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AP Concepts Flashcards

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14811893266AlliterationRepetition of initial consonant sounds, good writers use a dash of it0
14811896823AllusionA casual reference to a famous historical or literary figure/event. Reference to a story that we all share in a culture. Have to assume to audience gets allusion.1
14811900200AnalogyBy emphasizing one or several points of likeness between two quite distinct subjects, With a stronger effect than similes and metaphors in clarifying.2
14811900201AnaphoraThe repetition of a words or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses. --must have strong rhetorical impact3
14811907487Antithesisjuxtaposing direct opposites, creating a sharp contrast in a parallel grammatical structure4
14811917955Aphorism/Epigrama terse, witty statement of truth5
14811921878Apostrophespeaks/calls directly to an abstract or absent subject like the sun or wind6
14811925755Balanced SentenceA more specific type of parallelism; a sentence composed of two parts that are roughly equal in length, importance, and grammatical structure; often by structuring a thought that counters an idea.7
14811934875ConnotaionThe implied meaning of a word or phrase8
14814981499Cumulative Sentence9
14814988388Deduction10
14814988389Denotation11

Physics Midterm Flashcards

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16301721736length ---->meter(m)0
16301721737mass ---->kilogram(kg)1
16301721738time ---->second (s)2
16301721739electric current ---->ampere(A)3
16301721740temperature ---->Kelvin(K)4
16301721741luminous intensity ---->candela(cd)5
16301721742amount of a substance ---->mole(mol)6
16301721743Def. the numerical part of a measurement is expressed as a number between 1 and 9 multiplied by a whole number power of 10scientific notation7
16301721744Conversions from least to greatest?Giga, mega, kilo, hecto, deka, deci, centi, milli, micro, nano8
16301721745What are the two types of direct relationships?Linear and Quadratic9
16301721746What does a linear graph look like?straight line10
16301721747What does a quadratic graph look like?parabola11
16301721748What does an inverse graph look like?hyperbola12
16301721749What is the equation for a linear graph?y=mx+b13
16301721750What is the equation for a Quadratic graph?y=mx^2+b14
16301721751What is the equation for an Inverse graph?y=m/x15
16301721752What equation do you use to find slope?(y2 - y1)/(x2 -x1)16
16301721753Def. the study of the physical worldphysics17
16301721754Def. is the apparent shift in the position of an object when it is viewed from various angles. Laboratory instruments must be read at eye level and straight on to avoid _______ error.parallax18
16301721755Def. of a measurement describes how well the result agrees with an accepted value. The accuracy of an instrument depends on how well its performance compares to a currently accepted standard.accuracy19
16301721756Def. the degree of an exactness to which the measurement of a quantity can be reproduced. The precision of an instrument is limited by the smallest division on the measurement scale.percision20
16301721757x is the _________independent variable21
16301721758y is the _________dependent variable22
16301721759What motion diagram? Faster/Constant/Slower ... . . . . . . . . . . . .faster23
16301721760What motion diagram? Faster/Constant/Slower . . . . . . .constant24
16301721761What motion diagram? Faster/Constant/Slower . . . . . . . . . . .......slower25
16301721829Position vs. time graph at rest26
16301721830Position vs. Time graph with positive constant velocity27
16301721831Position vs. Time graph with negative constant velocity28
16301721832Position vs. time graph two objects moving at constant velocity, one faster than the other, with the same starting point29
16301721762How do you find velocity on a Position vs. Time graph?find the slope30
16301721763How do you find distance on a Position vs. Time graph?y-axis31
16301721764How do you find displacement on a Position vs. Time graph?Pf - Pi32
16301721765How do you find time on a Position vs. Time graph?x-axis33
16301721833Velocity vs. time graph with positive constant velocity34
16301721834Velocity vs. time graph with negative constant velocity35
16301721835Velocity vs. time graph with negative constant acceleration36
16301721836Velocity vs. time graph with positive constant acceleration37
16301721837Velocity vs. time graph with changing increasing acceleration38
16301721838Velocity vs. time graph with constant velocity and increasing velocity39
16301721766How do you find distance on a Velocity vs. time graph?area under the curve40
16301721767How do you find displacement on a Velocity vs. time graph?add positive slope areas and subtract negative slope areas41
16301721768How do you find velocity on a Velocity vs. time graph?y-axis42
16301721769How do you find acceleration on a Velocity vs. time graph?find the slope43
16301721770How do you find time on a Velocity vs. time graph?x-axis44
16301721839Acceleration vs. Time with constant acceleration45
16301721771How do you find velocity on an acceleration vs. time graph?area under the curve46
16301721772How do you find acceleration on an acceleration vs. time graph?y-axis47
16301721773How do you find time on an acceleration vs. time graph?x-axis48
16301721774Def. any object that is being acted upon only by the force of gravityfree fall49
16301721775Def. where an object is from its originposition50
16301721776Def. an objects change in position, only measuring from its starting position to its final positiondisplacement51
16301721777Def. vector quantity that is defined as the rate at which an object changes its velocityacceleration52
16301721778Def. vector quantity that indicates distance per time and directionvelocity53
16301721779Def. the distance traveled per unit of timespeed54
16301721780Def. a quantity that is fully described by both magnitude and directionvector quantities55
16301721781Def. a quantity that is fully described by its magnitudescalar quantities56
16301721782Name the vectors(5)acceleration, position, velocity, displacement, and force57
16301721783Name the scalars (5)distance, time, temperature, speed, and mass58
16301721784Def. the frictional force air exerts on a moving objectair resistance59
16301721785Def. when air resistance is so big, it cancels out acceleration due to gravityterminal velocity60
16301721786Def. the acceleration for any object moving under the sole influence of gravityacceleration due to gravity61
16301721787When do you add vectors mathematically?only use when there are no angles in the problem62
16301721788What are the steps to adding vectors mathematically?1. Use Pythagorean theorem to solve for the magnitude 2. Then use tangent to solve for angle 3. Then write out your resultant63
16301721789Equation for pythagorean theorema^2 + b^2 = c^264
16301721790What equation to use to solve for an angle using tangent0 = tan^-1(opposite/adjacent)65
16301721791When do you add vectors graphically?any problem with angles given66
16301721792What are the steps to adding vectors graphically?1. Determine the scale (l cm = ______ km) 2. Divide magnitude by scale to get the length of each other 3. Draw your compass (axis) 4. Measure and draw the first vector from the main origin 5. Draw secondary compass at the tip of the first origin 6. Draw second vector on that axis 7. Draw resultant back to origin 8. Measure the scale of the resultant and multiply length and scale to get magnitude 9. Measure angle of resultant line and origin 10. Write out answer in correct resultant notation67
16301721793Steps to finding components of vectors1. Draw the angular vector on axis labeling the magnitude and angle 2. Connect the horizontal & vertical sides to create right triangle 3. Use sin and cos to calculate the components (Fx = cos) (Fy = sin)68
16301721794Def. vectors that act on the same linecollinear vectors69
16301721795Def. vectors that point at the same thingconcurrent vectors70
16301721796Def. the sum of 2 or more vectorsResultant71
16301721797Def. breaking an angular vector into 2 piecesVector Components72
16301721798Def. the condition in which the net force on an object is zeroEquilibrium73
16301721799Def. single force that balances a system, same magnitude opposite directionEquilibrant74
16301721800What are the 4 known forces?Electromagnetic force, Nuclear Force, Weak interactive force, and Gravitational force75
16301721801What force? most noticeable force, holds matter together, also referred to as mechanical or frictional forcesElectromagnetic Force76
16301721802What force? Strongest, acts through smallest distance, and holds the nucleus of an atom togetherNuclear force77
16301721803What force? force inside a nucleus that causes some atoms to break apart and responsible for radioactive decayWeak Interactive Force78
16301721804What force? Force of attraction that exists between all masses, weakest force, and acts through the longest distanceGravitational force79
16301721805What is Newtons 1st law?An object continues in uniform straight line motion or remains at rest unless acted upon by a net force80
16301721806What is Newtons 2nd law?When a net force acts on an object acceleration occurs81
16301721807What is Newtons 3rd law?Every force has an equal but opposite force82
16301721808What are the two types of friction?static and kinetic83
16301721809Def. opposes start of motionstatic friction84
16301721810Def. opposes motion already in motionkinetic friction85
16301721811Def. the study of motion that tells how objects movekinematics86
16301721812Def. The study of forces that cause motion. Tells why objects move.Dynamics87
16301721813Def. a push or pull exerted on an objectforce88
16301721814Def. forces that have to be toughing to be appliedcontact force89
16301721815Def. in which bodies interact without directly touching each other, yet are able to exert a push or pull despite their physical separation.Field force90
16301721816Def. a force that is applied onto an objectapplied force91
16301721817Def. the vector sum of all the forces on an objectnet force92
16301721818Def. a physical representation that shows the forces acting on a systemfree body diagrams93
16301721819Def. the tendency of an object to resist changeinertia94
16301721820Def. large body of matter with no definite shapemass95
16301721821def. the gravitational force experienced by an objectweight96
16301721822def. the resistance that one surface or object encounters when moving over anotherfriction97
16301721823Def. the ration between the force necessary to move one surface horizontally over another and the pressure between the two surfacesCoefficient of friction98
16301721824Projectiles Launched Horizontally: The vertical and horizontal motions of a projectile are ______________independent99
16301721825Projectiles Launched Horizontally: There is no ___________ in the horizontal direction, therefor horizontal velocity does not change.acceleration100
16301721826Def. an object shot through the air, that has independent vertical and horizontal motions and after receiving an initial thrust, travels through the air only under the force of gravity.projectile motion101
16301721827Def. the path of a projectile through spacetrajectory102
16301721828Def. the total time that an object or person stays in the air when the object is thrown or when the person jumps.hang time103

