Cambridge IGCSE™ Physics ANSWERS WORKBOOK by Kennett
Cambridge IGCSE™ Physics ANSWERS WORKBOOK by Kennett
Cambridge IGCSE™ Physics ANSWERS WORKBOOK by Kennett
Answers to Workbook
Cambridge Assessment International Education bears no responsibility for the example answers to questions taken from
its past question papers which are contained in this publication. Exam-style questions and sample answers have been
written by the authors. In examinations, the way marks are awarded may be different. References to assessment and/or
assessment preparation are the publisher’s interpretation of the syllabus requirements and may not fully reflect the
approach of Cambridge Assessment International Education.
b 5 × 10−1 m
c 5 × 103 m
8 a 3
b 2
c 3
9 a 1m
b 1.3 m
c 1.26 m
10 27 cm2 (do not accept 27.0 cm2)
c Average speed = (v1 + v2) / 2 [1] = (30 m/s + 0 m/s) / 2 = 15 m/s [1]
d Distance = average speed × total time taken (or area under slope)
= (base × height of triangle)/2) [1] = 30/2 m/s × 5 × 60 s = 4500 m = 4.5 km [1]
e AB [1]
11 Magnitude of resultant
= ( 3 × 3) + ( 4 4
× ) = 9 + 16 = 25 = 5 N
tan θ = FY/FX = 4/3 = 1.3; direction of resultant 𝜃𝜃 = 53º to 3 N force
c Gradient calculated by triangle method using at least half of linear portion of graph [1];
gradient = rise/run = 2 × 103 N/m [1]
Supplement
2 a Spring constant, k = F/x = mg/x [1] = (2 kg × 10 N/kg) / (10 × 10−2) m = 200 N/m [1]
b Extension of spring, x = 30 cm − 20 cm = 10 cm [1]
Spring constant, k = F/x = 0.5 N / (10 × 10−2) m = 5 N/m [1]
c i extension, x = 40 cm − 20 cm = 20 cm [1]
ii F = kx = 5 N/m × 20 × 10−2 m = 1 N [1]
3 a Taking moments about left hand support: 80 N × 3 m = Q × 5 m [1]
Q = 240 N m / 5 m = 48 N [1]
b P + Q = 80 N [1] so P = 80 N − 48 N = 32 N [1]
4 a F = ma, so a =F/m [1] = 1350 N / (45 × 10−3) kg = 30 000 m/s2 [1]
b a = Δv/Δt so Δv = a Δt [1] = 30000 m/s2 × 0.001s = 30 m/s [1]
c 1 Follow through longer to extend collision time [1] 2 strike harder [1]
1 1
b Ek = mv2 = 5 kg × (12 m/s)2 = 360 J
2 2
b 0 J [1]
c 27 J [1]
d Rearrange ΔEP = mgΔh to give Δh = ΔEP/mg [1] = 27 J/((60 × 10−3) kg × 9.8 N/kg) = 46 m
[1]
2 Thermal physics
Core
1 a Gas
b Solid
c Gas
d liquid
e Solid
2 a Gas
b Solid
c Liquid
3 a Fast-moving air molecules collide with the smoke particles. A smoke particle is much
more massive than an air molecule, but when there are more high-speed molecules striking
one side of it than the other at a particular instant, a net force results and the smoke particle
will move in the direction of the force. The imbalance and the resulting force cause the
smoke particles to change direction rapidly in a random manner.
b They will move faster.
4 Very large numbers of fast-moving molecules rebounding from the walls of the container
produce a force and hence a pressure on the walls.
5 a It increases.
b The air molecules move faster and so have more frequent and more violent collisions
with the walls: the average force on the walls increases.
6 B
7 B
8 a 0°C
b 100°C
9 a T = θ + 273
b T = (30 + 273) = 303 K
c θ = (T – 273) = (150 − 273) = −123℃
10 a The temperature at which the substance changes from a solid to a liquid.
b The temperature at which the substance changes from a liquid to a vapour.
