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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. The series of standing waves supported by a string with both ends tied down. The first member of the series - called the fundamental - has two nodes at the ends and one anti-node in the middle. The higher harmonics are generated by placing an integra
Cosine
Translational kinetic energy
Tip
Harmonic series
2. The distance between successive wave crests - or troughs. Wavelength is measured in meters and is related to frequency and wave speed by = v/f.
System
Angle of reflection
Wavelength
Energy
3. The application of kinematics to understand why objects move the way they do. More precisely - dynamics is the study of how forces cause motion.
Wave
Dynamics
Superposition
Optics
4. The unit of magnetic flux - equal to one T · m2.
Distance
Torque
Weber
Pendulum
5. The temperature at which a material will change phase from solid to liquid or liquid to solid.
Melting point
Inelastic collision
Wave
Restoring force
6. The force that causes simple harmonic motion. The restoring force is always directed toward an object's equilibrium position.
Heat transfer
Restoring force
Motional emf
Temperature
7. 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.
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8. The particles and energy released by the fission or fusion of one atom may trigger the fission or fusion of further atoms. In a chain reaction - fission or fusion is rapidly transferred to a large number of atoms - releasing tremendous amounts of ene
Translational kinetic energy
Angular position
Frequency
Chain reaction
9. 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.
Isolated system
Cross product
Electron
Weightlessness
10. A wave that interferes with its own reflection so as to produce oscillations which stand still - rather than traveling down the length of the medium. Standing waves on a string with both ends tied down make up the harmonic series.
Kelvin
Standing wave
Pulley
Photon
11. The current induced in a circuit by a change in magnetic flux.
Radioactive decay
Induced current
Half
Dynamics
12. The stable position of a system where the net force acting on the object is zero.
Momentum
Equilibrium position
Conservation of Angular Momentum
Instantaneous velocity
13. With spherical mirrors - the center of the sphere of which the mirror is a part. All of the normals pass through it.
Law of reflection
De Broglie wavelength
Radiation
Center of curvature
14. The amount of error that's possible in a given measurement.
Margin of error
Conservation of Angular Momentum
Angle of refraction
Angular position
15. When dealing with reflection or refraction - the incident ray is the ray of light before it strikes the reflecting or refracting surface.
Incident ray
Heat engine
Uniform circular motion
Reflection
16. The net change - - in a point's angular position - . It is a scalar quantity.
Angular displacement
Tangent
Induced current
Spring constant
17. Energy cannot be made or destroyed; energy can only be changed from one place to another or from one form to another.
Weightlessness
Law of conservation of energy
Ground state
Inversely proportional
18. A quantity that possesses a magnitude but not a direction. Mass and length are common examples.
Scalar
Strong nuclear force
Diffraction
Electromagnetic wave
19. The number of hydrogen atoms in one gram of hydrogen - equal to . When counting the number of molecules in a gas - it is often convenient to count them in moles.
Mole
Beats
Refraction
Heat transfer
20. 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
Right-hand rule
Node
Newton's First Law
Phase
21. The process by which unstable nuclei spontaneously release particles and/or energy so as to come to a more stable arrangement. The most common forms of radioactive decay are alpha decay - beta decay - and gamma decay.
Instantaneous velocity
Radioactive decay
Cross product
Radian
22. The straight line that runs through the focal point and the vertex of a mirror or lens.
Principal axis
Angular period
Doppler shift
Component
23. The lowest theoretical temperature a material can have - where the molecules that make up the material have no kinetic energy. Absolute zero is reached at 0 K or -273º C.
Weak nuclear force
Absolute zero
Conservation of momentum
Mole
24. 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.
Charles's Law
Weightlessness
Restoring force
Kinematics
25. A back-and-forth movement about an equilibrium position. Springs - pendulums - and other oscillators experience harmonic motion.
Oscillation
Newton
Strong nuclear force
Electromagnetic wave
26. In a right triangle - the tangent of a given angle is the length of the side opposite the angle divided by the length of the side adjacent to the triangle.
