[Physics Class Notes] on Non-Optical Low Vision Aids Pdf for Exam

What Are Blind Aid Devices? 

Visual impairment occurs when the ability of a person’s sight or vision decreases by such a large degree that it cannot be fixed with conventional means such as glasses and lenses. Complete loss of vision leads to blindness. A person with a normal vision can see from as far as 200 feet. But a kind person can only view from 20 feet away. To help the blind with sight in today’s world, several blind aid devices have been introduced in the market. There are some fantastic gadgets in the market that help propel without vision. These blind aid devices have been developed using the latest technological advancements. 

(Image to be added soon)

What Are Low Vision Aids? 

Low vision aids are explicitly designed to help people who have a poor or weak vision. These devices provide increased magnification, along with very high-quality optical features. A person’s vision usually degenerates with age. Cataracts, which are the white milky layer over the eyes, block the light rays from entering the eyes. Visual impairments have been affecting people from all over the world for a very long time. There are several optical and non-optical aids available in the market nowadays that have come out as a solution to this problem. These aids are also known as blind aid devices. There are several low vision aids ppt online that one can look up to gain more knowledge in the subject. 

What Are The Symptoms Of Blindness? 

A few common symptoms of blindness are: 

  • Cloudy vision 

  • Inability to see shapes and figures 

  • Highly poor night vision 

  • Colour blindness 

  • Hazy images 

  • Constant eye redness 

  • Swollen eyelids

  • White pupil instead of a black pupil 

  • Constant itching in the eye 

Several diseases can lead to blindness or visual impairment. When the optic nerves of the eye get damaged, visual information from the eye cannot travel into the brain anymore. Glaucoma is one such condition that causes blindness. Macular degeneration causes the eye muscles to become weak, which destroys the eye’s capability to see integrated details. Other similar diseases that may lead to blindness or vision loss are optic neuritis and tumors in the retina. 

Other than people with the diseases mentioned above, few other people who are at risk of turning blind are patients who have diabetes, heart strokes, or people undergoing eye surgery. 

Misconceptions About Blindness 

  • Eating carrots help save vision: Although this may be true to some extent, there is no medical proof regarding this condition. 

  • Using lenses can reduce blindness: Not real at all. Lenses are only advised for people with high power.

  • Too much use of electronic gadgets leads to blindness: A simple warning uttered by parents but has no truth to it.

Solved Examples

  1. Mention Some Blind Aid Devices And Their Functions 

Answer: Owing to the advanced technology, various solutions have come up for the visually impaired and blind people. Blind aid devices with different designs and functions offer a whole range of features for people with visual disabilities. The simple visual aid is the thin colored sheet of transparent plastic. Some colors such as red and yellow, when placed over a page to be read, increase the contrast, and thus makes the writings and alphabets visible. 

Some other countries have also developed GuideDogs that are highly trained and help the visually impaired people to stroll across the cities and towns. The dogs are trained such that they adapt to human life comfortably. Not only do the dogs help the visually impaired to crossroads but also keep them protected from the outside world. 

Fun Facts About Blind Aid Devices And Blindness 

  • Notes and coins are now made in such a manner that even the visually impaired can understand the value just by touch. 

  • The size of a note increases with value in Euros as well as rupees. 

  • Food is placed in plates and dinner tables in a particular position to guide the blind and visually impaired. 

  • For people with low vision, books are now printed with larger fonts. 

  • Books in Braille and audiobooks are also helpful for the blind. 

  • Children with low vision must take proper consultation from experts.

  • Technological advancements have made education easy for visually impaired children. 

[Physics Class Notes] on Optics Pdf for Exam

WHAT IS WAVE?

 

Waves can be defines as the vibrations that include perturbation with a periodic spatial pattern and that pattern propagates in space. Waves will have a wavelength. Wave has the property of interference. Example: Sound waves when propagates produces crest and troughs. 

 

CAN LIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS A WAVE?

 

To understand this we need to find the analogy between the characteristics of sound and light. When a crest and a trough meet in the trajectory, the two waves actually cancel each other. Similarly, when two sources emitting light waves are coordinated it also produces a pattern of alternating bright and dark bands on a screen. This experiment was done by Thomas Young to prove the wave pattern of light. 

