What are SPLATs? They are explained here.
The principles of matter and energy
- Matter and energy can be neither created nor destroyed, but matter 
can sometimes be converted into energy, and energy can sometimes be 
converted to matter.
- The energy of stars comes from a slow conversion of matter 
to energy as light atoms join to make slightly heavier atoms. Stars do 
this for billions of years.
- All change requires energy. Energy is what you need to do 
work. Energy can be electrical, chemical, or of other sorts. Energy is 
neither created nor destroyed.
- Energy is the cause of all change in all systems, 
everywhere. Energy can be converted from one form to another. Power is 
the rate of transfer of energy.
- Heat makes changes of state happen: the processes of 
boiling: condensing: melting, subliming and solidifying all happen when 
heat is added or taken away.
- Energy operates within in accordance with the laws of 
thermodynamics, and can only be understood, used and manipulated within 
those assumptions.
- Tensioning a bow or any other elastic item increases its 
potential energy, which is converted back to kinetic energy when it is 
released again.
- Falling weights, expanding gas and burning material all 
release energy, and can be used to do work. Most machines convert energy
 from one form to another.
- The first form of energy assistance for humans came with 
the use of draught animals, hence the name of the original unit for work
 done, the horsepower.
- We waste valuable domestic energy by bad housing design and
 a lack of insulation. This leads to a cost which is not usually borne 
by the wasters.
- In 1834, Benoit Paul Emile Clapeyron presented a 
formulation of the second law of thermodynamics, giving us for the first
 time, the notion of entropy.
- James Joule spent most of his time experimenting. The joule
 derives from his studies which showed that heat and mechanical movement
 are forms of the same thing.
- Joule's work proved that heat and movement were both forms 
of energy, and that was as good as a theoretical proof. It also put a 
measure on the equivalence.
- Joule's predecessors include Plato who saw 'heat and fire' 
come from 'impact and friction', and Count Rumford, who studied the heat
 produced in cannon-boring.
- Maxwell's demon is a fascinating paradox which implied that
 there might be a way to beat the laws of thermodynamics and achieve 
perpetual motion. You can't.
- The Maxwell's demon paradox is based on the fact that some 
gas molecules have more energy than others: if a demon could separate 
them, this would yield energy.
- When James Clerk Maxwell proposed the paradox, he would 
have known that there must be an answer, but he could not immediately 
see what it would be.
- The answer to Maxwell's demon is that the energy needed to separate the molecules would be greater than the energy that could be obtained from the differences.
The principles of wise energy use
- Energy can be stored in many ways, and it is often convenient to 
think of it as potential energy when attempting to understand what is 
happening.
- Alternative energy is widely seen as important to our 
future but some known alternative energy sources are carbon-neutral, or 
close to it, while others are not.
- Many alternative energy sources carry with them a severe 
carbon cost in making steel, concrete or other materials, or in 
transport and feed stock for sprays.
- In 1609, an attempt was made to harness tidal power in the 
Bay of Fundy, the first time that tidal power had been brought into use,
 but it was unsuccessful.
- Energy has been the cause of social change. The developed 
world lives at 7.5 kilowatts, the undeveloped world at 1 kilowatt. This 
needs to change.
- The energy we need to live at 7.5 kilowatts involves 
burning enough fossil fuel to produce 5.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide for 
each person each year.
- Incandescent lamps are inefficient light producers, because
 much of the electricity they use is converted to heat first and 
released as waste heat.
- Energy conservation will prolong the life of the earth as 
we know it, and of the life forms on the planet, and so prolong the 
survival of humanity.
- Fossil fuels like coal, gas, oil and peat contain stored 
solar energy from the past. They can be used far more rapidly than 
replacements can be formed.
- Most renewable energy requires a certain energy input, but 
some renewable energy sources consume more energy (mostly fossil fuels) 
than they deliver.
- In reality, most alternative energy systems carry a major 
carbon cost in the manufacture of the components or in lost 
opportunities like lost photosynthesis.
- Some forms of energy are renewable, as we see it in our 
time frame. In that sense, solar energy is renewable, although in a 
longer time frame, it is not.
- In 1865 W. S. Jevons warned that coal supplies would 
eventually run out, though he exaggerated estimates of use, and did not 
allow for oil being used as a fuel.
- The best solar conversion systems now convert 9% of 
sunlight to hydrogen, which is getting close to the generally assumed 
break-even point of 10%.
- Geothermal energy draws heat from hot water and rock, deep 
underground, and is effectively renewable in our time frame, although 
not in a longer time frame.
- Alcohol which is made from sugar or corn, vegetable oils, 
draught animals, biologically generated hydrogen and biogas are all 
renewable energy sources.
- Wind power is a form of alternative or renewable energy 
that relies on the sun for the energy input side. Wind generators 
require backup, as they stop at times.
- Photovoltaic cells convert sunlight to electrical energy 
but there are problems in getting satisfactorily efficient conversion in
 mass-produced modules.
- There seems to be a practical limit of 25% on the 
efficiency of photovoltaic cells. There is no good theoretical reason 
for this limit that anybody can see.
- Hydrogen makes a clean and effective fuel, but it needs to 
come from somewhere in the first place, and it presents special storage 
and transport problems.
- Fuel cells convert the chemical energy of fuel and an 
oxidant to electrical energy cleanly, but while they show promise, they 
are not yet fully developed.
- At the moment, more people die around the world as a result of mining coal each year than were killed in nuclear accidents in the whole of the past ten years.
The principles of nuclear energy
- Some nuclei are unstable as a result of an imbalance in the numbers 
of neutrons and protons in the nucleus. The radioactive decays end when 
stability is reached
- Radioactivity can be natural or artificial: one important 
use of nuclear reactors is in making radioisotopes which have important 
medical applications.
- Radioactive nuclei all have a half-life, the time in which 
half the nuclei in a sample decay. The half-life of any unstable nucleus
 can be determined.
- More unstable nuclei have shorter half-lives: the half-life
 depends on the probability that a given nucleus will undergo fission 
within a given time.
- Nuclear fusion involves two light nuclei being combined 
into a heavier nucleus with less mass than the original nuclei and 
releasing energy as a result.
- Nuclear fission involves a heavy nucleus forming two nuclei
 lighter (in total) than the original nucleus and releasing energy 
equivalent to the lost mass.
- As a general rule, the nuclei in the centre of the periodic
 table have less energy available because energy was released during 
their formation.
- The mass deficiency at the end of a nuclear reaction is 
linked to the energy released in accordance with the much-misquoted "e 
equals mc squared".
- A critical mass is an amount of fissile material formed so 
that each fission generates products (usually neutrons) that trigger, on
 average, one more fission.
- The amount of fissile material needed to make a critical 
mass is least when the fissile material is in the shape of a sphere, as 
fewer neutrons escape.
- A nuclear chain reaction requires a critical mass of 
fissile material in a small space, and control systems which need to be 
highly reliable, except in a bomb.
- Beta particles are energetic electrons ejected from the 
nucleus during nuclear decay, and they indicate that a neutron has 
become a proton in the nucleus.
- Alpha particles are the most massive form of radiation. 
Each alpha particle is made up of two neutrons and two protons, ejected 
from a fissioning nucleus.
- Radioactivity involves the release of energy, and the 
release comes in three forms, originally simply called alpha, beta and 
gamma radiation.
- Gamma radiation is a form of electromagnetic radiation, 
rather like X-rays, which is emitted as a way of losing energy during 
some forms of nuclear decay.
