0625 Igcse Physics 22
0625 Igcse Physics 22
0625 Igcse Physics 22
KOCHI
PASTPAPER BOOKLET
IGCSE LEVEL
0625 PHYSICS
(2017 - 2021)
Cambridge International Examinations
Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) February/March 2017
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*9900917881*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB17 03_0625_22/4RP
© UCLES 2017 [Turn over
2
stack of
coins
2.40 cm
2 Four balls with different masses are dropped from the heights shown.
P Q R S
1.0 kg
2.0 kg
3.0 kg
4.0 m
4.0 kg
3.0 m
2.0 m
1.0 m ground
3 An object is travelling in a straight line. The diagram is the speed-time graph for the object.
C
speed
m/s
B
D
A
0
0 time / s
4 Which statement about the masses and weights of objects on the Earth is correct?
5 An object in a space probe above the Earth weighs 3.5 N. The gravitational field strength at the
height of the space probe is 7.0 N / kg.
What are the mass and the weight of the object on the Earth’s surface?
mass / kg weight / N
A 0.50 3.5
B 0.50 5.0
C 2.0 3.5
D 2.0 20
6 A skydiver jumps from a stationary helicopter and reaches a steady vertical speed. She then
opens her parachute.
path of car
car
direction
of travel
A All the forces are balanced as the car is moving at constant speed.
B The forces are unbalanced and the resultant force acts away from the centre of the circle.
C The forces are unbalanced and the resultant force acts towards the centre of the circle.
D The forces are unbalanced and the resultant force is in the direction of travel of the car.
A Nm B N/m C Ns D N/s
9 A man can either take an escalator or a lift to travel up between two floors in a hotel.
escalator lift
The escalator takes 20 seconds to carry the man between the two floors. The useful work done
against gravity is W. The useful power developed is P.
The lift takes 30 seconds to carry the same man between the same two floors.
How much useful work against gravity is done by the lift, and how much useful power is
developed by the lift?
useful work
useful power
done against
developed by lift
gravity by lift
11 A column of liquid has height h, mass m and density ρ. The gravitational field strength is g.
A hρ B mρ C mgh D ρ gh
12 The diagrams show two mercury barometers. The right-hand diagram shows a tube of larger
diameter. There is a vacuum above the mercury in both tubes.
Which labelled position on the right-hand tube shows the mercury level in the right-hand tube?
A
B
C
glass
tubes
D
mercury
13 Very small pollen grains are suspended in water. A bright light shines from the side.
When looked at through a microscope, small specks of light are seen to be moving in a random,
jerky manner.
eye
microscope
bright light
pollen grains
in water
Which row shows whether the mercury absorbs or releases energy and what happens to the
bonds between the mercury atoms?
bonds between
energy
atoms
A absorbed stronger
B absorbed weaker
C released stronger
D released weaker
15 A model thermometer consists of a flask of coloured water and a stopper with a glass tube
passing through it, as shown.
glass tube
temperature scale
stopper
● The flask can be replaced with a larger one full of coloured water.
● The glass tube can be replaced with one with a larger internal diameter.
16 A metal has a specific heat capacity of 360 J / (kg °C). An object made of this metal has a mass of
2.0 kg.
17 In which type of substance are free electrons involved in the transfer of thermal energy?
A all liquids
B all solids
C metals only
D plastics only
18 Four objects, made of the same material and having the same mass, are at the same
temperature. The objects have different surfaces and different surface areas.
A dull large
B dull small
C shiny large
D shiny small
19 A person uses a surfboard to ride every 30th wave crest towards the beach. The wave crest
travels at a speed of 1.6 m / s and the distance between each wave crest is 24 m.
How many wave crests does the person surf in one hour?
A 1 B 2 C 8 D 450
20 In a shallow tank, a water wave moves towards a barrier with a narrow gap.
barrier
water
wave
A B
C D
A diffraction
B dispersion
C refraction
D total internal reflection
22 The points labelled F are the principal foci of a lens. A beam of parallel light is incident on the
lens.
Which diagram shows the path of the light after it passes through the lens?
A
F F
B
F F
C
F F
D
F F
25 A small compass is placed close to a strong bar magnet, the same distance from each end.
Which diagram shows the direction in which the compass needle points?
A B C D
N N N N
compass compass compass compass
S S S S
26 A bar magnet can be demagnetised by hammering it for a long time or by slowly removing it from
a coil connected to a power supply.
Which row completes the descriptions of how these processes are carried out?
A electrons
B neutrons
C nucleons
D protons
A B C D
20 mm 20 mm
10 mm 10 mm
1 mm 2 mm 1 mm 2 mm
29 An air-conditioning unit, a lamp and an electric fire all receive electrical energy from the mains
supply.
From which of these devices is all this energy eventually transferred to the surroundings?
air-
electric
conditioning lamp
fire
unit
A key
B = all energy transferred to surroundings
C = not all energy transferred to surroundings
D
A B C D
12 V 12 V 12 V 12 V
A A A A
2.0 Ω 2.0 Ω 2.0 Ω 2.0 Ω
What happens to the resistance of the LDR, the current in the fixed resistor and the reading on
the voltmeter?
32 The diagram shows two linked circuits to control when a bell is switched on.
The conditions are altered and only one pair of conditions causes the bell to ring.
0 0 1
0 1 0
1 0 0
1 1 0
34 In this circuit, a component at X automatically protects the wiring from overheating if there is a
fault.
electrical supply
circuit
fuse switch
breaker
A key
B = suitable
C = not suitable
D
35 The diagram shows a simple transformer with an input of 240 V and an output of 40 V.
600
input 240 V 40 V output
turns
36 The diagram shows a current-carrying wire. The wire is at 90° to a magnetic field. The direction of
the magnetic field is into the page.
A force acts on the wire due to the current and the magnetic field.
37 A radioactive substance emits radiation at a rate of 600 emissions per second. Four hours later, it
emits radiation at a rate of 300 emissions per second.
What is the half-life of the substance and what is the rate of emission after a further four hours?
A 2 0
B 2 150
C 4 0
D 4 150
109
38 The nuclide notation for an isotope of silver is 47 Ag .
A 47 B 62 C 109 D 156
39 The equation represents an isotope of radium Ra decaying to an isotope of radon Rn with the
emission of particle X.
226 222
88 Ra → 86 Rn +X
What is particle X?
0 1 4 1
A −1 e B 1H C 2 He D 0n
B α-decay only
D β-decay only
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.
Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) February/March 2018
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*8385724903*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB18 03_0625_22/4RP
© UCLES 2018 [Turn over
2
1 Which instrument is used to measure accurately the diameter of a thin metal wire?
A 30 cm ruler
B measuring tape
C metre rule
D micrometer screw gauge
A Every force acting on the parachutist is equal to zero and his acceleration is equal to zero.
B Every force acting on the parachutist is equal to zero and his velocity is equal to zero.
C The resultant force acting on the parachutist is equal to zero and his acceleration is equal to
zero.
D The resultant force acting on the parachutist is equal to zero and his velocity is equal to zero.
12.0
speed
10.0
m/s
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0
0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
time / s
4 The diagram shows a bird in flight. The bird is flying in a horizontal direction to the right.
D B
A 47 N B 75 N C 120 N D 750 N
cm3
50
40
30
20
10
balance
Some more of the liquid is added until the liquid level reaches the 50 cm3 mark.
7 A stone of mass 0.12 kg is fired from a catapult. The velocity of the stone changes from 0 to
5.0 m / s in 0.60 s.
What is the average resultant force acting on the stone while it is being fired?
The rod is suspended by a thread 20 cm from end X. A weight of 5.0 N is suspended from end X.
thread
20 cm uniform rod
X Y
80 cm
5.0 N
A 6 cm B 10 cm C 26 cm D 30 cm
9 A wooden plank rests in equilibrium on two rocks on opposite sides of a narrow stream.
P R
plank
A P+Q=R
B P+R=Q
C P=Q=R
D P=Q+R
10 A ball of mass 0.16 kg is moving forwards at a speed of 0.50 m / s. A second ball of mass 0.10 kg
is stationary. The first ball strikes the second ball. The second ball moves forwards at a speed of
0.50 m / s.