 

PROPERTIES OF LIGHT

 

There are two ways by which light propagates. These are

  1. Reflection

  2. Refraction

Christian Huygens was the one who proposed a mechanism for the propagation of light, called Huygens’ Principle: All points on a wavefront are sources of new waves, and the envelope of these secondary waves forms the new wavefront. Huygens’ Principle states a very fundamental property of waves, which clearly explains the phenomena of refraction. This chapter focuses mainly on refraction property. 

 

REFRACTION OF LIGHT RAYS

 

 

Light propagating through a transparent material medium has its speed generally less than the speed in vacuum c. Now it was observed that a light ray changes its direction while passing from one medium to another. This phenomenon is known as refraction. When a plane wavefront approaches the interface between two media, a new wavefront propagates outwards at one end reaching the interface in a time t according to Huygens’ principle. On the other end, a new wavefront propagates into medium 2 more slowly, so that in the same time t it makes radius v2t. Now considering the angle of incidence θi and the angle of refraction θr between the incident wavefront and the interface, and between the refracted wavefront and the interface.

 

[sintheta_{i} = frac{v_{1}t}{x}] and [sin theta_{r} = frac{v_{2}t}{x} Rightarrow frac{sintheta_{i}}{sintheta_{r}} = frac{v_{1}}{v_{2}}]

 

Then the refractive index is defined as:

[n = frac{c}{v}]

[n_{1}sintheta_{i} = n_{2} sintheta_{r}]

 

This is called Snell’s Law.

 

 

Refractive indices are always greater than 1 except vacuum which has an index of 1. It is 1.33 for water. the refractive index may be associated with the density of the material, but that is not always true. It is better to consider optical density for calculating it.

 

IMAGES

 

an image is created from an object using an optical system. For example, a slide projector creates an

image of a slide on a screen. An extended object is treated as a collection of multiple point sources of light.

 

Images are of two types:

 

1. Real Images

 

2. Virtual Images

 

Real Images 

 

a real image is an image is said to be formed when it is located in the plane of convergence for the light rays originating from a given object. If a screen is placed in the plane of a real image the image will be visible on the screen. Examples of real images include the image seen projected on a cinema screen with the source being the projector or the image formed on a detector in the rear of a camera, and the image formation in the retina of the human eye. A real image is said to be formed when the rays converge

 

  

 

The real image formed using a convex lens

 

Virtual Images 

 

a virtual image is an image formed when the outgoing rays from a point on an object get diverged or they just appear to converge from a point only. The image seems to be located at the point of apparent divergence/convergence as the rays never really converge. Thus, a virtual image can never be projected onto a screen. In diagrams of optical systems, virtual rays are thus mostly represented by dotted lines. Virtual images can be located by tracing the real rays that emerge from an optical device (lens, mirror, or some combination) backward to a perceived point of origin.

 

  

The above diagram depicts the formation of a virtual image using a diverging lens.

 

THE MIRROR EQUATION

 

We can calculate the location of the image from the position of the object and of the mirror’s focal point with the help of the mirror equation. These positions are measured using the object distance p measured along the axis from the vertex of the mirror, where the axis is intersecting the mirror; the image distance i, and the focal length f. 

 

  

 

The mirror equation assumes that the curvature of the mirror is extremely small, which is only true if the object is relatively small and quite close to the optical axis. In that case, we can consider the mirror approximately flat. The triangles 4OP F and 4F QI are similar then. This means that the following equation can be derived:

 

[frac{p – f}{f} = frac{f}{i – f}]

 

[frac{1}{p} + frac{1}{i} = frac{1}{f}]

 

  

 

LENS 

 

  

 

In most of the cases discussed here, the curvature of the interface has been considered as very small, so that it can be considered as a flat surface. In the figure, a point object at O is emitting a ray of light along the optical axis, and another ray of light is getting refracted at the interface and intersecting the first one to form an image at I. Let the radius of curvature of the interface is r; as usual, the object distance to the interface be p and the image distance be i.