- Nuclear energy produces no greenhouse emissions: the damage
 from continuing greenhouse emissions can be predicted, unlike the 
damage from nuclear reactors.
- The energetic radiation coming from radioactive material 
can be harmful to living cells, depending on the radiation produced, and
 how close the source gets.
- Most nuclear accidents have been caused by poor training 
and careless operation of facilities and operations by people who feel 
over-confident with their tasks.
- Nuclear waste can be classified as high, medium or 
low-grade waste, depending on its half-life, the products of decay and 
how much of it there is.
- Some nuclear waste will need to be stored safely for many 
thousands of years, while the radioactive products break down. It might 
harm our descendants, one day.
- Burning fossil fuels to obtain the energy we all demand is 
now considered to cause global warming, and that will, without a doubt, 
harm our descendants, soon.
- Some spent nuclear fuel rods can be recycled to produce new
 fuel rods. The recycling processes need to be managed and supervised 
with very great care.
- Nuclear weapons bring a variety of technical problems in 
maintenance and storage as the fissile materials in them slowly decay, 
and need to be refurbished.
- Burning one gram of hydrogen gas in the normal way with 
oxygen provides the energy that is needed to light a 100 watt bulb for 
about 40 minutes only.
- If the same gram of hydrogen could be converted completely 
to energy by some form of nuclear reaction, it would power a 100 watt 
bulb for 56,000 years.
- In 1939, Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassman bombarded uranium 
salts with thermal neutrons and found barium among the reaction 
products, indicating fission.
- In 1939, Rudolf Peierls and Otto Frisch worked out the 
critical mass and theory of the uranium-235 fission bomb, with a 
critical mass of about 10 kilograms.
- In 1976, Shlyakhter used samarium ratios from a 2 
billion-year-old natural fission reactor in Gabon to show the laws of 
physics have not changed in that time.
- In 1939, Teller, Szilard and Einstein, sent a warning 
letter to President Roosevelt about the possibilities of the atomic 
bomb, starting the Manhattan Project.
- In 1932, Leo Szilard realized that nuclear chain reactions 
may be possible, and by 1934, he had filed a patent on the principles, 
and gave it to the War Office.
- Early on, Frederick Soddy calculated that the energy liberated in the complete change of 28 grams of radium would be equal to that from burning 10 tons of coal.
- Raising an object against gravity increases its potential energy, 
which can be recovered by letting it go, when the potential energy 
becomes kinetic energy.
- Mass and weight are different: objects in free fall have no
 weight, but they still have mass, and strictly speaking, they are 
weightless but not massless.
- Every solid body which has mass has a centre of gravity, a 
point which sometimes lies outside of the body itself, if the body has 
an irregular shape.
- When a force operates on a body, it accelerates. This is a 
change in velocity, involving either speed or direction, so moving in a 
circle is acceleration.
- Aristotle believed that if a small stone and a large stone 
were dropped from a tower, the large stone would fall faster than the 
small stone, which was wrong.
- Around 1350, Jean Buridan and Nicolas Oresme said, contrary
 to Aristotle, that unequal masses would fall at the same speed, as 
Galileo Galilei argued later.
- Galileo Galilei may have dropped rocks of different sizes, 
but also described what we would now call a perfectly good thought 
experiment to give the answer.
- In 1604 Galileo Galilei showed that the distance travelled 
by a freely falling object increases as the square of time during which 
it has been falling.
- Velocity is a vector quantity with both a speed and a 
direction, so acceleration may involve a change in either or both. 
Circular motion is accelerated.
- The study of flight is called aerodynamics. Flight depends 
on the interactions of forces produced by solid surfaces moving with 
respect to the atmosphere.
- The law of conservation of momentum describes what happens 
when moving bodies interact in a collision, the main effect being that 
momentum is conserved.
- Much of modern technology depends on devices that convert 
energy from one form to another. Usually one of those forms is 
electrical or chemical.
- All movement is subject to three laws called Newton's laws 
of motion which relate velocity, force, time, displacement, acceleration
 and mass to each other.
- Newton's 1st law: Every body continues in a state of rest, 
or uniform motion in a straight line, unless made to change that state 
by forces impressed upon it.
- Newton's 2nd law: The change of motion is proportional to 
the force on it, and is made in the direction of the straight line in 
which the force is impressed.
- Newton's 3rd law: To every action there is an equal and 
opposite reaction; the mutual actions of two bodies on each other are 
equal, and directed opposite ways.
- The process of adding vectors to one another may be carried
 out with the parallelogram of forces, or mathematically, whichever is 
more convenient.
- Perpetual motion is physically impossible, mainly because of frictional losses in moving parts and the transfer of energy to air surrounding the machine.
The principles of force in physics
- The four known and recognized forces of nature are the 
electromagnetic force, the gravitational force, the strong nuclear force
 and the weak nuclear force.
- The gravitational force exerted on a standard mass by an 
object depends on its mass, and on the square of the distance between 
their two centres of mass.
- The force of gravity obeys the inverse square law, and 
gravitational forces may be calculated using Newton's law of gravitation
 which is based on this.
- In 1674 Robert Hooke attempted to explain planetary motion 
as a balance of centrifugal force and gravitational attraction, but this
 failed to stand up.
- In 1665 Isaac Newton deduced the inverse-square 
gravitational force law from the 'falling' of the moon, rather than the 
apple of all the mythological accounts.
- In 1680 Isaac Newton demonstrated that the operation of the
 inverse square law on gravity leads directly to the formation of 
elliptical orbits in space.
- Gravitation is one of the four forces of nature. Although 
it may seem strong to us as we experience the force, it is a weak force 
which acts everywhere.
- In 1798 Henry Cavendish measured the gravitational constant
 with John Michell's torsion balance and from that, was able to 
determine the mass of the Earth.
- Based on the value of G and the known size of the Earth, 
Cavendish was able to estimate the density of the Earth at 5.48, close 
to the current value of 5.52.
- In 1749, Pierre Bouguer attempted to estimate the value of 
G, the Universal Gravitational Constant, using a mountain as an 
attracting mass, but it was too weak.
- The centrifugal force is a fictitious force, but there 
really is a force called the centripetal force. Either can be used in 
explanations and calculations.
- Under extreme conditions, the operations of gravity may 
lead to the formation of a black hole, a concentration of mass so great 
that even light cannot escape.
- Parabolic flight may be used to simulate 'weightlessness' 
near the Earth's surface, for short periods of time as an aircraft 
slows, turns over and falls freely.
- A centrifuge may be used to simulate high gravitational 
forces, relying on the accelerational forces used to keep rotating 
material moving in a circle.
- The understanding of the pendulum depends on understanding the forces involved, in particular, the restoring forces that operate in all forms of the pendulum.
The principles of air and pressure
- The air we breathe is made mainly of two gases. One is oxygen, which
 most living things need. There are also other gases in small amounts, 
and water vapour.
- Air has weight, and it exerts a pressure on us. This air 
pressure can be measured, and it decreases with altitude and as the 
weather changes.
- In a mixture of gases, each gas exerts a partial pressure, 
equal to the pressure it would exert on the container if it alone filled
 the container.
- Pressure measurement in the atmosphere can be done in 
different ways: with a pressure gauge or with a barometer, but each 
relies on air exerting pressure.
- Places on the map with the same (sea level-corrected) air 
pressure are linked by lines called isobars to reveal weather patterns 
that involve pressure changes.
