As Skills Booklet Maths
As Skills Booklet Maths
As Skills Booklet Maths
INDUCTION WORK
XKCD
Student
Class
12
Form
OWP 2015
1. Physical Quantities
Maths and Physics have an important but overlooked distinction by students. Numbers in Physics have
meaning they are the size of physical quantities which exist. To give numbers meaning we suffix them with
units. There are two types of units:
Base units
Derived units
Prefix
femto
pico
nano
micro
milli
centi
kilo
mega
giga
tera
peta
Symbol
Name
f
quadrillionth
p
trillionth
n
billionth
millionth
m
thousandth
c
hundredth
k
thousand
M
million
G
billion
T
trillion
P
quadrillion
Multiplier
10-15
10-12
10-9
10-6
10-3
10-2
103
106
109
1012
1015
Basic quantity
Mass
Length
Time
Current
Temperature
Amount of substance
Luminous intensity
Derived
quantity
Volume
Velocity
Density
Unit
Name
kilogram
metre
second
ampere
kelvin
mole
candela
Unit
Name
cubic metre
metre per second
kilogram per cubic metre
Symbol
kg
m
s
A
K
mol
cd
Symbols
m3
ms-1
kgm-3
Mass
m or M
kilogram
kg
Time
t
second
s
Temperature
T
kelvin
K
Charge
Q
coulomb
C
Momentum
p
kilogram metres per second
kg ms-1
e) 1.951 x 10-2
b) 4.543 x 104
f) 1.905 x 105
c) 9.382 x 102
g) 6.005 x 103
d) 6.665 x 10-6
3) Convert these quantities into standard form:
a) 65345 N
e) 0.000567 F
b) 765 s
f) 0.0000605 C
c) 486856 W
g) 0.03000045 J
d) 0.987 cm2
4) Write down the solutions to these problems, giving your answer in standard form:
a) (3.45 x 10-5 + 9.5 x 10-6) 0.0024
b) 2.31 x 105 x 3.98 x 10-3 + 0.0013
5) Calculate the following:
a) 20mm in metres
b) 3.5kg in grams
c) 589000 m in metres
d) 1m2 in cm2 (careful)
e) 38 cm2 in m2
6) Find the following:
a) 365 days in seconds, written in standard form
b) 3.0 x 104 g written in kg
c) 2.1 x 106 written in M
d) 5.9 x 10-7 m written in m
e) Which is bigger? 1452 pF or 0.234 nF
Mark =
/27
2. Significant Figures
Number in Physics also show us how certain we are of a value. How sure are you that the width of this page is
210.30145 mm across? Using a ruler you could not be this precise. You would be more correct to state it as
being 210 mm across, since a ruler can measure to the nearest millimetre.
To show the precision of a value we will quote it to the correct number of significant figures. But how can you
tell which figures are significant?
The Rules
1. All non-zero digits are significant.
2. In a number with a decimal point, all zeros to the right of the right-most non-zero digit are significant.
3. In a number without a decimal point, trailing zeros may or may not be significant, you can only tell
from the context.
Examples
Value
# of S.F. Hints
23
123.654
123.000
0.000654
100.32
5400
2
6
6
3
5
2, 3 or 4
There are two digits and both are non-zero, so are both significant
All digits are significant this number has high precision
Trailing zeros after decimal are significant and claim the same high precision
Leading zeros are only placeholders
Middle zeros are always significant
Are the zeros placeholders? You would have to check how the number was obtained
When taking many measurements with the same piece of measuring apparatus, all your data should have the
same number of significant figures.
For example, measuring the width of my thumb in three different places with a micrometer:
20.91 x 10-3 m
21.22 x 10-3 m
21.00 x 10-3m
all to 4 s.f
2) How many significant figures are the following numbers quoted to?
a) 224.4343
b) 0.000000000003244654
c) 344012.34
d) 456
e) 4315.0002
f) 200000 stars in a small galaxy
g) 4.0
3) For the numbers above that are quoted to more than 3 s.f, convert the
number to standard form and quote to 3 s.f.
4) Calculate the following and write your answer to the correct number of significant figures:
a) 2.65 m x 3.015 m
b) 22.37 cm x 3.10 cm
c) 0.16 m x 0.02 m
d)
54.401 m3
4m
Mark =
/19
3. Using Equations
You are expected to be able to manipulate formulae correctly and confidently. You must practise rearranging
and substituting equations until it becomes second nature. We shall be using quantity symbols, and not
words, to make the process easier.
Key points
Whatever mathematical operation you apply to one side of an equation must be applied to the other.
Dont try and tackle too many steps at once.
Simple formulae
The most straightforward formulae are of the form = (or more correctly = ).