 

If the surface is convex and the center of curvature C is to the right. Then for the oblique ray, the incidence angle is θ and the refracted angle is φ. Then, as per the exterior angle theorem, 

 6 P CO = θ − α and 6 P IC = θ − α − φ.

In the small angle assumption, Snell’s law becomes

n1θ = n2φ

and the angles can be approximated as follows:

 

[alpha = frac{x}{p}]

[theta – alpha = frac{x}{r} Rightarrow theta = frac{x}{p} + frac{x}{r}]

[theta – alpha – phi = frac{x}{i} Rightarrow phi = frac{x}{r} – frac{x}{i}]

 

and substituting θ and φ in Snell’s law, we get after canceling x 

 

[frac{n_{1}}{p} + frac{n_{1}}{r} = frac{n_{2}}{p} – frac{n_{2}}{i}] 

 

which can be rearranged more meaningfully to

 

[frac{n_{1}}{p} + frac{n_{2}}{i} = frac{n_{2} – n_{1}}{r}]

 

If the light is passing from the air of refractive index n1 = 1 to a glass of index n2 = n, then the eq is

 

[frac{1}{p} + frac{n}{i} = frac{n – 1}{r}]

 

Locating the image 

 

In a lens, two consecutive refractions happen. Those are from air to glass, and then from the glass back into the air. Then applying the lens equation we can write

 

< p>[frac{n_{1}}{p} + frac{n_{2}}{i’} = frac{n_{2} – n_{1}}{r_{1}}]

 

here [r_{1}] is the curvature radius for the first surface. The image formed after the first refraction becomes the object of the second refraction, and its distance from the second surface is

 

[p’ = L – i’]

 

so that the final image formed at a distance i from the second surface is given by

 

[frac{n_{2}}{L – i’} + frac{n_{1}}{i} = frac{n_{2} – n_{1}}{r_{2}}]

 

In the thin lens approximation, L → 0 so

 

[-frac{n_{2}}{i’} + frac{n_{1}}{i} = frac{n_{1} – n_{2}}{r_{2}}]

 

Eliminating the intermediate image we can arrive at a single relation between object and image distances, adding the two equations

 

[frac{n_{1}}{p} + frac{n_{1}}{p} = (n_{2} – n_{1})(frac{1}{r_{1}} – frac{1}{r_{2}})]

 

  

 

The Lens Maker Equation 

 

In most of the cases, the outside medium is air – n1 = 1–, and the material of the lens is glass, with a refractive index n2 = n though it depends on the particular type of glass used. In this case, the equation will be: 

 

[frac{1}{p} + frac{1}{i} = (n – 1)(frac{1}{r_{1}} – frac{1}{r_{2}})]

 

It is important to notice that the right-hand side is dependent on the characteristics of the lens: material it is made of, and the curvature radii of its surfaces. Let us assume that it has dimensions of (length)−1; and when the object is at infinity, making the incident rays are parallel to the axis, the image is formed at a distance from the lens which is equal to the inverse of the right-hand side. All this indicates that a focal length for the lens can be calculated in the following way

 

[frac{1}{f} = (n – 1)frac{1}{p} + frac{1}{i} = (n – 1)(frac{1}{r_{1}} – frac{1}{r_{2}})]

 

This is known as the lensmaker’s equation. It helps a lensmaker to determine what curvature radii he should achieve while grinding a lens to obtain a desired focal length f, under the condition that he’s working with a particular type of glass of refractive index n.

 

Converging and diverging lens 

 

With the positive focal length, the image of an object at infinity is formed by rays that are converging at a point behind the lens. Such a lens is known as the converging. On the other hand, in case of a negative focal length, the rays from an object at infinity get diverged after passing through the lens, thus they appear to come from a point somewhere in front of the lens. This is known as a diverging lens.

 

  

 

Converging lens

 

  

 

Diverging Lens

 

The image was formed at the point of intersection not of the light rays emerging from the lens, but of their extension behind the lens that is at the backward. This results in the formation of a virtual image: Such images can never be projected on a screen. In fact, since the image is formed behind the lens, so even if a screen is placed there, the light would get blocked and would not be able to pass through the lens at all.