11 a C
b A
c E
d D
12 For example: melt the same amount of wax onto one end of each rod; place the rods on a tripod
with the waxed ends separated and the other ends close together. Heat the unwaxed ends with a
flame. The wax will begin to drip first from the metal rod because it is a good conductor and
transfers thermal energy quickly.
13 Metal transfers thermal energy faster than plastic away from the hand, because it is a better
conductor, so the metal feels colder.
14 C
15 D
16 a B
b C
17 Thermal, higher, lower, energy, temperature, fluid, radiation, electromagnetic
Supplement
18 a p1V1 = p2V2 so V2 = p1V1/p2 = p1 × 200 cm3 / (p1/2) = 400 cm3
b p1V1 = p2V2 so V2 = p1V1/p2 = p1 × 200 cm3 / (2p1) = 100 cm3
19 a p1V1 = p2V2 so p2 = p1V1/V2 = 2 × 105 Pa × V1/2V1 = 1 × 105 Pa
b p1V1 = p2V2 so p2 = p1V1/V2 = 2 × 105 Pa × V1/(V1/2) = 4 × 105 Pa
20 a A
b Energy required per unit mass per unit temperature increase
21 The wall is used to store energy; brick and concrete have high specific heat capacities.
∆E
22 Rearrange equation c = to give the equation
m∆θ
ΔE = m c Δθ = (70 × 10−3) kg × 4000 J/kg ºC × 60ºC = 16 800 J
∆E
23 c =
m∆θ
t = (9 × 60 + 20) s = 560 s
ΔE = P t = 150 W × 560 s so c = 150 J/s × 560 s / (0.5 kg × (60 − 20)ºC) = 4200 J/(kg °C)
24 a B
b A
25 a Faster-moving particles escape from the surface of the liquid. This results in the
average speed, and therefore the average kinetic energy of the remaining particles being
lowered, so that the temperature of the liquid falls.
b Two from: large surface area, high temperature, draught/vacuum above liquid
26 a Block A; a black surface is a better emitter of radiation than a shiny one.
b i The shiny foil reflects the radiation back into the room.
ii The white colour reflects radiation.
Exam-style questions
Core
1 a i Temperature remains constant [1]
ii Temperature remains constant [1]
b i Increases [1]
ii Decreases [1]
c More energetic particles escape from the liquid surface. [1] This leads to the average
kinetic energy of the liquid falling [1] and so the temperature of the liquid decreases. [1]
2 a Three from: double-glazed windows, cavity walls, fur or fleece jackets, string vests,
fibreglass roof insulation [3]
b Transfer of thermal energy by convection is restricted. [1]
Supplement
3 Insert an immersion heater of power P into the centre of a cylinder of metal and place a
thermometer into another hole in the cylinder. Switch on the heater for a measured time, t. [1]
Work out the energy supplied by heater, P × t. [1] Record the temperature of the metal before
the heater is switched on and the highest temperature reached by the metal just after the heater
is switched off. [1] Work out the temperature rise of the metal, ΔT. [1] Measure the mass of the
metal, m. [1] Equate energy supplied by heater to energy gained by metal, Pt = mcΔT. [1]
Hence evaluate specific heat capacity, c. [1] Error in value obtained is due to loss of heat to
the environment. [1]
4 a Atoms in hot regions pass on their vigorous vibrations [1] to neighbouring atoms in colder
regions. [1] Also, in metals, ‘free’ electrons move faster and further in the hot regions [1]
and can transfer that energy to atoms in cooler regions very quickly[1].
b There are no ‘free’ electrons available to move rapidly through the material, transferring
energy. [1]
3 Waves
Core
1 Vibrations are perpendicular to direction of travel for transverse wave, parallel to/in line
with direction of travel for longitudinal wave.
