphic rocks is correct?□ They are formed when rocks are heated until they melt□ They are only formed from heated sedimentary rocks□ They are formed from all types of rock when they are heated and compressed

18. Which type of rock never contains fossils?

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□ Sedimentary□ Igneous□ Metamorphic

19. Which statement about the crystals in metamorphic rocks is correct?□ They are small if the molten rock cooled quickly□ They are large if the molten rock cooled slowly□ They are often arranged in layers

20. Which metamorphic rock is formed from limestone?□ Marble□ Slate□ Shale

21. Which of these is not an example of physical weathering?□ Freeze-thaw□ Acid rain falling on limestone□ Wind blowing sand onto a rock

22. What happens to pieces of rock as they are transported by a river?□ They get larger and more jagged□ They get smaller and more rounded□ They get smaller and more jagged

23. Which of these rocks is most likely to be damaged by acid rain?□ Limestone□ Granite□ Gabbro

24. Which of these is an example of biological weathering?□ A tree root splitting a rock apart□ Acid rain eroding limestone□ Freeze-thaw

25. Which landscape feature can be caused by chemical weathering?□ U-shaped valley□ Basalt columns□ Limestone caves

26. Which gas can cause acid rain?□ Nitrogen□ Sulfur dioxide

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□ Oxygen

27. What term describes the movement of small rock particles away from their source?□ Weathering□ Decomposition□ Erosion

28. What type of rock is formed by volcanoes in the rock cycle?□ Igneous□ Sedimentary□ Metamorphic

29. What type of rock is made when tiny particles of other rocks settle out from slow moving water?□ Igneous□ Sedimentary□ Metamorphic

30. What is required to make a metamorphic rock?□ Millions of years□ High temperatures and pressures□ A catalyst

31. Which of these processes absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere?□ Respiration□ Combustion of fossil fuels□ Photosynthesis

32. Which of these processes releases carbon dioxide into the air?□ Dissolving in sea water□ Combustion of fossil fuels□ Plants being eaten by animals

33. What is used to explain how carbon moves through the atmosphere, Earth and living organisms?□ The water cycle□ The nitrogen cycle□ The carbon cycle

34. Carbon dioxide is released when fossil fuels burn. What is the main problem caused by carbon dioxide?□ It is a greenhouse gas□ It makes it difficult for wild animals to breathe

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□ It is the major cause of acid rain

35. Which of the following is likely to be a result of global warming?□ Sea levels falling□ Sea levels staying the same□ Sea levels rising

36. What term is used for the process of cutting down large numbers of trees?□ Deforestation□ Reforestation□ Eutrophication

37. Which of the following is not a greenhouse gas?□ Methane□ Carbon dioxide□ Nitrogen

38. What would happen if there was no greenhouse effect on Earth?□ The Earth would be too cold for life to exist□ The global temperature would stay constant□ The global temperature would rise very quickly

Quiz Score: /38

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Physics – Sound – Key Points

Waves are oscillations or vibrations that have an amplitude, wavelength and frequency. The top of a wave is a crest and the bottom is a trough.

In a transverse wave the oscillation is 90o to the wave direction and in a longitudinal wave it is parallel to the wave direction.

Waves can reflect from barriers and add up or cancel out.

A sound wave is produced by vibrating objects and is longitudinal.

Sound travels at 340 m/s. sound travels fastest in solids and slowest in gases and cannot travel through a vacuum.

The loudness of a sound depends on its amplitude, and the pitch depends on its frequency. Frequency is measured in hertz (Hz).

A human’s audible range is from 20-20 000 Hz.

Your outer ear consists of the pinna, auditory canal and eardrum. Your middle ear contains your ossicles. Your inner ear contains your cochlea and semi-circular canals.

Vibrations travel from your eardrum to the hairs in your cochlea. This produces a signal that is sent to your brain.

Loudness is measured in decibels (dB).

An echo is a reflection of sound that you can use to work out distance. Soft materials absorb sound and don’t produce echoes.

Ultrasound is sound with frequency of more than 20 000 Hz. Humans use ultrasound to produce images of inside the body and to find the depths of water.