 

IMPLEMENTATION OF LENS 

 

Various combinations of the lens are used in manufacturing various optical devices. Some of those devices include magnifying glass, telescope, camera and many more.

[Physics Class Notes] on Pascal Law – Formula, Application & Derivation

This law was given by a well known French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher Blaise Pascal in the year 1647.

This law states that pressure exerted in some liquid which is at rest is the same in all the directions.

OR

Whenever an external pressure is applied on any part of a fluid contained in a vessel, it is transmitted undiminished and equally in all directions.

Hydraulic Power machines work on the basis of this law.

Pascal’s Law Formula

Pascal’s Law formula shows the relationship between pressure, force applied and area of contact i.e,

P = [frac{F}{A}]

F = PA

Where, P= Pressure, F=Force and A=Area of contact

Let us understand the working principle of Pascal’s law through an example.

A Pressure of 2000 Pa is Transmitted Throughout a Liquid Column by Applying a Force on a Piston. If the Piston has an Area of 0.1 m2, What is the Force Applied?

We can calculate the value of force using Pascal’s Law formula.

F = PA

Here,

P = 2000 Pa = N/m2

A = 0.1 m2

After substituting the values, we arrive at Force = 20N or F = 200 N

Applications of Pascal’s Law

1. Hydraulic Lift

It has many applications in daily life. Several devices, such as hydraulic lift and hydraulic brakes, are based on Pascal’s law. Fluids are used for transmitting pressure in all these devices. In a hydraulic lift, as shown in the figure above, two pistons are separated by the space filled with a liquid. A piston of small cross-section A is used to exert a force F directly on the liquid. The pressure P =F/A is transmitted throughout the liquid to the larger cylinder attached with a larger piston of area B, which results in an upward force of  P × B. Therefore, the piston is capable of supporting a large force (large weight of, say a car or a truck placed on the platform). By changing the force at A, the platform can be moved up or down. Thus, the applied force has been increased by a factor of B/A and this factor is the mechanical advantage of the device.

2. Hydraulic Brake

In automobiles, the hydraulic brakes also work on the same principle. When we apply a little force on the pedal with our foot, the master piston moves inside the master cylinder, and the pressure caused is transmitted through the brake oil for acting on a piston of the larger surface area. A large force then acts on the piston and is pushed down, which expands the brake shoes against brake lining. Consequently, a small force on the pedal produces an extremely retarding force on the wheel. A significant advantage of the system is that the pressure, which is set up by pressing pedal is transmitted equally to all cylinders, which are attached to the four wheels to make the braking effort equal on all wheels.

3. Variation of Pressure with Depth

Consider a fluid at rest in a container. In the figure above point 1 is at height h from a point 2. P1 and P2 denote the pressure at points 1 and 2 respectively. Consider a cylindrical element of fluid having an area of base A and height h. Since the fluid is at rest, the resultant horizontal forces should be zero along with the resultant vertical forces balancing the weight of the element. The forces, which are acting in the vertical direction, are due to the fluid pressure at the top (P1A) acting downward and at the bottom (P2A) acting upward. If mg is the weight of the fluid in the cylinder then we can say that,

(P2 −P1 ) A = mg

Now, if ρ is the mass density of the fluid then the mass of fluid will be

m = ρV= ρhA

so that    (P2 −P1) = ρgh

Pressure difference depends on

The vertical distance h between the points (1 and 2),

  1. The mass density of the fluid ρ

  2. Acceleration due to gravity g.

If the point 1 under discussion is shifted to the top of the fluid (say, water), which is open to the atmosphere, P1 may be replaced by atmospheric pressure (Pa ) and we replace P2 by P. Then the above equation gives,

P = Pa + ρgh.

Derivation of Pascal’s Law

Blaise Pascal, a French scientist observed that the pressure in a fluid at rest is the same at all points provided they are at the same height. This fact may be demonstrated directly. The figure above shows an element in the interior of a fluid at rest. This element AEC-BDF is in the form of a right-angled prism. In this principle, the prismatic element is extremely small, due to which, every part of it can be considered at the same depth from the liquid surface and hence, at all these points, the effect of the gravity is the same. The forces on this element are the ones exerted by the rest of the fluid and they must be normal or perpendicular to the surfaces of the element. Thus, the fluid exerts pressures Pa, Pb, and Pc on this element of an area corresponding to the normal forces Fa, Fb and Fc as shown in the figure above on the faces ABFE, ABDC and CDFE denoted by Aa, Ab and Ac respectively.

