Unit 4 High-Yield Topics
Free resource by Flowxiom — Edexcel A-level Physics
Not everything. Just what’s on the paper. High-frequency topics only — covering ~80% of exam marks.
Edexcel A-level Physics | Fields, Capacitors & Particles | WPH14 & WPH15
Topic 1: Capacitor Discharge (Exponential Decay)
Question types: Exponential equation calculation, ln graph linearisation, reading time constant.
Key Formulae
\[Q = Q_0 e^{-t/RC} \qquad V = V_0 e^{-t/RC} \qquad I = I_0 e^{-t/RC}\]
Time constant: \(\tau = RC\)
After one time constant \(\tau\), charge/voltage/current falls to 37% of its initial value (63% lost).
Logarithmic Linearisation (essential for practical questions)
Taking \(\ln\) of \(V = V_0 e^{-t/RC}\):
\[\ln V = \ln V_0 – \frac{1}{RC} \cdot t\]
Plot \(\ln V\) against \(t\):
- Gradient \(= -1/RC\) (use to find \(C\) or \(R\))
- y-intercept \(= \ln V_0\)
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Time constant: value falls TO 37%, not BY 37%
- ❌ Gradient is negative; \(RC = -1/\text{gradient}\)
- ❌ Charging and discharging curves go in opposite directions
Topic 2: Electromagnetic Induction
Question types: Determine direction of induced current; calculate induced e.m.f.; Lenz’s law explanation (frequent 6-mark).
Faraday’s Law
\[\varepsilon = -N\frac{\Delta\Phi}{\Delta t}\]
Magnitude of induced e.m.f. ∝ rate of change of flux linkage.
Magnetic Flux
\[\Phi = BA\cos\theta\]
- \(\theta\) = angle between B field and the normal to the coil plane
- Coil parallel to B: \(\theta = 90°\), \(\Phi = 0\)
- Coil perpendicular to B: \(\theta = 0°\), \(\Phi = BA\) (maximum)
⚠️ If the question gives the angle between the coil plane and B, use \(\sin\alpha\) not \(\cos\alpha\).
Lenz’s Law Answer Chain (6-mark question)
The induced current flows in a direction such that its magnetic field opposes the change in flux that caused it.
Steps:
State whether flux is increasing or decreasing
By Lenz’s law, the induced field must oppose the change
Use right-hand rule to find current direction
State that this creates a force opposing the motion
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Confusing angle between B and normal (use cos) with angle between B and plane (use sin)
- ❌ Must state WHY — the induced current opposes the change in flux
- ❌ Maximum \(\varepsilon\) occurs when \(\Phi\) is zero (90° phase difference)
Topic 3: Circular Motion
Question types: Identify source of centripetal force; calculate centripetal force, speed, period.
Centripetal Force is Not a New Force
Centripetal force = the resultant force (or component of resultant) directed towards the centre.
| Scenario | Source of centripetal force |
|---|---|
| Satellite orbiting Earth | Gravitational force |
| Car cornering | Static friction |
| Conical pendulum | Horizontal component of tension |
| Top of vertical circle | Weight + normal force (or tension) |
Formulae
\[F = \frac{mv^2}{r} = mr\omega^2 = \frac{4\pi^2 mr}{T^2}\]
⚠️ Do NOT draw centripetal force on a free-body diagram — only draw real forces.
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Centripetal force is not a separate force — do not include it on a free-body diagram
- ❌ At the top of a vertical circle: centripetal force = weight − normal force
Topic 4: Electric Fields
Question types: Point charge fields, work done in uniform field, calculations involving \(E\), \(V\), \(W\).