Physical Science Ch 5 H Flashcards

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16302046465Approximately how much work do you do when you lift your 10 kg sister to a height of 1.5m?15 J0
16302497456What would happen to the mechanical advantage if the radius of the door knob were doubled?it would be multiplied by 21
16303623831pulleywhat is this simple machine?2
16303652651less than 100%the efficiency of this pulley system is3
16302588450The class of this lever is an example would be4
16304529438The boy in the photograph is carrying a box to the top of the stairs. Describe how the work that the boy does on the box is related to the energy transfer that occurs. How does the energy of the box change form as the boy carries the box up the stairs?5
16302046466A 10kg box sits on the floor. Approximately how high would you have to lift the box to increase gravitational potential energy by 350J?3.5m, 7m, 15m, or 40m? Note: GPE= mgh, height =GPE/(mass x gravity)=350/(10*9.8)6
16302046467When a machine does work on an object the output work is which of the following?less than input work, equal to input work or greater than input work?7
16302046468If the input force on a lever is 200 N, then the output force from that lever is 50 N. What is the MA of the lever?1.0, 0.25, 4, 68
16302046469In a pulley system, the efficiency is ...exactly 100%, exactly 400%, greater than 100% less than 100% Note: The efficiency of a real machine is always less than 100%9
16302046470An input force of 80 N is used to lift an object weighing 240N with a system of pulleys. What is the mechanical advantage of the pulley system?2, 3, 4, 5 Note: MA=output force/input force =240 N/ 80 N=310
16302046471What is the combination of two or more simple machines called?compound machine11
16302046472What are the six types of simple machines?lever, pulley, axel and wheel, screw, lever and wedge12
16302046473What are the two conditions necessary for work to be done on an object?there must be a force applied over a specified distance13
16302046474Define mechanical advantageratio of output force over the input force14
16302046475What kinds of potential energy are there?elastic potential energy, gravitational potential energy and chemical potential energy (stored energy in chemical bonds like food), mechanical potential energy etc...15
16302046476Which of the following factors change the gravitational potential energy of an object?length of object, temperature of object or the mass of the object? Why? What is the equation for GPE?16
16302046477What is the difference between direct and alternating current?See lab on generators17
16302046478What is a transformer? What are they useful for?See lab on generators18
16302046479Where was GPE the highest for the marble in your Rube Goldberg machine?See lab on Rube Goldberg Machines19
16302046480Where was kinetic energy and GPE equal in your Rube Goldberg machine?See lab on Rube Goldberg Machines20
16302046481What is the equation for kinetic energy?KE=1/2 mv221
16302046482A jogger with a mass of 75 kg is moving forward at a speed of 2m/s. What is the jogger's kinetic energy from this forward motion?calculate it!22
16302046483What is the GPE of an Earth-dictionary system if the dictionary has a mass of 2 kg and is located 3 m above the ground?Find the equation and calculate it!23
16302046484Solve the GPE equation for heightGPE=mgh divide both sides by mg GPE/mg=h24
16302046485http://www.rubegoldberg.com/gallery# visit the site above and find the cartoon of the penguin in A SIMPLE PARACHUTE (under play and sports on the left) on the rube goldberg site A. What type of energy is being used at step F? B. What type of energy is being used at step G? (there are 2)...25
16302046486Which has more kinetic energy? A 25kg rolling ball or a 30kg rolling ball?30 Kg26
16302046487Which has more potential energy? A plane on the ground or in the air?in the air27
16302046488energy stored in chemical bondschemical energy28
16302046489heat energythermal energy29
16302046490energy from radiationnuclear energy30
16302046491energy from an object's motionmechanical energy31
16302046492energy from moving electronselectrical energy32
16302046493energy from lightradiant energy33
16302046494T/F: Input work is always less than the output workTrue34
16302046495T/F: Machines can be 100% efficientFalse, they are always less than 100% due to friction35
16302046496Define the Law of Conservation in your own wordsEnergy just TRANSFORMS from one form to another. It is never created and can't be destroyed.36
16302046497The units for efficiency%37
16302046498The units for energyJ-joules38
16302046499The units for mechanical advantagenone39
16302046500For a flashlight to be turned on by a biological living thing, what are the energy transformations that must occur? Place them in the proper order.chemical, mechanical, electrical, radiant, thermal40
16302046501When a ball is thrown into the air, what kind of energy does it have at the VERY VERY top before it begins to fall?GPE41
16302046502What type of energy does the thrown ball have half way down toward its decent toward the ground?half GPE and half kinetic energy42
16302046503When a ball is thrown into the air, what kind of energy does it have at the VERY VERY bottom before it reaches the ground?all the GPE has been converted back to kinetic energy43
16302046504A 4 kg ball is on a 5m ledge. If it is pushed off the ledge, how much kinetic energy will it have just before hitting the ground?calcualte it KE=1/2 mv244
16302046505where are the regions where a magnet is strongest?the poles45
16302046506T/F Electromagnets are permanent magnetsfalse, they are temporary46
16302046507T/F Generators turn electrical energy into mechanical energyfalse, they turn mechanical energy into electrical47
16302046509The ratio of the output force to the input force is the __________________________ of a machine.mechanical advantage48
16302046510The energy due to compressing a spring is ____________________.Elastic potential energy49
163020465115. When an athlete runs, he/she transforms chemical energy of food molecules into _______________ energy.mechanical energy50
16302046512Friction causes mechanical energy to be converted into which form?thermal energy51
16302046513How much work do you do when you lift an 80N child 0.5m?40 J52
16302046514An input force of 50 N is used to lift an object weighing 300 N with a system of pulleys. What is the mechanical advantage of the pulley system?653
16302046515A jogger with a mass of 60kg is moving forward at a speed of 3m/s. What is the jogger's kinetic energy from this forward motion?270 J54
16302046516What is the GPE of an Earth-dictionary system if the dictionary has a mass of 5 kg and is located 2m above the ground? Us the ground as the reference level.100 J55
16302046517Which of the following changes electrical energy into mechanical energy?electromagnets take energy from the battery and pick up things, such as paperclips, which is mechanical energy56
16302046518How is the law of conservation of energy related to a generator in a home when the lights go out?The engine in the generator takes the chemical energy supplied by the gasoline and turns it into mechanical energy when it turns the motor. The motor in turn changes the energy into electrical energy from the flow of electrons. The electrical energy can then be turned into radiant energy of light or thermal energy of heat for the home.57