Then

Fa sinθ = Fb , Fa cosθ = Fc (by equilibrium)

Aa sinθ = Ab , Aa cosθ = Ac (by geometry)

[frac{F_a}{A_a}=frac{F_b}{A_b}=frac{F_c}{A_c}]

Therefore, the pressure exerted is the same in all directions in the fluid, which is at rest. We can say that like other types of stress, pressure is not a vector quantity. No direction can be assigned to it. The force against any area within (or bounding) a fluid at rest and under pressure is normal to the area, regardless of the orientation of the area.

[Physics Class Notes] on Photoelectric Threshold Frequency Pdf for Exam

The photoelectric effect is a phenomenon in which light causes electrons to be released from a metal’s surface. Photoelectrons are the electrons that are expelled. It’s worth noting that the frequency of the light incident on the metal’s surface affects the emission of photoelectrons and the kinetic energy of the expelled photoelectrons. Photoemission is the term used to describe the process by which photoelectrons are emitted from the metal’s surface owing to the action of light.

The photoelectric effect happens when electrons at the metal’s surface absorb energy from incoming light and utilise it to overcome the attractive forces that bind them to the nuclei of the metal. In this article, students will get to learn about photoelectric threshold frequency in detail. The material is revised and provided by ’s subject matter expert with an in-depth concept and easy explanation. Students preparing for JEE, NEET and other competitive exams can get an upper hand if they study the topic from as covers the topic very concisely.

Work Function and Threshold Frequency

The emission of electrons with help of electromagnetic radiation like light from the surface of a photoelectric material is called the photoelectric effect.  The electrons emitted are known as photoelectrons. The photoelectric threshold frequency is the minimum frequency of the electromagnetic rays which when strikes a surface, causes a photoelectric effect. The photoelectric effect is a subject of study for quantum chemistry, condensed matter physics, for the behavioural study of various properties of solids, atoms, and molecules. The concept of emission of electrons from metal surfaces when electromagnetic waves, typically of short wavelength like the visible or ultraviolet rays strike the surface is known as photoconductive, photoelectrochemical effect since it is initiated by light energy. 

 

Photons

A photon can be defined as a quantum of light that carries energy proportional to radiation frequency but has zero rest mass, and moves at the speed of light in the vacuum. Photons belong to the class of Boson and are elementary particles. The energy of light is considered to be quantized and hence, these small packets or quanta of energy are known as photons. Max Planck while studying Black Body Radiation discovered this fact. 

 

Work Function and Threshold Frequency Formula

The first theory of the photoelectric effect was put forward by Einstein by using Max Planck’s theory of light energy. It was considered that each packet of light energy or photons carried energy hv where h was a proportionality constant known as the Planck constant and v was the frequency of the electromagnetic waves of light. Kmax is the maximum amount of kinetic energy delivered to the atoms before they leave their atomic bonding. To explain threshold frequency we can write the equation for photoelectric effect as: 

Kmax = hv – W

Here W is the work function of the metal. It is the minimum energy that needs to be supplied to the metal body for the emission of photoelectrons. Now W can be written as: 

W= hvo

Here vo is the photoelectric threshold frequency of the electromagnetic rays. 

 

Steps for Photoemission from Metal Surfaces

The process of photoemission is a multistep process. These are:

  • The first step involves the striking of the electromagnetic radiation on the metal surface which causes the excitation of electrons. 

  • The second step involves overcoming the energy barrier. The electrons impart the energy given to them by the photons. Or it can be said that the energy of photons is transmitted to electrons.

  • The valence electrons of the metal which are bound loosely to the nucleus start leaving the metal body with the help of the excess energy provided after utilising the work function of the metal.

