Module 00 — Foundations

Duration: 1–2 weeks | Prereq: None

This module isn't exciting — but it's load-bearing. Everything in later modules uses these tools. The good news: it's short, and most of it will feel familiar once you see it.


1. SI Units — The Language of Physics

Physics quantities are meaningless without units. The international standard is the SI system (Système International).

The seven base units

QuantityUnitSymbol
Lengthmetrem
Masskilogramkg
Timeseconds
Electric currentampereA
TemperaturekelvinK
Amount of substancemolemol
Luminous intensitycandelacd

Everything else is derived from these. For example:

  • Speed = distance / time → m/s (or m s⁻¹)
  • Force = mass × acceleration → kg m s⁻² = newton (N)
  • Energy = force × distance → kg m² s⁻² = joule (J)

Prefixes you'll use constantly

PrefixSymbolMultiplier
GigaG× 10⁹
MegaM× 10⁶
kilok× 10³
× 10⁰ (baseline)
millim× 10⁻³
microμ× 10⁻⁶
nanon× 10⁻⁹
picop× 10⁻¹²

Example: A wavelength of 500 nm = 500 × 10⁻⁹ m = 5 × 10⁻⁷ m

Unit checking (dimensional analysis)

Before trusting any answer, check the units work out. If you're calculating speed and your units don't simplify to m/s, you've made an error somewhere. This habit catches a huge number of mistakes.


2. Standard Form and Orders of Magnitude

Physics deals with extremes — from the radius of a proton (~10⁻¹⁵ m) to the distance to the edge of the observable universe (~10²⁶ m). Standard form keeps numbers manageable.

Standard form: a × 10ⁿ where 1 ≤ a < 10

Examples:

  • 6,400,000 m = 6.4 × 10⁶ m
  • 0.000000045 s = 4.5 × 10⁻⁸ s

Multiplying in standard form: multiply the numbers, add the exponents

(3 × 10⁴) × (2 × 10³) = 6 × 10⁷

Dividing in standard form: divide the numbers, subtract the exponents

(6 × 10⁸) ÷ (2 × 10³) = 3 × 10⁵


3. Significant Figures and Uncertainty

The short version: Never write down more precision than your data justifies.

  • 9.81 m/s² has 3 significant figures
  • 9.8 m/s² has 2 significant figures
  • 0.0045 has 2 significant figures (leading zeros don't count)

In practice, working to 3 significant figures is standard for most A Level problems.

Uncertainty is the acknowledgement that every measurement has limits. You'll encounter it when reading about experiments. The key idea: if a ruler can measure to ±1 mm, then a measurement of 23 cm is really 23.0 ± 0.1 cm.


4. Maths Toolkit

4.1 Rearranging Equations

The single most important algebraic skill in A Level Physics. The rule: whatever you do to one side, do to the other.

Example: The equation for speed is v = d / t

To find d: multiply both sides by t → d = v × t

To find t: divide both sides by v → t = d / v

A useful trick: think of the equation as a triangle. Write v at the top, d and t at the bottom. Cover the one you want, and the arrangement of the remaining two tells you the operation.

Practice: Rearrange E = mc² to find m. (Answer: m = E / c²)

4.2 Proportionality

Physics is full of proportional relationships. Understanding them stops you needing to memorise every equation.

  • Direct proportion: y ∝ x means "if x doubles, y doubles"
  • Inverse proportion: y ∝ 1/x means "if x doubles, y halves"
  • Square proportion: y ∝ x² means "if x doubles, y quadruples"

Example: Gravitational force ∝ 1/r² (inverse square law). Double the distance → force drops to 1/4.

4.3 Trigonometry

You need sin, cos, and tan — specifically for resolving vectors (covered next) and wave problems.

        hypotenuse
       /|
      / |
     /  | opposite
    /θ  |
   ------
   adjacent

sin θ = opposite / hypotenuse
cos θ = adjacent / hypotenuse
tan θ = opposite / adjacent

Memory aid: SOH-CAH-TOA

The angles you'll use most: 30°, 45°, 60°, 90°.