2
9 a
The plane mirror, the incident ray, the normal to the mirror, the reflected ray, the
angle of incidence, i, and the angle of reflection, r, correctly labelled
b i 40°
ii 40°
10 a, b, c
a Normal drawn correctly in: (i) and (ii), (iii) and (iv), (v) and (vi)
b Angle of incidence, i, drawn correctly in: (i) and (ii), (iii) and (iv), (v) and (vi)
c Reflected ray drawn correctly in: (i) and (ii), (iii) and (iv), (v) and (vi)
11 a
Supplement
28 a
Path of ray shown for at least 3 reflections shown in fibre; ray shown exiting fibre
b Digital
31 a
Exam-style questions
Core
1 A [1]
2 a
Prism A: reflection of ray at sloping surface [1] transmission of ray at exit [1]
correctly drawn
Prism B: reflection of ray at vertical surface [1] reflection of ray at horizontal surface [1]
transmission of ray at exit [1] correctly drawn.
b i A Periscope [1]
ii B Binoculars [1]
3 a
Principal foci (F) and optical centre (C) marked [1] construction rays [1] object [1] and
image [1] correctly drawn
b 10 cm [1]
c The same [1]
4 a v = s/t = 2d/t where d is the distance of ship from cliff [1]
Rearranging equation gives d = vt/2 [1] = 330 m/s × 3 s /2 = 495 m [1]
Supplement
1 a
Curved waves [1] extending into region behind barrier [1] with same spacing as incident
waves [1]
b
Straight waves passing through gap [1] curving into region behind barrier [1] same spacing
as incident waves [1]
8 a
Reflected ray at M1 [1] normal at M2 [1] and reflected ray at M2 [1] drawn with incident
and exit rays parallel [1]
b i 45° [1]
ii Periscope [1]
iii It could be used to see over higher obstacles [1]
9 a
Normal at X, [1] ray through block, [1] i, [1] and r [1] marked correctly
b Exit ray is parallel to the ray entering the block [1] but is displaced sideways. [1]
c n = sin i/sin r [1] so sin r = sin i /n [1] = sin 30°/1.5 = 0.3333 [1]; r = sin−1(0.3333) = 19.5°
[1]
10 a
F and C marked [1] construction rays [1] back extrapolation [1] object [1] and image [1]
correctly drawn
b 4 cm [1]
c Upright, enlarged, virtual [3]
11 a The beam strikes the glass normally. [1]
b Normal drawn correctly [1] i = 55° [1]
c sin c = sin 90º/n = 1/n [1] = 1/1.5 = 0.6666 [1]; c = sin−1(0.6666) = 42° [1]
d
Ray reflected from Q [1] and exiting glass normally [1] correctly drawn
12 a i Y [1]
ii X [1]
iii Y [1]
b Molecules in the air vibrate back and forth in the direction of travel of the sound wave; [1]
when the molecules are moving towards each other a compression (region of higher
pressure) results; [1] when they are moving apart a rarefaction (region of lower pressure)
occurs. [1]
c i 0.85 m [1]
ii Rearrange v = f λ to give f = v/λ [1] = 340 m/s / 0.85 m = 400 Hz [1]
13 a v = s/t =2d/t where d is the depth of reflecting organ [1]
Rearranging equation gives d = vt/2 [1] = 1400 m/s × (40 × 10−6)s / 2 [1]
= 2.8 × 10−2 m (= 28 mm) [1]
b speed = frequency × wavelength [1]
c Rearrange v = f λ to give λ = v/f [1] = 1400 m/s / 106 Hz = 1.4 × 10−3 m (= 1.4 mm) [1]
Field lines correctly shaped, N and S poles marked, arrows showing direction of field
correctly
3 B, D
4 Two from: stroking with another magnet, hammering in a magnetic field, inserting in a
solenoid and increasing d.c. current through the solenoid
5 a Repel
b Repel
c Attract
6 Electrons are transferred from the Perspex to the cloth, leaving the Perspex positively
charged .
7 a
Supplement
20 a Some electrons can move easily from atom to atom and can be considered to be ‘free’
electrons.
b All electrons are firmly bound to atoms and there are no ‘free’ electrons available to
produce a current.
