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Physics

Topics

Measurement

Physical Quantity
A physical quantity is a property of a physical system that can be measured or compared, such as length, time, mass, speed, force, or energy.

The height of a table, the duration of a song, and the mass of a book are physical quantities because each can be measured and compared.

Unit
A unit is a chosen standard amount of a physical quantity. A measurement compares a physical quantity with a unit.

Saying a table is 2 metres long compares its length with the metre as the chosen unit of length.

A unit is not the same kind of object as the numerical value used to represent a measured quantity. For a scalar quantity, the numerical value is a real number after a unit is chosen. For a vector quantity, the numerical value is a vector after coordinates and a unit are chosen, and the unit tells how to interpret each component.

Product Unit
Suppose quantities of one kind have numerical values in a set A when measured in a unit u1, quantities of another kind have numerical values in a set B when measured in a unit u2, and there is a multiplication operation __:A×BC. If aA and bB, then the product quantity has numerical value abC and is measured in the product unit u1u2.

If length is measured in metres and time is measured in seconds, then a length divided by a time is measured in the product unit ms1, because division by seconds is multiplication by s1.

Basic Quantities

Time
Time is the physical quantity used to order events and measure durations between them.

The time between two clock ticks is a duration, and the order of the ticks tells which event happened first.

Frequency
Frequency is the number of repeating cycles or events per unit of time.

A light wave with 5×1014 cycles each second has frequency 5×1014Hz.

Period
A period of a repeating process is the duration of one complete cycle of that process.

If a pendulum completes one swing cycle every 2s, then its period is 2s.

Length
Length is the physical quantity used to measure distance or spatial extent.

The width of a doorway and the distance between two points on a table are lengths.

Position
Position describes where an object is located relative to a chosen reference frame.

The position of a book on a table can be described by its distance from the table's edges.

Motion
Motion is change of position over time.

A train moving along a track is in motion because its position changes as time passes.

Speed
Speed is the distance travelled per unit of time. If an object travels a distance d in a time t, its average speed is v=dt.

If a car travels 100km in 2h, its average speed is 50km/h.

Mass
Mass is the physical quantity that measures the amount of matter in a body and its resistance to acceleration.

This phenomenon can be seen experimentally by giving a bowling ball and a tennis ball similar pushes: the bowling ball's motion changes less.

Energy
Energy is a scalar physical quantity that can be transferred between physical systems and converted between different forms.

A raised book has gravitational energy because it can fall and transfer energy to another object on impact.

Heat
Heat is energy transferred from one physical system to another because of a temperature difference.

A hot pan transfers heat to cooler water placed in it.

Defining Constants

Electric Charge
Electric charge is the physical quantity that determines how a physical system participates in electromagnetic attraction and repulsion.

Two protons repel each other because they have electric charges of the same kind.

Charge Sign
The charge sign of an electric charge records whether the charge is positive, negative, or zero.

A proton and an electron have opposite charge signs.

Positive Electric Charge
A positive electric charge is an electric charge whose charge sign is positive.

The electric charge carried by a proton is positive.

Negative Electric Charge
A negative electric charge is an electric charge whose charge sign is negative.

The electric charge carried by an electron is negative.

Electrically Neutral
A physical system is electrically neutral if its total electric charge is zero.

A neutron is electrically neutral.

Particle
A particle is a physical system treated as a single localized object.

In a simple model of a gas, each atom can be treated as one particle moving through space.

Subatomic Particle
A subatomic particle is a particle smaller than an atom or used as one of the parts from which atoms are built.

Protons, neutrons, and electrons are subatomic particles.

Proton

Each hydrogen nucleus contains one proton.

Neutron

A carbon-12 nucleus contains 6 neutrons.

Electron

A neutral hydrogen atom has one electron bound to its nucleus.

Atomic Nucleus
An atomic nucleus is a small bound system of protons and, except in the one-proton nucleus with no neutrons, neutrons.

In a carbon-12 atom, the nucleus contains 6 protons and 6 neutrons.