 

Uses of Photoelectric Effect Threshold Frequency 

The concepts threshold energy in photoelectric effect and threshold frequency find their application in many devices and processes. Some of which are:

Photomultipliers: 

These are extremely light-sensitive vacuum tubes that have quoted photocathodes with caesium, rubidium and antimony for providing low work function as these metals have extremely low work function. This is so that when illuminated by very low levels of light the photocathodes start releasing electrons and photocurrent can be detected.

Photoelectron Spectroscopy: 

Photoelectron spectroscopy measurements are done in a high vacuum environment to prevent electrons from being scattered by gas molecules present in the air. In this process monochromatic X-ray or UV rays of known frequency and kinetic energy are used to determine experimentally the composition of area samples.

Night Vision Devices: 

Photons when strike alkali metal or semiconductor material like gallium arsenide in an image intensifier tube, causes the ejection of photoelectrons because of the photoelectric effect. This is accelerated by an electrostatic field where they strike a phosphor-coated screen thus converting electrons back into photons. Signals are generated and intensified due to the acceleration of electrons or increasing the number of electrons from the secondary emission. This concept is used in night vision devices.

Image Sensors: 

Television in the early days had video camera tubes that used the photoelectric effect to transform an electronic signal into an optical image. However, currently, the mechanism of television working has changed.

As seen above, the concept of photoelectric emission, work function and photoelectric threshold frequency is indispensable for the study of quantum physical sciences. This is required for constructing various devices and various phenomena to occur.

 

Discovery Of Photoelectric Effect

Wilhelm Ludwig Franz Hallwachs initially proposed the photoelectric effect in 1887, while Heinrich Rudolf Hertz carried out the experimental proof. They discovered that when a surface is subjected to higher-frequency electromagnetic radiation, the energy is absorbed and electrons are released. The photoelectric effect is now understood to be a phenomenon in which a substance absorbs electromagnetic radiation and releases electrically charged particles.

To be more specific, the photoelectric effect causes electrons to be expelled when light is incident on a metal’s surface. A photoelectron is an electron that is emitted as a result of the photoelectric effect and is symbolised by the letter e–. Photoelectric current is the current generated as a result of the expelled electrons.

 

Did You Know?

The lower the work function of a metal, the easier it is for us to achieve the process of photoelectric emission and lower the photo-energy required for it to emit electr
ons. Caesium, lithium, antimony are perfect metals to obtain photoelectric emission phenomena because of their low work function. Most of the photo devices are coated with these metals.

[Physics Class Notes] on Planets and their Moons Pdf for Exam

Our solar system comprises the following 8 planets:

Mercury

Venus

Earth 

Mars 

Jupiter

Saturn 

Uranus

Neptune

It also includes dwarf planets like Pluto, dozens of moons, and millions of asteroids, comets, and meteoroids.

                   

The term “Planet,” is an ancient word with ties to science, history, astrology, mythology, and religion.  It is a celestial body that orbits the Sun and it carries enough mass to be circled by its own gravity, where each planet has a varying number of moons and natural satellites.

On this page, we will discuss planets and their moons in our solar system, and planets and their satellites in detail.

Moons of Planets in Solar System

Do you know the meaning of the Moons of Planets in the Solar System? If not, let’s understand it:

We all hear that planets and their natural satellites exist in the sky, among these, we have a moon. So, do you know what Moon is?

Moons are natural satellites that vary in shapes, sizes, and types. They are solid bodies, and few have atmospheres. 

Most planetary moons probably formed from the rotating discs of gas and dust, circling around planets in the early solar system.

                             

Do you know the Planets and Satellites of our Solar System? If not,  let’s understand the moons of different planets:

The below table comprises the Planets and their Moons:

Planets and their Moons List 

Planets’ Name

Planets and their Satellites/Planets with Moons)

Mercury

0

Venus

0

                                                    Planets With Moons

Earth 

1

Mars

2 (small moons)

Jupiter

79 

  • 53 confirmed

  •  26 provisional

Saturn

62 

  • 53 confirmed

  •  9 provisional

Uranus

27

Neptune

14

                                  

Planets and Moons

Planets of the inner solar system: Earth has one and Mars has its two small moons. 

However, in the outer solar system: the gas giants: Jupiter and Saturn, and therefore, the ice giants: Uranus and Neptune have dozens of moons.