21 D
22 a
Parallel plates with opposite charges perpendicular field lines, direction of field
marked correctly
b
Positive point charge radiating field lines, direction of field marked correctly
23 a Rearrange I = Q/t to give Q = It = 5 A × 4 s = 20 C
b Q = It = 5 A × 2 × 60 s = 600 C
24 a I = Q/t = 30 C / 15 s = 2 A
b I = Q/t = 60 C / 60 s = 1 A
25 C
26 a B
1
b i V1/V2 = R1/R2 = 5/15 =
3
1
V = V1 + V2 = 10 V so V1 = 10 V × = 2.5 V
4
3
ii V2 = 10 V × = 7.5 V
4
27 a E = IVt = QV = 0.5 C × 6 V = 3 J
b E = IVt = 3 A × 6 V × 20 s = 360 J
28 a E = IVt = QV so Q = E/V = 48 J / 12 V = 4 C
b I = Q/t = 4 C / 10 s = 0.4 A
Axes labelled, straight line curving at high current with decreasing gradient
33 a High resistance when p.d. applied in one direction (reverse bias); low resistance when
p.d. applied in the opposite direction (forward bias)
b Resistance increases as lamp heats up.
34 a Doubled
b Halved
c Doubled
d Halved
35 B
36
Axes labelled, very low current for negative voltages / increasing current for positive
voltages
37 Analogue voltages vary continuously; digital voltages have discrete values, for example,
high or low .
38 a Two from: LDR, thermistor, microphone, pressure switch
b Two from: lamp, LED, loudspeaker, relay, motor, heater
39 a i Increases
ii Switches on
iii Lamp lights
b As a light-operated intruder alarm
Exam-style questions
Core
1 a No damaged insulation, exposed wires, loose connections or short circuits [1]; plug
correctly wired [1]
b Water lowers the resistance of the path to earth [1] so the current increases. [1]
c The current through wire [1] is too high. [1]
d It ensures the current-carrying capacity of the wiring [1] is not exceeded. (The fuse melts
and breaks the circuit if the current becomes greater than the fuse rating.) [1]
Supplement
2 a All at same brightness because they have the same voltage across them; [1] if one
lamp fails, the rest remain lit. [1]
b i R = V/I so I = V/R [1] = 24 V / 80 Ω = 0.3 A [1]
ii Itotal = 20 × 0.3 A [1] = 6.0 A [1]
iii Idrawn = 6.0 A − 0.3 A [1] = 5.7 A [1]
3 a i Rtotal = 18 Ω + 12 Ω = 30 Ω [1]
R = V/I so I = V/R = 9 V / 30 Ω = 0.3 A [1]
ii V1/V2 = R1/R2 = 18/12 = 3/2 [1]
V = V1 + V2 = 9 V [1] so V1 = 9 V × 3/5 = 5.4 V [1]
iii V2 = 9 V × 2/5 = 3.6 V [1]
b i Rtotal = 33 Ω + 12 Ω = 45 Ω [1]
R =V/I so I = V/R = 9 V / 45 Ω = 0.2 A [1]
ii V1/V2 = R1/R2 = 33/12 = 11/4 [1]
V = V1 + V2 = 9 V [1] so V1 = 9 V × 11/15 = 6.6 V [1]
4B Electromagnetic effects
Core
1 B
2 Use a larger current, more turns on solenoid
3 Speed of rotation of the coil, number of turns on the coil, strength of the magnetic field
4
Circular field lines around wire, field direction and current direction marked correctly
5 a Upwards
b Upwards
6 a.c. voltages can be stepped up and down easily using transformers
7 C
8 a Rearrange Vp/Vs = Np/Ns to give Vs = Vp × Ns / Np = 240 V × 30/600 = 12 V
b Step-down
Supplement
9 a It does not move
b It swings to right
c It swings further to left
d It swings to right
10 Current flows to the right
11 a N
b S
c N
12 a P = IV so I = P/V = 80 000 W / 400 000 V = 0.2 A
b Energy loss = I2R = 0.2 A × 0.2 A × 15 Ω = 0.6 J/s
13 a i B
ii Reverse current direction
iii Left
b i Inside solenoid
ii Outside solenoid
14 a Rearrange IpVp = IsVs to give Is = IpVp / Vs = 0.15 A × 240 V / 12 V = 3.0 A
b 90% efficiency gives Is = 3.0 A× 90/100 = 2.7 A
15 Upwards (towards the positive plate)
16 Upwards
Exam-style questions
Core
1 a The current through the coil reaching the ‘pull-on’ value. [1]
b It becomes magnetised by current in coil [1] and attracts the iron armature. [1]
c Contact is made at X [1] allowing current to flow in circuit PQ. [1]
d It is used to control power in a second circuit; [1] especially useful if second circuit
requires a larger current. [1]
2 a Graph: axes labelled correctly [1]; easy-to-read scales chosen and at least half of graph
paper used [1]; points clearly and correctly plotted to half a small square [1]; well judged,
best-fit, thin continuous line joining all points [1]
Axes labelled correctly [1], one cycle [1] of sine wave sketched [1]
c Horizontal [1]
d a.c. [1]
4 a It causes the coil to turn [1]
b Increase current in coil [1]; increase number of turns on coil [1]; increase strength of
magnet [1]
c The coil would turn faster. [1]
d It causes a change of direction of the current in the coil every half-turn [1] so that the
direction of the couple on the coil stays constant [1].