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Physics – Sound – Quick Quiz

1. What are oscillations?□ The number of waves per second□ Up and down movements□ The height of a wave

2. At what direction are the oscillations in a transverse wave to its direction?□ 360 degrees□ 180 degrees□ 90 degrees

3. What happens to water waves when they hit a surface?□ Reflection□ Refraction□ They stop

4. What happens to two waves that collide in step?□ Cancelling□ Adding□ Subtracting

5. What happens to two waves that collide out of step?□ Multiplying□ Dividing□ Cancelling

6. What is the amplitude of a wave?□ The distance between the same two points on a wave□ The maximum height of the wave□ The number of waves per second

7. What type of waves are sound waves?□ Water□ Longitudinal□ Transverse

8. What part of the ear collects sounds?□ Ear drum□ Ear canal□ Pinna

9. What is the diaphragm in a telephone most like?□ Ear drum

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□ Ossicles□ Ear canal

10. What is the amplitude of a wave?□ The distance between the same two points on a wave□ The maximum height of the wave□ The number of waves per second

11. What is the wavelength of a wave?□ The maximum height of the wave□ The number of waves per second□ The distance between the same two points on a wave

12. What is the frequency of a wave?□ The number of waves per second□ The distance between the same two points on a wave□ The maximum height of the wave

13. In which does sound travel fastest?□ Liquids□ Solids□ Gases

14. Above what frequency is ultrasound?□ 10 000 Hz□ 20 Hz□ 20 000 Hz

15. What do we use ultrasound for?□ Taking photos of unborn babies□ Taking photos of jewellery□ Cleaning babies

Quiz Score: /15

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Physics – Light – Key Points

Light is emitted from luminous objects. It can be transmitted through, reflected or absorbed by non-luminous objects.

Objects are transparent, translucent or opaque. Light travels through a vacuum at 300 000 km/s. A light-year is the distance light travels in one year. Light-years are used to measure very large

distances. Your brain uses the fact that light travels in straight lines and you see a virtual image when you

look in the mirror. The law of reflection says that the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. Images are formed when reflection is specular but not when there is diffuse scattering from a

surface. When light slows down, it is refracted towards the normal. A lens can focus light to a focal point. Light enters your eye through a pupil. The cornea and lens focus the light to produce a real

image on your retina. A chemical reaction in the photoreceptors in your eye produces an electrical signal. The signal travels down the optic nerve to your brain.

Light forms an image in a camera in the same way. Digital cameras store images produce when light hits a charge-coupled device (CCD).

Prisms disperse white light to produce a continuous spectrum. Primary colours of light add up to make secondary colours. All three colours add to make white light.

Filters and coloured objects subtract colour from white light by transmitting or reflecting the colour that they are and absorbing the rest.

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Physics – Light – Quick Quiz

1. What type of waves are light?□ Transverse□ Longitudinal□ Water

2. Why are some objects transparent?□ Some light passes through them□ All light passes through them□ No light passes through them

3. Which travels most quickly?□ Water waves□ Sound waves□ Light waves

4. The angle of incidence always equals what?□ The angle of reflection□ The angle of dispersion□ The angle of exodus

5. Why does light refract?□ Its size changes□ Its speed changes□ Its shape changes

6. What type of lens focuses light on a point?□ Dispersing□ Concave lens□ Converging

7. Which of these colours is not found in the spectrum?□ Cyan□ Yellow□ Green

8. What are the three primary colours?□ Red, green and yellow□ Red, green and blue□ Red, blue and yellow

9. What is the retina?□ The part of your eye that sends the image to your brain

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□ The part of your eye that focuses light□ The light-sensitive section at the back of your eye

10. What type of reflection is seen in a mirror?□ Specular□ Diffuse□ Normal

Quiz Score: /10

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Physics – Electricity & Magnetism – Key Points

Objects can be charged positively or negatively by transferring electrons.

Like charges repel and unlike charges attract.

An electric field is a region where there is a force on charged particles or materials.

Electric current is the amount of charge flowing per second. You measure current in amps (A) using an ammeter.

The potential difference of a cell tells you the size of the push on the charges and how much energy can be transferred by them.