11 A ball is at rest at the top of a hill. It rolls down the hill. At the bottom of the hill the ball hits a wall
and stops.
The student applies the brakes and stops. The braking distance is 10 m.
gas Q
supply
water
There is a gas leak and the pressure of the gas supply falls.
What happens to the water level at P and what happens to the water level at Q?
A falls falls
B falls rises
C rises falls
D rises rises
14 A submarine is 20 m below the surface of the sea. The pressure due to the water at this depth
is P.
The density of sea water is 1.3 times the density of fresh water.
A P B P C 1.3 P D 1.7 P
1.3
15 A cylinder with a tap contains a fixed mass of gas X. The gas is contained by a piston which can
move freely towards or away from the tap.
atmosphere
gas X
tap closed
piston
cylinder
When the tap is opened, the piston moves slightly to the right, towards the tap.
atmosphere
gas X
tap open
What happens to the temperature of the remaining liquid and how does this temperature change
affect the rate of evaporation?
rate of
temperature
evaporation
A decreases decreases
B decreases increases
C increases decreases
D increases increases
20 A teacher demonstrates an experiment to a class. A boiling tube is filled with water and some ice
cubes are trapped at the bottom of the tube. The teacher then heats the boiling tube in the
position shown until the water at the top boils.
water
ice heat
metal mesh
21 A metal cup has a plastic lining. The cup is filled with hot water and held by a hand.
Which statement about the transfer of thermal energy from the water to the hand is correct?
22 Which row shows an example of a transverse wave and an example of a longitudinal wave?
transverse longitudinal
A light radio
B radio sound
C sound water
D water light
23 A wave passes through a gap and diffraction causes the wave to spread out.
A student views the image of the object in the mirror from point P.
object B C D
mirror
A aluminium
B glass
C iron
D wood
lamp 1
lamp 2
Switch S is closed.
A lamp 1 only
B lamp 2 only
C lamp 1 and lamp 2
D neither lamp 1 nor lamp 2
34 A circuit contains four ammeters and three resistors with different values.
A A D
10 Ω
A
B A
20 Ω
30 Ω
A
C
In which diagram does the lower circuit of the pair not behave in the same way as the upper
circuit?
A B
C D
– +
The magnitude of the potential difference across the coil is increased and its direction is
reversed.
A The lines become closer together and the right-hand end becomes a south pole.
B The lines become closer together and the right-hand end remains a north pole.
C The lines become further apart and the right-hand end becomes a south pole.
D The lines become further apart and the right-hand end remains a north pole.
23
37 The notation for an isotope of sodium is 11 Na .
Which row gives the composition of a neutral atom of this isotope of sodium?
A 11 12 11
B 11 12 12
C 11 23 11
D 12 11 12
39 When measuring the emissions from a radioactive rock brought into the laboratory, a teacher
mentions that background radiation must be taken into account.
40 Solid caesium-137 decays by the emission of a β-particle to form solid barium-137, which emits a
γ-ray.
The diagram shows a radiation detector a distance of 5 cm from the block. The detector registers
a count rate of 2000 counts / second.
detector
counter
block
5 cm
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.
Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) February/March 2019
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*1358010994*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
This syllabus is regulated for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB19 03_0625_22/3RP
© UCLES 2019 [Turn over
2
1 Which row shows the best choice of measuring instruments to obtain accurate values for the
distances shown?
3 The graph shows how the speed of a car varies during part of its journey.
20
speed
m/s 15
10
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
time / s
4 The gravitational field strength on the Moon is less than on the Earth.
Which of these is different when done on the Moon compared with when done on the Earth?
A the gravitational potential energy gained by a stone lifted through the same vertical height
B the kinetic energy gained by a ball when hit with the same force for the same period of time
C the momentum gained by a bullet when fired from the same gun
D the work done in accelerating a stone from rest to the same speed
When exactly half of the oil has been used, the mass of the bottle plus the remaining oil is
0.90 kg.
1.30 0.90
kg kg
6 A solid ball has a volume of 4.0 cm3. The density of the ball is 1.6 g / cm3.
7 The extension / load graph for a spring is shown. The unstretched length of the spring is 15.0 cm.
3
extension / cm
0
0 1 2 3 4 5
load / N
When an object of unknown weight is suspended on the spring, the length of the spring is
16.4 cm.
10 A constant force acts on a body causing the momentum of the body to increase.
Which expression relates the force to the momentum and the time taken?
change in momentum
A force =
time taken
B force = momentum
time taken
C force = change in momentum × time taken
A 19 kJ B 38 kJ C 170 kJ D 340 kJ
12 Which source of energy uses the production of steam to generate electrical energy?
A hydroelectric
B nuclear
C tides
D waves
13 A car, travelling on a straight horizontal road, has 1.6 MJ of kinetic energy. It accelerates for 20 s
until it has 2.5 MJ of kinetic energy.
What is the average power output used to increase the kinetic energy of the car?
A 45 W B 205 W C 45 kW D 205 kW
A B C D
15 The diagram shows a U-tube manometer containing three liquids: mercury, liquid X and liquid Y.
Neither liquid X or liquid Y mixes with mercury.
liquid X liquid Y
mercury
Which row compares the pressure exerted by liquid X and by liquid Y on the mercury, and the
density of liquid X and the density of liquid Y?
16 Gas molecules exert a pressure when they collide with the walls of a container.
A They experience a change in force which exerts a pressure equal to momentum × area on
the walls.
B They experience a change in force which exerts a pressure equal to momentum on the
area
walls.
C They experience a change in momentum which exerts a pressure equal to force × area on
the walls.
D They experience a change in momentum which exerts a pressure equal to force on the
area
walls.
17 A thermometer has graduations which start at –10 °C and end at 110 °C.
°C
What is the lower fixed point and what is the upper fixed point of the Celsius scale?
A –10 100
B –10 110
C 0 100
D 0 110
18 A 1 kg block of aluminium requires more thermal energy to raise its temperature by 1 °C than a
1 kg block of copper requires.
Why is this?
They use different rods, each of the same dimensions, to hold their food near the fire.
rod
food
fire
Which material is the best choice to prevent their hands from getting too hot?
A aluminium
B copper
C steel
D wood
20 Two metal cans are identical, except that one has a shiny silver outer surface and the other has a
dull black outer surface. They each have 300 g of water at 80 °C sealed inside them. They are
both in a vacuum, in the darkness of outer space.
barrier
C D
22 A vibrating object produces ripples on the surface of a liquid. The object completes 20 vibrations
every second. The spacing of the ripples, from one crest to the next, is 3.0 cm.
23 A narrow beam of light is travelling through a transparent liquid. It meets the surface as shown, at
an angle of incidence of 40°. The refractive index of the liquid is 1.5.
air
liquid
40°
24 Which diagram correctly represents rays of light passing through a converging lens in a camera?
A B
camera camera
object object
image image
lens lens
C D
camera camera
object object
image image
lens lens
in a vacuum in air
26 A sound wave passes a point. The air pressure at that point increases and then decreases
300 times every second.
27 A boy stands 150 m from a wall. He claps and when he hears the echo, he immediately claps
again. He continues this for some time.
Another student has a stop-watch. She starts the watch on the first clap and stops it on the
eleventh clap. The watch reads 10.0 s.
Which value do her measurements give for the speed of sound in air?
28 The ends of three metal rods are tested by holding end Q of rod 1 close to the others in turn.
R T
Q S U
A rod 1 only
B rod 1 and rod 2
C rod 1 and rod 3
D rod 3 only
29 A metal sphere is charged by induction. There are four stages W, X, Y and Z in this process.
A W → X → Y → Z
B W → X → Z → Y
C Z → W → X → Y
D X → Z → W → Y
30 Which electrical quantity is defined in terms of the energy supplied in driving charge round a
complete circuit?