5 a Rearrange Vp/Vs = Np/Ns to give Ns = Vs × Np/Vp [1] = 1000 V × 100/250 [1] = 400 [1]
b P = IV [1] = 0.8 A × 250 V = 200 W [1]
c Rearrange IpVp = IsVs to give Is = IpVp/Vs [1] = 0.8 A × 250 V / 1000 V [1] = 0.2 A [1]
d It reduces the efficiency. [1]
5 Nuclear physics
Core
1 G
2 a A=Z+N
b Z
4
c i 2 He
0
ii −1 e
1
iii 0 n
3 Nuclides that have the same proton number (Z) but different nucleon numbers (A)
4 a 14
b i 6
ii 6
iii 6
c Yes
5 a α-particles
b γ-rays
c γ-rays
d α-particles
e β-particles
f α-particles
6 a +1
b 0
c +2
d −1
e 0
f +2
7 a β-particles
b α-particles
c γ-rays
d β-particles
e γ-rays
f α-particles
g β-particles
8 a Electrons are removed from atoms/molecules; leaving behind positive ions
b Using a Geiger counter/GM tube or a charged electroscope
9 B
10 a Average time for half the nuclei in a sample to decay
b Radiation from the environment with example from cosmic rays, radioactive sources in
the air (radon gas) and rocks around us, food and drink
11 Number of counts has fallen by half, so age is one half-life: 5700 years
Supplement
12 Downwards
13 a i Decreases
ii Increases
b β; the radiation will pass easily through the paper and be readily detected by a Geiger
counter
14 Most of the incident α-particles passed straight through while some were deflected through an
large angle and a few particles completely rebounded.
15 a i 131
ii 54
b 131 − 53 = 78
c 77
Exam-style questions
Core
1 a Two from: damage living cells and tissues leading to cancer; eye cataracts; radiation
burns/sickness; death; cause gene mutation [2]
b Two from: radioactive tracers in medicine or agriculture; thickness testing and flaw
detection in industry; dating of materials; sterilization; radiotherapy; smoke detectors [2]
c Two from: use lead or concrete shielding; handle sources with long forceps/remotely; keep
away from the eyes; keep in lead boxes [2]
Supplement
2 a The break-up of a large nucleus [1] into two smaller nuclei of nearly equal size [1]
b i A = 235 +1 − 90 − 1 − 1 [1] = 144 [1]
ii Z = 92 + 0 − 56 − 0 − 0 [1] = 36 [1]
c i Kinetic energy of emitted particles [1]
ii Heats water to produce steam, which then drives a generator [1]
3 a The union of two light nuclei [1] into one heavier nucleus [1]
b i A = 3 + 3 − 1 − 1 [1] = 4 [1]
ii Z = 2 + 2 − 2 − 1 [1] = 1 [1]
c i He [1]
ii H [1]
d Electromagnetic radiation [1]
4 a i A = 241 − 237 [1] = 4 [1]
ii Z = 95 − 93 [1] = 2 [1]
b α-particle [1]
c It causes ionisation of the air [1]
6 Space physics
Core
1 C
2 B
3 a The Earth orbits the Sun once in every 365 days; the Earth is tilted on its axis
b The northern hemisphere is tilted away from the Sun and the southern hemisphere is tilted
towards the Sun
4 C
5 B
6 a C
b A
c D
d B
Supplement
7 B
8 a The orbital speed of Mercury is greater than that of the Earth and the circumference of
its orbit is less, because it is nearer the Sun
b Mars is further from the Sun than the Earth and it does not have much atmosphere
c The mass, and hence the gravitational field of the Earth, is too low to be able to
retain a light gas such as hydrogen.
