Paper 2 covers Topics 5–8. Below is the breakdown, with Separate (Triple) science-only content highlighted.
Topic 5: Forces
Scalar vs. Vector: Magnitude only (Speed, Distance) vs. Magnitude + Direction (Velocity, Displacement, Force).
Contact vs. Non-Contact: Friction/Air Resistance vs. Gravity/Magnetism/Electrostatic.
Gravity: Weight, Centre of mass.
Resultant Forces: Adding vectors;
Free body diagrams; Resolution of forces (splitting a diagonal force into horizontal/vertical components).
Work Done & Energy: Work; Elastic deformation.
Motion: Distance-time graphs (gradient = speed); Velocity-time graphs (gradient = acceleration, area under line = distance).
Equations of Motion.
Newton’s Laws:
Zero resultant force = Constant velocity (Inertia).
F = ma
Action-reaction forces are equal and opposite.
Stopping Distance: Thinking distance (reaction time, drugs, tiredness) + Braking distance (speed, road condition, tyres).
Momentum: Conservation of momentum in collisions.
Separate Science Only:
Moments: Turning effect of a force; Levers and Gears.
Pressure: In fluids, pressure is the force that acts on a surface due to the weight of the fluid above it, upthrust, and floating.
Momentum Hazards: Force = Change in momentum / time; Safety features (seatbelts, airbags) increase time to reduce force.
Topic 6: Waves
Wave Properties: Transverse (perpendicular oscillation, e.g., light) vs. Longitudinal (parallel oscillation, e.g., sound).
The Wave Equation.
EM Spectrum:
Radio, Micro, IR, Visible, UV, X-ray, Gamma. (Mnemonics help here!).
* Trends: Frequency increases and wavelength decreases from Radio to Gamma.
* Uses: Radio (TV), Micro (Cooking/Satellite), IR (Heaters/Cameras), Visible (Fibre optics), UV (Tanning), X-ray/Gamma (Medical imaging/treatment).
* Dangers: UV (Skin aging/cancer), X-ray/Gamma (Ionising radiation).
Separate Science Only:
Sound: Reflection (Echoes) and Refraction.
Ultrasound: Frequencies > 20kHz; Uses in prenatal scanning and sonar.
Seismic Waves: P-waves (Longitudinal, travel through liquids) vs. S-waves (Transverse, solids only); Evidence for the Earth's liquid outer core.
Lenses: Convex (converging) vs. Concave (diverging); Ray diagrams; Magnification.
Visible Light: Reflection (Specular vs. Diffuse); Colour filters.
Black Body Radiation: Perfect emitters/absorbers; The Leslie Cube concept.
Topic 7: Magnetism and Electromagnetism
Permanent vs. Induced: Permanent magnets produce their own field; Induced magnets become magnetic only in a field.
Fields: North to South; Field strength decreases with distance.
Electromagnetism: Right-hand grip rule (current in wire creates circular field); Solenoids (coils increase strength).
The Motor Effect: A current-carrying wire in a magnetic field experiences a force.
Fleming's Left Hand Rule:
Determining the direction of force (Thumb = Motion, First finger = Field, Second finger = Current).
Separate Science Only:
The Generator Effect: Inducing potential difference by moving a wire in a field (or moving a magnet in a coil).
Applications: Alternators (AC) vs. Dynamos (DC); Microphones (Motor effect reversed) and Loudspeakers (Motor effect).
Transformers: Step-up vs. Step-down; Calculations.
Topic 8: Space Physics (Separate Science Only)
The Solar System: Sun, Planets, Moons, Dwarf planets, Comets/Asteroids.
Life Cycle of a Star:
Orbital Motion: Gravity provides the centripetal force; Velocity changes (direction changes) even if speed is constant.
The Big Bang: The universe is expanding from a hot, dense singularity.
Red-Shift: Light from distant galaxies shifts to longer wavelengths (red end), proving they are moving away; Distant galaxies move away faster.
Required Practicals (Paper 2)
You must know method, variables, and analysis for:
Force and Extension: Investigating Hooke’s Law with a spring, weights, and a clamp stand.
Acceleration: Investigating Newton's 2nd Law using a trolley, light gates (or stopwatch), and varying masses/force.
Waves (Ripple Tank/String): Measuring frequency and wavelength to calculate wave speed.
Radiation: Investigating emission of IR radiation from different surfaces (Matte Black vs. Shiny Silver) using a Leslie Cube.
Light (Separate Science Only): Investigating Reflection (angle of incidence = angle of reflection) and Refraction (bending towards/away from normal) using a glass block and ray box.
Key Differences Summary
Space: Separate students have a whole extra topic (Topic 8) on Stars and the Universe. Combined students do not study Space at all.
Forces: Separate students must calculate Moments and Pressure
Waves: Separate students study Light (Lenses and Ray Diagrams) and Sound (Ultrasound/Seismic).
Magnetism: Separate students learn about Transformers and Generators; Combined students stop at the Motor Effect.