Motion
Forces
Conservation Laws
Thermodynamics
Symbols/Units
100

This is the shape that a projectile makes as it travels.

What is a parabola?

100

This force arises when a rope or chain is used to move something or hold something still.

What is the Tension Force?

100

What conserved quantity requires that an angle (relative to you the observer) be swept out as it moves?

What is Angular Momentum?

100

This term refers to how much heat a substance in one phase can hold before beginning to turn into another phase.

What is the heat capacity?

100

These are the units of Force.

What are Newtons?

200

True or False: Upon release, an object that is originally moving in a circle will continue to move in a circle.

What is False. It moves in a straight line. An object in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted on by a force. This is just Newton's 1st Law.

200
This is the name given to the type of force that goes off like the reciprocal squared.

What is an inverse square law?

200

This type of energy is associated with motion.

What is kinetic energy?

200

This type of transfer requires that two objects be touching.

What is conduction?
200

These are the units of momentum.

What are kg*m/s? (P = MV)

300

True or False: It is possible for an object to have a constant speed, but be accelerating.

What is true? A clock is a good example of this. The speed is constant, but the minute hand is changing direction and is hence accelerating.
300

This is the name for the proportionality constant found in the equations for friction.

What is the coefficient of friction. (This actually comes in two types: kinetic and static.)

300

This type of energy is associated with position or arrangement.

What is potential energy?

300

This type of heat transfer requires a fluid such as a liquid or gas.

What is convection?

300

These are the units of angular momentum.

What are kg*m^2/s? (L = rmv)

400

True or False: When traveling in a circle, the acceleration points inwards toward the circle.

What is True? Remember that acceleration is the change in velocity. That is, its direction is changing. The change in this direction points inward.

400

True or False: An object traveling upward takes a longer amount of time to get to its peak than the same object falling back down.

What is False? The time to go upward takes LESS time because there are TWO forces acting against it while it is headed up. On its way down there is only one force acting against its motion and it takes more time.

400

This quantity is a rough measure for the average amount of kinetic energy that a system has.

What is temperature?

400

This type of heat transfer requires particles such as light.

What is radiation?

400

True or False: Heat and Work both have units of energy (Joules).

What is True?
500

True or False: The centripetal (or centrifugal) acceleration goes off like the square of the velocity.

What is true? a_c = v^2 /r.

500

This is the proportionality constant associated with universal gravitation.

What is G? Remember that proportionality constants do two things. They make units work and give the correct scaling.

500

True or False: Entropy is a conserved quantity in a closed system.

What is False? The second law of thermodynamics says that the entropy is always increasing (or zero but this is very unlikely if a process is rearranging something).

500

This object is a good example of a closed system.

What is a thermos?

500

True or False: The units of entropy are J/K.

What is true?