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OCR A level Physics: Half-life and Activity
OCR A level Physics: 25.3 Half-life and Activity
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
The reason why radioactive decays are considered random and spontaneous
Rolling dice being a good analogue for radioactive decays
Definition of half-life
Determining half-life from a graph.
Calculating half-life from a table of data.
Activity of a sample in Bq
The decay constant derivation
OCR A level Physics: Binding Energy
OCR A level Physics: 26.2 Binding Energy
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
Definition of mass defect
Definition of binding energy
Binding energy per nucleon
Calculating mass defect, binding energy, and binding energy per nucleon.
Explaining nuclear stability
OCR A level Physics: Radioactive Dating
OCR A level Physics: 25.6 Radioactive Dating
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
State what isotopes of carbon are used in carbon dating.
Explain how carbon dating works.
Calculate the age of objects with carbon dating.
Bundle
OCR A level Physics: Radioactivity
OCR A level Physics: Chapter 25 Radioactivity is apart of the Module 6: Particle and Medical Physics
All presentations come with worked examples, solutions and homeworks.
25.1 Radioactivity
25.2 Nuclear decay equations
25.3 Half-life and Activity
25.4 Radioactive Decay Calculations
25.5 Modelling Radioactive Decay
25.6 Radioactive Dating
Types of ionising radiation (alpha, beta-plus/beta-minus, gamma)
Penetration power and ionising power
Detecting radiation with a Geiger (GM tube) counter
Background radiation and correct count rates
Electric and magnetic fields affect ionising radiation
Cloud chambers
Typical speeds of radiation produced form nuclear decays
Conservation rules for nuclear decays
Nuclear notation
Alpha decays
Beta-minus and beat-plus decays
Gamma decays
Decay chains
The reason why radioactive decays are considered random and spontaneous
Rolling dice being a good analogue for radioactive decays
Definition of half-life
Determining half-life from a graph.
Calculating half-life from a table of data.
Activity of a sample in Bq
The decay constant derivation
Decay constant and half-life
Using exponentials to calculate activity and number of nuclei present
Solving Differential Equations (beyond A-level Physics course)
Iterative Method
Selecting appropriate time intervals
Comparing answers from the iterative method and exact solution.
State what isotopes of carbon are used in carbon dating.
Explain how carbon dating works.
Calculate the age of objects with carbon dating.
OCR A level Physics: Einstein's Mass-Energy Equation
OCR A level Physics: 26.1 Einstein’s Mass-Energy Equation
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
Mass-energy is a conserved quantity
Einstein’s mass-energy equation
Particle and antiparticle annihilate each other
Rest mass and increasing mass with increased kinetic energy
Interpretation of mass-energy equivalence
OCR A level Physics: Radioactive Decay Calculations
OCR A level Physics: 25.4 Radioactive Decay Calculations
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
Decay constant and half-life
Using exponentials to calculate activity and number of nuclei present
Solving Differential Equations (beyond A-level Physics course)
OCR A level Physics: Modelling Radioactive Decay
OCR A level Physics: 25.5 Modelling Radioactive Decay
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
Iterative Method
Selecting appropriate time intervals
Comparing answers from the iterative method and exact solution.
OCR A level Physics: Nuclear Fusion
OCR A level Physics: 26.4 Nuclear Fusion
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
Nuclear equations
Conditions for nuclear fusion
Binding energy and released energy
Bundle
OCR A level Physics: Nuclear Physics
OCR A level Physics: Chapter 26 Nuclear Physics is apart of the Module 6: Particle and Medical Physics
All presentations come with worked examples, solutions and homeworks.
26.1 Einstein’s Mass-Energy Equation
26.2 Binding Energy
26.3 Nuclear Fission
26.4 Nuclear Fusion
Mass-energy is a conserved quantity
Einstein’s mass-energy equation
Particle and antiparticle annihilate each other
Rest mass and increasing mass with increased kinetic energy
Interpretation of mass-energy equivalence
Definition of mass defect
Definition of binding energy
Binding energy per nucleon
Calculating mass defect, binding energy, and binding energy per nucleon.
Explaining nuclear stability
Fuels in nuclear fission reactors
Moderators and thermal neutrons
Conservation of mass-energy
Energy released in fission reactions
Control rods
Nuclear waste management
Conditions for nuclear fusion
Binding energy and released energy
OCR A level Physics: Nuclear Fission
OCR A level Physics: 26.3 Nuclear Fission
Module 6 Particles and Medical Physics
This PowerPoint is a whole lesson included with student activities, animated answers, homework questions with answers provided.
This lesson covers:
Fuels in nuclear fission reactors
Moderators and thermal neutrons
Conservation of mass-energy
Energy released in fission reactions
Control rods
Nuclear waste management
GCSE Biology: Animal and Plant Cells
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.1.1 Animal and Plant Cells
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
Cells are the building blocks of living objects.
