Charging Terms
Terms and Formulas
Waves
Misc
People
100

An objects store ability to do work

What is energy?

100


What is coloumbs law?

100

The distance from any point on a wave to the next identical point.

What is the wavelength?

100

Coulomb's Law depends on __________ and __________

What is charge and distance

100

He developed the general theory of relativity

Who is Albert Einstein?

200

A material whose conduction electrons are free to move throughout.

What is a conductor

200


What is the forumla for an electric field?

200

A decibel

What are the units that sound intensity is measure in?

200

The units for the Electrostatic Force

What is a Newton?

200

He laid the foundations for classical mechanics and the unit for force is named after him

Who Sir Isaac Newton?

300

A material whose electrons seldom move from atom to atom.

What is an insulator

300

The direction that electric field lines point

What is from positive to negative?

300

They are an interference pattern in time, rather than in space.

What are beats?

300

It says that electric flux through a closed surface is proportional to the charge

What is Gauss`s Law?

300

A temperature scale is named after him (and Ms. Darci`s undergraduate research project was about a particle he theorized)

Who is Lord Kelvin?

400

What happens when the atoms rotate in response to an external charge.

What is polarization of a material

400

The rate at which work is done.

What is power?

400

Constructive and Destructive

What are two types of itnerference?

400

This is the force of attraction if the distance between two charges is decreased to one third of the original distance and the charge of each is increased by three times.

What is 81 times greater?

400
He was best known for developing the definition of the electrostatic force of attraction and repulsion. The SI unit of electric charge was named after him
Charles-Augustin de Coulomb
500

If a conductor carries excess charge, where does the charge go?

What is the surface of the conductor?

500

An example of a semiconductor

What is silicon, germanium, antimony, arsenic, boron, carbon, selenium, sulfur, and tellurium. 

500

Apparent change of frequency of a wave when there is relative motion between a source and an observer.

What is the Doppler effect?

500

This is how you add multiple point charges

What is superposition?

500

LIGO

What is where gravitational waves were discovered

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