Waves
KS4PH-KS4-D006
The properties and behaviour of transverse and longitudinal waves, the wave equation, reflection, refraction, diffraction, and the electromagnetic spectrum. Covers sound as a longitudinal wave, the properties and applications of different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, and the uses and hazards of EM radiation.
National Curriculum context
Waves is a domain that spans both Physics and real-world applications from medical imaging to telecommunications. The DfE subject content requires pupils to describe the properties of waves (amplitude, wavelength, frequency, speed) and apply the wave equation (v = fλ) to calculate wave properties. Pupils must be able to explain reflection, refraction and diffraction in terms of wave behaviour, and to describe the electromagnetic spectrum as a family of transverse waves ranging from radio waves to gamma rays, with all waves travelling at the same speed in a vacuum. Required practicals include investigating reflection and refraction of light and measuring the speed of sound in air. Pupils are required to describe the uses of each part of the electromagnetic spectrum and evaluate the hazards of ionising radiation (X-rays, gamma rays, UV). Higher tier pupils additionally consider the superposition of waves and standing waves.
2
Concepts
2
Clusters
9
Prerequisites
2
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Describe wave properties and calculate wave speed, frequency and wavelength
introduction CuratedWave properties (amplitude, frequency, wavelength, speed) and the wave equation are the quantitative foundation for all wave physics at GCSE; they apply to both transverse and longitudinal waves.
Describe the electromagnetic spectrum and explain its uses and hazards
practice CuratedThe electromagnetic spectrum applies the wave model to the full range of EM radiation from radio waves to gamma rays; its uses and hazards for each region are a key socio-scientific application of wave physics.
Teaching Suggestions (2)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Infrared Radiation and Emission
Science Enquiry Fair TestPedagogical rationale
This required practical connects the electromagnetic spectrum to everyday thermal physics. The Leslie cube provides dramatic, measurable differences between surfaces that challenge everyday assumptions (pupils often expect 'white = hot' because white things feel warmer in sunlight — but that is absorption, not emission). The investigation develops understanding of infrared radiation as an energy transfer mechanism that does not require a medium, distinguishing it from conduction and convection. Linking the results to real-world applications (house insulation, thermos flasks, survival blankets) demonstrates the utility of physics knowledge.
Waves in a Ripple Tank
Science Enquiry Fair TestPedagogical rationale
The ripple tank makes invisible wave phenomena visible. Projected wave patterns allow direct observation and measurement of reflection, refraction, and diffraction — concepts that are otherwise abstract. The investigation naturally leads to the wave equation v = fλ through measurement. Comparing diffraction through different gap widths develops understanding of a key principle: waves interact most strongly with objects of similar size to their wavelength. This principle transfers directly to understanding why radio waves diffract around hills while light does not.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (2)
Wave Properties and Behaviour
knowledge AI DirectPH-KS4-C010
A wave transfers energy without transferring matter. Transverse waves (light, electromagnetic waves, water waves) have oscillations perpendicular to the direction of wave travel. Longitudinal waves (sound) have oscillations parallel to the direction of wave travel. All waves can be described by amplitude, wavelength, frequency, period and speed. The wave equation v = fλ relates speed, frequency and wavelength. Waves undergo reflection (change of direction at a boundary), refraction (change of speed and direction when entering a different medium) and diffraction (spreading of waves around obstacles or through gaps).
Teaching guidance
Required Practical 17: investigate reflection and refraction of light using ray boxes and glass blocks; measure the refractive index using n = sin(i)/sin(r). Measure the speed of sound using the echo method or using a signal generator and microphone. Use ripple tanks to demonstrate all wave behaviours qualitatively. Pupils should be able to describe why refraction occurs (change in wave speed at a boundary causes change in direction when the wave hits at an angle). Diffraction is greatest when the wavelength is comparable to the gap size.
Common misconceptions
Students think waves move matter — waves transfer energy; matter oscillates but does not travel with the wave. Students confuse frequency and period: period is the time for one complete oscillation; frequency is the number of oscillations per second; they are reciprocals of each other. Students also think refraction only occurs when light hits a surface at 90° — at 90° (normal incidence), light passes straight through without changing direction; refraction only changes direction when the wave hits at an angle.
Difficulty levels
Identifies basic wave properties (amplitude, wavelength, frequency) and distinguishes between transverse and longitudinal waves with examples.
Example task
State one example of a transverse wave and one example of a longitudinal wave. Describe how particle movement differs in each.
Model response: A transverse wave example is a water wave — particles move up and down, perpendicular to the direction the wave travels. A longitudinal wave example is a sound wave — particles vibrate back and forth in the same direction the wave travels, creating compressions and rarefactions.
Applies the wave equation v = fλ, measures wave properties from diagrams and oscilloscope traces, and describes reflection, refraction, and diffraction qualitatively.
Example task
A sound wave has a frequency of 440 Hz and travels at 330 m/s. Calculate its wavelength.
Model response: v = fλ, so λ = v/f = 330/440 = 0.75 m.
Explains refraction using changes in wave speed at boundaries, applies the law of reflection, describes diffraction through gaps and around obstacles, and interprets oscilloscope traces for frequency and amplitude changes.
Example task
Explain why a light ray bends towards the normal when it passes from air into glass. Include a diagram description.
Model response: Light travels slower in glass than in air. When the wavefront enters the glass at an angle, the part that enters first slows down while the rest continues at the original speed. This causes the wavefront to change direction, bending towards the normal. The angle of refraction is smaller than the angle of incidence. This is because the wavelength decreases in the denser medium (v = fλ; frequency stays constant, speed decreases, so wavelength decreases), causing the wave to change direction.