A current
B electromotive force
C potential difference
D power
31 A student sets up a circuit containing a battery of two cells and three lamps, as shown.
– + – +
A B C D
A B C D
Which potential divider makes the potential difference across component Y increase when the
light intensity increases?
A B C D
X X X X
Y Y Y Y
34 There are two inputs to the combination of logic gates shown, and one output.
input 1
output
input 2
A B
C D
A a change in shape
B a change in weight
C a resultant force
D a turning effect
39 A radioactive isotope of carbon 14C decays by beta emission to give an isotope of nitrogen 14
N
and a beta particle. The equation for the reaction is shown.
14
XC → 14
7N + Y0β
What is the value of X and of Y?
X Y
A 6 –1
B 6 1
C 8 –1
D 8 1
Which statement explains how beta particles are emitted from an atom?
A An electron is emitted as a beta particle from an inner electron shell of the atom.
B An electron is emitted as a beta particle from an outer electron shell of the atom.
C A neutron changes into a proton and a beta particle is emitted from the nucleus.
D A proton changes into a neutron and a beta particle is emitted from the nucleus.
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) February/March 2020
45 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
• There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions.
• For each question there are four possible answers A, B, C and D. Choose the one you consider correct
and record your choice in soft pencil on the multiple choice answer sheet.
• Follow the instructions on the multiple choice answer sheet.
• Write in soft pencil.
• Write your name, centre number and candidate number on the multiple choice answer sheet in the
spaces provided unless this has been done for you.
• Do not use correction fluid.
• Do not write on any bar codes.
• You may use a calculator.
• Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
INFORMATION
• The total mark for this paper is 40.
• Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
• Any rough working should be done on this question paper.
IB20 03_0625_22/5RP
© UCLES 2020 [Turn over
2
30
metal sheet
20
10
cm
0
0 cm 10 20 30 40 50
2 A ball falls from rest through the air towards the ground. The diagram shows two forces acting on
the ball.
air resistance
gravitational force
On the Earth, the ball reaches the chamber floor 4.0 m in front of the spring.
An identical experiment is done on the Moon. The gravitational field strength is lower on the
Moon than on the Earth.
The experimental results on the Moon are compared with those on the Earth.
A The horizontal speed is greater on the Moon and the ball hits the floor 4.0 m in front of the
spring.
B The horizontal speed is greater on the Moon and the ball hits the floor more than 4.0 m in
front of the spring.
C The horizontal speed is the same on the Moon and the ball hits the floor 4.0 m in front of the
spring.
D The horizontal speed is the same on the Moon and the ball hits the floor more than 4.0 m in
front of the spring.
4 Diagram 1 shows a piece of flexible material that contains many pockets of air. Diagram 2 shows
the same piece of flexible material after it has been compressed so that its volume decreases.
diagram 1 diagram 2
(before compression) (after compression)
What happens to the mass and to the weight of the flexible material when it is compressed?
mass weight
A increases increases
B increases no change
C no change increases
D no change no change
5 The graph shows how the strength of the Earth’s gravitational field varies as the distance from
the Earth’s surface increases.
strength of
the Earth’s
gravitational
field
0
0 distance from the
surface of the Earth
Which row describes the effect that this has on the mass and on the weight of an object as it
moves further away from the Earth’s surface?
A decreases decreases
B decreases unchanged
C unchanged decreases
D unchanged unchanged
A solid metal ball is dropped into the water and the water level rises to 56 cm3.
What is the density of the metal from which the ball is made?
7 A car travels along a horizontal road at constant speed. Three horizontal forces act on the car.
The diagram shows two of these forces.
direction of
motion forwards
What is the size and the direction of the third horizontal force acting on the car?
A 1200 N backwards
B 1200 N forwards
C 1800 N backwards
D 1800 N forwards
car
direction of the
motion of the car
What is the direction of the resultant force on the car when it is going round the bend?
9 An athlete with mass 70 kg trains by performing press-ups with a load on his back. The diagram
shows the perpendicular distances involved.
The centre of mass of the athlete is CM and the centre of mass of the load he is carrying is CL.
load
CL
CM
A 54 N B 76 N C 540 N D 760 N
A The air pistol moves backwards with speed greater than the pellet.
B The air pistol moves backwards with speed less than the pellet.
C The air pistol moves forward with speed greater than the pellet.
D The air pistol moves forward with speed less than the pellet.
advantage disadvantage
12 An electric motor provides 900 J of useful output energy. The efficiency of the motor is 60 %.
13 A crane takes 2.0 minutes to lift a 500 kg load to the top of a building that is 12 m high.
A 21 W B 50 W C 500 W D 30 000 W
skis
The weight of the skier is 550 N. The total area of his skis in contact with the ground is 0.015 m2.
15 A tall cylinder is partly filled with two liquids which do not mix. The two liquids have different
densities. A student measures the pressure due to the liquids at different depths.
position P
Which graph shows how the liquid pressure varies between positions P and Q?
A B
Q Q
pressure pressure
P P
depth depth
C D
Q
pressure pressure
P Q
P
depth depth
16 When pollen grains in water are viewed through a microscope, they are seen to be in continuous,
rapid random motion.
17 A student measures the mass of warm water in an open container over two minutes. The
container is kept at a constant temperature. The results are in the table.
0.0 33.9
0.5 30.6
1.0 27.6
1.5 24.9
2.0 22.5
18 Which points are the fixed points of the liquid-in-glass thermometer shown?
19 The specific heat capacities of aluminium, iron, ethanol and water are given.
aluminium 900
iron 450
ethanol 2400
water 4200
The starting temperature of each metal is 60 °C. The starting temperature of each liquid is 10 °C.
metal liquid
A aluminium ethanol
B iron ethanol
C aluminium water
D iron water
21 A teacher shows his class a polystyrene cup. The cup is made from thick plastic with lots of tiny
air bubbles in it.
He asks the class why the cup is so good at keeping a hot drink warm. Three suggestions are
made.
22 A boy jumps into an indoor swimming pool. He notices that the water appears to get colder as he
goes deeper underwater. This is due to convection.
A Cold water is more dense than warm water so it sinks to the bottom of the pool.
B Warm water is more dense than cold water so it rises to the surface of the pool.
C The molecules in cold water have more kinetic energy than the molecules in warm water so
they move to the bottom of the pool faster.
D The molecules in warm water are closer together than the molecules in cold water so they
rise to the surface of the pool.
23 Four students A, B, C and D, investigate the diffraction of water waves through a gap.
Each student uses a different gap size and a different wavelength for the water waves.
Which student produces the waves which have the most diffraction?
A 2.0 1.8
B 3.0 2.1
C 4.0 2.0
D 5.0 0.9
1 2
ripple tank
drum
3 4
25 Which diagram shows how the light from a candle is reflected by a mirror, and shows the position
of the image formed?
A B
image of image of
candle candle
candle candle
eye
eye
mirror mirror
C D
candle candle
image of
candle eye
image of eye
candle
mirror mirror
27 The wavelength of blue light changes from 4.7 × 10–7 m to 3.5 × 10–7 m as it passes from air to
water.
A 7.4 × 107 m / s
B 1.3 × 108 m / s
C 2.2 × 108 m / s
D 3.0 × 108 m / s
28 The diagram shows compressions and rarefactions in air as a sound wave moves from left to
right.
rarefaction compression
What will happen to the number of particles in a region of rarefaction and in a region of
compression?
A decrease decrease
B decrease increase
C increase decrease
D increase increase
29 The diagrams show three different metal rods P, Q and R, inside coils of wire.
Small iron nails are placed on a wooden bench under the rods.
Diagram 1 shows the situation when there are electric currents in the wires.