Atom
An atom is a physical system made of an atomic nucleus and bound electrons.

A neutral helium atom has a nucleus with 2 protons and bound electrons around it.

Chemical Element
A chemical element is a type of atom determined by the number of protons in its atomic nucleus.

Every atom with 6 protons is carbon, even if it has a different number of neutrons.

Caesium
Caesium is the chemical element whose atoms have 55 protons in their atomic nucleus.

Any atom whose nucleus has 55 protons is a caesium atom.

Isotope
An isotope of a chemical element is a kind of atom with the element's fixed number of protons and a specified number of neutrons.

Carbon-12 and carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon because both have 6 protons, but they have different numbers of neutrons.

Spontaneous Process
A spontaneous process is a process that occurs without being caused by a specific external trigger in the model being used.

Radioactive decay is modeled as spontaneous when it occurs without a collision or applied field triggering the particular decay event.

Nuclear Decay
Nuclear decay is a process in which an atomic nucleus changes into a different nucleus or energy state by emitting radiation or particles.

A nucleus that emits an alpha particle undergoes nuclear decay and becomes a different nucleus.

Ordinary Conditions
Ordinary conditions are the normal environmental conditions assumed in a discussion, with no special external fields, collisions, or experimental interventions being applied.

An atom sitting in a room-temperature laboratory with no deliberately applied strong fields is being considered under ordinary conditions for this discussion.

Stable
A physical system is stable relative to a process if it does not undergo that process as a spontaneous process under the conditions being considered. For an isotope, stable usually means that its atomic nuclei do not undergo nuclear decay under ordinary conditions.

Caesium-133 is stable in the nuclear sense because its nuclei do not spontaneously decay under ordinary conditions.

Caesium-133
Caesium-133 is the stable isotope of caesium whose atomic nucleus contains 55 protons and 78 neutrons.

The atoms used in caesium atomic clocks are caesium-133 atoms.

Radiation
Radiation is energy that travels outward from a source through space or through a material medium.

Sunlight is radiation carrying energy from the Sun to Earth.

Magnetism
Magnetism is the physical phenomenon in which magnets, electric currents, or moving charged objects can attract, repel, or reorient one another.

A compass needle turns because it is affected by Earth's magnetism.

Electromagnetic
Electromagnetic means involving both electric charge and magnetism.

Light is called electromagnetic because it is described using linked electric and magnetic effects.

Electromagnetic Field
An electromagnetic field is a physical quantity assigned to positions and times that describes electromagnetic influence on objects with electric charge.

A radio antenna creates a changing electromagnetic field around it.

Electromagnetic Radiation
Electromagnetic radiation is radiation carried by electromagnetic fields.

Radio waves, microwaves, visible light, and X-rays are forms of electromagnetic radiation.

Periodic Radiation
Periodic radiation is radiation whose state at a fixed location repeats after a fixed period. Because it repeats in cycles, periodic radiation has a frequency.

An ideal single-frequency laser beam is modeled as periodic radiation.

Energy Level
An energy level of a physical system is one of the possible energy values the system can have.

In a simple quantum model, an electron bound in an atom can occupy only certain atomic energy levels.

Energy Level Transition
An energy level transition is a change of a physical system from one energy level to another. The difference in energy is supplied by incoming radiation or carried away by outgoing radiation.

When an atom moves from a higher energy level to a lower one, the lost energy can leave as electromagnetic radiation.

Closely Spaced Energy Levels
Closely spaced energy levels are energy levels whose energy values differ by a small amount in the scale being considered.

The two ground-state levels used in a caesium-133 atomic clock are closely spaced: electromagnetic radiation with frequency 9192631770Hz has the energy needed for an energy level transition between them, while visible-light atomic transitions have frequencies hundreds of thousands of times larger.

Physical Interaction
A physical interaction is a way that physical systems affect one another, often by changing their motion, energy, or state.

The electric attraction between an atomic nucleus and an electron is a physical interaction.

Hyperfine Level
A hyperfine level is one of the closely spaced energy levels of an atom caused by a physical interaction between the atomic nucleus and the atom's electrons.