Handy values to remember:

  • sin 30° = 0.5, cos 30° = 0.866
  • sin 45° = cos 45° = 0.707
  • sin 60° = 0.866, cos 60° = 0.5

4.4 Graphs — Gradients and Areas

Two graph operations matter in physics:

Gradient (slope) = Δy / Δx (change in y divided by change in x)

The gradient tells you the rate of change. On a distance-time graph, the gradient is speed. On a velocity-time graph, the gradient is acceleration.

Area under a graph tells you accumulated quantity. On a velocity-time graph, the area is displacement (net change in position). If the object reverses direction partway through, areas above and below the time axis partially cancel — giving displacement, not total distance travelled.

This is secretly calculus. The gradient is the derivative (rate of change); the area is the integral (accumulated total). You don't need to use calculus notation at A Level, but recognising what's happening conceptually will serve you well if you go further.


5. Vectors and Scalars

This is one of the most important distinctions in all of physics.

Scalar: a quantity described by magnitude (size) alone.

Examples: speed, distance, mass, temperature, energy, time

Vector: a quantity described by both magnitude and direction.

Examples: velocity, displacement, force, acceleration, momentum

Subtle but important: Speed and velocity are different.

  • Speed = 60 mph (scalar — just a size)
  • Velocity = 60 mph north (vector — size and direction)

Adding vectors

Scalars add normally: 5 kg + 3 kg = 8 kg.

Vectors must account for direction. If two forces both act in the same direction, add them. If they act at 180° (opposite), subtract. If they act at an angle, you need trigonometry.

The component method (most useful approach):

Any vector can be split into a horizontal (x) component and a vertical (y) component.

For a vector of magnitude F at angle θ to the horizontal:

  • Horizontal component: F cos θ
  • Vertical component: F sin θ

To find the resultant of multiple vectors:

  1. Resolve each into x and y components
  2. Sum all x components → Rₓ
  3. Sum all y components → Rᵧ
  4. Resultant magnitude: R = √(Rₓ² + Rᵧ²)
  5. Angle: θ = tan⁻¹(Rᵧ / Rₓ)

Worked Example: Two forces act on a box: 6 N east and 8 N north. What is the resultant?

Rₓ = 6 N, Rᵧ = 8 N R = √(36 + 64) = √100 = 10 N θ = tan⁻¹(8/6) = tan⁻¹(1.33) ≈ 53° north of east


6. Self-Check Questions

Try these before moving on. Don't worry if you need to look back — that's the point.

  1. Convert 45 nm to metres in standard form.
  2. The equation for kinetic energy is Eₖ = ½mv². Rearrange to find v.
  3. A force of 50 N acts at 30° to the horizontal on a box. What are its horizontal and vertical components?
  4. On a velocity-time graph, what does the area under the curve represent?
  5. Is "temperature" a vector or scalar? What about "force"?

Answers:

  1. 45 × 10⁻⁹ m = 4.5 × 10⁻⁸ m
  2. v = √(2Eₖ / m)
  3. Horizontal: 50 cos 30° = 50 × 0.866 = 43.3 N. Vertical: 50 sin 30° = 50 × 0.5 = 25 N
  4. Displacement (net change in position)
  5. Temperature is a scalar. Force is a vector.

Go Deeper

If you're finding the maths more enjoyable than expected, these are worth a look:

  • "The Language of Physics" — any introductory chapter in Halliday & Resnick (a classic university text, often findable in libraries)
  • Khan Academy: Algebra and Trigonometry sections — short videos, good for specific gaps
  • 3Blue1Brown "Essence of Calculus" (YouTube) — if you want the intuition behind gradients and areas, this series is beautiful. Not required, but outstanding.

Next: Module 01 — Mechanics & Motion

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