Diagram 2 shows the situation when the currents are switched off.
diagram 1
P Q R
current
in coils
wooden
bench
diagram 2
P Q R
no
current
in coils
wooden
bench
P Q R
30 Which row describes conventional current and electron flow in a circuit containing a cell?
31 A student makes four resistors using different pieces of wire. The wires have different diameters
and lengths. All the pieces of wire are made of the same material.
Which piece of wire will make the resistor with the largest resistance?
diameter / mm length / cm
A 0.8 10
B 0.8 17
C 2.0 10
D 2.0 17
32 A student is to determine the resistance of resistor R. She uses a circuit including a voltmeter and
an ammeter.
A B C D
V A V V A
R R R R
A A V
33 The diagram shows a battery connected to two resistors. Three ammeters M1, M2 and M3 are
connected in the circuit.
M1 A A M3
A
M2
reading on reading on
M2 / A M3 / A
A 0.0 0.0
B 0.5 0.5
C 0.5 1.0
D 1.0 1.0
34 A cell is connected to a parallel combination of a 2.0 Ω resistor and a 4.0 Ω resistor. The current
in the 4.0 Ω resistor is 1.0 A.
2.0 Ω
4.0 Ω
1.0 A
input output
A B C D
0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1
secondary coil
A 12 B 20 C 50 D 20 000
Which particle experiences a magnetic force acting up out of the plane of the paper?
A B
proton electron
C D
proton electron
38 When Rutherford bombarded thin gold foil with α-particles, he found that some α-particles were
deflected through large angles.
39 The diagram shows the path followed by α-particles as they pass between two charged plates.
They are deflected downwards.
+ + + + + + + + +
β-particles
α-particles
– – – – – – – – –
40 The graph shows the count rate from a radioactive source over a period of time.
2000
count rate
counts / s
1500
1000
500
0
0 1 2 3
time / hours
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) February/March 2021
45 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions.
For each question there are four possible answers A, B, C and D. Choose the one you consider correct
and record your choice in soft pencil on the multiple choice answer sheet.
Follow the instructions on the multiple choice answer sheet.
Write in soft pencil.
Write your name, centre number and candidate number on the multiple choice answer sheet in the
spaces provided unless this has been done for you.
Do not use correction fluid.
Do not write on any bar codes.
You may use a calculator.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
INFORMATION
The total mark for this paper is 40.
Each correct answer will score one mark.
Any rough working should be done on this question paper.
IB21 03_0625_22/3RP
© UCLES 2021 [Turn over
2
1 A student has a measuring cylinder containing water and also has a balance.
Which of these could she use to find the volume of a small metal sphere?
2 A ball hits a bat with a velocity of 30 m / s, and leaves the bat travelling with a velocity of 20 m / s in
the opposite direction. The ball is in contact with the bat for 0.10 s.
What is the magnitude of the acceleration of the ball whilst it is in contact with the bat?
A 3.0 m / s B 5.0 m / s C 50 m / s D 60 m / s
5 A small bottle has a mass of 20 g when empty. The volume of the bottle is 10 cm3.
6 An object of mass 0.80 kg is moving in a straight line at a velocity of 2.0 m / s. A force is exerted
on the object, in the direction of motion, for a period of 1.0 minute and the velocity of the object
increases to 6.0 m / s.
P
Z X
Which statement about the acceleration of the object when it is at point P is correct?
8 An object is pivoted at point P. A student ties a length of string to a peg on the object. He pulls
the string with a force F.
string
s t
peg
r
q P
object
9 A gas molecule strikes the wall of a container. The molecule rebounds with the same speed.
wall wall
gas molecule gas molecule
What happens to the kinetic energy and what happens to the momentum of the molecule?
A changes changes
B changes stays the same
C stays the same changes
D stays the same stays the same
The box gains 30 J of kinetic energy and 10 J of thermal energy is produced by the friction
between the box and the surface.
A 10 J B 20 J C 30 J D 40 J
The crane then lifts a lorry, which has 3.0 times the weight of the car, through 0.25 of the distance
in 0.50 of the time.
A 3P B 3P C 8P D 6P
8 2 3
mm
500
from 400
gas supply
300
200
100
mercury
0
6.0 cm
X
Z
4.0 cm Y 8.0 cm
On which face must the box rest in order to exert the least pressure?
A face X
B face Y
C face Z
D The pressure is the same for all the faces.
14 Air in a sealed syringe is slowly compressed by moving the piston. The temperature of the air
stays the same.
air
syringe piston
A The pressure of the air decreases because its molecules now travel more slowly.
B The pressure of the air decreases because the area of the syringe walls is now smaller.
C The pressure of the air increases because its molecules now hit the syringe walls more
frequently.
D The pressure of the air increases because its molecules now travel more quickly.
15 In an experiment, smoke particles are suspended in air and viewed through a microscope.
A Air particles have large masses compared to smoke particles and they move in one direction
only.
B Air particles have large masses compared to smoke particles and they move in random
directions.
C Air particles move at high speeds compared to smoke particles and they move in one
direction only.
D Air particles move at high speeds compared to smoke particles and they move in random
directions.
16 The graph shows how the internal energy of 1.0 kg of a metal changes with temperature.
835
830
internal
energy 825
/ kJ
820
815
810
805
800
795
0 20 40 60 80 100
temperature / °C
What is the increase in the internal energy of a block of the same metal of mass 0.25 kg when its
temperature rises from 40 C to 50 C?
17 A piece of melting ice at 0 C and a beaker of boiling water are both in a laboratory. The
laboratory is at 20 C.
boiling water
Bunsen burner
melting ice heating water
What is happening to the temperature of the melting ice and what is happening to the
temperature of the boiling water?
temperature of temperature of
melting ice boiling water
A constant constant
B constant increasing
C increasing constant
D increasing increasing
What is one method by which thermal energy is transferred in the copper rod?
A Free electrons transfer energy from the cooler end to the hotter end.
B Free electrons transfer energy from the hotter end to the cooler end.
C Molecules of copper move from the cooler end to the hotter end.
D Molecules of copper move from the hotter end to the cooler end.
19 Which change will cause a decrease in the rate of radiation emitted by an object?
20 What is the approximate wavelength in air of the highest frequency sound that can be heard by a
normal healthy person?
21 What causes the change in direction when light travels from air into glass?
22 Light from a torch is incident on a plane mirror. The angle of incidence is 38.
23 Two rays with an angle of incidence of 60 pass into dilute and concentrated sugar-water
solutions. The refractions are shown.
60 60
air air
dilute concentrated
sugar sugar
40 35
solution solution
A decreases decreases
B decreases increases
C increases decreases
D increases increases
screen
image
lens
candle
Various sharp images are produced on the screen by moving the lens and the screen backwards
and forwards.
25 Which row gives the approximate speeds at which ultraviolet waves travel in air and in a
vacuum?
X Y
What are the names of the parts of the sound wave labelled X and Y?
X Y
A amplitude wavelength
B compression rarefaction
C rarefaction amplitude
D wavelength compression
Which row correctly compares the speed of sound in ice and the speed of sound in water vapour
with the speed of sound in water?
28 Three methods to demagnetise a magnet are suggested. The magnet is in an east-west direction.
29 Three cores of different metals P, Q and R are placed inside identical coils of wire.
The three diagrams show what happens when there is a current in the coils.
coil
+ + +
– – –
core
P Q R
iron
nails
The three diagrams below show what happens when the current is then switched off.
+ + +
– – –
P Q R
30 Two uncharged metal spheres X and Y rest on insulating stands and touch each other. A
negatively charged plastic rod is brought near to sphere X.
metal spheres
negatively –
–
charged rod –
– X Y
–
–
What are the signs and the relative magnitudes of the charges induced on X and Y?
relative magnitudes
charge on X charge on Y
of charges
cross-sectional
length of wire
area of wire
A decrease decrease
B decrease increase
C increase decrease
D increase increase
32 There is a current I in a resistor of resistance R for a time t. The potential difference across the
resistor is V.