Do You Know?

1. Property of a Moon 

A moon is Earth’s only natural satellite. At 1/4th the diameter of the Earth, a moon is the largest natural satellite within the system relative to the dimensions of its planet, and therefore the fifth largest satellite within the system overall. 

2. Moons in Asteroids

There are many moons in our system – even a couple of asteroids are found to possess small companion moons.

3. Provisional Moons

Moons that start with a letter and a year are provisional moons. However, they will be given a proper name when their discoveries are confirmed by additional observations.

Discovery of Our Solar System

For millennia, astronomers have followed points of sunshine that appeared to move among the celebs. the traditional Greeks named them planets, meaning “wanderers.” 

Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn were known in antiquity, and therefore the invention of the telescope added the belt, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, and lots of of those worlds’ moons. 

The dawn of time saw dozens of probes launched to explore our system, an adventure that continues today. just one spacecraft thus far, Voyager 1, has crossed the edge into the region. 

The discovery of Eris began a rash of the latest discoveries of dwarf planets, and eventually led to the International Astronomical Union revising the definition of a “planet.” The revision changed Pluto’s status from planet to dwarf planet in 2006, a choice that is still controversial – especially after the New Horizons mission found immense geological variety on the planet in 2015. 

Now, we will understand the Planet Definition:

Definition of a Planet

As per the definition of a planet given by IAU in 2006 officially, it is:

“Planets” under the present definition are some celestial bodies, like Ceres, Pallas, Juno, and Vesta (each an object within the solar asteroid belt), and Pluto (the first trans-Neptunian object discovered), that were once considered planets by the scientific community, are not any longer viewed as planets under the present definition of a planet.

Formation of Planets

Many scientists think our system formed from an enormous, rotating cloud of gas and mud referred to as the solar nebula. because the nebula collapsed due to its gravity, it spun faster and flattened into a disk. Most of the fabric was pulled toward the middle to make the sun. While, other particles within the disk collided and stuck together to make asteroid-sized objects named planetesimals, a number of which combined to become the asteroids, comets, moons, and planets.

Fun Facts:

  • Our solar system carries inner rocky planets, which are Mercury, Earth, and Mars. 

  • Apart from the Earth itself, five planets within the system are visible to the eye. These were regarded by many early cultures as divine/ as emissaries of deities. Because of the knowledge base advancement, human perception of the planets changed, incorporating a spread of disparate objects.

  • Astronomers are now trying to find another planet in our system, a true ninth planet, after evidence of its existence was unveiled on Jan. 20, 2016. 

  • The reputed “Planet-Nine,” as scientists are calling it, is assumed to be about 10 times the mass of Earth and 5,000 times the mass of Pluto.

[Physics Class Notes] on Potentiometer Working – Principle & Diagram Pdf for Exam

A potentiometer is a three-terminal variable resistor. A resistor, a bundle of resistance, is one of the commonly used components in an electric circuit. Often used to regulate the current flow either by adding or subtracting resistance from the circuit, resistors are available in several different shapes and sizes. Apart from the classification based on these two features, i.e., size and shape, the resistors are categorized as fixed and variable. As the names suggest, a fixed resistor has a fixed value of resistance, whereas a variable resistor possesses a resistance value over a defined range. 

Out of the various variable resistors available, the potentiometer is the most common one. In this article, we will discuss working, applications, and many other things related to the potentiometer. Nevertheless, to explain or understand the potentiometer working, we first need to comprehend the potentiometer. So, let’s start.

What is a Potentiometer?

As discussed above, a Potentiometer is a resistor with three terminals. Out of the three terminals – one is varying, whereas the rest two are fixed. It is an electric component used to measure the unknown voltage by comparing it with the known one, which can be drawn by a cell or any of the other supply sources. In other words, it is a device used for measuring the EMF (electromotive force), and internal resistance of a given cell. A Potentiometer can also be used to vary the resistance for measuring the potential differences. Although the most common use of Potentiometer is to control volume in radios and other audio-related electronic equipment, they are also helpful in manufacturing electronic components that provide a way of adjusting circuits to obtain the correct outputs.