Key Formulae
\[E = \frac{F}{q} \qquad E = \frac{V}{d} \text{ (uniform)} \qquad E = \frac{Q}{4\pi\varepsilon_0 r^2} \text{ (point charge)}\]
\[W = qV \qquad V = \frac{Q}{4\pi\varepsilon_0 r}\]
Electric Field vs Gravitational Field
| Electric field | Gravitational field | |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Charge \(Q\) | Mass \(M\) |
| Field strength | \(E = Q/4\pi\varepsilon_0 r^2\) | \(g = GM/r^2\) |
| Potential | \(V = Q/4\pi\varepsilon_0 r\) | \(\varphi = -GM/r\) |
| Sign | Positive or negative | Always negative |
Common Mistakes
- ❌ \(d\) = separation between the plates, not distance from one plate
- ❌ Gravitational potential is always negative; electric potential can be positive or negative
Topic 5: Magnetic Force and Charged Particles
Question types: Force direction (Fleming’s left-hand rule), velocity selector, charged particle trajectory.
Force on a Conductor
\[F = BIL\sin\theta\]
Magnetic Force on a Moving Charge
\[F = Bqv\sin\theta\]
Direction: use Fleming’s left-hand rule
(first finger = B field; second finger = conventional current direction; thumb = force)
Velocity Selector (straight-line condition)
\[qE = qvB \implies v = \frac{E}{B}\]
Only particles with speed \(v = E/B\) pass through undeflected — independent of mass and charge.
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Neutrons are uncharged — no magnetic force, trajectory is a straight line
- ❌ Negative charges (e.g. electrons) experience force in the opposite direction to positive charges
Topic 6: Capacitors
Question types: Calculate stored energy, series/parallel equivalent capacitance, effect of changing parameters.
Key Formulae
\[C = \frac{Q}{V} \qquad E_{stored} = \frac{1}{2}QV = \frac{1}{2}CV^2 = \frac{Q^2}{2C}\]
Series vs Parallel (opposite to resistors)
| Capacitors in series | Capacitors in parallel | |
|---|---|---|
| Formula | \(\dfrac{1}{C_{total}} = \dfrac{1}{C_1} + \dfrac{1}{C_2}\) | \(C_{total} = C_1 + C_2\) |
| Result | Total less than smallest | Total greater than largest |
Capacitor combinations are the reverse of resistor combinations.
Changing Parameters
- After disconnecting supply: \(Q\) is fixed. Change \(d\) → \(C\) changes → \(V = Q/C\) changes
- While connected to supply: \(V\) is fixed. Change \(d\) → \(C\) changes → \(Q = CV\) changes
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Capacitor series/parallel rules are the reverse of resistors
- ❌ Choose the correct energy formula based on which quantities are known
- ❌ After disconnecting: \(Q\) is constant, not \(V\)
Topic 7: Electron Acceleration and Deflection in a Magnetic Field
Question types: Calculate electron speed after acceleration; radius of circular path in B field; mass spectrometer.
Electron Accelerated Through p.d. V
\[eV = \frac{1}{2}mv^2 \implies v = \sqrt{\frac{2eV}{m_e}}\]
\(e = 1.6\times10^{-19}\ \text{C}\), \(m_e = 9.11\times10^{-31}\ \text{kg}\)
Circular Motion in Magnetic Field
Lorentz force provides centripetal force:
\[Bqv = \frac{mv^2}{r} \implies r = \frac{mv}{Bq}\]
Larger mass or speed → larger radius; stronger \(B\) or larger charge → smaller radius.
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Proton mass ≈ 1836 × electron mass — do not use the same value
- ❌ Negative particles deflect in the opposite direction to positive charges
- ❌ Magnetic force does no work — it only changes direction, not speed
Topic 8: Particle Physics Fundamentals
Question types: Verify quark composition; use conservation laws to judge reactions; quark explanation of β decay.
Particle Classification
| Class | Subclass | Examples | Composition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hadron | Baryon | Proton, neutron | Three quarks |
| Hadron | Meson | Pion | Quark + antiquark |
| Lepton | — | Electron, neutrino, muon | Fundamental — no substructure |
Quark Charges
- Up quark: charge \(+\frac{2}{3}e\); Down quark: charge \(-\frac{1}{3}e\)
- Proton \(= uud\): \(+\frac{2}{3}+\frac{2}{3}-\frac{1}{3} = +1e\) ✓
- Neutron \(= udd\): \(+\frac{2}{3}-\frac{1}{3}-\frac{1}{3} = 0\) ✓
β⁻ Decay — Quark Explanation
\[d \to u + e^- + \bar{\nu}_e\]
One down quark in a neutron changes to an up quark → neutron becomes a proton + electron + electron antineutrino.
