SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
SAT Subject Test: hysics
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
sat
,
science
,
physics
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. In the graphical representation of vectors - the tip of the arrow is the pointy end.
Frequency
Photoelectric effect
Newton's Third Law
Tip
2. A pendulum consists of a bob connected to a rod or rope. At small angles - a pendulum's motion approximates simple harmonic motion as it swings back and forth without friction.
Coefficient of kinetic friction
Gamma decay
Pendulum
Coherent light
3. Defined as the rate at which work is done - or the rate at which energy is transformed. P is measured in joules per second (J/s) - or watts (W).
Electromagnetic wave
Centripetal force
Power
Mass number
4. A pulley is a simple machine that consists of a rope that slides around a disk or block.
Pulley
Nuclear fission
Convection
Gold foil experiment
5. An object that retains its overall shape - meaning that the particles that make up the rigid body stay in the same position relative to one another.
Motional emf
Rigid body
Weber
Doppler shift
6. Essentially a restatement of energy conservation - it states that the change in the internal energy of a system is equal to the heat added plus the work done on the system.
Centripetal acceleration
First Law of Thermodynamics
Focal point
Scalar
7. The experience of being in free fall. If you are in a satellite - elevator - or other free-falling object - then you have a weight of zero Newtons relative to that object.
Amplitude
Conservation of momentum
Weightlessness
Velocity
8. There are a few versions of this law. One is that heat flows spontaneously from hot to cold - but not in the reverse direction. Another is that there is no such thing as a 100% efficient heat engine. A third states that the entropy - or disorder - of
Ideal gas law
Equilibrium
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Principal axis
9. The angle between a reflected ray and the normal.
Electric generator
Angle of reflection
Constant of proportionality
Law of conservation of energy
10. For a reflected light ray - . In other words - a ray of light reflects of a surface in the same plane as the incident ray and the normal - and at an angle to the normal that is equal to the angle between the incident ray and the normal.
Heat engine
Rotational motion
Law of reflection
Spring
11. For a gas held at constant pressure - temperature and volume are directly proportional.
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
12. In oscillation - a cycle occurs when an object undergoing oscillatory motion completes a "round-trip." For instance - a pendulum bob released at angle has completed one cycle when it swings to and then back to again. In period motion - a cycle is the
Static friction
Polarization
Potential energy
Cycle
13. A rigid body's resistance to being rotated. The moment of inertia for a single particle is MR2 - where M is the mass of the rigid body and R is the distance to the rotation axis. For rigid bodies - calculating the moment of inertia is more complicate
Alpha decay
Moment of inertia
Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics
Wave speed
14. The straight line that runs through the focal point and the vertex of a mirror or lens.
Principal axis
Coefficient of static friction
Radioactive decay
Momentum
15. The speed at which a wave crest or trough propagates. Note that this is not the speed at which the actual medium (like the stretched string or the air particles) moves.
Temperature
Nuclear fission
Doppler shift
Wave speed
16. A transfer of thermal energy. We don't speak about systems "having" heat - but about their "transferring" heat - much in the way that dynamical systems don't "have" work - but rather "do" work.
Heat
Newton's Second Law
Momentum
Boyle's Law
17. A collision in which momentum is conserved but kinetic energy is not.
Deposition
Inelastic collision
Optics
Gamma decay
18. The principle by which the displacements from different waves traveling in the same medium add up. Superposition is the basis for interference.
Superposition
Principal axis
Oscillation
Thermal energy
19. The longest side of a right triangle - opposite to the right angle.
Hypotenuse
Inertia
Transformer
Focal length
20. The square of the amplitude of a sound wave is called the sound's loudness - or volume.
Magnetic flux
Specific heat
Spring
Loudness
21. A small particle-like bundle of electromagnetic radiation.
Dynamics
Motional emf
Photon
Latent heat of sublimation
22. An area of high air pressure that acts as the wave crest for sound waves. The spacing between successive compressions is the wavelength of sound - and the number of successive areas of compression that arrive at the ear per second is the frequency -
Compression
Real image
Boiling point
Latent heat of vaporization
23. The amount of heat necessary for a material undergoing sublimation to make a phase change from gas to solid or solid to gas - without a change in temperature.
Inclined plane
Latent heat of sublimation
Spring constant
Atomic number
24. A scalar quantity that tells us how fast an object is moving. It measures the rate of change in distance over time. Speed is to be contrasted with velocity in that there is no direction associated with speed.
Cosine
Frequency
Coefficient of volume expansion
Speed
25. A scale for measuring temperature - defined such that 0K is the lowest theoretical temperature a material can have. 273K = 0ºC.