The caesium-133 clock transition uses two hyperfine levels of the ground state of a caesium-133 atom.

Unperturbed Ground State
The unperturbed ground state of an atom is its lowest-energy state when external disturbances, such as applied fields or collisions, are idealized away.

An isolated caesium-133 atom with no applied external fields is idealized using its unperturbed ground state.

Caesium-133 Transition Frequency
The caesium-133 transition frequency, denoted ΔνCs, is the frequency of the periodic electromagnetic radiation corresponding to the energy level transition between the two hyperfine levels of the unperturbed ground state of the caesium-133 atom.

The second is defined by counting periods of the electromagnetic radiation associated with the caesium-133 transition frequency.

Light
Light is electromagnetic radiation, especially the part that can be detected by the human eye.

Sunlight, laser light, and the light from a lamp are all forms of electromagnetic radiation.

Vacuum
A vacuum is an idealized region of space with no material medium present.

Interplanetary space is often modeled as a vacuum when the small amount of matter there is irrelevant to the calculation.

Speed of Light
The speed of light in vacuum, denoted c, is the speed at which light travels in a vacuum.

In a vacuum, light travels at exactly 299792458m/s by the definitions of the metre and second.

Photon
A photon is a discrete packet of light or other electromagnetic radiation. A photon is associated with electromagnetic radiation of some frequency.

In a green laser beam, the frequency is the frequency of the associated light radiation: the electromagnetic state repeats at that rate. The beam can be modeled as many photons associated with that same frequency and traveling in nearly the same direction.

Nonzero Physical Quantity
A nonzero physical quantity is a physical quantity whose measured value is not 0 in the units being used.

A frequency of 5Hz is nonzero, while a frequency of 0Hz is zero.

Dimensionless Constant
A dimensionless constant is a constant whose value is a pure number. Its numerical value does not depend on the units used to measure the quantities from which it is formed.

The ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter is dimensionless: measuring both lengths in metres or both lengths in inches gives the same number π.

Dimensional Constant
A dimensional constant is a constant whose value carries units. The physical constant is fixed, but its numerical value changes when the unit choices change.

The speed of light is a dimensional constant: the same physical speed is written as 299792458m/s or about 186000 miles per second because the length unit changed.

Planck Constant
The Planck constant, denoted h, is the dimensional constant ratio of a photon's energy E to the frequency f of its associated radiation, when f is nonzero: h=Ef.

If a photon has energy E and its associated electromagnetic radiation has nonzero frequency f, then dividing E by f gives the same physical constant h for every photon. The frequency is not a frequency of the photon moving around a path; it is the frequency of the electromagnetic radiation associated with the photon. To assign a numerical value to h, the energy and frequency must be measured using chosen units. Since energy is measured in joules and 1J=1kgm2s2, the numerical value of h depends on the kilogram, metre, and second.

Different photons can have different energies and frequencies while keeping the same ratio. A photon associated with frequency 1Hz has energy E=hf=(6.62607015×1034Js)(1s1)=6.62607015×1034J, so E/f=6.62607015×1034Js. A photon associated with frequency 1014Hz has energy E=(6.62607015×1034Js)(1014s1)=6.62607015×1020J, and again E/f=6.62607015×1034Js. A photon associated with frequency 5×1014Hz has energy E=3.313035075×1019J, and dividing by 5×1014s1 gives the same ratio h.

The same Planck constant can therefore be written with different numerical values. Using joules and seconds, h=6.62607015×1034Js. Since 1J=107erg, the same constant is h=6.62607015×1027ergs. Since 1kJ=1000J, it is also h=6.62607015×1037kJs. Using electronvolts for energy gives approximately h4.135667696×1015eVs. These are not different physical constants; they are the same constant expressed with different energy units.

Base Units

Second Unit of Time
The second unit of time, denoted s, is the unit of time defined as the duration of 9192631770 periods of the periodic radiation corresponding to the caesium-133 transition frequency.

A stopwatch reading of 3s measures a duration of three seconds.