You measure potential difference in volts (V) using a voltmeter. The rating of a cell or battery tells you the potential difference at which is operates.

Series circuit contain only one loop, and the current is the same everywhere. Parallel circuits have branches and the currents in all the branches add up to make the total current.

A component with a high resistance has a small current through it. Resistance is measured in ohms (). You calculate the resistance using the potential difference across a component and the current through it. Insulators have a very high resistance and conductors have a very low resistance.

Magnets have a north pole and a south pole. Like poles repel and unlike poles attract.

Magnetic materials feel a force in the region around a magnet called a magnetic field. Magnetic field lines show the pattern of the magnetic field.

A current flowing in a coil of wire wrapped around a magnetic material is an electromagnet. It behaves like a bar magnet but you can turn it on and off.

Electromagnets are used in maglev trains, hospitals and cars.

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Physics – Electricity & Magnetism – Quick Quiz

1. What are all substances made from?□ Atoms□ Electrons□ Circles

2. What happens to an atom if it gains an electron?□ It becomes positive□ It becomes negative□ It stays neutral

3. What charge are electrons?□ Neutral□ Positive□ Negative

4. Which is an example of the build-up of static electricity?□ Lightning□ Electromagnets□ Friction

5. What will happen to two objects with the same static charge?□ They will attract□ They will repel□ Nothing

6. What will happen to two objects with the opposite static charge?□ They will repel□ Nothing□ They will attract

7. What happens to an atom if it loses an electron?□ It becomes positive□ It becomes negative□ It stays neutral

8. Which part of atoms cause static electricity?□ Neutrons□ Electrons□ Protons

9. What machine is used by teachers to show static electricity?□ Quadrat

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□ Bunsen burner□ Van de Graaff generator

10. Static electricity produces what type of force?□ Non-contact□ Contact□ Non-touching

11. What needs to be done to this circuit so that the lamp lights up?

□ Close the switch□ Add another lamp□ Add a cell and close the switch

12. What component does this circuit symbol represent?

□ Cell□ Voltmeter□ Resistor

13. Which switch or switches must be closed to make the lamps light?

□ Only switch 1□ Only switch 2□ Switches 1 and 2

14. If lamp 1 is unscrewed from its holder, what will happen to lamp 2?

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□ It will get brighter□ It will go out□ It will stay the same brightness

15. If lamp 1 is unscrewed from its holder, what will happen to lamp 2?

□ It will stay lit□ It will go out□ It will get dimmer

16. What is wrong with this circuit diagram?

□ There is only one cell□ The ammeter should be connected in series□ A ammeter should be connected in parallel

17. Which ammeter will have the biggest reading?

□ Ammeter 1□ Ammeter 2□ They will read the same

18. Which statement about electric current is correct?□ It always flows clockwise

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□ It gets used up as it goes around the circuit□ It does not get used up as it goes around the circuit

19. What is the definition of current?□ The flow of charge□ A measure of the difference in energy□ How difficult it is for electrons to flow

20. Which term is used instead of voltage?□ Resistance□ Potential difference□ Current

21. Which of the following are magnetic poles?□ North and south□ East and west□ Red and blue

22. Which of the following is not a magnetic material?□ Steel□ Cobalt□ Aluminium

23. What do two poles of the same type do when they are brought close together?□ They attract□ They repel□ Nothing

24. What do two unlike poles do when they are brought close together?□ They attract□ They repel□ Nothing

25. The arrow on magnetic field lines shows them flowing in which direction?□ From south to north□ From north to south□ From left to right

26. Where are the field lines most concentrated around a bar magnet?□ At both poles□ In the middle

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□ At the north pole only

27. How can we increase the strength of an electromagnet?□ Add an iron core□ Reduce the number of turns on the coil□ Reduce the current in the coil

28. What is one difference between electromagnets and bar magnets?□ Bar magnets can be turned off but electromagnets cannot□ Bar magnets have a magnetic field but electromagnets do not□ Electromagnets need electricity but bar magnets do not

29. What can we use to find the shape of a magnetic field?□ An electromagnet□ A coil of wire□ A compass

30. Which of these doesn't usually use an electromagnet?□ A compass□ A school bell□ A speaker

Quiz Score: /30

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