Kelvin
Angle of refraction
Work
Convex lens
26. The units of frequency - defined as inverse-seconds (1 Hz = 1 s-1). "Hertz" can be used interchangeably with "cycles per second."
Specific heat
Hertz (Hz)
Kinetic friction
Uncertainty principle
27. The force between two surfaces that are not moving relative to one another. The force of static friction is parallel to the plane of contact between the two objects and resists the force pushing or pulling on the object.
Static friction
Threshold frequency
Angular frequency
Frictional force
28. Waves in which the medium moves in the direction perpendicular to the propagation of the wave. Waves on a stretched string - water waves - and electromagnetic waves are all examples of transverse waves.
Constructive interference
Reflect
Boyle's Law
Transverse waves
29. Any vector can be expressed as the sum of two mutually perpendicular component vectors. Usually - but not always - these components are multiples of the basis vectors - and ; that is - vectors along the x-axis and y-axis. We define these two vectors
Component
Vector
Third Law of Thermodynamics
Spectroscope
30. In an interference or diffraction pattern - the places where there is the most light.
Nuclear fission
Torque
Maxima
Law of conservation of energy
31. A unit of force: 1 N is equivalent to a 1 kg · m/s2.
Amplitude
Harmonic series
Newton
Radioactivity
32. Energy cannot be made or destroyed; energy can only be changed from one place to another or from one form to another.
Center of mass
Law of conservation of energy
Right-hand rule
Heat
33. A unit of measurement for energy on atomic levels. 1 eV = J.
Electronvolt
Conservation of momentum
Loudness
Snell's Law
34. A collision in which the colliding particles stick together.
Completely inelastic collision
De Broglie wavelength
Superposition
Kelvin
35. The amplification of one wave by another - identical wave of the same sign. Two constructively interfering waves are said to be "in phase."
Constructive interference
Hypotenuse
Pitch
Velocity
36. The five equations used to solve problems in kinematics in one dimension with uniform acceleration.
Kinematic equations
Concave mirror
Heat transfer
Atomic number
37. A means of defining the direction of the cross product vector. To define the direction of the vector - position your right hand so that your fingers point in the direction of A - and then curl them around so that they point in the direction of B. Th
Unit vector
Cross product
Right-hand rule
Pascals
38. Also called a diverging lens - a lens that is thinner in the middle than at the edges. Concave lenses refract light away from a focal point.
Vector
Specific heat
Scalar
Concave lens
39. The motion of a body in a circular path with constant speed.
Diffraction grating
Pitch
Isolated system
Uniform circular motion
40. A constant in the numerator of a formula.
Polarization
Constant of proportionality
Equilibrium
Total internal reflection
41. The points on a standing wave where total destructive interference causes the medium to remain fixed at its equilibrium position.
Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics
Decay constant
Ground state
Node
42. The cancellation of one wave by another wave that is exactly out of phase with the first. Despite the dramatic name of this phenomenon - nothing is "destroyed" by this interference—the two waves emerge intact once they have passed each other.
Rotational kinetic energy
Optics
Ideal gas law
Destructive interference
43. The building blocks of all matter - quarks are the constituent parts of protons - neutrons - and mesons.
Diffraction grating
Center of mass
Thermal energy
Quark
44. A coefficient that tells how much the volume of a solid will change when it is heated or cooled.
Coefficient of volume expansion
Scalar
Translational motion
Rotational motion
45. The energy of the molecules that make up an object. It is related to heat - which is the amount of energy transferred from one object to another object that is a different temperature.
Thermal energy
Standing wave
Work
Equilibrium position
46. A nuclear reaction in which a high-energy neutron bombards a heavy - unstable atomic nucleus - causing it to split into two smaller nuclei - and releasing some neutrons and a vast amount of energy at the same time
Hertz (Hz)
Nuclear fission
Mole
Tip
47. A machine that operates by taking heat from a hot place - doing some work with that heat - and then exhausting the rest of the heat into a cool place. The internal combustion engine of a car is an example of a heat engine.
Uniform circular motion
Heat engine
Absolute zero
Kinematics
48. When objects collide - each object feels a force for a short amount of time. This force imparts an impulse - or changes the momentum of each of the colliding objects. The momentum of a system is conserved in all kinds of collisions. Kinetic energy is
Completely inelastic collision
Centripetal acceleration
Collision
Bohr atomic model
49. With spherical mirrors - the center of the sphere of which the mirror is a part. All of the normals pass through it.
Radian
Center of curvature
Translational motion
Spring
50. A system with many parts in periodic - or repetitive - motion. The oscillations in one part cause vibrations in nearby parts.
Angular momentum
Photoelectric effect
Latent heat of fusion
Wave