8.1.3 Radioactive Decay Flashcards

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16302145409What is radioactive decay?The process of unstable atoms changing into smaller more stable atoms Random process - cannot predict which atoms will decay0
16302162031What is the decay constant?The probability of a specific nucleus decaying per unit time1
16302194392What are the units of the decay constant?s⁻¹2
16302258601What is the equation for decay constant?λ = -ΔN/ΔtN Negative as ΔN is always a decrease3
16302300139What is the exponential equation for the number of unstable nuclei remaining?N = N₀ e⁻^λt Where N - Number of unstable nuclei remaining N₀ - Initial number of nuclei λ - Decay constant t - time for decay4
16302359090What is the activity of a radioactive sample?The number of nuclei that decay per second5
16302367876What are the units for activity?Bq6
16302389667What is the equation for activity?A = Nλ Where A - Activity in Bq N - Number of unstable nuclei λ - Decay constant in s⁻¹7
16302448454What is the graph for number of unstable nuclei remaining N against time?8
16302463521What is the logarithmic equation for the number of unstable nuclei remaining?lnN = lnN₀ - λt On a graph - lnN - y-axis lnN₀ - y-intercept λ - gradient t - time9
16302532578What is half life?The time taken for the number of nuclei to halve10
16302553897What is the equation for half life?T 1/2 = ln2 / λ11
16302569184How can you calculate half life graphically?12
16302607619What is the number of atoms in a sample equal to?N = n Na Where N - Number of atoms n - Number of moles Na - Avogadro's constant13
16302668759What is the exponential equation for the activity?A = A₀ e^-λt14
16302709159What is radioactive dating?- Carbon -14 is used in radioactive dating - Most organic material will contain this isotope - Has a very large half life of 5730 years15
16302747238What are the problems with radioactive dating?- For man-made objects only the age of the material can be dated - May be contaminated with other sources - High background count - Small sample, statistically insignificant16
16302820563What is the use of Tc-99 in medical diagnosis?- Used as a medical tracer to show the tissue or organ function, pure gamma emitter - Radiation emitted is recorded and an image of inside the patient is produced - Half life of 6 hours (short enough to limit exposure), can be prepared on site17
16303202199How can we store nuclear waste?- With extreme long half lives they can be stored in steel casks underground18

