Definitions: 4. Mechanics and Materials: Paper 1: Physics A Level AQA

0.0(0)
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/30

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

31 Terms

1
New cards

Breaking Stress

The maximum stress that an object can withstand before failure occurs.

2
New cards

Brittle

A brittle object will show very little strain before reaching its breaking stress.

3
New cards

Centre of Mass

The single point through which all the mass of an object can be said to act.

4
New cards

Conservation of Energy

Energy cannot be created or destroyed - it can only be transferred into different forms.

5
New cards

Conservation of Momentum

The total momentum of a system before an event, must be equal to the total momentum of the system after the event, assuming no external forces act.

6
New cards

Couple

Two equal and opposite parallel forces that act on an object through different lines of action. It has the effect of causing a rotation without translation.

7
New cards

Density

The mass per unit volume of a material.

8
New cards

Efficiency

The ratio of useful output to total input for a given system.

9
New cards

Elastic Behaviour

If a material deforms with elastic behaviour, it will return to its original shape when the deforming forces are removed. The object will not be permanently deformed.

10
New cards

Elastic Collision

A collision in which the total kinetic energy of the system before the collision is equal to the total kinetic energy of the system after the collision.

11
New cards

Elastic Limit

The force beyond which an object will no longer deform elastically, and instead deform plastically. Beyond the elastic limit, when the deforming forces are removed, the object will not return to its original shape.

12
New cards

Elastic Strain Energy

The energy stored in an object when it is stretched. It is equal to the work done to stretch the object and can be determined from the area under a force extension graph.

13
New cards

Equilibrium

For an object to be equilibrium, both the resultant force and resultant moment acting on the object must be equal to zero.

14
New cards

Hooke’s Law

The extension of an elastic object will be directly proportional to the force applied to it up to the object’s limit of proportionality.

15
New cards

Impulse

The change of momentum of an object when a force acts on it. It is equal to the product of the force acting on the object and the length of time over which it acts.

16
New cards

Inelastic Collision

A collision in which the total kinetic energy of the system before the collision is not equal to the kinetic energy of the system after the collision.

17
New cards

Moment

The product of a force and the perpendicular distance from the line of action of the force to the pivot.

18
New cards

Momentum

The product of an object’s mass and velocity.

19
New cards

Newton’s First Law

An object will remain in its current state of motion, unless acted on by a resultant force. An object requires a resultant force to be able to accelerate.

20
New cards

Newton’s Second Law

The sum of the forces acting on an object is equal to the rate of change of momentum of the object.

21
New cards

Newton’s Third Law

Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. If an object exerts a force on another object, then the other object must exert a force back, that is opposite in direction and equal in magnitude.

22
New cards

Plastic Behaviour

If a material deforms with plastic behaviour, it will not return to its original shape when the deforming forces are removed. The object will be permanently deformed.

23
New cards

Principle of Moments

For an object to be in equilibrium, the sum of the clockwise moments acting about a point must be equal to the sum of the anticlockwise moments acting about the point.

24
New cards

Scalar

A scalar quantity is one that only has a magnitude. Examples include length, mass and temperature.

25
New cards

Spring Constant

The constant of proportionality for the extension of a spring under a force. The higher the spring constant, the greater the force needed to achieve a given extension.

26
New cards

Stiffness

A measure of how difficult it is to stretch a given object.

27
New cards

Tensile Strain

The ratio of an object’s extension to its original length. It is a ratio of two lengths and so has no unit.

28
New cards

Tensile Stress

The amount of force acting per unit area. Its unit is the Pascal (Pa).

29
New cards

Terminal Speed

The maximum speed of an object that occurs when the resistive and driving forces acting on the object are equal to each other.

30
New cards

Vector

A vector quantity is one that has both a magnitude and a direction. Examples include velocity, displacement and acceleration.

31
New cards

Young Modulus

The ratio of stress to strain for a given material. Its unit is the Pascal (Pa).