- In 1632, Galileo Galilei said that he had been told by a 
workman that there was no way suction could raise water a hair's breadth
 more than eighteen cubits.
- You cannot suck air up more than 10 metres or siphon over a
 rise greater than 10 metres. This limit is imposed by the pressure of 
the atmosphere.
- Warm air is less dense than cooler air, so it rises. As it 
rises to areas of lower pressure, it expands and so gets cooler. This is
 called adiabatic cooling.
- In 1646, Blaise Pascal made a barometer using a mixture of 
water and wine, which rose under atmospheric pressure, to twenty cubits,
 more than Galileo's report.
- In 1648, Blaise Pascal took his wine and water barometer up
 a mountain and discovered that the atmospheric pressure varies with 
altitude in a systematic way.
- In 1660, Otto von Guericke used a barometer and the trends 
shown (whether it was rising, falling, and the rate) in order to develop
 forecasts of future weather.
- Flotation effects happen when a solid is placed in a more 
dense fluid and displaces some of it. The law of flotation depends on 
Archimedes' principle.
- When one object floats in a fluid it floats because the 
mass of fluid it displaces, pushes out of the way, is equal to the mass 
of the floating object.
- A hot air balloon floats in the air because the total mass 
of the balloon and the air in it is less than the mass of cool 
surrounding air displaced by it.
- An object only floats in a fluid when it is less dense. A 
steel ship floats in water because its overall average density is less 
than the density of water.
- Before the launch of the first iron ship, many people 
predicted that it would plummet to the bottom of the ocean, because iron
 always sinks in water.
- You can make a vacuum with a suitable air pump, or by 
boiling water to drive out air, then sealing and condensing the water 
vapour. Other ways exist as well.
- Getting a good vacuum requires a vacuum pump: the Magdeburg
 hemispheres were an early demonstration that a vacuum could exist, even
 if it was thought unnatural.
- It is very difficult to obtain a good vacuum, and gases 
could not really be discovered until a vacuum could be created after an 
effective pump was invented.
- In 1663 Blaise Pascal proposed isotropy of pressure: 
pressure acts equally in all directions, a rule which we know today 
better as Pascal's principle.
- Fluids exert pressure, and the pressure exerted obeys 
Pascal's principle that the pressure applied is transmitted equally and 
in all directions.
- Pressurized fluids can be used in many ways. The hydraulic 
press is an application of Pascal's principle with the advantage that 
the force direction changes.
- Gas bubbles appear in carbonated drinks when the seal is 
broken (opened), as the solubility of gases in the blood depends on 
pressure, which is eased.
- Divers can get the 'bends' as bubbles form if they come up 
from great depth too fast, as the solubility of gases like nitrogen in 
the blood depends on pressure.
- In 1738 Charles Dangeau de Labelye developed the caisson, a
 pressure cabinet to allow workers to operate beneath the water, to 
build a bridge at Westminster.
- In 1686, Edmond Halley worked out the theory of the trade 
winds, established the relationship between barometric pressure and 
height above sea level.
- Robert Boyle's investigations that led to what we now call 
Boyle's law relied on Robert Hooke constructing an effective air pump 
for the experiments.
- In 1727, in his Vegetable Staticks, Stephen Hales showed that air was an element which took part in chemical reactions, that it could be 'fixed' in some way.
- In 1771, Joseph Priestley showed by experiment that air in which a candle had burned could be restored by a sprig of mint to let another candle burn in it.
The principles of surface tension
- Surface tension gives rise to capillary action and this explains why
 water will soak into a rock, and many other effects, including 
'wetting'.
- Surface tension affects many animals, but it usually has a 
greater effect on small animals which encounter greater pro rata forces 
on their smaller mass.
- Surface tension effects give rise to the meniscus at a 
liquid boundary, the curve being shaped by the relative attractions of 
the molecules for each other.
- Two-dimensional bubble films will always contract and take 
up a shape to minimize their surface areas in the same way that a 
three-dimensional bubble does.
- The pressure inside the bubble is greater than the pressure
 outside, due to the compressive effects of surface tension in the 
bubble on the air inside.
- Bubbles take the shape which minimizes their surface area: when they are unconstrained, this will normally be a sphere, but other shapes are possible.
- In 1834, Michael Faraday used the expression 'atoms of electricity',
 generally taken now as the earliest reference to what we today call the
 electron.
- George Johnstone Stoney coined the name 'electron' for the 
unit of electric charge, in 1874. Later, this name was transferred to 
the cathode ray particles.
- If scientists could measure the charge/mass ratio (e/m) for
 an electron, that was proof that there was really something fitting the
 name 'atom of electricity'.
- In 1890, Arthur Schuster measured the e/m ratio for 
electrons, and found the value was about 1000 times the value for a 
hydrogen ion. He dismissed it as wrong.
- In 1895, Jean Perrin showed that cathode rays are negative 
particles, rather than being a form of electromagnetic radiation, as 
German scientists believed.
- Jean Perrin showed that cathode rays had negative charge, 
leading the way for J. J. Thomson to measure the ratio e/m, and prove 
that electrons were particles.
- In 1897, both Walter Kaufmann and J. J. Thomson carried out
 separate measurements of the electron charge to mass ratio by 
deflection of cathode rays.
- When J J Thomson measured the charge/mass ratio of the 
electron, e/m, this proved once and for all that electrons were 
particles, not electromagnetic radiation.
- R A Millikan succeeded in studying the behaviour of charged
 oil drops in an electric field, and so deduced the charge on the 
electron, and that it was uniform.
- In 1924, Louis de Broglie more or less suggested that 
electrons might be in some ways like waves. Actually, he said that the 
particles were guided by waves.
- In 1927, Clinton Davisson, Lester Germer, and G. P. Thomson demonstrated electron diffraction by a crystal, showing that electrons have wavelike properties.
- An electric charge on an object is the result of there being 
electrons removed or added to the object. Friction on a non-conductor 
can cause this loss or gain.
- In 1786 Luigi Galvani discovered 'animal electricity' and 
proposed a somewhat confused idea that animal bodies are storehouses of 
electricity.
- In 1774, the existence of electric eels in South Carolina 
was described to the Royal Society in considerable detail, introducing 
the idea of animal electricity.
- Electric current can be generated in a number of ways, some
 physical (generators), some chemical (batteries), some even biological 
(electric eels).
- Electricity and magnetism are related: an electric current 
makes a magnetic field, and a changing electric current makes a changing
 magnetic field.
- In 1820 Ampère measured the force on an electric current in
 a magnetic field and Oersted reported that a current in a wire can 
deflect a compass needle.
- In 1820, Hans Oersted had found that an electric current 
produced a magnetic field, setting the scene for the development of 
electric relays and electromagnets.
- In 1821, Michael Faraday discovered both the principle of 
the electric motor and the generator, and also plotted the magnetic 
field around a conductor.
- In 1833, Heinrich Lenz stated that an induced current in a 
closed conducting loop will appear in such a direction that it opposes 
the change that produced it.
- An electromagnet is formed when an electrical current flows
 in a coiled conductor surrounding soft iron, aligning the magnetic 
domains in the soft iron core.
- In 1847, Werner von Siemens suggested the use of 
gutta-percha as insulation on wiring to protect it from moisture, 
essential to later electricity transmission.
- An electric current may be generated by the Seebeck effect,
 where a voltage develops across the junction of two metals or alloys at
 different temperatures.