A E = IR B E = IV C E = IRt D E = IVt
33 A resistor R is connected in parallel with an 8.0 resistor. The resistance of this combination
is 4.0 .
8.0 Ω
What happens to the brightness of the lamp and the potential difference (p.d.) across the lamp,
when the slider is moved from X to Y?
A decreases decreases
B decreases increases
C increases decreases
D increases increases
A B C D
P Q R P Q R P Q R P Q R
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1
36 The diagram shows an electromagnet near a coil of wire connected to a voltmeter. The reading
on the voltmeter is zero.
electromagnet coil
soft iron
switch
V
+ –
A It keeps increasing.
B It quickly increases and stays at maximum.
C It quickly increases and then decreases.
D It stays on zero.
37 Which graph shows the voltage output of an a.c. generator with the peaks and zeros correctly
labelled?
A B
peaks peaks
voltage V voltage V
0 0
0 time t 0 time t
zeros zeros
C D
peaks peaks
voltage V voltage V
zeros
0 0
0 time t 0 time t
zeros peaks
39 When alpha particles are incident on a thin metal foil, most of them pass through undeviated.
What does this observation reveal about the nature of the atom?
40 A laboratory worker measures the count rate from a radioactive source. He records his results in
a table.
0 100
1.0 73
2.0 54
3.0 41
4.0 31
A 1.5 minutes
B 2.0 minutes
C 3.0 minutes
D 4.0 minutes
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) May/June 2017
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*7478947670*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB17 06_0625_22/3RP
© UCLES 2017 [Turn over
2
1 What is the most accurate and precise method to measure the thickness of a coin?
2 A student determines the average speed of a bubble rising through a liquid at constant speed.
bubble
18 Q
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
P
26
cm
27
bubble
3 The diagram shows the speed-time graph for a toy car travelling in a straight line.
4.0
speed
m/s 3.0
2.0
1.0
0
0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
time / s
What is the acceleration of the car during the first two seconds and what is the total distance that
it travels?
acceleration total
m / s2 distance / m
A 0.50 10
B 0.50 20
C 2.0 10
D 2.0 20
5 The masses of a measuring cylinder before and after pouring some liquid into it are shown in the
diagram.
cm3 cm3
200 200
100 100
liquid
7 A car travels forwards along a straight horizontal road. Only the horizontal forces acting on it are
shown.
air resistance
and friction
driving force
8 The diagram shows a wooden beam of weight 20 N. The centre of mass of the beam is labelled
M.
There is a pivot at one end of the beam. The beam is kept horizontal by an upward force, F.
2.0 m
1.2 m
pivot
M wooden beam
20 N
A 12 N B 20 N C 30 N D 33 N
9 A ball of mass 2.0 kg is travelling at a speed of 12 m / s. It moves towards an object of mass 3.0 kg
which is at rest.
12 m / s
3.0 kg
2.0 kg at rest
Which row gives the total momentum, and the speed of both objects immediately after the
collision?
A 0 4.8
B 0 8.0
C 24 4.8
D 24 8.0
A 15 kg B 50 kg C 75 kg D 150 kg
11 An electric generator produces an electromotive force (e.m.f.) of 200 V and produces a current of
3.0 A in a circuit. The generator is driven by an engine with a power of 2.4 kW.
A B
C D
The diagrams show the depth and the density of liquid in each container.
A B C D
40 cm
30 cm
20 cm
10 cm
14 Brownian motion is observed when using a microscope to look at smoke particles in air.
15 A student blows air through a liquid using a straw. This causes the liquid to evaporate quickly and
therefore to cool.
A the energy needed to change unit mass of ice into water at constant temperature
B the energy needed to change unit volume of ice into water at constant temperature
C the energy needed to produce unit temperature increase of unit mass of ice
D the energy needed to produce unit temperature increase of unit volume of ice
17 Equal masses of two different liquids are put into identical beakers.
Liquid 1 is heated for 100 s and liquid 2 is heated for 200 s by heaters of the same power.
different liquids
of same mass
liquid 1 liquid 2
18 A copper bar and a wooden bar are joined. A piece of paper is wrapped tightly around the join.
The bar is heated strongly at the centre for a short time, and the paper goes brown on one side
only.
heat
Which side goes brown, and what does this show about wood and copper?
A B
barrier barrier
wavelength
wavelength 2.0 cm
1.0 cm
C D
barrier barrier
wavelength
wavelength 2.0 cm
1.0 cm
20 The incomplete ray diagram shows two rays of light that have passed from one point on an object
through a thin converging lens.
rays of
light
Which type of image is formed, and on which side of the lens is it formed?
21 Which diagram shows what happens when a ray of white light passes through a prism?
A B
spectrum
white white
light light
spectrum
C D
spectrum
white white
light light spectrum
22 Light travels in a vacuum and then enters a glass block. The speed of the light in the glass block
is 2.0 × 108 m / s.
D The speed in the glass is 1.0 × 108 times the speed in a vacuum.
23 A fire alarm is not loud enough and the pitch is too low. An engineer adjusts the alarm so that it
produces a louder note of a higher pitch.
What effect does this have on the amplitude and on the frequency of the sound?
amplitude frequency
A larger greater
B larger smaller
C smaller greater
D smaller smaller
He places the bar in a solenoid connected to a power supply. He then removes the bar from the
solenoid.
Which row indicates the most effective way of demagnetising the bar?
type of speed to
power supply remove bar
A a.c. fast
B a.c. slow
C d.c. fast
D d.c. slow
25 A magnet near a coil of wire is attracted to the coil only when there is a current in the coil.
iron disc
N S
aluminium
iron
plastic
silver
A ampere
B coulomb
C ohm
D volt
+ +
+ + +
+
+ + +
positively charged + + + neutral
metal sphere metal sphere
What happens to the charges on the neutral sphere as the positively charged sphere is brought
close to it?
A Some positive charges move to the left and some negative charges move to the right.
B Some positive charges move to the right and some negative charges move to the left.
C Some positive charges move to the right, but the negative charges do not move.
D The positive charges do not move, but some negative charges move to the left.
30 Which diagram is the current-voltage (I-V) characteristic graph for a metallic conductor at
constant temperature?
A B C D
I I I I
0 0 0 0
0 V 0 V 0 V 0 V
31 Four circuits each contain a 6 V battery, a diode, an ammeter and a lamp. None of the
components is faulty.
A B
A A
reading = 1.0 A reading = 0 A
C D
A A
reading = 1.0 A reading = –1.0 A
R
T V
12 V
What happens to the reading on the voltmeter as the sliding terminal T is moved from R to S?
A It decreases from 12 V to 0 V.
B It increases from 0 V to 12 V.
C It remains at 0 V.
D It remains at 12 V.
20 Ω 0.40 A
10 Ω
A 4.0 V B 8.0 V C 25 V D 50 V
A an AND gate
B a NOR gate
C a NOT gate
D an OR gate
A a d.c. motor
B a relay
C a transformer
D an a.c. generator
A an alpha particle
B an electron
C a neutron
D a proton
BLANK PAGE
BLANK PAGE
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.
Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) May/June 2018
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*7373168877*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB18 06_0625_22/3RP
© UCLES 2018 [Turn over
2
cotton
cm 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
When the length of cotton is wound closely around a pen, it goes round six times.
2 When does an object falling vertically through the air reach terminal velocity?
3 A ball is dropped in an evacuated tube. A series of photographs is taken at equal time intervals
from the time of release. Another ball of the same size but twice the mass is also dropped in the
same evacuated tube and photographed.
4 Which statement about the mass and the weight of an object is correct?
40 cm beam
X
pivot
6.0 N
The beam weighs 6.0 N and its weight acts at a point X, 40 cm from the pivot.
