Simple Machines
Description

What are simple machines? Simple machines are tools that make work easier. They have few or no moving parts. These machines use energy to do work with one movement. They make our work easier by letting us use less mechanical effort to move an object.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Leigh Kleynhans
Phases of matter
Description

In this unit, you will explore the three phases of matter and then look at the properties and differences between them. You will explore their shape, volume, and kinetic energy.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Emma Harrage
Motion in One Dimension
Description

This unit is about how things move along a straight line or, more scientifically, how things move in one dimension. Examples of this would be the movement (motion) of cars along a straight road or of trains along straight railway tracks.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Leigh Kleynhans
Magnets and magnetic fields
Description

Magnetism is an interaction that allows certain kinds of objects, which are called ‘magnetic’ objects, to exert forces on each other without physically touching. A magnetic object is surrounded by a magnetic ‘field’ that gets weaker as one moves further away from the object. A second object can feel a magnetic force from the first object because it feels the magnetic field of the first object. The further away the objects are the weaker the magnetic force will be.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Leigh Kleynhans
Electric Current
Description

You have learnt about static electricity where charged particles (electrons) can move from one object into another giving objects an overall charge. In this unit1 you will learn about current electricity. This is when a continuous flow of charge can be created using a circuit made of conducting wires and an energy source.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Leigh Kleynhans
Electrical Circuits
Description

The flicker of numbers on a handheld calculator, nerve impulses carrying signals of vision to the brain, an ultrasound device sending a signal to a computer screen, the brain sending a message for a baby to twitch its toes, an electric train pulling into a station, a hydroelectric plant sending energy to metropolitan and rural users—these and many other examples of electricity involve electric current, which is the movement of charge. Humanity has harnessed electricity, the basis of this technology, to improve our quality of life. 

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
openstax
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Openstax
Static Electricity
Description

Electric charge comes in two varieties, which we call positive and negative. Like charges repel each other, and unlike charges attract each other. Thus, two positive charges repel each other, as do two negative charges. A positive charge and a negative charge attract each other.

How do we know there are two types of electric charge? When various materials are rubbed together in controlled ways, certain combinations of materials always result in a net charge of one type on one material and a net charge of the opposite type on the other material. By convention, we call one type of charge positive and the other type negative.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
openstax
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Openstax
Motion in Two Dimensions
Description

In this chapter, we’ll use vectors to expand our understanding of forces and motion into two dimensions. Most real-world physics problems (such as with the game of pool pictured here) are, after all, either two- or three-dimensional problems and physics is most useful when applied to real physical scenarios. We start by learning the practical skills of graphically adding and subtracting vectors (by using drawings) and analytically (with math). Once we’re able to work with two-dimensional vectors, we apply these skills to problems of projectile motion, inclined planes, and harmonic motion.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
openstax
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Openstax
Magnetism
Description

The force that acts across the air gaps between magnets is the same force that creates wonders such as the Aurora Borealis. In fact, magnetic effects pervade our lives in myriad ways, from electric motors to medical imaging and computer memory. In this chapter, we introduce magnets and learn how they work and how magnetic fields and electric currents interact.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
openstax
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Openstax
Work, Energy, and Simple Machines
Description

What exactly is energy? How can changes in force, energy, and simple machines move objects like roller coaster cars? How can machines help us do work? In this chapter, you will discover the answer to this question and many more, as you learn about work, energy, and simple machines.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
openstax
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Openstax