- In 1901, Hertha Ayrton had a paper on electric arcs read to
 the Royal Society by a male friend, as women were not allowed, at that 
time, to read papers.
- A potential difference may be generated by the piezoelectric effect, when pressure is applied to a crystal. A PD applied to a crystal produces a deformation.
The principles of electrostatics
- Static electricity shows attraction and repulsion: the forces obey 
the inverse square law, the force being inversely proportional to the 
square of the distance.
- Electrostatic charges can accumulate on the outside of 
insulators, but the charges cannot move freely over the surface, or 
through the insulators.
- A charge which exists on an object is called a static 
charge because it does not move, but it is still capable of moving if a 
path is available.
- Static electricity is most easily generated by friction, 
but it may also be generated by induction with an electrophorus which 
has been charged by friction.
- An electrostatic charge may be induced in conducting 
material: this is the basis of the operation of the electrophorus, an 
early electrostatic device.
- Objects like a balloon, comb, and other common objects made
 from insulating materials can be charged, simply by rubbing them 
against another insulator.
- A Leyden jar was an early form of capacitor, a device for 
holding static charge and allowing crude experiments on the flow of 
brief currents.
- A capacitor can be used to store a static charge and the 
capacitance of a capacitor depends on the dielectric of the medium 
separating the two charges.
- Lightning is caused by the build-up of static charge, it 
carries a great deal of energy, and it has good and bad effects, fixing 
nitrogen and starting fires
- Lightning is a form of static electricity, and thunder is 
caused by air being heated and expanding suddenly along the flash when 
the charge breaks down.
- A Faraday cage is a metal screen that can protect somebody 
from lightning because it isolates them from charge on the outside. The 
cages also block radio waves.
- In 1660 Otto von Guericke developed an electrostatic 
machine to generate charge. It was made by charging a ball of sulfur 
with static electricity.
- In 1675, Jean Picard was carrying a barometer through the 
darkened streets of Paris, when he noticed a faint glow in the empty 
space above the mercury.
- In 1702 Francis Hauksbee noticed rarefied air glows during 
an electrical discharge through a vacuum, and showed this to the Royal 
Society the following year.
- In 1729, Stephen Gray used string to send an electrostatic 
signal in a barn, over a distance of 293 feet along a fine thread, the 
first telegraph.
- In 1746 Abbé Nollet showed that electricity travels at an 
apparently instantaneous speed around a mile-circumference circle of 
monks, linked to a Leyden jar.
- In 1775, a Royal Navy gunpowder magazine suffered a 
lightning strike at Purfleet in England, in spite of the fact that it 
was fitted with lightning rods.
- We know now that static charge accumulates better at the 
point of a lightning rod, but the Purfleet strike was used to claim that
 knobby ends were better.
- In 1785, Charles Coulomb showed that electrostatic 
repulsion and attraction are related to the product of the charges and 
the inverse square of the distance.
- If Benjamin Franklin ever flew a kite in a thunderstorm to 
attract lightning, he did so in 1749: he certainly wrote about doing so 
in that year, and in 1752.
- The next person to fly a kite in a thunderstorm after Franklin published his account was killed. Sometimes, a thought experiment or a better design is needed.
The principles of electrodynamics
- An electric current is a flow of electrons along a conductor which 
happens when there is a higher charge at one end of the conductor, 
compared with the other.
- When an electric current flows in a conductor, there will 
be an associated magnetic force near the conductor, and this force can 
be used in a variety of ways.
- An electrical current requires a potential difference and a
 conductor or conducting medium through which electrons can flow with 
little interference.
- A current may be thought of as a flow of electrons in one 
direction, or a flow of holes in the other. Each can be used to 
understand electric currents.
- A varying magnetic force or field near a conductor makes 
electrons in the conductor move, producing an electric current. This is 
the basis of the generator.
- Dynamic electricity (an ordinary electric current) may be 
generated by electromagnetic induction, a magnetic field inducing a flow
 of electrons in a conductor.
- An electrical current may be generated by chemical 
reactions in a 'dry cell', a form of electrochemical cell which is not 
entirely dry, but has no loose liquid.
- A current may be generated by electromagnetic induction, 
when there is relative motion of a conductor and a magnetic field: it 
does not matter which one moves.
- A dynamo produces direct current. While many devices need 
DC to operate, it is generally easier to transmit electrical power as 
alternating current.
- Electrical currents may be alternating current or direct 
current. In alternating current, the peak voltage is greater than the 
average voltage.
- Alternating currents are easier to change the voltage of, 
using a transformer to step the voltage up or down. This is why domestic
 supplies are all AC.
- Metals make good electrical conductors, non-metals can make
 good insulators: this related to the availability of free electrons in 
their structures.
- Electric circuits need to be closed before a current will 
flow in the circuit: a switch can open and shut a circuit, and switches 
can be of many sorts.
- Electrical systems are often protected by fuses and circuit
 breakers, which are designed to stop overload that might burn out 
expensive wiring and cause fires.
- Many electrical systems are fitted with sensitive detectors
 that cut the current in the event of any 'leakage to earth', which 
usually indicates a fault.
- A galvanometer can be used to detect a very small 
electrical current, using a coil to produce a small magnetic field that 
interacts with a permanent magnet.
- Electrical currents can be measured: the unit of current is
 the ampere, and current is measured with a modified galvanometer called
 an ammeter.
- Potential difference can be measured: the unit of potential
 is the volt, and voltage is measured with a modified galvanometer 
called a voltmeter.
- Wattmeters/Joule meters measure the energy transferred, and
 are more useful when it comes to charging consumers for the electricity
 they use.
- In 1911, Heike Kammerlingh Onnes discovered 
superconductivity in extremely cold conductors, having mastered the art 
of attaining low temperatures.
- In 1957, John Bardeen, Leon Cooper and Robert Schrieffer 
develop the BCS theory of superconductivity to explain why some 
substances are superconducting.
- Until superconductors are found that operate at room 
temperature (or above the boiling point of nitrogen), superconductivity 
will be of little practical use.
- If there is a magnetic field near a conductor in which a current is flowing, there will be a force on the conductor. This is the basis of the electric motor.
The principles of electronics
- A capacitor can store a static charge. A Leyden jar was an early 
form of capacitor, charged by electrostatic means. The unit of 
capacitance is the farad.
- Conductors may be in a parallel circuit or in a series 
circuit. At the junction of any circuit, all electric currents must obey
 Kirchhoff's laws.
- Resistance is measured in ohms, conductance is measured in 
mhos, each refers to a conductor's capacity to allow electrons to pass 
through it.
- A potentiometer (or a rheostat) has a variable resistance 
because a slider can tap in at various points on what is generally a 
uniform resistor.
- A light dependent resistor can be used to measure light 
intensity, because the resistance it causes to a current is proportional
 to the light falling on it.
- A light dependent resistor can be used to measure light 
intensity in a uniform way, since the resistance varies with the 
intensity of the incident light.
- A reed switch uses a magnetic effect, changing from one 
state (with the switch open or closed) to the other when a magnet is 
moved near it or away from it.
- An image intensifier is a device that allows us to see in 
what is effectively the dark, by taking the few available photons and 
amplifying them.
- Electrons can flow through a vacuum, and this is the basis 
of the thermionic valve, where electrons are 'boiled off' a hot cathode 
and then travel to an anode.