8 A spacecraft is travelling in space with no resultant force and no resultant moment acting on it.
9 A car of mass 1000 kg travelling at 8.0 m / s collides with a lorry of mass 3000 kg that is travelling
at 2.0 m / s in the same direction. After colliding, the two vehicles stick together.
A α-decay
B β-decay
C nuclear fission
D nuclear fusion
11 The work done W by a force is related to the magnitude F of the force and the distance d moved
in the direction of the force.
A W=d÷F
B W=d+F
C W=F÷d
D W=F×d
A 0.04 kW B 25 W C 25 kW D 640 kW
13 A submarine is in water of density 1.0 × 103 kg / m3. The submarine changes its depth. This causes
the pressure on it to change by 0.10 MPa.
14 An oil tank has a base of area 2.5 m2 and is filled with oil to a depth of 1.2 m.
What is the force exerted on the base of the tank due to the oil?
15 When molecules of a gas rebound from a wall of a container, the wall experiences a pressure.
Which values should she use for the lower fixed point and for the upper fixed point?
18 Four thermometers, with their bulbs painted different colours, are placed at equal distances from
a radiant heater.
Which thermometer shows the slowest temperature rise when the heater is first switched on?
A matt black
B matt white
C shiny black
D shiny white
19 A tank contains water. Ripples are produced on the surface of the water.
A 2.0 × 10–15 Hz
B 1.3 × 10–2 Hz
C 80 Hz
D 5.0 × 1014 Hz
21 Scout P signals to scout Q on the other side of a valley by using a mirror to reflect the Sun’s light.
Sun’s
scout P light
mirror
scout Q
A B C D
mirror Sun’s Sun’s Sun’s Sun’s
light light light light
A The speed of long-wavelength infra-red radiation in a vacuum is greater than that of short-
wavelength ultraviolet light.
24 A siren is emitting a sound. As time passes, the sound becomes louder and higher pitched.
What is happening to the amplitude and to the frequency of the emitted sound wave?
amplitude frequency
A decreasing decreasing
B decreasing increasing
C increasing decreasing
D increasing increasing
permanent
S N P Q soft iron bar
magnet
end P end Q
A N N
B N S
C S N
D S S
A the amount of charge that passes through the cell per unit time
B the energy gained per unit charge as charge passes through the cell
C the total amount of charge flowing through the cell
D the total energy stored in the cell
28 A student measures the potential difference across a device and the current in the device.
length / cm diameter / mm
A 20 1.0
B 20 4.0
C 80 1.0
D 80 4.0
V voltmeter P
X
V voltmeter Q
The sliding connection at point X is moved towards the top of the diagram.
reading on P reading on Q
A decreases decreases
B decreases increases
C increases decreases
D increases increases
A B C D
P Q R P Q R P Q R P Q R
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1
34 In an a.c. generator, a coil is rotated in a magnetic field and an electromotive force (e.m.f.) is
induced in the coil.
In which position of the coil does the e.m.f. have the largest value?
A B
coil coil
N S N S
C D
coil coil
N S N S
35 Wire P carries a current directed perpendicularly into the page. A compass is placed at point Q
which is close to wire P.
The magnetic field at Q due to the current is very much larger than the magnetic field of the
Earth.
P
B C
Q
A D
36 A transformer has Np turns in the primary coil and Ns turns in the secondary coil.
Which row gives the values of Np and Ns for a transformer that steps up a voltage of 1200 V to
36 000 V?
Np Ns
A 2 000 60 000
B 2 000 600 000
C 60 000 2 000
D 600 000 2 000
37 In the atomic model, an atom consists of a central mass, orbited by much smaller particles.
orbiting central
particle mass
What is the name of the central mass and of the orbiting particles?
A neutron α-particles
B neutron electrons
C nucleus α-particles
D nucleus electrons
218
38 An isotope of polonium has the nuclide notation 84 Po .
A nucleus of this isotope decays by emitting an α-particle. A β-particle is then emitted to form
nuclide X.
39 The table compares the penetrating abilities and ionising effects of α-radiation and of γ-radiation.
least most
penetrating ionising
A α α
B α γ
C γ α
D γ γ
40 The graph shows how the count rate registered by a counter near to a sample of a radioactive
isotope changes over a period of a few days. The background count rate is 5 counts per minute.
50
count rate
40
counts / minute
30
20
10
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
time / days
BLANK PAGE
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.
Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) May/June 2019
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*8579442859*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
This syllabus is regulated for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB19 06_0625_22_ML/RP
© UCLES 2019 [Turn over
2
The distance of an object from a fixed point on the line is plotted against time for each object.
A B
0 0
0 time 0 time
C D
0 0
0 time 0 time
3 A heavy metal ball falls vertically downwards through air past four equally spaced levels J, K, L
and M.
metal ball
level J
level K
level L
level M
The times taken to fall from one level to the next are measured.
Where is the speed of the ball greatest and which time is shortest?
speed is time is
greatest between shortest between
A J and K J and K
B J and K L and M
C L and M J and K
D L and M L and M
A The mass of an object depends on the gravitational field which acts on the object.
B The mass of an object divided by its weight is equal to the acceleration with which it falls
freely.
C The mass of an object increases when the temperature of the object increases.
D The mass of an object resists change in motion of the object.
5 A metal has a density of 8.0 g / cm3. A solid cube of mass 1.0 kg is made from this metal.
Different loads are hung from the spring and its length is measured for each different load.
4.0
weight of
load / N 3.0
2.0
1.0
0
0 4 8 12 16 20
length of
spring / cm
25 cm
15 cm
pivot
10 N 5.0 N
A 25 N cm anticlockwise
B 25 N cm clockwise
C 175 N cm anticlockwise
D 175 N cm clockwise
A B C D
2N 2N
2N 2N 2N
2N
2N 2N
A 0.75 kg m / s B 1.3 kg m / s C 12 kg m / s D 24 kg m / s
11 A force F acts on a body and the body moves a distance d in the direction of the force.
A W = Fd B W = Fd 2 C W= 1
2
Fd D W= 1
2
Fd 2
12 A boy produces an average power output of 60 W as he rides his bicycle for 2.0 minutes.
13 The diagram shows a stone suspended on a string under the surface of a liquid. The stone
experiences a pressure caused by the liquid.
string
stone
liquid
15 A night storage heater contains a large block of material that is heated electrically during the
night. During the day the block cools down, releasing thermal energy into the room.
Which thermal capacity and which night-time temperature increase will cause the most energy to
be stored by the block?
A large large
B large small
C small large
D small small
16 100 g of water at 25 °C is poured into an insulated cup. 50 g of ice at 0 °C is added to the water.
The water is stirred until the temperature of the water has fallen to 0 °C.
Which value does this experiment give for the specific latent heat of fusion of ice?
17 The handle of a metal saucepan is made of plastic. As the saucepan heats up, the handle gets
warmer.
What happens to the cool air outside the kettle when it comes into contact with the hot kettle?
19 Vacuum flasks usually have silvered walls that help to keep the contents of the flask hot.
A B C D
22 Light is travelling through air. The light strikes a glass block at an angle of incidence of 45°. The
glass has a refractive index of 1.4.
23 An eclipse of the Sun happens when the Moon comes between the Earth and the Sun.
A Infra-red radiation from the Sun disappears before visible light and ultra-violet radiation.
B Ultra-violet radiation from the Sun disappears before visible light and infra-red radiation.
C Visible light from the Sun disappears before ultra-violet radiation and infra-red radiation.
D Infra-red radiation, ultra-violet radiation and visible light from the Sun all disappear at the
same moment.
24 A pulse of sound is produced at the bottom of a boat. The sound travels through the water and is
reflected from a shoal of fish. The sound reaches the boat again after 1.2 s. The speed of sound
in the water is 1500 m / s.
boat
shoal of fish
How far below the bottom of the boat is the shoal of fish?
25 An observer stands at the finish line of a 100 m race. He wants to time the winner’s run. He starts
his stop-watch as soon as he sees the smoke from the starting gun instead of when he hears the
bang.