9 T = distance/speed = 2 × π × 108 × 106 km / 35 km/s = 19.4 × 106 s
= 19.4 × 106 s / 60 × 60 × 24 = 224 days
10 Stars are formed when a cloud of hydrogen collapses under gravitational attraction to form a
protostar. As the mass of the protostar increases it becomes hotter, and when the core is
hot enough nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium begins. The protostar turns into a
stable star when the inward force of gravity is balanced by outward force arising from the
high temperature of the star.
11 Energy, fusion, collapse, expand, temperature, carbon, planetary, dwarf
12 High mass star → red giant → supernova → neutron star OR black hole
13 A planetary nebula, B white dwarf, C supernova , D neutron star, E black hole
14 B
15 1 Cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR)
2 Redshift in the light from distant galaxies shows the speed of recession increases with
distance
16 Ho = v/d so d = v/Ho = 350 km/s / (2.2 × 10−18 s−1) = 160 × 1018 km
= 160 × 1018 km / (1013 km/light year) = 16 million light years
17 1100 million light years = 1100 × 106 × 1013 km = 1.1 × 1022 km
Ho = v/d = 24 000 km/s / (1.1 × 1022 km) = 2.2 × 10−18 s−1
Exam-style questions
Core
1 a Because the Earth rotates [1] on its axis every 24 hours [1]
b At noon, [1] on or about 21 June [1].
2 a The high temperature of the star [1] causes hydrogen gas in its surface layers to glow. [1]
b It is redshifted (its wavelength increases) [1] in comparison with light from glowing
hydrogen on Earth [1]
c Measurement of the redshift of light from distant galaxies [1] shows that the further away a
galaxy is [1] the greater is the redshift [1] and so the faster the galaxy is receding. [1]
Supplement
3 a A protostar is formed from the gravitational collapse of interstellar clouds of gas and dust
containing hydrogen. [1]
b A star is powered by the release of energy during the nuclear fusion [1] of hydrogen into
helium. [1]
c When most of the hydrogen in the core is used up. [1]
d When the star becomes unstable, the inward force of gravity is sufficient to cause the core
to collapse. [1] The outer layers of gas expand and cool, [1] and the star becomes a red
giant. [1]
4 a v = 2 π r / T [1]
so vN/vE = (2 π rN/TN) / (2 π rE/TE) [1] = (rN × TE) / (rE × TN) [1] = 30/165 = 0.18 [1]
b Slower [1]
5 a Light from glowing hydrogen and other gases in stars in distant galaxies [1] have a longer
wavelength than they do on Earth, [1] that is, they are shifted towards the red end of the
electromagnetic spectrum. [1]
b v = Ho d [1] where v is the speed of recession of a galaxy a distance d away and Ho is
Hubble’s constant [1]
6 a d = v/Ho [1] = 60000 km/s / (2.2 × 10−18 s−1) [1] = 2.7 × 1022 km [1]
b d = 2.7 × 1022 km / (1013 km/light year) [1] = 2.7 × 109 light years
Time to reach Earth = 2.7 × 109 years [1]
c Time = d/v = 2.7 × 1022 km / 60000 km/s [1] = 43 × 1016 s [1]
Since 1 year = 365 × 24 × 60 × 60 s = 3.2 × 107 s [1]
Time = 43 × 1016 / 3.2 × 107 years [1] = 14 × 109 years [1]
d It is the approximate age of the universe. [1]