- Thomas Edison made just one real scientific discovery, the 
'Edison effect', which is the key to the thermionic valve. He patented 
it, but never used it.
- An integrated circuit or chip contains many separate 
semiconductor devices, all of them incorporated into a single unit, made
 in a single process.
- Modern electronics relies on semiconductor devices: a diode
 only allows current to flow in one direction, a transistor can act as a
 switch or an amplifier.
- The strength of a signal may be increased with an 
amplifier, a circuit designed for that purpose, and using either 
thermionic valves or transistors.
- A diode only allows current to pass in one direction, and a
 set of diodes may be arranged to make a full-wave rectifier, as in a 
conventional power pack.
- In 1947, the transistor effect was noted, and by 1948, William Shockley, Walter Brattain, and John Bardeen had made and proven the first working transistor.
- A magnet has the power of attracting magnetic material like iron. A 
given pole of a magnet will attract an unlike pole and repel a like 
pole.
- Magnetic forces of attraction and repulsion pass through 
wood, paper and flesh without any measurable effect, and can operate on 
the other side.
- Many aspects of magnetism can be explained by lines of 
force. Lines of force do not exist, but they are a convenient 'fiction' 
that we continue to use.
- A magnet can induce magnetism in a piece of iron if it is 
manipulated properly. The most common method of magnetizing iron is by 
stroking to align the domains.
- A moving magnetic field makes a current flow in a 
conductor. So does a changing magnetic field. This is the basis of 
electromagnetic induction.
- The Earth's magnetic field experiences polar reversals from
 time to time, as shown by 'frozen' magnetic particles in igneous rocks 
which remain as a record.
- Many animals have a magnetic sense. Birds seem to use the 
Earth's magnetic field to navigate, from experiments where they are 
fitted with magnets or weights.
- The most recent reversal of the Earth's magnetic field, 
known as the 'Jaramillo Event' is calculated to have happened somewhere 
around 900,000 years ago.
- In 1832, Karl Gauss, whose name is now attached to one of 
the basic units of magnetism, put together a consistent set of units for
 use with magnetic effects.
- In 1948, Alpher, Bethe, and Gamow considered a rapidly 
expanding and cooling universe and suggested the elements were produced 
by rapid neutron capture.
- In 1895, Pierre Curie described how magnetization is 
proportional to magnetic field strength, and how magnetism is lost at 
high temperature, the Curie point.
- In 1750 John Michell stated that the inverse square law 
applied also to magnetic fields, and described magnetic induction, 
extending the operation of the law.
- A paramagnetic molecule is attracted by a magnetic field, while a diamagnetic molecule is repelled by a magnetic field.
The principles of radiation
- To really understand the inner workings of electromagnetic 
radiation, we need to understand blackbody radiation, which is covered 
under 'quantum physics'.
- Many materials that appear opaque to us when we rely on the
 visible spectrum, are transparent at other wavelengths such as X-rays 
and ultraviolet radiation.
- In 1845, Michael Faraday found that light propagation in a 
material can be influenced by external magnetic fields (rotation of 
polarized light by magnetism).
- In 1850, Michael Faraday experimented to find the link 
between gravity and electromagnetism, but all his efforts failed, a 
situation that continues today.
- In 1861, James Clerk Maxwell set out his four laws of 
electromagnetic fields, proving mathematically that there was such a 
thing as electromagnetic radiation.
- In 1864, James Clerk Maxwell published on his dynamical 
theory of the electromagnetic field, and his equations of 
electromagnetic wave propagation in the ether.
- In 1873, James Clerk Maxwell published his Treatise on 
electricity and described the electromagnetic nature of light and 
predicted radio waves.
- In 1883, George FitzGerald developed a theory of radio 
transmission, and explained how to create electromagnetic waves such as 
radio waves, but did not do so.
- In 1894, Heinrich Hertz reported that radio waves travel at
 speed of light and can be both refracted and polarized. He had measured
 their wavelength in 1888.
- In 1879, Joseph Stefan pointed out that the total radiant 
flux from a black-body is always proportional to the fourth power of its
 temperature.
- In November 1895, Wilhelm Röntgen discovered some of the 
effects of X-rays, and spent almost two months identifying as many of 
their other effects as possible.
- Cherenkov radiation is produced as bright flashes when high speed particles enter a medium, travelling faster than the speed of light in that medium.
The principles of heat
- All matter has a capacity to hold heat, measured as its specific 
heat or heat capacity. Heat capacity and temperature are not the same 
thing at all.
- Heat makes changes happen, including expansion and 
contraction. The varying expansion coefficients of materials can be 
measured and used in many ways.
- Heat generally increases the chemical rate of reaction, and
 it can also cause pyrolysis, the breakdown of compounds under the 
application of heat.
- Heat at the junction of two metals causes a potential 
difference. The thermocouple formed can be used to generate electricity 
or to measure temperature.
- Heat is a form of energy and travels mainly as infrared 
radiation, but also by convection and conduction. Heat may be converted 
to other forms of energy.
- In 1849, William Thomson ( Lord Kelvin ) coined the term 
'thermodynamics' to describe the science of heat flow which is basic to 
the scientific study of energy.
- The movement of heat happens in accordance with the laws of
 thermodynamics, especially the second law, which means heat goes from 
warmer to cooler areas.
- Sufficient heat will make a change of state happen: 
boiling, condensing, melting, solidifying (freezing), sublimation, to 
form gases, liquids and solids.
- The rate at which bodies cool follows Newton's law of 
cooling. As the difference between an object and its environment gets 
less, the rate of cooling slows.
- When matter is heated, energy is gained and the molecules 
move or vibrate faster. As matter cools, the molecules lose energy and 
move or vibrate more slowly.
- Heat generally travels from hot to cold. Convection occurs 
in gases and liquids. Conduction occurs in solids, liquids and gases. 
Radiation can occur in a vacuum
- Isaac Newton showed that the rate of cooling in a hot body 
was proportional to the difference between it and its surroundings: that
 hot things cool faster.
- Metals are usually good conductors of heat, non-metals are 
usually poor conductors. Conduction is the transfer of energy from one 
atom or molecule to the next.
- A higher temperature means more energy has been stored in a
 body than when it was a lower temperature. Temperature can be measured 
with a thermometer.
- Refrigeration depends on adiabatic cooling to move heat 
from one place to another, pumping it out of the cold compartment. Cold 
is an absence of heat.
- There is a lowest possible temperature, called absolute 
zero. Matter which is at absolute zero on the Kelvin scale is completely
 motionless in all dimensions.
- In 1761 Joseph Black discovered that ice absorbs heat 
without changing temperature when melting, and outlined the effects of 
latent and specific heats.
- Latent heat is absorbed or released during a change of 
state. This is why steam at 100º C contains more heat than an equal mass
 of water at 100º C.
- In 1798, Count Rumford reported that mechanical energy 
could be converted to heat when cannon barrels were bored with drills, 
whether they were blunt or sharp.
- By careful measurement, Count Rumford was able to establish
 that if heat had any mass, then a single calorie had to be less than 
0.000013 milligrams.
- William Herschel used a thermometer to detect heat falling 
outside the visible solar spectrum, and so became the first to observe 
infrared radiation.
- We cannot see infrared radiation, although we can detect it as heat, and we can also detect it with some photographic films and special cameras.
- Light is a form of electromagnetic radiation, part of the 
electromagnetic spectrum. It has electrical and magnetic properties, 
just like radio waves and X-rays.