Definition of eukaryotic cells
Typical size of eukaryotic cells
Subcellular structure of animal cells
Subcellular structure of plant cells
Organelles and their functions
Revision activities (Look, Cover, Write, Check)
Print out of animal and plant cells
GCSE Biology: Bacterial Cells
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.1.2 Bacterial Cells
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
Typical size of bacterial cells
Subcellular structure of bacterial cells
Functions of subcellular structure of bacterial cells
Comparing animal, plant, and bacterial cells
Revision activity - flash cards
Print out of bacterial cell
GCSE Biology: Light Microscopy
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.1.3 Light Microscopy
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
Labeling a light microscope
Defining magnification and resolution.
Explaining why stains are used for light microscope.
Calculating total magnification, objective lens magnification and eyepiece lens magnification.
Calculating actual size, magnification, and magnified size of objects.
Converting from from micrometre (µm) to millimetres (mm)
Rearranging equations
GCSE Biology: DNA
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.2.1 DNA
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid.
DNA is found in the nucleus of cells.
DNA is packaged into a thread-like structure called chromosomes.
Humans typically have 46 chromosomes shared from their parents.
Genes are sections of DNA that code for physical characteristics.
The structure of DNA.
DNA is comprised of monomers called nucleotides.
A nucleotide consists of a phosphate group, a sugar (deoxyribose), and an organic base.
There are four organic bases: Adenine, A. Thymine, T. Cytosine, C. Guanine, G.
Hydrogen bonds in DNA.
Bundle
GCSE OCR Biology: B1.1 Cell Structures
All resources for B1.1 Cell Structures GCSE OCR Biology Gateway 9-1. Triple and combined (Higher and Foundation) is covered in this material.
Each PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
Cells are the building blocks of living objects.
Definition of eukaryotic cells
Typical size of eukaryotic cells
Subcellular structure of animal cells
Subcellular structure of plant cells
Organelles and their functions
Revision activities (Look, Cover, Write, Check)
Print out of animal and plant cells
Typical size of bacterial cells
Subcellular structure of bacterial cells
Functions of subcellular structure of bacterial cells
Comparing animal, plant, and bacterial cells
Revision activity - flash cards
Print out of bacterial cell
Labeling a light microscope
Defining magnification and resolution.
Explaining why stains are used for light microscope.
Calculating total magnification, objective lens magnification and eyepiece lens magnification.
Calculating actual size, magnification, and magnified size of objects.
Converting from from micrometre (µm) to millimetres (mm)
Rearranging equations
Comparing sizes of different cells
Using standard form
Using SI prefixes (nano, micro, milli, kilo, mega)
Comparing electron microscopes and light microscopes.
GCSE Biology: Electron Microscopy
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.1.4 Electron Microscopy
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
Comparing sizes of different cells
Using standard form
Using SI prefixes (nano, micro, milli, kilo, mega)
Comparing electron microscopes and light microscopes.
GCSE Biology:Transcription and Translation
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.2.2 Transcription and Translation
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
The role of proteins and AI
Proteins as polymers
Explaining transcription
mRNA and complementary bases
Explaining translation
GCSE Biology: Carbohydrates, Proteins, and Lipids
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.3.1 Carbohydrates, Proteins, and Lipids
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
The three main macronutrients - carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids
Names of enzymes - carbohydrase, amylase, protease, lipase
What the macronutrients are broken down into - simple sugars, amino acids, fatty acids and glycerol.
Metabolic rate
Food tests and the positive results
GCSE Biology: Enzyme Reactions
This presentation covers OCR Gateway Biology 9-1 B1.2.4 Enzyme Reactions
This PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
Enzymes-catalysed reactions
Rate of reaction
Denaturing of enzymes and the active site
Optimum temperature and optimum pH for enzymes
Definition of concentration
Increasing concentration of enzymes and substrates
Saturation of substrates
Bundle
GCSE OCR Biology: B1.2 What happens in cells?
All resources for B1.2 What happens in cells? GCSE OCR Biology Gateway 9-1. Triple and combined (Higher and Foundation) is covered in this material.
Each PowerPoint is a whole lessons included with student activities and animated answers.
DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid.
DNA is found in the nucleus of cells.
DNA is packaged into a thread-like structure called chromosomes.
Humans typically have 46 chromosomes shared from their parents.
Genes are sections of DNA that code for physical characteristics.
The structure of DNA.
DNA is comprised of monomers called nucleotides.
A nucleotide consists of a phosphate group, a sugar (deoxyribose), and an organic base.
There are four organic bases: Adenine, A. Thymine, T. Cytosine, C. Guanine, G.
Hydrogen bonds in DNA.
The role of proteins and AI
Proteins as polymers
Explaining transcription
mRNA and complementary bases
Explaining translation
Enzymes are made of protein.
Enzymes are biological catalysts.
Catalysts speed up the rate of reaction without being used up themselves.
Enzymes and the lock and key hypothesis.
Enzymes breaking down and bonding substrates.
Enzymes-catalysed reactions
Rate of reaction
Denaturing of enzymes and the active site
Optimum temperature and optimum pH for enzymes
Definition of concentration
Increasing concentration of enzymes and substrates
Saturation of substrates