Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education
Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education
Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education
com
PHYSICS 0625/21
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) May/June 2018
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*7516764361*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB18 06_0625_21/3RP
© UCLES 2018 [Turn over
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2
cotton
cm 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
When the length of cotton is wound closely around a pen, it goes round six times.
2 When does an object falling vertically through the air reach terminal velocity?
A B
distance distance
0 0
0 time 0 time
C D
speed speed
0 0
0 time 0 time
4 Diagram 1 shows a beam balance. A beaker with a wire loop balances the standard masses.
The beaker is then removed and hung from a spring. The spring extends by 5.0 cm, as in
diagram 2.
diagram 1 diagram 2
beaker with
wire loop
attached
The experiment is repeated with the same apparatus on the Moon, where the acceleration of free
fall is less than on Earth.
A The beam balance is balanced and the spring extends by 5.0 cm.
B The beam balance is balanced and the spring extends by less than 5.0 cm.
C The right-hand balance pan is higher and the spring extends by 5.0 cm.
D The right-hand balance pan is higher and the spring extends by less than 5.0 cm.
5 An object always has mass but does not always have weight.
What must be present and acting on the mass for it to have weight?
A a gravitational field
B a set of scales
C displaced water
D friction due to air resistance
6 A force acting on a moving ball causes its motion to change. This force stays constant.
What makes the force produce a greater change in the motion of the ball?
balloon
45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5
P
cm
mass
The balloon is filled with helium, a gas less dense than air, so that it applies an upward force on
the rod.
8 A car is moving in a straight line on a level road. Its engine provides a forward force on the car. A
second force of equal size acts on the car due to resistive forces.
A mass × acceleration
C mass × velocity
D 1
2 × mass × (velocity)2
11 A ball of mass 1.2 kg is dropped from a height of 30 m. As it falls, 25% of its initial gravitational
potential energy is transferred to thermal energy.
What is the kinetic energy of the ball just before it hits the ground?
A 27 J B 90 J C 270 J D 360 J
12 A girl hangs by her hands from a bar in the gymnasium. She pulls herself up until her chin is level
with the bar.
A 6.0 W B 24 W C 60 W D 240 W
13 Four identical beakers are filled with equal volumes of liquids P or Q, as shown. Liquid P is more
dense than liquid Q.
liquid P B liquid Q D
A C
14 An oil tank has a base of area 2.5 m2 and is filled with oil to a depth of 1.2 m.
What is the force exerted on the base of the tank due to the oil?
15 When molecules of a gas rebound from a wall of a container, the wall experiences a pressure.
Which values should she use for the lower fixed point and for the upper fixed point?
17 Which statements about boiling and about evaporation are both correct?
boiling evaporation
A takes place only at the surface takes place only at the surface
B takes place only at the surface takes place throughout the liquid
C takes place throughout the liquid takes place only at the surface
D takes place throughout the liquid takes place throughout the liquid
18 On a cold day, a metal front-door knob X and a similar plastic knob Y are at the same
temperature.
A 2.0 × 10–15 Hz
B 1.3 × 10–2 Hz
C 80 Hz
D 5.0 × 1014 Hz
displacement
B
A C
0
0 distance
21 Scout P signals to scout Q on the other side of a valley by using a mirror to reflect the Sun’s light.
Sun’s
scout P light
mirror
scout Q
A B C D
mirror Sun’s Sun’s Sun’s Sun’s
light light light light
22 A prism is made from transparent plastic. In this plastic, light travels at 0.80 c, where c is its speed
in air. Light enters one face of the prism at right-angles as shown.
NOT TO
SCALE
The light just escapes from the sloping face of the prism.
What is angle θ ?
Which range of frequencies can be heard both by humans with good hearing and by dolphins?
A 20 Hz–150 Hz
B 20 Hz–150 kHz
C 20 kHz–150 kHz
D 150 Hz–20 kHz
permanent
S N P Q soft iron bar
magnet
end P end Q
A N N
B N S
C S N
D S S
28 A student measures the potential difference across a device and the current in the device.
29 A water heater is connected to a 230 V supply and there is a current of 26 A in the heater. It takes
20 minutes to heat the water to the required temperature.
A B C D
V voltmeter P
X
V voltmeter Q
The sliding connection at point X is moved towards the top of the diagram.
reading on P reading on Q
A decreases decreases
B decreases increases
C increases decreases
D increases increases
33 The diagram represents a digital circuit using a NOR gate and an AND gate.
X NOR
AND
Y
output
A B C D
A A strong magnet that is held stationary near a stationary conductor causes a greater effect
than a weak magnet.
B The effect occurs when a magnet and a conductor are both moved with the same speed and
in the same direction.
C The effect occurs when a magnet is moved away from a nearby conductor.
D The effect only occurs when a magnet is moved towards a conductor.
Which arrow shows the direction of the force acting on the conductor?
S D B N
36 Power losses in transmission cables are reduced by increasing the transmission voltage.
37 In the atomic model, an atom consists of a central mass, orbited by much smaller particles.
orbiting central
particle mass
What is the name of the central mass and of the orbiting particles?
A neutron α-particles
B neutron electrons
C nucleus α-particles
D nucleus electrons
39 The diagram shows emissions from a source passing into the electric field between two charged
plates.
+ + + + + + + + + +
source
– – – – – – – – – –
40 The graph shows how the count rate registered by a counter near to a sample of a radioactive
isotope changes over a period of a few days. The background count rate is 5 counts per minute.
50
count rate
40
counts / minute
30
20
10
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
time / days
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