Diagram 2 shows the same strips after they have been rubbed with a dry cloth.
strips strips
of plastic of plastic
diagram 1 diagram 2
Which row describes the charge on the strips after rubbing, and the force between the strips after
rubbing?
A opposite attraction
B opposite repulsion
C the same attraction
D the same repulsion
A The cell converts 1.0 J of energy when driving 1.5 C of charge round a complete circuit.
B The cell converts 1.5 J of energy when driving 1.0 C of charge round a complete circuit.
C The cell converts 1.5 J of energy per second when driving 1.0 C of charge round a complete
circuit.
D The cell converts 1.5 W of power when driving 1.0 C of charge round a complete circuit.
29 A metal wire of length 100 cm and cross-sectional area 0.20 mm2 has a resistance of 8.0 Ω.
What is the resistance of a wire of the same metal of length 50 cm and cross-sectional area of
0.40 mm2?
A 2.0 Ω B 8.0 Ω C 16 Ω D 32 Ω
A heater
B lamp
C light-dependent resistor
D variable resistor
31 A lamp is to be connected in a circuit so that the potential difference (p.d.) across it can be varied
from 0 to 6 V.
A B
6V 6V
C D
6V 6V
32 Components X and Y can be inserted to complete the circuit below. The completed circuit is a
potential divider in which the potential difference across component Y increases when the
temperature increases.
Y V
X Y
33 Which two logic gates each have a high output (1) when both of their inputs are low (0)?
A AND and OR
B AND and NOR
C NAND and NOR
D NAND and OR
input 1
output
input 2
35 Which components are designed to improve the safe working of a mains electrical supply?
circuit earth
fuse
breaker wire
A
B
C
D
36 The diagram shows a current-carrying wire placed between two magnetic poles. The current is in
the direction shown.
wire
S N
current direction
diagram 1
coil
N
S
Diagram 2 shows the output voltage produced by the generator as the coil turns.
Which point on diagram 2 shows the voltage induced when the coil is moving through the position
shown in diagram 1?
diagram 2
output A
voltage
B
0
0 C time
39 The chemical symbol for uranium is U. The equation represents the radioactive decay of
uranium-235.
235
92U → xyTh + 24He
What are the numbers x and y?
x y
A 231 94
B 231 90
C 239 94
D 239 90
40 An experiment is done to measure the radiation from a radioactive source that has a
half-life of 10 minutes.
radioactive
counter
detector source
At the start of the experiment, the count-rate recorded by the counter is 1000 counts / minute.
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) May/June 2020
45 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
• There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions.
• For each question there are four possible answers A, B, C and D. Choose the one you consider correct
and record your choice in soft pencil on the multiple choice answer sheet.
• Follow the instructions on the multiple choice answer sheet.
• Write in soft pencil.
• Write your name, centre number and candidate number on the multiple choice answer sheet in the
spaces provided unless this has been done for you.
• Do not use correction fluid.
• Do not write on any bar codes.
• You may use a calculator.
• Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
INFORMATION
• The total mark for this paper is 40.
• Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
• Any rough working should be done on this question paper.
IB20 06_0625_22/4RP
© UCLES 2020 [Turn over
2
1 Five athletes P, Q, R, S and T compete in a race. The table shows the finishing times for the
athletes.
athlete P Q R S T
finishing time / s 22.50 24.40 25.20 26.50 23.20
A Athlete P won the race and was 0.70 s ahead of the athlete in second place.
B Athlete P won the race and was 1.90 s ahead of the athlete in second place.
C Athlete S won the race and was 1.30 s ahead of the athlete in second place.
D Athlete S won the race and was 2.10 s ahead of the athlete in second place.
t = 0s
v = 0 cm / s
t = 0.2 s
v = 2.8 cm / s
t = 0.4 s
ball v = 5.1 cm / s t = 0.6 s
v = 7.0 cm / s
4 Which statement correctly describes the effects of placing a heavy load in a car?
A It is easier to accelerate the car and easier to bring the car to rest.
B It is easier to accelerate the car but more difficult to bring the car to rest.
C It is more difficult to accelerate the car and more difficult to bring the car to rest.
D It is more difficult to accelerate the car but easier to bring the car to rest.
The force of gravity on the surface of Mars is less than the force of gravity on the surface of the
Earth.
How do the weight and the mass of a space probe on the surface of Mars compare to their values
when the probe is on the surface of the Earth?
A decreased decreased
B decreased unchanged
C unchanged decreased
D unchanged unchanged
A B C D
P resultant P resultant P P
resultant resultant
Q Q Q Q
A geothermal
B nuclear fission
C solar
D wind
11 A car of mass 500 kg is moving at 10 m / s. The engine does work on the car and the speed
increases to 16 m / s.
How much work is done by the engine to increase the speed of the car?
12 The diagram shows a solid block resting on a bench. The dimensions of the block are shown.
40 cm
20 cm
Q
R bench
80 cm P
On which labelled surface should the block rest to produce the smallest pressure on the bench?
A P
B Q
C R
D P, Q and R produce the same pressure
13 An object is 60 cm below the surface of a liquid. The pressure due to the liquid at this depth is
9000 Pa.
14 Which row describes the forces between the molecules and the motion of the molecules in a
solid?
Which condition decreases the rate of evaporation of the water from the clothes?
A folded clothes
B higher temperature
C wetter clothes
D windy day
–10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
liquid
17 The diagrams show four blocks of steel. The blocks are all drawn to the same scale.
A B C D
18 A room is heated by a radiator. The diagrams X and Y show two possible circulations of hot air,
which heat the room.
radiator radiator
floor floor
Which diagram and reason explain the heating of the room by convection?
diagram reason
P Q
Container P emits more infrared radiation from its surfaces than container Q.
A The surfaces of P are painted white and the surfaces of Q are painted black.
B The surfaces of P are shiny and the surfaces of Q are dull.
C The surfaces of P have a smaller area than the surfaces of Q.
D The water in P is hotter than the water in Q.
8 cm
3 cm
6 cm
4 cm
amplitude / cm wavelength / cm
A 3 4
B 3 8
C 6 4
D 6 8
O
plane mirror
1 2
position of nature of
the image the image
A 1 real
B 1 virtual
C 2 real
D 2 virtual
A The speed of light in glass is equal to the speed of light in a vacuum multiplied by the
refractive index of glass.
B The incident angle of a light ray at an air-glass surface is the angle between the ray and the
glass surface.
24 An intruder alarm sensor detects that a person is warmer than his surroundings.
A infrared
B radio
C ultraviolet
D visible light
25 A dolphin sends out a sound wave. An echo returns 0.010 s later from a fish which is 7.5 m from
the dolphin.
26 Four nails A, B, C and D are tested to find which makes the strongest permanent magnet.
One of the nails is placed against a bar magnet and the number of paper clips which the nail can
support is recorded.
nail
N S
bar magnet
paper clips
The bar magnet is then removed and the number of paper clips remaining attached to the nail is
recorded. Each nail is tested individually.
A 2 0
B 2 1
C 4 3
D 5 2
27 A student wants to demagnetise a steel bar. He uses the apparatus shown. He switches on the
circuit for a few seconds and then switches off. He finds that the steel bar is still magnetised.
a.c.
supply
Why does the plastic rod become negatively charged and the cloth become positively charged?
A The rod gains electrons and the cloth gains positive charges.
B The rod gains electrons and the cloth loses electrons.
C The rod loses electrons and the cloth gains electrons.
D The rod loses electrons and the cloth loses positive charges.
29 A student uses the circuit shown to determine the resistance of two identical resistors.
30 A cell passes a current of 2.0 A in a circuit for 30 s. In this time the cell transfers 120 J of energy.
31 The circuit shown contains five lamps J, K, L, M and N. All the lamps are glowing.
lamp L
lamp K
lamp J
lamp N
lamp M
A lamp J
B lamp K
C lamp L
D lamp M
6.0 Ω
4.0 Ω
8.0 Ω
A 1.8 Ω B 7.4 Ω C 11 Ω D 18 Ω
A B C D
34 The diagram shows a circuit used to switch on a heater when the temperature drops below a
certain value.