Proton
Tangent
Newton's First Law
Gold foil experiment
27. The amplification of one wave by another - identical wave of the same sign. Two constructively interfering waves are said to be "in phase."
Displacement
Constructive interference
Thermal equilibrium
Conduction
28. Heat transfer via the mass movement of molecules.
Diffraction
Frictional force
Convection
Loudness
29. 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.
De Broglie wavelength
Basis vector
Lenz's Law
Pendulum
30. Occurs when every point in the rigid body moves in a circular path around a line called the axis of rotation.
Temperature
Rotational motion
Traveling waves
Wave speed
31. A measurement of a body's inertia - or resistance to being accelerated.
Superposition
Photoelectric effect
Mass
Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation
32. A conserved scalar quantity associated with the state or condition of an object or system of objects. We can roughly define energy as the capacity for an object or system to do work. There are many different types of energy - such as kinetic energy -
Energy
Center of curvature
Inertia
Diffraction grating
33. The cosine of an angle in a right triangle is equal to the length of the side adjacent to the angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse.
Transverse waves
Cosine
Kinetic theory of gases
Acceleration
34. Linear momentum - p - commonly called "momentum" for short - is a vector quantity defined as the product of an object's mass - m - and its velocity - v.
Faraday's Law
Momentum
Frequency
Uncertainty principle
35. An area of high air pressure that acts as the wave trough for sound waves. The spacing between successive rarefactions is the wavelength of sound - and the number of successive areas of rarefaction that arrive at the ear per second is the frequency -
Spring
Inertial reference frame
Frequency
Rarefaction
36. The force between two surfaces moving relative to one another. The frictional force is parallel to the plane of contact between the two objects and in the opposite direction of the sliding object's motion.
Specific heat
Minima
Internal energy
Kinetic friction
37. Represented by R = 8.31 J/mol · K - the universal gas constant fits into the ideal gas law so as to relate temperature to the average kinetic energy of gas molecules.
Coefficient of static friction
Motional emf
Electron
Universal gas constant
38. A positively charged particle that - along with the neutron - occupies the nucleus of the atom.
Proton
Electron
Third Law of Thermodynamics
Destructive interference
39. Another word for the frequency of a sound wave.
Concave lens
Pitch
Coherent light
Centripetal force
40. The process by which a solid turns directly into gas - because it cannot exist as a liquid at a certain pressure.
Cosine
Sublimation
Concave mirror
Magnetic flux
41. The force that binds protons and neutrons together in the atomic nucleus.
Right-hand rule
Collision
Strong nuclear force
Free
42. In a right triangle - the sine of a given angle is the length of the side opposite the angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse.
Neutron
Frequency
Velocity
Sine
43. A vector quantity - L - that is the rotational analogue of linear momentum. For a single particle - the angular momentum is the cross product of the particle's displacement from the axis of rotation and the particle's linear momentum - . For a rigid
Instantaneous velocity
Concave lens
Angular momentum
Magnetic flux
44. A collision in which momentum is conserved but kinetic energy is not.
Newton's Third Law
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Directly proportional
Inelastic collision
45. 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.
Angle of reflection
Normal force
Rigid body
Law of reflection
46. Two quantities are inversely proportional if an increase in one results in a proportional decrease in the other - and a decrease in one results in a proportional increase in the other. In a formula defining a certain quantity - those quantities to wh
Virtual image
Electromagnetic spectrum
Radian
Inversely proportional
47. Two oscillators that have the same frequency and amplitude - but reach their maximum displacements at different times - are said to have different phases. Similarly - two waves are in phase if their crests and troughs line up exactly - and they are o
Conservation of momentum
Phase
Calorie
Translational kinetic energy
48. The ray of light that is reflected from a mirror or other reflecting surface.
Hypotenuse
Atomic number
Motional emf
Reflected ray
49. The angle between a reflected ray and the normal.
Inelastic collision
Energy
Angle of reflection
Moment of inertia
50. 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
Bohr atomic model
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Radiation
Electromagnetic spectrum