Characteristics of Potentiometer

Some significant characteristics of Potentiometer are as follows:

  • As the potentiometers work on the comparative method rather than the deflection method for determining the unknown voltages, these are very accurate.

  • Potentiometers measure null or balance point that doesn’t require the power for measurement. 

  • As no current flows through pots when they are balanced, their working is free from the source resistance.

 

Potentiometer Working Principle

The basic potentiometer working principle is based on the fact that the potential across any piece of the wire is directly proportional to the length of the wire, which has a uniform cross-sectional area and the constant current flowing through it. In the case of no potential difference amid any two notes, the electric current will flow. The working principle of pot can be understood and explained through the below circuit, where L is the long resistive wire. The circuit also includes a battery of known EMF (electromotive force) and V, voltage named as driver cell voltage. Now, by connecting battery terminals to the two ends of L, assume a primary circuit arrangement. One end of this circuit is connected to a galvanometer (G) and the other to the cell whose electromotive force (E) is to be measured. The new circuit formed now is considered to be a secondary circuit. 

 

Below is the derivation to explain the working principle of Potentiometer:

According to Ohm’s law, 

V = IR

Where I is current, R is total resistance, and V is voltage.   

Now, R = ρL/A and V = I (pL/A).

Where ρ is resistivity and A is the cross-sectional area.

With ⍴ and A constant, I is also constant for a rheostat. Hence, 

Lρ/A = K

V = KL

E = Lρx/A =Kx

Where x: length of Potentiometer wire, E: cell with Lower EMF, and K: constant.

As the potential difference is zero (0) and there’s no flow of current, the galvanometer has null detection. So, x is considered as the length of the null point. Ultimately, the unknown electromotive force can be found by using K and x, as shown below:

E = Lρx/A = Kx

Since the EMF here includes two cells, let L1 and L2 be the null point length of the first cell and second cell with EMF E1 E1 and EMF E2 accordingly. So,

[ frac{E_{1}}{E_{2}} = frac{L_{1}}{L_{2}} ]

Types of Potentiometer

Although the basic working principle and construction of all potentiometers are the same, they differ based on the geometry of moving terminals. Most of the potentiometers have a wiper that rotates on an arc-shaped resistive material. Nonetheless, in some other types of potentiometers, the wiper slides linearly on a straight resistive strip. Based on the concept of the resistive strip, the potentiometers are of two types: Rotary and Linear.

  1. Rotary Potentiometer: This sort of pot has a wiper that rotates across two terminals for varying the resistance of the potentiometer. Depending upon the number of times one can turn or rotate the wiper, rotary potentiometers can be classified in the below categories:

    1. Single Turn: The wiper takes only a single turn and often rotates just 3/4th of the complete turn. 

    2. Multi-Turn: These potentiometers can make multiple rotations such as 5, 10, or more. 

    3. Concentric Pot: Here, two pots are adjusted together by using concentric shafts.

    4. Servo Pot: This is a motorized pot used to adjust or control a servo motor automatically. 

  2. Linear Potentiometer: Also known as slider, fader, or slide pot, these are potentiometers in which the wiper slides on a straight resistive strip. These can further be classified in the following categories:

    1. Slide Pot: Slide potentiometers are the high-quality pots mostly made from conductive plastics.

    2. Dual Slide Pot: This sort of pot is the calibration of two slide pots in parallel. 

    3. Multi-Turn Pot: This type of potentiometer is constructed by using a spindle, which actuates the slider. 

    4. Motorised Fader: The resistance and movement of the wiper in this pot are controlled by a motor.

 

Applications of Potentiometer

A potentiometer operates as a voltage divider and, therefore, has numerous applications. Some of the applications of pots are as follows: 

  • Audio Control: Both rotary and linear Potentiometers are used to control audio devices for changing and controlling the loudness and other audio-related signals. 

  • Television: In televisions, the pots are used to control the brightness, colour, and contrast of the picture. 

  • Motion Control: Pots are also used as servomechanisms, the position feedback devices used to create a closed-loop control.  

  • Transducers: Due to the aspect of giving large output signals, pots find applications in designing displacement transducers.