- Light is a form of energy, and it is usually released when 
other forms of energy are converted. Hot bodies radiate light, if they 
are sufficiently hot.
- Light can be converted to other forms of energy such as 
electricity in photovoltaic cells and it is converted into chemical 
energy in plants.
- Because light radiates out in all directions, we can treat 
light as straight-line rays. Rays of light do not exist, but they are a 
convenient 'fiction'.
- Light and other forms of radiation are reflected. Most 
surfaces are rough, and reflect light in many directions but a mirror 
has a comparatively smooth surface.
- Light can be 'piped' through a carefully designed optic 
fibre, and the light source can be modulated to carry signals from one 
place to another.
- As you get further from a light source, the apparent 
intensity drops according to the inverse square law, dropping to a 
quarter when the distance is doubled.
- As a general rule, light travels in a straight line, but it
 will bend when it travels through a transparent medium that is not a 
vacuum, such as water or glass.
- Projection systems and pinhole cameras rely on light 
travelling in straight lines, which can be assumed in a uniform medium 
with no massive bodies nearby.
- Light can be bent away from a straight line of travel by 
the force of gravity when it passes very close to a very large mass such
 as a star or a black hole.
- The way that light bends when it travels through a 
transparent medium is called refraction. Curved lenses and prisms work 
because of refraction.
- In 1666 Isaac Newton demonstrated the composite nature of 
white light while carrying out studies directed at minimizing chromatic 
dispersion in lenses.
- Rainbows are seen when sunlight shines on small spherical 
water droplets, and is reflected and refracted several times inside the 
drops before exiting again.
- Some colours are produced by dispersion, the effect where a
 prism bends different wavelengths to different extents, separating 
white light into components.
- The colours in white light may be separated by filtering 
light through coloured transparent material that absorbs some 
wavelengths while transmitting others.
- Some colours are produced by selective absorption and 
reflection of different wavelengths of white light giving objects the 
colour of the reflected light.
- A 'blue' object absorbs other colours and reflects blue 
light. A black object absorbs all colours equally. A white object 
reflects all colours equally
- The Tyndall effect, where dust causes scattering of light, 
is behind the blue colour of the sky, and the red colour of sunsets, and
 the moon in a lunar eclipse.
- White light is what we see when we look at all of the 
colours that form the visible spectrum in combination. These colours 
have different wavelengths.
- The different wavelengths (colours) that make up white 
light are separated into the standard colours of the spectrum by a prism
 in a process called dispersion.
- When light is refracted in a medium such as a lens, 
different colours are refracted to different extents, causing coloured 
fringes like a rainbow.
- Some forms of colour are produced by selective scattering, 
as in the Tyndall effect, where dust in the atmosphere scatters blue 
light as it lets red light pass.
- The colours in some animals arise from birefringence, which
 depends on anisotropy, a measurable difference in optical properties in
 different directions.
- In 1665 Robert Hooke and Christiaan Huygens pointed out 
that the colours of an oil film are explained by combining the wave 
theory of light with interference.
- Light travels through a vacuum at a speed of 300,000 
kilometres per second. That means it takes 500 seconds for light from 
the Sun to reach Earth.
- Light has a constant velocity of 300,000 kilometres a 
second when it travels in a vacuum, but when light enters a more dense 
medium, it slows down.
- In the first century AD, Hero of Alexandria said the speed 
of light must be infinite. He thought light came from the eyes, and we 
see as soon as we open them.
- In the early 1600s, Galileo Galilei tried measuring the 
speed of light by flashing lanterns from two hilltops, and decided the 
speed of light was infinite.
- The distance of the hilltops Galileo Galilei used were only
 about one forty-thousandth of a light-second apart, making it hard to 
reach a reliable estimate.
- In 1676, Ole Rømer used variations in the eclipses of 
Jupiter's moons to estimate the speed of light at around 227 million 
kilometres a second, about 25% out.
- About 1690, Christiaan Huygens estimated that the speed of 
light was might be as high as 35 million kilometres a second, which he 
thought extreme but possible.
- Armand Fizeau developed an earth-bound variation on the 
method developed by Galileo Galilei to measure the speed of light, using
 a toothed wheel and reflection.
- Fizeau's speed of light was about 5% higher than the value 
we accept to day, but this was adjusted the following year, when Jean 
Foucault refined the method.
- Light is produced when fuels burn because energy is 
released, and some of this is used to energize some of the electrons in 
atoms in the flame.
- In 1782, Aimé Argand invented the highly efficient fuel 
lamp which is still known as the Argand lamp. It had a hollow flame or 
wick and was much brighter.
- The combination of the Fresnel lens and the Argand lamp 
allowed much better light-houses to be set up, visible from a much 
greater distance in bad weather.
- Light of a suitable wavelength, shining on certain metals, 
can generate a charge by the photoelectric effect by energizing 
electrons in the metal.
- We cannot see ultraviolet radiation: black light is another name for ultraviolet light, which makes certain objects fluoresce at visible wavelengths.
- Mirror images can be explained by geometrical optics, assuming that 
light is made up of rays. It is not made up of rays, but the method 
works.
- Some mirrors magnify their images, and reflecting 
telescopes use surface-silvered magnifying mirrors as well as lenses, to
 produce clear images.
- Images from flat mirrors reverse left and right, but curved
 mirrors reflect differently, depending on the curvature and the 
distances of object and viewer.
- Around 1000, Alhazen studied lenses and their operation in 
Cairo, tried to puzzle out where the colours of the rainbow come from, 
and used a camera obscura.
- Around 1250, Roger Bacon studied the use of lenses to 
assist the vision, and he may even have found the principle of combining
 different lenses in a telescope.
- In 1621, Willebrod Snell published his law of refraction, 
which related the sines of the angles of incidence and refraction, known
 today simply as Snell's law.
- In 1637, René Descartes used Snell's law about the bending 
of rays passing in and out of glass to explain fully the operations of 
concave and convex lenses.
- One effect of light slowing down is that it bends in a 
mathematically predictable way. This is called refraction, and refracted
 light obeys Snell's law.
- Any transparent material has a refractive index that can be
 measured. This value can then be used to predict how that material will
 refract light.
- Lenses and prisms depend on the bending of light in the 
process of refraction. Prisms can bend or reflect light internally, 
depending on the angle of incidence.
- Imperfect images from lenses may be caused by spherical 
aberration. Spherical aberration can be reduced by using a smaller 
aperture for viewing an object.
- We see more clearly with a bright light, because the iris 
of our eye closes to give a smaller aperture, as a smaller aperture 
gives a greater depth of field.
- Imperfect images with coloured fringes may be caused by 
chromatic aberration in lenses. Chromatic aberration may be kept under 
control with an achromatic lens.
- Lenses can be used to focus rays so that they converge at what is called the focal point. This is why lenses can be used to form and project an image.
The principles of wave properties
- Electromagnetic radiation involves the oscillation of electric and 
magnetic fields at the same time. This principle applies to all forms of
 radiation.
- When waves travel back and forth in a medium, they form a 
standing wave as a result of interference effects between the two halves
 of the wave.
- Waves interact through interference, and this interference 
can result in waves either cancelling each other out or joining to make a
 bigger wave.
- Diffraction is an interference effect seen when waves 
encounter a regular array. Diffraction demonstrates the wave-like nature
 of whatever is diffracted.
- When light passes through a grating, it behaves as a wave. 
Longer wavelength light diffracts through a greater angle than shorter 
wavelength light.