Analyses total internal reflection and critical angle, applies Snell's law quantitatively, evaluates the effects of diffraction on resolution and communication, and discusses wave behaviour in complex real-world applications such as fibre optics and seismology.
Example task
The critical angle for glass-to-air is 42°. Explain how optical fibres use total internal reflection and calculate the refractive index of the glass. Discuss one limitation of fibre optic communication.
Model response: When light inside the glass fibre hits the boundary at an angle greater than 42° to the normal, it is totally internally reflected — no light escapes. The fibre is designed so light always hits at angles exceeding 42°, allowing signals to travel long distances with minimal loss. Refractive index n = 1/sin(c) = 1/sin(42°) = 1/0.669 = 1.49. A limitation is signal degradation over very long distances: the pulse spreads (modal dispersion) because different paths through the fibre have slightly different lengths. This limits data rate and requires repeaters. Using single-mode fibres with very narrow cores reduces dispersion.
Delivery rationale
Secondary science knowledge concept — factual/theoretical content with clear misconceptions to diagnose.
Electromagnetic Spectrum
knowledge AI DirectPH-KS4-C011
The electromagnetic spectrum is a continuous range of transverse waves that all travel at the same speed in a vacuum (3 × 10⁸ m/s). From longest to shortest wavelength: radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, gamma rays. Higher frequency EM waves carry more energy per photon. Ionising radiation (X-rays, gamma rays, high-energy UV) can cause ionisation of atoms, damage DNA and increase the risk of cancer.
Teaching guidance
Teach the spectrum mnemonic: 'Rude Martians Invaded Venus Using X-ray Guns'. For each region of the spectrum, pupils must know the wavelength range (approximately), typical sources, and practical uses and hazards. Emphasise that visible light is just one small part of the EM spectrum. The relationship between photon energy and frequency (E = hf) is not required at GCSE but the qualitative relationship (higher frequency = more energetic photons = more ionising) should be understood. Connect to atomic structure (gamma rays from radioactive decay) and medical physics (X-ray imaging, radiotherapy).
Common misconceptions
Students often order the spectrum incorrectly, particularly forgetting the correct position of microwaves (between radio and infrared) and ultraviolet (between visible and X-rays). Students also think microwaves in ovens work by ionising food molecules — microwaves cause water molecules to vibrate, generating heat by friction; they do not ionise. Students confuse gamma rays (from nuclear decay) with X-rays (from electron interactions) — both are high-energy EM radiation but they have different sources.
Difficulty levels
Names the main regions of the electromagnetic spectrum in order of wavelength or frequency and gives one use for each.
Example task
List the electromagnetic spectrum in order from longest wavelength to shortest and give one use of each type.
Model response: Radio waves (TV and radio broadcasting), microwaves (cooking and satellite communication), infrared (thermal imaging and remote controls), visible light (seeing and photography), ultraviolet (fluorescent lamps and detecting forged banknotes), X-rays (medical imaging of bones), gamma rays (treating cancer).
Describes how all electromagnetic waves are transverse, travel at the speed of light in a vacuum, and differ only in wavelength and frequency. Relates wave properties to uses and hazards.
Example task
Explain why all electromagnetic waves travel at the same speed in a vacuum but have different frequencies and wavelengths.
Model response: All EM waves are oscillating electric and magnetic fields that propagate at 3 × 10⁸ m/s in a vacuum. They differ in frequency and wavelength, which are inversely related (v = fλ, with v constant). Higher frequency means shorter wavelength. The energy carried by the wave increases with frequency, which is why gamma rays are more ionising than radio waves.
Explains the hazards of different EM radiations at a cellular level (ionisation, heating), evaluates the balance of risk and benefit for medical and industrial uses, and applies the relationship between frequency, wavelength, and energy to explain penetration and absorption.
Example task
Compare the hazards and medical uses of X-rays and gamma rays. Explain why both can be useful despite being dangerous.
Model response: Both X-rays and gamma rays are ionising — they can remove electrons from atoms, damaging DNA and causing mutations or cell death. X-rays are used in medical imaging because they are absorbed differently by bone and soft tissue, creating contrast images. The benefit (diagnosis) outweighs the risk when exposure is minimised (lead shielding, limited dose). Gamma rays are used in radiotherapy: a focused beam targets cancer cells. Healthy tissue is damaged too, but rotating the beam source around the patient concentrates the dose at the tumour. In both cases, the ionising nature that makes them dangerous also makes them useful — the key is controlled, targeted exposure.
Analyses applications across the full EM spectrum in unfamiliar contexts, evaluates competing technologies, and discusses the physics behind detection methods, atmospheric absorption windows, and the social implications of EM technology.
Example task
Explain why astronomers use telescopes operating at different EM wavelengths (radio, infrared, visible, X-ray) and why some must be in space. Evaluate the importance of multi-wavelength astronomy.
Model response: Different astronomical objects and processes emit strongly at different wavelengths: hot gas in galaxy clusters emits X-rays; stars peak in visible/UV; cool dust clouds emit infrared; pulsars emit radio waves. Earth's atmosphere absorbs most EM radiation except visible light and radio waves (atmospheric windows). X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes must be in space (e.g. Chandra, Fermi) because the atmosphere blocks these wavelengths. Infrared telescopes benefit from space (e.g. JWST) to avoid atmospheric water vapour absorption and thermal noise. Multi-wavelength astronomy is essential because no single wavelength reveals the complete picture — combining data reveals temperature, composition, motion, and magnetic field information that would be invisible in any single band.
Delivery rationale
Secondary science knowledge concept — factual/theoretical content with clear misconceptions to diagnose.