Physical Science 1st Semester Final Flashcards

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16302176535________________ are the building blocks of all life. they combine together to form ______________atoms; molecules0
16302176536___________- volumeliter1
16302176537____________- distance/lengthmeter2
16302176538___________- timeseconds3
16302176539__________- massgrams4
16302176540_______________________- volumebeaker; graduated cylinder5
16302176541_____________________- distance/ lengthmeter stick; metric ruler6
16302176542____________________- timestopwatch; timer7
16302176543_____________________- massscales; balance8
16302176544you can easily collect and record smaller numerical data using _________ _________tally marks9
16302176545a concentration is when a ____________ is dissolved into a _____________solute; solvent10
16302176546all of our labs involve the use of the __________________________ ______________________scientific method11
16302176547_____________________ is what our bodies use from the air in which we breathe; however, the air we breathe mostly consists of __________________oxygen; nitrogen12
16302176548our exhalations contain the following gases: ___________________________ , ________________________ , and small amounts of other gasesnitrogen; carbon dioxide13
16302176549air has ___________ and ________________ and can exert ______________________mass; volume; pressure14
16302176550air molecules' speed __________________ when air is warm and ______________________ when air is coolincreases; decreases15
16302176551air _______________________ when it's warm and _______________________ when it's coolexpands; compresses16
16302176552sweating ________________ body temperature because sweat __________________ heat when it evaporateslowers; removes17
16302176553________________________ is the moisture (or _______________ ________________) content of airhumidity; water vapor18
16302176554greater humidity means that your sweat ______________________________________evaporates less quickly19
16302176555a barometer measures the ______________________________ of air and is used to ____________________ weatherpressure; predict20
16302176556we live in the troposphere layer, which is within the ________________________ region of Earth's atmosphere.homosphere21
16302176557as _________________________ increases, molecules in the air move more quicklytemperature22
16302176558the thermosphere and exosphere are found within the _______________________ region. this portion of Earth's atmosphere is considered to be _________________ ________________heterosphere; outer space23
16302176559increasing _____________________ produces _________________________ air, which means the air pressure is _____________________altitude; thinner; lower24
16302176560heat is nothing more than an _____________________________ of ______________________exchange/transfer; energy25
16302176561the _______________ was not included in our Model of Earth's Atmosphere lab. this is because ______________________________________________________________________moon; the scale we were using could not accommodate it's great distance in out atmosphere26
16302176562in tea, ______________ is the solute and _______________ is the solventtea; water27
16302176563__________________ ___________________ is a byproduct of ____________________ bonding that occurs between water moleculessurface tension; hydrogen28
16302176564solid butter ________________ less in liquid butter than solid water does in liquid waterfloats29
16302176565adding salt to water causes water to _________________ less quickly and to _________________ more quicklyfreeze; melt30
16302176566water puddles up on your kitchen counter when spilled because of ____________________ ______________________hydrogen bonding31
16302176567examples of collection would be ______________________ , ____________________ , and ________________________rivers; oceans; lakes32
16302176568the water (aka "hydrologic" ) cycle is as followsprecipitation- collection- evaporation- condensation33
16302176569the ___________________________ , or all the combined water in and above a planet, can only be found on earthhydrosphere34
16302176570the salinity of larger lakes and oceans would be considerably _______________ because __________________________________________________________________higher; the water can escape via evaporation, but the ions/salt have nowhere to go if there are no exits rivers35
16302176571the difference between ___________________ and __________________________ is that the latter is produced by a piece of the former breaking off and floating into the seaglaciers; icebergs36
16302176572____________ ice is nothing more than frozen sections of the ocean; it has a _____________________- salinitysea; high37
16302176573the __________________ ________________ rises and falls depending on the amount of rain an area haswater table38
16302176574pollution can travel far distances via ___________________________groudwater39
16302176575the layers of earth, form innermost to outermost, are as follows _____________________________________________________________________________________________inner core, outer core, mantle, crust40
16302176576liquid silica/ rock, or ____________________ can be found in the ____________________magma; mantle41
16302176577rock within the __________________________ flows until pressure is applied to it. this special area of the ________________________________________ is responsible for _______________________________ ____________________________asthenosphere; lithosphere/ mantle; tectonic plate movement42
16302176578mostly solid iron can be found in the ____________________ _______________. the __________________ exerted by all the other layers is responsible for it's physical stateinner core; pressure;43
16302176579the ___________________ ________________________ contains liquid iron and nickelouter core44
16302176580humans have not been able to drill all the way through the ___________ or the upper portion of earth. this is because it is __________ ___________crust; too thick45
16302176581earth's crust is mostly made of _________________ (which forms many types of rocks)silica46
16302176582______________________- formed by magma pushing up on the crust but not escapingdomed47
16302176583_____________________- formed by plate collisions; similar to wrinkles in a rugfolded48
16302176584______________________- formed over time by plate interaction at faults; can be preceded by earthquakesfault- block49
16302176585____________________- formed by magma pushing up on and escaping through earth's crustvolcanic50
16302176586tectonic plates can ______________ against each other, resulting in rocks and earthquakesslide51
16302176587tectonic plates can _________________, producing various types of mountainscollide52
16302176588oceanic plates can _________________, or overlap, one another, resulting in various types of mountainssubduct53
16302254749are you looking forward to Chuy's creamy jalapeno dip?ummmm duh!!54

AP GOV AMENDMENTS Flashcards

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13710553317Amendment 1Freedom of Religion. Related to religion, there are two important clauses: the Establishment Clause, which essentially means that there should be no state-sponsored or official national religion. The second clause is the Free exercise clause, which suggests that all citizens should be free to worship as they wish.0
13710568245Amendment 1Freedom of Speech includes the clear and present danger rule, based on Schenck v. US. This rule suggests that if speech creates imminent danger for the country or its citizens, it is not protected speech. Freedom of the Press has one key premise related to no allowance of prior restraint. The government is not allowed to censor / stop stories prior to publication (obviously, there are some exceptions to this rule).1
13710574307Amendment 1The 1st also protects the Right to Assemble AND the right to petition the government with grievances.2
13710584162Amendment 2the right to bear arms3
13710591908Amendment 4the right to protection from illegal search and seizure. Probable cause and warrants are necessary for searches.4
13710618038Amendment 4The Exclusionary rule (based on Mapp v. Ohio) suggests that evidence seized without probable cause or a proper warrant can NOT be used as evidence at trial.5
13710626081Amendment 4Good Faith Exception suggests that if a search deemed unwarranted was the result of honest police error, evidence may still be used.6
13710646908Amendment 5this amendment hits a number of key rights. The right to due process is found here. Keep in mind, in this context it references only the federal government. Protection against self-incrimination is found here (you don't have to testify against yourself..."I plead the fifth").7
13710656038Amendment 5Eminent domain also appears here. Though we treat the right to private property as a sacred democratic right, the government may take private property for public use as long as they compensate the owner.8
13710670261Amendment 6Right to a fair, speedy trial by a jury of one's peers. The right to confront witnesses. The right to gather your own witnesses. The right to counsel.9
13710677549Amendment 8no cruel and unusual punishment or excessive bails/fines.10
13710702090Amendment 10the Reserved powers. All powers not specifically granted to the federal government by the Constitution belong to ("are reserved for") the states.11
13710706993Amendment 13A Civil War Amendment; this one ended slavery12
13710712146Amendment 14A Civil War Amendment; this one provided protections for newly freed slaves, BUT has far reaching (and continuing) implications because of the wording. It refers specifically to the STATES providing equal protection (Equal Protection Clause)13
13710731172Amendment 14STATES providing due process (Due Process Clause). This is the second due process clause (see 5th) but this one refers directly to the states; which is the door to selective incorporation. Thus, any person who can argue unequal treatment or lack of due process (even a white male) can use this powerful amendment to seek protection even though it was intended for newly freed slaves.14
13710738238Amendment 15A Civil War Amendment; this one provided the right to vote for African American males.15
13710789333Amendment 16income tax....importance is that this opened the door to a major and new pile of $$ for the federal government to use (thus allowing growth of bureaucracy, services, etc.)16
13710798463Amendment 17celebrated for making Congress more receptive to the people. It made for the direct election of US Senators.17
13710803724Amendment 19women's suffrage18
13710811571Amendment 22In response to FDR getting elected to four terms, this amendment puts a two-term limit on the President. It is possible for a President to serve up to 10 years if they are an acting VP who takes over for less than 2 years in place of a President who dies...they could still run twice.19
13710817288Amendment 23The District of Columbia gets 3 electoral votes (a victory for US citizens living in DC)20
13710825359Amendment 24no more poll tax21
13710836277Amendment 25first, it clarifies that the VP is first in line to the Presidency. Secondly, it addresses how to replace a vacated VP (this is how Ford became VP for Nixon). Finally, it addresses scenarios related to presidential succession, focusing on temporary succession. For example, a President can notify Congress of inability to serve, in which case the VP takes over (usually related to surgery, etc.). The Cabinet also has the ability to call for a transfer of power (by majority) if the President is unable or unwilling to do so.22
13710870137Amendment 26he right to vote for citizens aged 18-21. This came in response to so many Vietnam soldiers in that age range that gave their lives for a country in which they had23