- In 1912, Max von Laue began investigating the use of a 
crystal of zinc sulfide to diffract X-rays, thus revealing any regular, 
repeated structure it might have.
- X-ray crystallography depends on the analysis of 
diffraction effects from arrays of atoms in a crystal acting like the 
lines in a diffraction grating.
- Clinton Davisson demonstrated electron diffraction, showing
 that electrons can sometimes be treated as waves. This property is used
 in the electron microscope.
- A wave may be represented as a longitudinal wave or as a 
transverse wave, depending on which is most convenient for understanding
 it or making predictions.
- Light is most easily considered as a wave, but it arrives 
in small packets known as photons. There is no single simple view 
fitting all the observed facts.
- Light can be thought of as a wave or as a particle, 
depending on what we look for: this is called wave-particle duality. 
Sometimes we speak of 'wavicles'.
- Discussing 'Newton's rings', Thomas Young pointed out that light appeared to be capable of destructively interfering with itself, clearly a wave phenomenon.
The principles of particle physics
- Particles exert attractive and repulsive forces on each other, 
mostly from their electrical charges, in part from other forces which 
control atomic behaviour.
- There is a limited number of fundamental particles over and
 above the standard electron, neutron and proton, which set is all that 
most people know.
- Most of chemistry can be explained with no more than the 
proton, neutron and electron. When it comes to physics, the behaviour of
 atoms needs more structure.
- When particles collide at high speed, we can learn a great 
deal from the careful study of the fragments that are thrown off, and 
their energies.
- Mesons are of medium mass, between the size of an electron 
and a proton, and they are very unstable, medium-mass elementary 
particles with short life spans.
- Matter exists also in the form of antimatter, and when it 
comes in contact with ordinary matter, the two will annihilate each 
other, becoming energy.
- In 1873, Johannes van der Waals wrote about intermolecular 
forces in fluids, and introduced the idea of weak attractive forces 
between molecules.
- In 1930, Fritz London explained van der Waals forces in 
terms of their being caused by the interacting fluctuating dipole 
moments between molecules.
- In 1911, Victor Hess discovered high altitude radiation 
from space after ascending in a balloon. At this time, cosmic rays were 
referred to as 'Hess rays'.
- In 1912, Victor Hess used more ascents to show that the 
ionization of air increases with altitude indicating the existence of 
some form of cosmic radiation.
- In 1927, Eugene Wigner concluded that parity is conserved 
in a nuclear reaction, that the laws of physics should not distinguish 
between right and left.
- In 1958, Yang and Lee showed that, contrary to Wigner, 
certain types of reaction involving the weak nuclear force, such as beta
 decay, do not conserve parity.
- The Standard Model says that there are hundreds of 
particles, but that these are all made up of various combinations of six
 quarks and six leptons.
- In 1924, Edward Appleton demonstrated the presence of the 
ionosphere when he used radio ranging to measure the distance to the 
Heaviside layer.
- The F-layer or Appleton layer (after Sir Edward Appleton) 
is a layer of ions about 200 km above the Earth by day, and 300 km above
 the Earth at night.
- The Appleton layer reflects radio waves at frequencies up 
to about 50 MHz, and so allows radio signals below that frequency to 
travel around the world.
- Ernst Rutherford predicted that there must be a neutron as 
early as 1920, but finding it was harder. Chadwick did not detect one 
experimentally until 1932.
- In 1931, Wolfgang Pauli suggested that the neutrino could 
explain both the missing energy and spin in weak nuclear decay, starting
 the search for neutrinos.
- In 1932, Werner Heisenberg suggested that nuclei are made 
of protons and neutrons, which would explain why there are isotopes, 
when the neutron number varies.
- In 1923, Arthur Compton discovered the Compton effect which
 confirmed photons as particles. Compton and Debye provided the theory 
of Compton effect.
- A lepton is a light-weight charged or uncharged particle: 
each with an anti-particle. They are the electron, the muon, the tau, 
and their associated neutrinos.
- Within the nucleus, two main forces operate: the repulsion 
of the positively charged protons, and the strong nuclear force which 
pulls them together.
- In 1934, Pavel Cherenkov discovered that what is now Cherenkov radiation was caused when very fast particles entered an optically dense medium.
The principles of fluid flow
- There are two sorts of fluid that we meet in daily life: gases and 
liquids. Each has the property that the particles are not closely 
bonded, so they can flow.
- An object moving through a fluid experiences drag. 
Engineers design the shapes of aircraft, ships and vehicles to reduce 
drag and improve efficiency.
- Laminar flow is more efficient than turbulent flow because 
turbulence absorbs energy, and so slows the fluid or the object passing 
through the fluid.
- The pressure exerted by a moving fluid is described by 
Bernoulli's principle, which is rooted in the assumption that a fluid is
 made of separate particles.
- Animals which rely on swimming or flying fast to catch food
 or to avoid being food, have evolved streamlined bodies that produce a 
laminar flow and reduce drag.
- The relative speed of a fluid may be measured with a Pitot tube, which uses the pressure detected to deduce the velocity of the fluid (or the tube).
The principles of sound
- Sound is made of vibrations. A musical note is a uniform vibration. 
Waves with a greater amplitude have more energy, which makes them sound 
louder.
- Every musical note or tone has in it harmonics or overtones
 which add to the richness of the sound, and producing the 
characteristics of different instruments.
- Sound vibrations may be seen with an oscilloscope. You can 
also make the vibrations of a string visible by using a very long, thick
 string or wire.
- Every object has a natural frequency at which it vibrates, 
which is known as its resonant frequency. When struck, it will vibrate 
at this frequency.
- Vibrations can be made in a variety of ways. Plucked 
strings and struck objects vibrate to make a tone, and resonance in a 
tube can make a tone.
- Tone and pitch are both aspects of the frequency of the 
note being heard. The tone is a single frequency, the pitch is a 
subjective perceived frequency.
- Sound can be observed and/or visualized in Chladni figures,
 made when a violin bow is rubbed on the edge of a steel plate scattered
 with fine sand.
- Sound can be reflected and refracted. Acoustics is 
basically the study of how sounds are changed in an environment as they 
reflect and refract in a space.
- Sound from a moving source that is moving towards or away, 
relative to the listener, appears to change frequency, due to the 
principles of the Doppler effect.
- Thunder is caused by air being heated along the lightning 
flash, causing an increase in pressure. The bang from more distant parts
 takes longer to arrive.
- Sonic booms are caused when an aircraft or other object 
travels faster than the speed of sound in the atmosphere at the level at
 which it is flying.
- Beats occur when two very similar waves move in and out of 
synchronization, either reinforcing each other or cancelling each other 
at different times.
- The bang of a gun, a firework or a handclap are all caused 
by the sudden release of gas under pressure. The bang is the pressure 
wave reaching our ears.
- Sound travels through all materials as compressions and 
rarefactions, although it travels through some materials better (and 
sometimes faster) than others.
- Sound is most easily considered as a wave, but may also be 
thought of as a cyclic variation in pressure. The model we use does not 
change the sound's nature.
- In 1640, Marin Mersenne established a reasonable estimate 
of the speed of sound in air, which he set at 320 metres per second. The
 usual value today is 330 m/s.
- The velocity of sound can be measured and shown to vary 
with the transmission medium and also travelling faster when the 
temperature of the medium increases.
- The intensity of sound can be measured in decibels. Sound above a certain intensity can cause temporary damage to the delicate parts of the ears, or deafness.
