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Plymstock School P.J.McCormack Lesson 2 ISA Prepara0on

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Plymstock School P.J.McCormack

Lesson  2  -­‐  ISA  Prepara0on    

Resistance  Prac0cal      

Inves0gate  a  factor  that  may  affect  the  resistance  of  a  filament  bulb  

 

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Learning  Outcomes.  By  the  end  of  the  lesson  I  will  be  able  to....    

All..  •  State  the  meaning  of  the  term  resistance  •  State  the  equa;on  for  Ohms  Law  Most…  •  Calculate  the  resistance  of  a  filament  bulb  Some...  •  Explain  how  the  current  and  voltage  affects  the  resistance  of  a  filament  bulb  

   

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Low  

High  Key  Words:                  resistance,                                      current,                                voltage,                          electrons  

29/11/2013

Basic ideas. Electric current is when electrons start to flow around a circuit. We use an _________ to measure it and it is measured in ____.

Potential difference (also called _______) is how big the push on the electrons is. We use a ________ to measure it and it is measured in ______, a unit named after Volta.

Resistance is anything that resists an electric current. It is measured in _____.”

(Words: volts, amps, ohms, voltage, ammeter, voltmeter)

Georg Simon Ohm 1789-1854

Resistance  

Resistance is anything that will RESIST a current. It is measured in Ohms, a unit named after me.

The resistance of a component can be calculated using Ohm’s Law:

Resistance = Voltage (in V)

(in Ω) Current (in A)

V  

I   R  

November  29,  2013  P.J.McCormack  

V  

A  

An  example  ques0on:  

1) What is the resistance across this bulb?

2)  Assuming all the bulbs are the same what is the total resistance in this circuit?

Voltmeter  reads  10V  

Ammeter  reads  2A  

Current  Voltage  &  Resistance  hSp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lp7192oVbzI  

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Current,  Voltage  and  Resistance.  

Equipment  •  12  volt  filament  bulb  •  Bulb  holder  •  Connec;ng  wires  •  Variable  power  supply  •  Ammeter    •  Voltmeter    

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

The  Method  hSp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcmYedpm4Do  

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Method  •  Connect  the  circuit  as  shown  below              •  Switch  on  the  variable  power  supply  to  2V    •  Record  the  readings  on  the  ammeter  and  voltmeter  to  two  decimal  places  the  turn  off  the  variable  power  supply  

•  Calculate  the  resistance  of  the  bulb  by  using  the  equa;on  R  =  V/I  

•  Repeat  the  above  steps  using  4V,  6V,  8V  and  10V  on  the  variable  power  supply  

 

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

November  29,  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Starter  (BoB  Ex.)  Current  

1.  What  is  current?  2.  If  the  current  out  of  the  baSery  is  6A  

what  is  the  current  at  point  B  and  C?  

3.  What  is  voltage?  4.  What  is  Ohms  Law?  

B  

C  

Key  Ques0ons.  1.  What  was  the  independent  variable?  2.  What  was  the  dependent  variable?  3.  What  safety  precau;on  must  you  make?  4.  Name  two  variables  that  you  must  control.  5.  How  would  repea;ng  my  experiment  affect  

my  results?  6.  How  would  comparing  my  results  with  some  

else  improve  my  results?      

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Q1.  Background  Research.    Name  two  sources  that  you  used  for  your  research.  This  can  be  a:    •  Textbook  (men;on  the  publisher)    •  The  internet.  You  need  the  full  web  address  such  as….  

www.rsc.org.uk  /alchemy/limestone    

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Q1.  Background  Research  You  must  explain  which  one  of  your  sources  of  informa;on  is  the  most  useful.    You  must  comment  on  both,  such  as…    Source  1  gave  me  a  complete  method  of  what  to  do.  Source  2  gave  me  informa8on  about  how  solar  cells  work  and  what  affects  how  much  voltage  they  make.      

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Q2.  Control  Variable  and  Preliminary  Test.  

This  is  where  you  plan  what  you  would  do  and  how  it  would  help  you  produce  a  real  plan.    In  this  ques;on  men;on  the  how  the  results  you  gather  would  help  you  such  as…..    I  would  adjust  the  area  by  moving  the  card  1  cm  each  8me  to  see  if  it  made  a  measurable  difference  to  the  voltage,  if  not  I  would  adjust  the  lamp  closer  to  the  solar  cell  so  more  light  hit  the  cell  or  move  the  card  2  cm  at  a  8me.  

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Q3.  The  Plan.  •  Equipment  with  volumes,  sizes  and  amounts  •  Men;on  two  variables  that  must  be  kept  the  same  in  order  to  make  the  inves;ga;on  a  fair  test.  

•  Men;on  the  independent  variable    and  how  this  will  be  varied  and  the  dependent  variable.  

•  Risk  assessment,  what  are  the  risks  and  how  can  they  be  controlled.  

•  You  may  bullet  point  your  method  as  long  as  it  is  well  structured  in  a  logical  sequence.  Check  your  spelling,  punctua0on  and  grammar  and  use  technical/scien0fic  terms  

   

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Q4.  Comparing  Results.  Explain  the  advantage  of  sharing  results  with  others?    Reproducibility  –  measurement  repeated  by  another  person,  or  by  using  different  equipment  or  techniques  and  the  same  results  are  obtained.    If  all  the  class  results  are  shared  then  we  can  calculate  a  mean  and  that  would  give  us  a  more  accurate  result.    If  the  results  are  reproducible  I  must  have  carried  out  the  test  correctly.    

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Q5.  Results  Table  Independent  

Variable  (unit)  Dependent  variable  

(unit)  

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Sketch  Graph  •  A  line  graph  that  shows  the  general  paSern  and  the  rela;onship  between  the  two  variables.  

•  Sketch  graphs  do  not  need  to  have  a  scale  or  points  ploSed  but  they  must  have  labelled  axis.    

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Sketch  Graph  29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Example  ISA’s  with  Examiners  Comments  

hSp://store.aqa.org.uk/sciencelab/AQA-­‐CHEM1-­‐EXEMPLAR-­‐CA-­‐AV.PDF    hSp://store.aqa.org.uk/sciencelab/AQA-­‐BIOL1-­‐EXEMPLAR-­‐CA-­‐AV.PDF    hSp://store.aqa.org.uk/sciencelab/AQA-­‐PHYS1-­‐EXEMPLAR-­‐CA-­‐AV.PDF    hSp://store.aqa.org.uk/sciencelab/AQA-­‐CHEM1-­‐EXEMPLAR-­‐CA-­‐HI.PDF    hSp://store.aqa.org.uk/support/pdf/AQA-­‐SCIENCE-­‐CONTROLLED-­‐ASSESSMENT-­‐LEAFLET.PDF    hSp://store.aqa.org.uk/sciencelab/AQA-­‐PHYS1-­‐EXEMPLAR-­‐CA-­‐HI.PDF    

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

Measles  (000's)  

Mumps  (000's)  

Rubella  (000's)  

Marking  Criteria  29  November  2013  

P.J.McCormack

What  key  point  are  we  going  to  include?