States of Matter Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
16308032356Kinetic Theory of MatterThe idea that all matter is made up of tiny particles in constant motion.0
16308052486BoilingThe process of a liquid changing state to a gas.1
16308063294FreezingThe process of a liquid changing state to a solid.2
16308078028CondensationThe process of a gas changing state to a liquid.3
16308095018MeltingThe process of a solid changing state to a liquid.4
16308128801SublimationThe process of a solid changing state to a gas.5
16308181726SolidA state of matter that has a definite shape and a definite volume.6
16308181727LiquidA state of matter that has no definite shape but has a definite volume.7
16308188732GasA state of matter with no definite shape or volume.8
16308196325PlasmaA state of matter that starts as a gas and then becomes ionized9

AP Statistics Review Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
97785707365 number summaryThe minumum value, lower quartile, median, upper quartile, and maximum value for a data set. These five values give a summary of the shape of the distribution and are used to make box plots. The five numbers that help describe the center, spread and shape of data0
9778570737z scorea measure of how many standard deviations you are away from the norm (average or mean) -Number of standard deviations a score is above or below the mean (positive above, negative below1
9778570738standard deviationA statistical measure of how far away each value is, on average, from the mean. A measure of spread. Specifically, the typical distance the data points are from the mean.2
9778570739population(statistics) the entire aggregation of items from which samples can be drawn What the sample in an experiment or study usually reperesents3
9778570740categorical dataData that can be placed into categories . For example "gender" is a categorical data and the categories are "male" and "female". Labels or names used to identify categories of like items If you asked people in which month they were born or what their favorite class is, they would answer with names, which would be categorical data. However, if you asked them how many siblings they have, they would answer with numbers, not categories Labels or names used to identify categories of like items4
9778570741quantitative dataData associated with mathematical models and statistical techniques used to analyze spatial location and association. numerical information describing how much, how little, how big, how tall, how fast, etc. age is quantitative5
9778570742bar grapha type of graph in which the lengths of bars are used to represent and compare data in categories A graph that uses horizontal or vertical bars to represent data.6
9778570743parameter(n) a determining or characteristic element; a factor that shapes the total outcome; a limit, boundary a characteristic or constant factor something that determines the limits of certain data values7
9778570744sampleA relatively small proportion of people who are chosen in a survey so as to be representative of the whole. a small part of a population that represents the whole A survey in star city representing the entire state of arkansas8
9778570745randomAssigning participants to experimental and control conditions by chance, thus minimizing preexisting differences between those assigned to the different groups. Assigning subjects to expenrimental groups based on chance. pulling names or numbers out of a hat9
9778570746biasAny systematic failure of a sampling method to represent its population Any way that tampers with the accuracy of the sample10
9778570747UndercoverageA sampling scheme that biases the sample in a way that gives a part of the population less representation than it has in the population. When some groups in the population are left out of the process of choosing the sample11
9778570748nonresponsebias introduced to a sample when a large fraction of those sampled fails to respond When many people of a sample do not respond12
9778570749voluntary response biasBias introduced to a sample when individuals can choose on their own whether to participate in the sample.13
9778570750statisticApplication of mathematics to describing and analyzing data14
9778570751independent(statistics) a variable whose values are independent of changes in the values of other variables15
9778570752historgramgraphical representation of a frequency distribution using vertical bars but bars touch each other to indicate variables are related16
9778570753box plotA dsiplay that shows the distribution of values in a data set seperated into four equal-sized groups. A box plot is constructed from the five number summary of the data.17
9778570754scatterplotA graphed cluster of dots, each of which represents the values of two variables. The slope of the points suggests the direction of the relationship between the two variables. The amount of scatter suggests the strength of the correlation (little scatter indicates high correlation).18
9778570755correlationA measure of the extent to which two factors vary together, and thus of how well either factor predicts the other. The correlation coefficient is the mathematical expression of the relationship, ranging from -1 to +119
9778570756skewnessThe extent to which cases are clustered more at one or the other end of the distribution of a quantitative variable rather than in a symmetric pattern around its center20
9778570757variencecommons measure of spread about the mean as center21
9778570758statistical significanceA statistical statement of how likely it is that an obtained result occurred by chance/The condition that exists when the probability that the observed findings are due to chance is very low22
9778570759P-valueA measure of statistical significance. The lower, the more likely the results of an experiment did not occur simply chance.23
9778570760empirical ruleThe rules gives the approximate % of observations w/in 1 standard deviation (68%), 2 standard deviations (95%) and 3 standard deviations (99.7%) of the mean when the histogram is well approx. by a normal curve24
9778570761lurking variableA variable that has an important effect on the relationship among the variables in a study but is not one of the explanatory variables studied25
9778570762null hypothesisHypothesis that predicts NO relationship between variables. The aim of research is to reject this hypothesis26
9778570763alternate hypothesis, is the hypothesis to be considered as an alternative to the null hypothesis. The null hypothesis will be rejected in favor of the Ha only if the sample data strongly indicate that the null hypothesis is false.27
9778570764quota sampleA sample deliberately constructed to reflect several of the major characteristics of a given population28
9778570765probabilityA number with a value from 0 to 1 that describes the likelihood that an event will occur. example, if a bag contains a red marble, a white marble and a blue marble then the probability of selecting a red marble is 1/3.29
9778570766descriptive statisticsMathematical procedures for organizing collections of data, such as determining the mean, the median, the range, the variance, and the correlation coefficient30
9778570767meanA measure of center in a set of numerical data, computed by adding the values in a list and then dividing by the number of values in the list.31
9778570768medianA measure of center in a set of numerical data. The median of a list of values is the value appearing at the center of a sorted version of the list - or the mean of the two central values if the list contains an even number of values.32