The principles of relativity
- Our daily experience is quite adequately explained by Galilean 
relativity and Newtonian physics, without any need to refer to 
Einsteinian relativity.
- In 1845, Urbain Leverrier observed a 35" per century excess
 precession of Mercury's orbit, a discrepancy that could not be 
explained until Einstein did so.
- In 1882, Simon Newcomb observed a 43" per century excess 
precession of Mercury's orbit, a discrepancy which lacked an explanation
 in normal physics.
- At the start of the 1900s, it was clear that there were a 
number of unsolved problems which needed a new theory or theories to 
explain them adequately.
- The first problem was that the speed of light did not 
behave like the speeds of ordinary objects made of matter, because it 
seemed to be constant.
- The next problem was that some forms of matter, in 
particular the radioactive elements, showed a powerful and seemingly 
unpredictable instability.
- The next problem was that there was no way to account for 
the way atoms emitted light and other forms of radiation when they were 
heated or excited.
- The next problem was that Newton's laws, which generally 
worked perfectly well, could not explain oddities in the precession of 
Mercury's orbit.
- The last problem was that the heat capacity of molecular 
gases was not what it should have been, using calculations based on 
Newtonian theory.
- In 1907, Albert Einstein offered his equivalence principle 
(gravitation and inertia) and predicted the existence of gravitational 
redshift from this.
- In 1915, Albert Einstein completed his theory of general 
relativity, predicted light bending and offered an explanation for 
perihelion shift of Mercury.
- Einstein's theory of special relativity indicated that time
 was relative, that the speed of light was constant, and that mass and 
energy were equivalent.
- Physicists say if Albert Einstein had not proposed special 
relativity, the time was right and Hendrik Lorentz or Jean Perrin would 
have done so soon after.
- Einstein's general theory of relativity offered the 
disturbing view that gravitation, rather than being a force, is a curved
 field in the space-time continuum.
- The key effect of the two theories of relativity was to 
make us aware that space and time are not separate: they are an 
intertwined space-time.
- In 1861 and 1865, James Clerk Maxwell showed from theory 
alone, that there should be electromagnetic radiation, and that light 
was part of it.
- James Clerk Maxwell showed that his mathematically derived 
electromagnetic radiation would always travel at what we now call the 
speed of light.
- If we see a ruler going past us at close to the speed of 
light, or if we pass one at that sort of speed, it will appear to be 
considerably shorter than it is.
- The shortening effect comes about because the ruler's 
length relates to the average separation of the atoms, and in the 
direction of travel, this is shorter.
- A person standing beside (or travelling with) the apparently shortened ruler, will see it at its normal length as they are in the same frame of reference.
The principles of quantum physics
- The photoelectric effect was dependent on wavelength but not on 
intensity of the light, a puzzle that led to the discovery of what we 
now call quantum physics.
- Blackbody radiation was explained when quantum physics was 
developed, because it solved a number of apparent paradoxes about the 
energy of radiation.
- The 'violet catastrophe' said that if all frequencies are 
equally likely from a hot body, the many wavelengths beyond violet 
should swamp any emission spectrum.
- The 'violet catastrophe' does not occur, and unless the 
body is very hot, we do not even see any red light emitted from it, let 
alone violet or ultraviolet.
- Kirchhoff wanted to know why this was so. Because the 
higher frequencies are unlikely unless the body has very high energy, 
answered Planck's little equation.
- Wien produced a formula which explained the distribution of
 energy in a radiation spectrum as a function of both wavelength and the
 temperature of the body.
- Wilhelm Wien's displacement law explains why the sun's 
radiation peaks in the region we see best, because the sun has a surface
 temperature of around 6000 K.
- Wien's formula worked well at short wave-lengths, but 
failed at longer wave-lengths. Rayleigh's formula accurate at longer 
wavelengths but not at shorter ones.
- Rayleigh came up with a theory of black-body radiation, 
later modified by James Jeans, and often known as the Rayleigh-Jeans Law
 or the Rayleigh-Jeans theory.
- Sir James Jeans demonstrated the classical formula for the 
partition of radiant energy in an enclosure, which we now call the 
Rayleigh-Jeans Law.
- Linked to the displacement theory of Wilhelm Wien, the 
Rayleigh-Jeans Law more or less explained black-body radiation, until 
Max Planck found a better answer.
- In 1900, Max Planck proposed basic quantum theory, 
involving light quanta in black body radiation, Planck's black body law 
and Planck's constant.
- Planck saw that if the radiation was emitted only in 
'packets' of a minimum energy, he could calculate a radiation law which 
was good for all wavelengths.
- In 1901, Max Planck made determinations of Planck's 
constant, Boltzmann's constant, Avogadro's number and the charge on the 
electron, all in one year.
- Later, Albert Einstein explained the photo-electric effect 
from Planck's work. A shorter wave-length photon had more energy, and so
 could dislodge an electron.
- In 1925, Walter Elsasser explained electron diffraction by 
regarding it as wave property of matter, further smearing the 
wave/particle distinction.
- Quantum mechanics is a mathematical description of quantum 
effects, relating to the way in which, on a small scale, variables cease
 to be continuous.
- Quantum physics has given us the interesting paradox of 
Schrödinger's Cat, which is a sort of thought experiment which appears 
to show a contradiction.
- When electrons move from one shell to another, they absorb 
or emit a specific amount of energy related to that shift, producing 
lines in a spectrum.
- The energy absorbed when electrons move to higher levels 
make part of the absorption spectrum, each transition contributing a 
single line to the spectrum.
- The energy emitted when excited electrons move to a lower 
level makes the emission spectrum of that atom: each shift contributes 
one line to the spectrum.
- So far, gravitation has not been incorporated into quantum 
theory, but that remains a hope and a goal for physicists researching in
 that area.
- The Heisenberg uncertainty principle indicates that not all
 measurements may be made simultaneously. It is widely misunderstood and
 misquoted.
- Wigner's friend is a variant on Schrödinger's Cat. The 
'friend' is a human observer who replaces the cat in one of the thought 
experiments on quantum reality.
- In 1926, Erwin Schrödinger derived the spectrum of hydrogen
 atom using the wave equation, reinforcing the notion that waves and 
particles are interchangeable.
- In 1926, Schrödinger also showed the wave and matrix formulations of quantum theory were mathematically equivalent, combining the two sides of quantum physics.
The principles of the nature of radioactivity
Needs more material
- In 1899, Ernest Rutherford discovered that uranium radiation is 
composed of positively charged alpha particles and negatively charged 
beta particles.
- In 1913, Niels Bohr identified radioactivity as a specific 
property of the nucleus of the atom, rather than being a general 
property of the atom as a whole.
- In 1917, Ernest Rutherford and Marsden described artificial
 transmutation of elements, after having produced hydrogen and oxygen 
from nitrogen.
- In 1929, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton succeeded in 
'atom-smashing' as it was called, using equipment based on four glass 
cylinders taken from petrol pumps.
- In 1932, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton took linear 
proton accelerators to an energy of 700 keV and verified the mass/energy
 equivalence.
- Cockcroft and Walton used accelerated protons, hydrogen 
ions to split lithium and boron nuclei, and also to make unstable nuclei
 that were radioactive.
- In 1934, Irène Joliot-Curie and Frédéric Joliot-Curie bombarded aluminium atoms with alpha particles to create artificially radioactive phosphorus-30.
 
 
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