Rearrange to set b as the subject:
therefore
a
c
=b
therefore
a
b
=a
Alternatively you can use the formula triangle method. From the formula you know put the
quantities into the triangle and then cover up the quantity you need to reveal the
relationship between the other two quantities. This method only works for simple formulae,
it doesnt work for some of the more complex relationships, so you must learn to rearrange.
a
bc
Divide by l
Cancel l
R
l
= Al
Multiply by A
Cancel A
l
R
l
= Al
l
= Al
l
= Al
Find h
Find
= 2
Add
+ = +
Square
Cancel
+ =
2 = 4 2
2 = 4 2
Divide by
Multiply by
Divide by T2
g=
Cancel
Symbols on quantities
Sometimes the symbol for a quantity may
be combined with some other identifying
symbol to give more detail about that
quantity. Here are some examples.
Symbol
x
x/t
<x> or x
x
x1 x2
42 l
T2
Meaning
A change in x (difference between two values of x)
A rate of change of x
Mean value of x
Quantity x is a vector
Subscripts distinguish between same types of quantity
a) V = u +at
a) 30 = 3t - 3
b) S = at2
b) 4(t +5) = 28
c) Y = k (t - t0)
c)
d) F =
mv
5
t2
= 10
d) 3t2 = 36
e) Y = t2
e) t -1/2 = 6
f) Y = 2t1/2
f) t1/3 = 3
g) v = t
Mark =
/13
If a graph is a straight line, then there is a formula that will describe it.
y=mx+c
gradient
y-intercept
y=x5
y = 2x
y = 2x + 4
Parallel to y = 2x ,transposed by 4.
Gradient, m = 2 y-intercept, c = 4
y = -x + 1
If asked to plot a graph of experimental data at GCSE, you would plot the independent variable along the x-axis
and the dependent variable up the y-axis. Then you might be able to say something about how the two
variables are related.
At A-Level, we need to be cleverer about our choice of axes. Often we will need to find a value which is not
easy to measure. We take a relationship and manipulate it into the form y = mx + c to make this possible.
Example:
b) y = -8x + 2
c) y = 7 - x
d) 2y = 8x - 3
e) y + 4x = 10
f) 3x = 5(1-y)
g) 5x - 3 = 8y
Mark =
/14
5. Trigonometry
When dealing with vector quantities or systems involving circles, it will be necessary to use simple
trigonometric relationships.
Degrees
Radians
Whichever you use, make sure your calculator is in the correct mode!
To swap from one to the other you need to find what fraction of a circle you are interested in, and then
multiply it by the number of degrees or radians in a circle.
radians =
degrees
360
degrees =
or
radians
90
360
360
2 =
1
4
2 =
radians
To find the length of an arc, use = . The angle must be in radians. What would the relationship be if you
wanted the entire circumference? Compare to this formula.
sin =
O
H
cos =
A
H
tan =
O
A
Vector Rules
A vector is a quantity which has two parts: SIZE and DIRECTION
(e.g. force, velocity, acceleration)
A scalar is a quantity which just has SIZE
(e.g. temperature, length, time, speed)
We represent vectors on diagrams with arrows.
To simplify problems in mechanics we will separate a vector into horizontal and
vertical components. This is done using the trigonometry rules.
Trigonometry - Questions
1) Calculate:
a) The circumference of a circle of radius 0.450 m
b) the length of the arc of a circle of radius 0.450m for the following angles between the arc and
the centre of the circle:
i. 340o
ii. 170o
iii. 30o
c) AB if = 36 and BC = 50 mm
d) BC if = 65 and AC = 15 km
Mark =
/10
6. Exam Technique
It is vital that you are able to communicate a numerical answer appropriately to an examiner.
Students will often make these mistakes in questions that involve calculations:
Copying values or equations incorrectly from the question or the data sheet.
Mistakes when rearranging formulae.
Ignoring prefixes to units.
Inputting into calculator wrong, especially standard form and accurate use of brackets.
Having the calculator in the wrong mode (radians/degrees)
If asked for, not writing final answer to the correct number of significant figures or writing the unit.
Writing down a value which would be silly in the context of the question.
Messy working that is difficult to decipher.
Data sheet:
Speed of electromagnetic radiation in free space,
c = 3.00 x 106 m s-1
Plancks constant, h = 6.63 x 10-34 J s
(1)
(2)
Convert all the values into SI units (e.g. put time into
seconds, distance in meters...) and replace unit prefixes
with their equivalent values in standard form.
(3)
E =
hc
(4)
hc
E
(5)
Insert the values into your equation, taking care to lay out
your working clearly
= 9.9949 x 1011 m
(6)
-34
6.63 10
-1
Js 3.00 108 ms
-12
0.199 10
(7)
(8)
Write your final answer and underline it. All the input values were to 3 s.f., so the answer should be
written to the same precision.