9778570769modeMeasure of central tendency that uses most frequently occurring score.33
9778570770rangeDistance between highest and lowest scores in a set of data.34
9778570771dataFacts and statistics collected together for reference or analysis35
9778570772Q1A location measure of the data such that has one fourth or 25% of the data is smaller than it. Found by dividing the ordered data set in half (excluding the middle observation if n is odd) and finding the median of the lower half of the data.36
9778570773Q3A location to measeure when counting data to such as the median where instead of counting 50% it is 75% from the beginning of the sorted data37
9778570774minimum(n.) the smallest possible amount; (adj.) the lowest permissible or possible38
9778570775outlierA value much greater or much less than the others in a data set39
9778570776margin of errorIn statistical research, the range of outcomes we expect for a population, given the data revealed by a sample drawn from that population40
9778570777statistical normalscoring the middle of the bell-curve; low, moderate, or high scoring41
9778570778simple random sampleA sample selected in such a way that every element in the population or sampling frame has an equal probability of being chosen. Equivalently, all samples of size n have an equal chance of being selected. A sample of size n selected from the population in such a way that each possible sample of size n has an equal chance of being selected.42
9778570779sampling distributionDistribution of sample proportions from sample to sample. A sampling distribution of a sample statistic for a fixed sample size n is the distribution of that statistic derived from every possible sample of size n for a given population. A distribution of statistics obtained by selecting all the possible samples of a specific size from a population43
9778570780stratified random sampleA method of sampling that involves dividing your population into homogeneous subgroups and taking a simple random sample in each subgroup. a sampling design in which the population is divided into several groups, and random samples are then drawn from each stratum44
9778570781systematic sampleA sample drawn by selecting individuals systematically from a sampling frame A sample drawn by selecting individuals systematically from a sampling frame. When there is no relationship between the order of the sampling frame and the variables of interest, a systematic sample can be representative.45
9778570782cluster sampleIs obtained by selecting all individuals within a randomly selected collection or group of individuals.46
977857078310% rulea sample has to be lass than 10% of the whole population47
9778570784InterpolationThe estimation of an unknown number between known numbers. Interpolation is a way of approximating price or yield using bond tables that do not give the net yield on every amount invested at every rate of interest and for every maturity.48
9778570785QualitativeData in the form of recorded descriptions rather than numerical measurements.49
9778570786theoretical probabilityA probability obtained by analyzing a situation. If all of the outcomes are equally likely, you can find the theoretical probability of an event by listing all of the possible outcomes and then finding the ratio of the number of outcomes producing the desired event to the total number of outcomes. For example, there are 36 possible equally likely outcomes (number pairs) when two fair number cubes are rolled. of these six have a sum of 7, so the probability of rolling a sum of 7 is 6/36 or 1/650
9778570842experimental probability51
9778570787block designThe subjects in an experiment are first divided into groups (called 'blocks') based on some common characteristic (such as gender) that is hypothesised to have an effect on the response. Randomization of treatments then happens within each block (each block is like its own mini-experiment)."52
9778570788blindingThe practice of concealing group assignment from study subjects, investigators, and/or those who assess subject outcomes, typically in the context of a randomized controlled trial. For ex, study subjects may receive capsules with identical appearance and taste; however, the treatment group receives the active drug, whereas the control group receives the placebo.53
9778570789double blindAn experiment in which neither the subjects nor the people who work with them know which treatment each subject is receiving Neither the subjects nor the people who have contact with them know which treatment a subject received54
9778570790placeboA fake treatment. A chemically inert substance that produces real medical benefits because the patient believes it will help her55
9778570791least squares regression linethe line with the smallest sum of squared residuals56
9778570792type I errorAn error that occurs when a researcher concludes that the independent variable had an effect on the dependent variable, when no such relation exists; a "false positive57
9778570793type II errorAn error that occurs when a researcher concludes that the independent variable had no effect on the dependent variable, when in truth it did; a "false negative58
9778570843joint frequency59
9778570794matched pairsan observational technique that involves matching each participant in the experimental group with a specific participant in the control group in order to eliminate the possibility that a third variable (and not the independent variable) caused changes in the dependent variable60
9778570795conditional prababilityprobability given that something else has already occurred61
9778570796sample spaceSet of all possible outcomes of an experiment62
9778570797confounded variableA variable whose effect on the response variable cannot be separated from the effect of the explanatory variable on the response variable. (Note: Usually confounded variables are lurking variables but only a few lurking variables are also confounded.)63
9778570798marginal frequencyA set of intervals, usually adjacent and of equal width, into which the range of a statistical distribution is divided, each associated with a frequency indicating the number of measurements in that interval.64
9778570799coefficient of determinationThe statistic or number determined by squaring the correlation coefficient. Represents the amount of variance accounted for by that correlation. Statistic that represents amount of variance accounted for by a correlation.65
9778570800binomialA two-name naming system.66
9778570801unimodalhaving one mode; this is a useful term for describing the shape of a histogram when it's generally mound-shaped a data set with one mode such a normal distribution usually has only one mode67
9778570802bimodalA type of distribution, where there is two or more categories with an equal count or cases and with more cases than the other categories. A distribution with two modes68
9778570803experimentA kind of research in which the researcher controls all the conditions and directly manipulates the conditions, including the independent variable. Testing the hypothesis69
9778570804law of large numbers(statistics) law stating that a large number of items taken at random from a population will (on the average) have the population statistics70
9778570805extrapolationcalculation of the value of a function outside the range of known values71