Conservation Laws
| Conserved quantity | Must be conserved |
|---|---|
| Charge | Equal on both sides |
| Baryon number | Equal on both sides |
| Lepton number | Equal on both sides |
Antiparticles have negative baryon/lepton numbers (e.g. antiproton: baryon number = −1).
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Photons are gauge bosons — neither hadrons nor leptons
- ❌ Electron antineutrino has lepton number −1, not +1
- ❌ Check all three conservation laws — charge alone is not sufficient
Topic 9: Alternating Current and Transformers
Question types: Convert between RMS and peak values; transformer turns ratio; power loss in transmission lines.
Peak and RMS Values
\[V_{rms} = \frac{V_0}{\sqrt{2}} \qquad I_{rms} = \frac{I_0}{\sqrt{2}} \qquad P_{mean} = V_{rms} I_{rms} = \frac{1}{2}V_0 I_0\]
RMS value = equivalent d.c. value that produces the same heating effect.
Transformer Equations (ideal)
\[\frac{V_s}{V_p} = \frac{N_s}{N_p} \qquad \frac{I_s}{I_p} = \frac{N_p}{N_s} \qquad V_p I_p = V_s I_s\]
- Step-up: \(N_s > N_p\) → voltage increases, current decreases
- Step-down: \(N_s < N_p\) → voltage decreases, current increases
Power Loss in Transmission
\[P_{loss} = I^2 R_{line}\]
Reason for stepping up voltage: voltage ×\(n\) → current ÷\(n\) → power loss ÷\(n^2\).
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Divide by \(\sqrt{2}\), not by 2
- ❌ Transformers only work with a.c. — not d.c.
- ❌ Step-up transformer: voltage increases, current decreases — power is conserved
- ❌ Use the current in the transmission line, not the current at the load
Practice Questions
Q1. \(C = 500\ \mu\text{F}\), \(R = 10\ \text{k}\Omega\), \(V_0 = 12\ \text{V}\). Find the voltage after one time constant.
Answer
\(\tau = RC = 10000 \times 500\times10^{-6} = 5\ \text{s}\)
\(V = 12 \times e^{-1} = 12 \times 0.37 = \mathbf{4.4\ \text{V}}\)
Q2. A satellite of mass \(m\) has orbital radius \(r\) and period \(T\). State the source of centripetal force and write the expression.
Answer
Source: gravitational force
\(F = \dfrac{GMm}{r^2} = \dfrac{4\pi^2 mr}{T^2}\)
Q3. \(C_1 = 4\ \mu\text{F}\) and \(C_2 = 12\ \mu\text{F}\) in series, connected to \(9\ \text{V}\). Find: (a) equivalent capacitance; (b) total energy stored.
Answer
(a) \(\dfrac{1}{C} = \dfrac{1}{4} + \dfrac{1}{12} = \dfrac{4}{12}\), \(C = \mathbf{3\ \mu\text{F}}\)
(b) \(E = \dfrac{1}{2}CV^2 = \dfrac{1}{2} \times 3\times10^{-6} \times 81 = \mathbf{1.22\times10^{-4}\ \text{J}}\)
Q4. An electron is accelerated through \(3.0\ \text{kV}\), then enters a magnetic field \(B = 0.050\ \text{T}\) perpendicular to its velocity. Find: (a) electron speed; (b) radius of circular path.
Answer
(a) \(v = \sqrt{\dfrac{2eV}{m_e}} = \sqrt{\dfrac{2\times1.6\times10^{-19}\times3000}{9.11\times10^{-31}}} = \mathbf{3.25\times10^7\ \text{m/s}}\)
(b) \(r = \dfrac{m_ev}{eB} = \dfrac{9.11\times10^{-31}\times3.25\times10^7}{1.6\times10^{-19}\times0.050} = \mathbf{3.70\times10^{-3}\ \text{m}}\)
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