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 tail of the arrow is the blunt end (the end without a point).
Tail
Compression
Cycle
Efficiency
2. A nuclear reaction that takes place only at very high temperatures. Two light atoms - often hydrogen - fuse together to form a larger single atom - releasing a vast amount of energy in the process.
Phase
Focal point
Nuclear fusion
Electronvolt
3. A wave on a string that is tied to a pole at one end will reflect back toward its source - producing a wave that is the mirror-image of the original and which travels in the opposite direction.
Principal axis
Rarefaction
Instantaneous velocity
Reflect
4. A scale for measuring temperature - defined such that 0K is the lowest theoretical temperature a material can have. 273K = 0ºC.
Dispersion
Kelvin
Gamma decay
Mole
5. A collision in which momentum is conserved but kinetic energy is not.
Inelastic collision
Kepler's First Law
Efficiency
Optics
6. The energy associated with the configuration of bodies attracted to each other by the gravitational force. It is a measure of the amount of work necessary to get the two bodies from a chosen point of reference to their present position. This point of
Snell's Law
Force
Gravitational Potential Energy
Longitudinal waves
7. The points on a standing wave where total destructive interference causes the medium to remain fixed at its equilibrium position.
Frictional force
Node
Tip
De Broglie wavelength
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
Vector
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Gravitational constant
Newton
9. The angle between a reflected ray and the normal.
Pascals
Lenz's Law
Angle of reflection
Specific heat
10. 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
Law of reflection
Nuclear fission
Frequency
Potential energy
11. A body or set of bodies that we choose to analyze as a group.
Coherent light
Electron
Inertia
System
12. The energy of a particle rotating around an axis.
Kepler's Third Law
Focal length
Total internal reflection
Rotational kinetic energy
13. A system that no external net force acts upon. Objects within the system may exert forces upon one another - but they cannot receive any impulse from outside forces. Momentum is conserved in isolated systems.
Meson
Isolated system
Angular momentum
Newton
14. An electromagnetic wave of very high frequency.
Photoelectron
Axis of rotation
Gamma ray
Amplitude
15. Life- The amount of time it takes for one-half of a radioactive sample to decay.
Half
Virtual image
Celsius
Torque
16. The principle by which the displacements from different waves traveling in the same medium add up. Superposition is the basis for interference.
Kepler's Second Law
Total internal reflection
Vertex
Superposition
17. In an interference or diffraction pattern - the places where there is the least light.
Displacement
Beta decay
Minima
Completely inelastic collision
18. The sum of a system's potential and kinetic energy. In many systems - including projectiles - pulleys - pendulums - and motion on frictionless surfaces - mechanical energy is conserved. One important type of problem in which mechanical energy is not
Kinematics
Tip
Mechanical energy
Superposition
19. A coefficient that tells how much the volume of a solid will change when it is heated or cooled.
Torque
Concave mirror
Coefficient of volume expansion
Doppler shift
20. An object is called radioactive if it undergoes radioactive decay.
Total internal reflection
Radioactivity
Superposition
Minima
21. Occurs when every point in the rigid body moves in a circular path around a line called the axis of rotation.
Gold foil experiment
Rotational motion
Optics
Transformer
22. A transverse traveling wave created by the oscillations of an electric field and a magnetic field. Electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light - m/s. Examples include microwaves - X rays - and visible light.
Electromagnetic wave
Boiling point
Coefficient of static friction
Kinetic energy
23. 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
24. When electromagnetic radiation shines upon a metal - the surface of the metal releases energized electrons. The way in which these electrons are released contradicts classical theories of electromagnetic radiation and supports the quantum view accord
Photoelectric effect
Unit vector
Neutron
Amplitude
25. Kinematics is the study and description of the motion of objects.
Kinematics
Nuclear fusion
Rarefaction
Radioactive decay
26. A positively charged particle that - along with the neutron - occupies the nucleus of the atom.
Conduction
Kepler's Second Law
Standing wave
Proton
27. The tendency of an object to remain at a constant velocity - or its resistance to being accelerated. Newton's First Law is alternatively called the Law of Inertia because it describes this tendency.