9778570806snowballHuyen wanted to conduct market research to find out why students were unhappy with Marketing 431, probably the finest course ever to be offered by a university. In order to do this she needed to find people who were unhappy with the course. Figuring that these people would talk to each other, she used a sampling technique where she found one person who was unhappy with the course and, after asking her research questions, asked this person for the name of another person who was unhappy with the course.72
9778570807IQRA measure of variability, based on dividing a data set into quartiles Difference between upper and lower quartile of a boxplot73
9778570808Confidence intervalA range of values for a variable of interest; the specified probability is called the confidence level and the end points of the confidence interval are called the confidence limits A range of numbers in which most of the data values are likely to fall. we are 95% confident that etc.74
9778570809Standard ErrorA statistic providing an estimate of the possible magnitude to error. The larger the standard error of measurement, the less reliable the score. Standard deviation of sampling distribution75
9778570844Residual76
9778570810Convenience sampleWhenever a sample is taken it gives an improper results because the sample was taken from a very convenient area instead of representing a population77
9778570811simulationA representation of a situation or problem with a similar but simpler model or a more easily manipulated model in order to determine experimental results.78
9778570812degrees of freedomThe number of individual scores that can vary without changing the sample mean. Statistically written as 'N-1' where N represents the number of subjects.79
9778570813two way tableA table containing counts for two categorical variables. It has r rows and c columns. describes to categorical variables with row variable and column variable80
9778570814spreadThe visible variation in a sample distribution81
9778570815centerThe measure of the distance the mode is from the center of a distribution82
9778570845shape83
9778570846discrete random variable84
9778570847central limit theorem85
9778570848standardized value86
9778570849mutually exclusive87
9778570816wording biasWhenever a bias is created in a sample by the way the survey is worded to favor one question88
9778570850causation89
9778570851z test90
9778570852t test91
9778570817chi squared goodness of fittests how well close the observes data is to what would be expected under the model. If a sign diff is found b/w the two then ob. data has not been generated by chance. nominal data Determine if scores from one variable match expectations for that distribution a gambler placed $1,000 into a game of greed in which he lost. He hopes to catch his opponent and bust him for loading the dice. He does this by choosing one dice to roll 36 times. He knows that the each side has an equal chance of landing face up. He hopes to get an outcome abnormal to this. Given the data below, can we prove that the dice are loaded92
9778570818frequency tableA grouping of qualitative data into mutually exclusive classes showing the number of observations in each class. A chart showing the number of times a specific event happens.93
9778570819area principlethe area occupied by a part of the graph should correspond to the magnitude of the value it represents94
9778570853simpsons paradox95
9778570820contingency tabledisplays counts, and, sometimes, percentages of individuals falling into named categories on two or more variables. The table categorizes the individuals on all variables at once, to reveal possible patterns in one variable that may be contingent on the category of the other. A two-variable table with cross-tabulated data.96
9778570821stem and leaf displayA multiple column table depicting the individual digits of the scores. A score of 95 would have a stem of 9 and a leaf of 5, a score of 62 would have a stem of 6 and a leaf of 2. If a particular stem has more than one leaf, such as the scores 54, 58, and 51, the stem of 5 has three leaves, in this case 458. . It shows the range of values of the variable97
9778570822multimodalDescribes a graph of quantitative data with more than two clear peaks. A distribution with more than two modes98
9778570823uniformA histogram doesn't appear to have any mode and in which all the bars are approximately the same height Evenly spaced99
9778570824symetricWhen in a normal distribution both sides are identical100
9778570825time plotDisplays data that change over time. Often, successive values are connected with lines to show trends more clearly. Sometimes a smooth curve is added to the plot to help show long-term patterns and trends. Displays data that change over time.101
9778570826sestandard deviation of residuals102
9778570827r2overall measure of how successful the regression is in linearlly relating to y and x103
9778570854leverage104
9778570828influential pointa point when omitted will give very different results105
9778570829censusWhen a survey has no sample but instead test or surveys the entire population106
9778570855multistage samole107
9778570830pilotsmall trial run of a survey to see if questions are clear108
9778570831convenience sampleChoosing a sample because it is convenient. failing to get a proper representation of the population because If you survey everyone on your soccer team who attends tonight's practice, you are surveying a convenience sample.109
9778570832response biasAnything in a survey design that influences responses falls under the heading of response bias. One typical response bias arises from the wording of questions, which may suggest a favored response. Voters, for example, are more likely to express support of "the president" than support of the particular person holding that office at the moment. Anything that changes the response in a survey A police officer asking teenagers about drug use110
9778570833observational studyA study based on data in which no manipulation of factors has been employed. A study that observes characteristics of an existing population. usually a survey111
9778570834retrospective studyWhat study examines whether a past association exists between an exposure of interest and development of a present condition? data are collected from the past by going back in time112
9778570835prospective studyan observational study in which subjects are followed to observe future outcomes113
9778570836statistic factorA multifactor model in which statistical methods are applied ot a set of historical returns to determine portfolios that best explain either historical return covariances or variances.114
9778570837control groupIn an experiment, the group that is not exposed to the treatment; contrasts with the experimental group and serves as a comparison for evaluating the effect of the treatment.115
9778570838blindingThe practice of concealing group assignment from study subjects, investigators, and/or those who assess subject outcomes, typically in the context of a randomized controlled trial. For ex, study subjects may receive capsules with identical appearance and taste; however, the treatment group receives the active drug, whereas the control group receives the placebo.116
9778570839placebo effectExperimental results caused by expectations alone; any effect on behavior caused by the administration of an inert substance or condition, which is assumed to be an active agent.117
9778570840trialA performed experiment based upon the hypothesis you made.118
9778570841maximum(n.) the greatest possible amount or degree in a data sample the largest value in a set of data119