Metre Unit of Length
The metre unit of length, denoted m, is the unit of length defined as the distance travelled by light in vacuum during 1299792458 of a second.

A metre stick is a physical object made to approximate one metre of length.

Kilogram Unit of Mass
The kilogram unit of mass, denoted kg, is the unit of mass fixed by the Planck constant. Once the metre and second have been defined, the mass scale is chosen so that the numerical value of the Planck constant is exactly 6.62607015×1034. That chosen mass unit is called one kilogram.

The physical value of the Planck constant is not being changed. Instead, the size of the unit kg is chosen so that, when h is measured using kilograms, metres, and seconds, its numerical value is exactly 6.62607015×1034. This is like choosing a length unit around a particular table so that the table measures exactly 1 table-unit: the table does not change, but the unit has been defined by using it as the reference.

The particular number 6.62607015×1034 was chosen so that the newly defined kilogram would have the same practical size as the kilogram already used in measurements. Before the kilogram was fixed this way, experiments measured the numerical value of h using the existing mass scale. The chosen number is that measured value, rounded and then made exact, so ordinary masses did not suddenly change size when the definition changed.

A 1kg calibration mass is an object whose mass approximates one kilogram.

Derived Quantities

Velocity
Velocity is the rate of change of position with respect to time, including both speed and direction. After choosing spatial coordinates in ordinary three-dimensional space, velocity is represented by a vector in 3.

A car moving north at 50km/h and a car moving east at 50km/h have the same speed but different velocities.

Acceleration
Acceleration is the rate at which velocity changes with respect to time. After choosing spatial coordinates in ordinary three-dimensional space, acceleration is represented by a vector in 3.

An object whose speed increases by 2m/s every second has acceleration 2m/s2.

Force
Force is an interaction that can change the motion of an object. After choosing spatial coordinates in ordinary three-dimensional space, force is represented by a vector in 3.

Pushing a cart applies a force that can change the cart's motion.

Work
Work is energy transferred when a force moves an object through a distance in the direction of the force.

Pushing a box forward across the floor does work on the box when the force and motion point in the same direction.

Derived Units

Hertz Unit of Frequency
A hertz unit of frequency, denoted Hz, is the unit used to measure frequency. One hertz is one cycle per second: 1Hz=1s1.

A 60Hz signal repeats 60 times each second.

Unit of Force
Suppose mass is measured using a unit um, and acceleration is measured using a unit ua. In Newtonian mechanics, after choosing spatial coordinates, force is measured from mass and acceleration using the vector equation F=ma, where m0 is the numerical mass value, a3 is the numerical acceleration vector, and F3 is the numerical force vector. Here scalar-vector multiplication is the operation __:0×33. By the definition of a product unit, the corresponding unit of force is umua. The unit umua is not itself an element of 3; rather, each component of the vector F is measured in units of umua.

When mass is measured in kilograms and acceleration is measured in metres per second squared, the corresponding force unit is kgms2. In a one-dimensional example, a 2kg object accelerating at 3m/s2 corresponds to a force measurement of 23=6 in that product unit, so the force is 6kgms2 in the direction of the acceleration.

Newton Unit of Force
A newton unit of force, denoted N, is the unit of force obtained when mass is measured in kilograms and acceleration is measured in metres per second squared. Thus N is the name of the component unit kg(ms2), not the numerical force vector itself: 1N=1kgms2.

A force measured as F=(1,1,1) in newtons has three component values, each measured in N. Its magnitude is 3N, since F=12+12+12N=3N. If this force acts on a 1kg mass, then F=ma, so F=ma=ma=1kga. Since F=3N=3kgms2, we get a=3ms2. Because m is positive, a points in the same direction as F.

Joule Unit of Energy
A joule unit of energy, denoted J, is the unit used to measure energy. One joule is the energy transferred when a force of one newton moves an object one metre in the direction of the force: 1J=1N1m=1kgm2s2.

Lifting a small object can transfer about one joule of energy if the force and distance multiply to 1Nm.