Electromagnetic spectrum
Kepler's First Law
Inertia
Radius of curvature
28. A vector quantity - or vector - is an object possessing - and fully described by - a magnitude and a direction. Graphically a vector is depicted as an arrow with its magnitude given by the length of the arrow and its direction given by where the arro
Vector
Charles's Law
Pascals
Speed
29. States that the net work done on an object is equal to the object's change in kinetic energy.
Work-energy theorem
Meson
Latent heat of transformation
Mutual Induction
30. F = ma. The net force - F - acting on an object causes the object to accelerate - a. The magnitude of the acceleration is directly proportional to the net force on the object and inversely proportional to the mass - m - of the object.
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
31. The point of a mirror or lens where all light that runs parallel to the principal axis will be focused. Concave mirrors and convex lenses are designed to focus light into the focal point. Convex mirrors and concave lenses focus light away from the fo
Newton's Second Law
Tension force
Diffraction
Focal point
32. The building blocks of all matter - atoms are made up of a nucleus consisting of protons and neutrons - and a number of electrons that orbit the nucleus. An electrically neutral atom has as many protons as it has electrons.
Completely inelastic collision
Atom
Michelson-Morley experiment
System
33. The stable position of a system where the net force acting on the object is zero.
Equilibrium position
Wave
Significant digits
Heat transfer
34. A model for the atom developed in 1913 by Niels Bohr. According to this model - the electrons orbiting a nucleus can only orbit at certain particular radii. Excited electrons may jump to a more distant radii and then return to their ground state - em
Newton's First Law
Sublimation
Bohr atomic model
Work function
35. A vector quantity - - that reflects the change of angular displacement with time - and is typically given in units of rad/s. To find the direction of the angular velocity vector - take your right hand and curl your fingers along the particle or body
Angular velocity
Translational motion
Potential energy
Ideal gas law
36. A measurement of a body's inertia - or resistance to being accelerated.
Cycle
Constant of proportionality
Gravitational Potential Energy
Mass
37. A particle - identical to an electron. Beta particles are ejected from an atom in the process of beta decay.
Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation
Neutrino
Unit vector
Beta particle
38. The amount of energy that metal must absorb before it can release a photoelectron from the metal.
Destructive interference
Acceleration
Work function
Hypotenuse
39. The velocity at any given instant in time. To be contrasted with average velocity - which is a measure of the change in displacement over a given time interval.
Reflected ray
Atom
Instantaneous velocity
Spring constant
40. 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.
Oscillation
Total internal reflection
Destructive interference
Centripetal force
41. 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.
Wave speed
Concave lens
Angle of refraction
Decibel
42. The process by which a gas turns directly into a solid because it cannot exist as a liquid at certain pressures.
Deposition
Focal length
Angular position
Chain reaction
43. The amplification of one wave by another - identical wave of the same sign. Two constructively interfering waves are said to be "in phase."
Work function
Concave lens
Constructive interference
Dynamics
44. The center of a mirror or lens.
Kepler's Second Law
Vertex
Universal gas constant
Gravitational constant
45. For a heat engine - the ratio of work done by the engine to heat intake. Efficiency is never 100%.
Efficiency
Coherent light
Gravitational Potential Energy
Law of reflection
46. If two systems - A and B - are in thermal equilibrium and if B and C are also in thermal equilibrium - then systems A and C are necessarily in thermal equilibrium.
Sine
Faraday's Law
Heat engine
Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics
47. A form of radioactivity where an excited atom releases a photon of gamma radiation - thereby returning to a lower energy state. The atomic structure itself does not change in the course of gamma radiation.
Axis of rotation
Transverse waves
Gamma decay
Concave mirror
48. The number of cycles executed by a system in one second. Frequency is the inverse of period - f = 1/T. Frequency is measured in hertz - Hz.
Speed
Frequency
Kepler's Second Law
Entropy
49. 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 -
Distance
Joule
Compression
Total internal reflection
50. For two given media - the smallest angle of incidence at which total internal reflection occurs.
Critical angle
Mechanical energy
Angular velocity
Distance