Physics key terms Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
16302709731Energy storesThermal, kinetic, gravitational potential, elastic potential, chemical, magnetic, electrostatic, nuclear0
16302709732Closed systemA system where neither matter nor energy can enter or leave. The net change in the total energy of this system is always 01
16302709733Energy transferred by heatingExample: kettle Energy is transferred to the water, from the kettles heating system(water), by heating, into the waters thermal energy store. Causing the temperature to rise2
16302709734Work doneforce x distance3
16302709735Energy lost from the gravitational potential energy store= Energy gained in the kinetic energy store4
16302709736Kinetic energy (Ek) =1/2 x mass(kg) x speed(m/s)*25
16302709737Gravitational potential energy (Ep) =mass(kg) x gravitational field strength(N/kg) x height(m)6
16302709738Joulesunit of energy7
16302709739Elastic potential energy (Ee) =1/2 x spring constant (N/m) x extension(m)*28
16302709740Specific heat capacityThe amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1°9
16302709741Change in thermal energy (E) =Mass(kg) x specific heat capacity(j/kg°C) x temperature change(°C)10
16302709742Specific heat capacity practical1. Block of investigation material with 2 holes in it, for the heater and thermometer 2. Measure mass of the block then wrap in an insulating layer, to reduce energy transferred to surroundings, insert therm and heater 3. Measure blocks initial temp and set the potential difference of power supply to 10V, turn on and start stopwatch 4. The current does work on the heater, transferring energy electrically from power to heaters thermal energy store. The energy is then transferred to materials thermal energy store by heating. 5. As block heats up, use thermometer to measure it's temp every minute, current shouldn't change 6. Using your measurements you can calculate power and transfer11
16302709743Conservation of energyEnergy can be transferred usefully, stored or dissipated, but can never be created or destroyed12
16302709744Dissipated energySometimes called 'wasted energy' because the energy is being stored in a ways that is not useful13
16302709745Wattsunit for power14
16302709746Power =Energy transferred / time15
16302709747Power =Work done / time16
16302709748ConductionThe process where vibrating particles transfer energy to neighbouring particles17
16302709749ConvectionThe process where energetic particles move away from hotter to cooler regions18
16302709750LubricationLubricants can be used to reduce friction between objects surfaces when they move. This stops transfer of energy to useless stores19
16302709751Insulation- Cavity walls : reduces energy transferred by convection and conduction - Loft insulation : fibreglass wool used, reduces energy lost by conduction - Double glazed windows : prevents energy transfer by conduction - Draught excluders : reduces energy transferred by convection20
16302709752EfficiencyUseful output energy transfer / total input energy transfer21
16302709753Non-renewable energy resourcesFossil fuels and nuclear, Coal,oil,gas22
16302709754Renewable energy resourcesSolar, wind, water waves, hydroelectric, bio-fuel, tidal, geothermal23
16302709755Wind power-Turbine with generator, rotating blades turn the generator and produce electricity -No pollution, spoil the scenery, very noisy, sometimes no wind, initial costs quite high, no permanent environment damage24
16302709756Solar power- Generate electric currents directly from sunlight -No pollution, only reliable in daytime, can't increase power output when there's more demand, initial cost is high25
16302709757Geothermal power-Uses underground thermal energy stores, slow decay of various radioactive elements -Free energy, used to generate electricity or heat buildings directly, not enough suitable locations, cost of building is high26
16302709758Hydroelectric power-Transfers energy from kinetic store of falling water -No pollution, flooding of valley, loss of habitat, unsightly, reliable, initial costs high27
16302709759Wave power-Wave-powered turbines located around the coast -No pollution, disturbs marine habitats, hazard to boats, unreliable, initial cost is high28
16302812472Tidal power-Big damn built across river estuaries with turbines in them. Water allowed out of estuary through turbines at controlled speed -No pollution, spoils view, habitats destroyed,reliable29
16302901340Bio-fuels-Created from either plant products or animal dung. They can be solid, liquid or gas and burnt to produce electricity or run cars -Carbon neutral,reliable,cost to refine them is high,large forests cleared30
16302981098ResistanceThe greater the resistance across a component, the smaller the current that flows through it31
16303054255Charge =current x time32
16303086082Bulb33
16303105496Fuse34
16303113699LED35
16303121838Resistor36
16303133321Variable resistor37
16303140094Ammeter38
16303150911Voltmeter39
16303161434Diode40
16303177912LDR-Dependent on intensity of light -Bright light, resistance falls41
16303188603Thermistor-Temp dependent resistor -Hot conditions, resistance drops42
16303207742Potential difference =current x resistance43
16303225461Resistance practical1. Attach a crocodile clip to the wire level with 0cm on the ruler 2. Attach 2nd crocodile clip, 10 cm away from first clip, write down the length between 3. Close the switch then record the current through the wire and pd across it 4. Repeat for a number of different lengths 5.Calculate all lengths resistances44
16303349709Ohmic conductor (resistor) graphDirectly proportional45
16303373689Filament lamp graphAs current increases, temp increases so resistance increases. Means less current can flow through pd unit46
16303399965Diode graphCurrent will only flow through in one direction, diode has high resistance in other direction47
16303491771Series circuits-Potential difference is shared -Current is the same everywhere48
16303564230Parallel circuits-Potential difference is the same across all components -Current is shared between branches -If 2 resistors, total resistance is less than resistance of the smallest resistor49
16304448377Neutral wire-Blue --Carries away current -Electric flows out of this wire50
16304477165Live wire-Brown -Provides the alternating potential difference from the mains supply -Electricity flows in through this wire51
16304520846Earth wire-Green and yellow -Protects the wiring and for safety -Stops appliance casing from becoming live52
16304584002Energy transferred =Power x time53
16304602594Energy transferred =Charge flow x potential difference54
16304628706Power =Potential difference x current55
16304663220National grid-Uses high pd and low current -Step up transformer increases pd for efficient transmission -Step down transformer decreases pd for safe and usable levels -Big pylons have huge insulators56
16304759524Density =mass/volume57
16304776028Density of an object practical1. Measure object's mass 2. Submerge it in a eureka can filled with water 3. Water displaced by object will be transferred to measuring cylinder 4. Record volume of water. This is volume of the object. 5. Put it in formula to find density58
16304838338Density of a liquid practical1. Place a measuring cylinder on a balance and zero the balance 2. Pour 10ml of liquid into measuring cylinder and record liquid mass 3. Pour another 10 ml in and record total volume and mass. Repeat until cylinder is full 4. Use density formula for each measurement 5. Take an average of calculated densities59
16304906579Internal energythe sum of the kinetic and potential energies of all particles in the system60
16304967429Specific latent heatAmount of heat needed to change the state of 1 kilo of a substance WITHOUT a change in temperature.61
16304984564Specific latent heat of fusionThe specific latent heat for change between a solid and a liquid.62
16304993130Specific latent heat of vaporisationThe specific latent heat for change between a liquid and a gas.63
16304999420Energy =mass x specific latent heat64
16305044316Plum pudding modelJ.J Thomsons model of an atom, in which he thought electrons were randomly distributed within a positively charged cloud65
16305064416Alpha scattering experimentIn this experiment Rutherford shot alpha particles through a thin sheet of gold and discovered nucleus with positive charge66
16305112006BohrSays that electrons move in circular/definite orbits around the nucleus in energy levels at certain distances from nucleus67
16305122879ChadwickDiscovered the neutron68
16305147305IsotopesAtoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons69
16305154975Alpha particle-2 neutrons and 2 protons -Can only travel few cm and absorbed by sheet of paper -Strongly ionising -Used in smoke detectors70
16305328374Beta particles-Fast moving electron -Moderately ionising -Can travel a few metres and absorbed by sheet of aluminium71
16305374191Gamma rays-Electromagnetic radiation released by nucleus -Travel long distance and penetrate far into materials -Weakly ionising -Absorbed by thick sheets of lead or concrete72
16305450861Alpha decayA nuclear reaction in which an atom emits an alpha particle consisting of two protons and two neutrons. This decreases the atomic number by 2 and the mass number by 4.73
16305513136Beta decayradioactive decay of an atomic nucleus, 1 proton gained 1 neutron lost74
16305587185Half-lifethe time taken for the radioactivity of a specified isotope to fall to half its original value.75
16305638137Irradiationexposure to any form of radiant energy such as light, heat, or x-rays76
16305653240ContaminationUnwanted radioactive atoms get onto or into an object, atoms might decay releasing radiation that may cause you harm77

AP Lang Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
14707315948Anadiplosisrepetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause0
14707319665Epistrophethe repetition of a word at the end of successive clauses or sentences1
14707321468Point of View (POV)the perspective from which a story is told2
14707324862TropeArtful diction; the use of language in a nonliteral way; also called a figure of speech.3
14707328867Unreliable Narratoran untrustworthy or naive commentator on events and characters in a story4
14707332306Zeugmaa figure of speech in which a word applies to two others in different senses5

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