X Y
How must the magnet be positioned to deflect the beam in the direction shown?
A B
e–
e–
N S direction S
of beam
direction
of beam
N
C D
e–
e–
S N direction N
of beam
direction
of beam
S
39 A thin sheet of paper is placed between a radioactive source and a radiation detector. The count
rate falls to a very low reading.
paper
detector
counter
source
A α-particles
B β-particles
C γ-rays
D X-rays
40 α-particles, β-particles and γ-rays are emitted by radioactive nuclei when they decay.
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) May/June 2021
45 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions.
For each question there are four possible answers A, B, C and D. Choose the one you consider correct
and record your choice in soft pencil on the multiple choice answer sheet.
Follow the instructions on the multiple choice answer sheet.
Write in soft pencil.
Write your name, centre number and candidate number on the multiple choice answer sheet in the
spaces provided unless this has been done for you.
Do not use correction fluid.
Do not write on any bar codes.
You may use a calculator.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
INFORMATION
The total mark for this paper is 40.
Each correct answer will score one mark.
Any rough working should be done on this question paper.
IB21 06_0625_22/5RP
© UCLES 2021 [Turn over
2
1 Which piece of apparatus is the most suitable for measuring the mass of a pencil sharpener?
A digital balance
B measuring cylinder
C newton meter
D ruler
2 Four balls with different masses are dropped from the heights shown.
A B C D
1.0 kg
2.0 kg
3.0 kg
4.0 m
4.0 kg
3.0 m
2.0 m
1.0 m ground
3 A ball is thrown vertically upwards through the air. Air resistance acts on the ball.
A B
speed speed
0 0
0 time 0 time
C D
speed speed
0 0
0 time 0 time
A stone of mass 94 g is lowered into the water so that it is fully submerged as shown.
cm3
100
90
80
70
90
60
50
80
40
30 70
20
10
6 The extension–load graph for a spring is shown. The unstretched length of the spring is 17.0 cm.
3
extension / cm
0
0 1 2 3 4
load / N
When an object is suspended from the spring, the length of the spring is 19.2 cm.
When the satellite is in the position shown, in which direction does the resultant force act upon it?
direction of motion
of satellite
Earth D B
satellite
C
A tennis player hits the tennis ball with a tennis racket. The tennis ball has a velocity of 25 m / s
when it hits the racket.
The velocity of the tennis ball when it leaves the player’s racket is 15 m / s in the opposite direction
from its approaching direction.
For how long is the tennis ball in contact with the tennis racket?
10 A stone is released from rest from a high building on Earth. Air resistance is negligible.
A 7.1 m / s B 10 m / s C 50 m / s D 100 m / s
11 The power input to an electric motor is 400 W. The efficiency of the motor is 85%.
A 60 W B 85 W C 340 W D 470 W
The surface of the book in contact with a table has dimensions 0.10 m 0.20 m.
13 A horizontal metal plate of area 0.50 m2 lies at the bottom of a lake at a depth of 40 m.
The density of water is 1000 kg / m3 and the gravitational field strength g is 10 N / kg.
What is the downward force acting on the plate due to the water?
A 20 kN B 80 kN C 200 kN D 800 kN
14 Which row describes the forces between the molecules and the motion of the molecules in a
gas?
15 Very small pollen grains are suspended in water. A bright light shines from the side.
When looked at through a microscope, small specks of light are seen to be moving in a random,
jerky manner.
eye
microscope
bright light
pollen grains
in water
What happens to the length of the plate and to the diameter of the hole when the plate is cooled?
A decreases decreases
B decreases increases
C increases decreases
D increases increases
A a thermometer which can be used to measure very high and very low values of temperature
B a thermometer which gives the same increase in length of the liquid column for each degree
of temperature rise
C a thermometer which is accurate because it has been calibrated
D a thermometer which gives a large increase in the length of the liquid column for each
degree of temperature rise
18 A block of aluminium of mass 2.0 kg has an initial temperature of 20 C. It absorbs 7300 J of
thermal energy.
A 4.0 C B 8.0 C C 24 C D 28 C
19 A student sets up four cans. Each can contains the same mass of water at 90 C.
21 A water wave passes into a region where the wave travels more slowly.
As it passes into the slow region, what happens to the frequency and what happens to the
wavelength of the wave?
frequency wavelength
22 Light travelling at a speed of 3.0 108 m / s strikes the surface of a glass block and undergoes
refraction as it enters the block.
The diagram shows a ray of this light before and after it enters the block.
55q
glass block
33q
A 1.8 108 m / s
B 2.0 108 m / s
C 4.5 108 m / s
D 5.0 108 m / s
23 Which statement about the image of an object formed in a plane mirror is correct?
The diagram shows the paths of two rays from the top of the object.
converging lens
object
26 The sound from a loudspeaker must pass through two materials to reach a microphone.
loudspeaker microphone
material 1 material 2
Which combination of materials gives the shortest time for the sound to reach the microphone?
material 1 material 2
A air hydrogen
B air water
C copper aluminium
D water oil
A Heat the bar magnet and place it in the east-west direction to cool.
B Place the bar magnet in the east-west direction and hammer it.
C Place the bar magnet in a coil connected to an a.c. supply and slowly withdraw it.
D Place the bar magnet in a coil connected to a d.c. supply and slowly withdraw it.
28 Three piles of small nails, P, Q and R, are placed on a bench below three electromagnets.
One set of nails is made of copper, one of soft iron and one of steel.
Diagram 1 shows the situation when the electromagnets are switched on.
Diagram 2 shows the situation when the electromagnets are then switched off.
diagram 1
the switches are closed
Q R
P bench
small nails
diagram 2
the switches are open
small nails R
bench
P Q
Which row correctly identifies the materials from which the nails are made?
A P Q R
B P R Q
C Q P R
D Q R P
The magnet is displaced then allowed to swing freely until it comes to rest.
Why does the magnet always come to rest pointing in the same direction?
A because of the interaction between the electric field of the magnet and the electric field of the
Earth
B because of the interaction between the electric field of the magnet and the magnetic field of
the Earth
C because of the interaction between the magnetic field of the magnet and the gravitational
field of the Earth
D because of the interaction between the magnetic field of the magnet and the magnetic field of
the Earth
left right
+ +
+ + +
+
+ + +
positively charged + + + neutral
metal sphere metal sphere
What happens to the charges on the neutral sphere as the positively charged sphere is brought
close to it?
A Some positive charges move to the left and some negative charges move to the right.
B Some positive charges move to the right and some negative charges move to the left.
C Some positive charges move to the right, but the negative charges do not move.
D The positive charges do not move, but some negative charges move to the left.
A B
A A
C D
A A
resistance in resistance in
series / parallel /
A 10 5
B 10 10
C 20 5
D 20 10
34 The diagram shows a combination of four logic gates that produce an output signal at R that
depends on the states of the inputs P and Q.
Which single logic gate produces the same effect as the combination?
35 A solenoid is connected to a very sensitive ammeter. A rod is inserted into one end of the
solenoid. The ammeter shows that there is a small electric current in the solenoid while the rod is
moving.
solenoid
rod
iron core
550 turns 115 turns
output
22 000 V
voltage
37 Which row correctly states how nuclei behave during nuclear fission and during nuclear fusion?
fission fusion
electron neutron
A e e
B e 0
C –e –e
D –e 0
39 Some radioactive nuclei decay to give new nuclei which are also radioactive. Part of a series of
decays is shown.
A 1 B 2 C 3 D 5
40 The graph shows the activity of a radioactive source over a period of time.
120
activity
counts / s 90
60
30
0
0 1 2 3 4 5
time / minutes
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) October/November 2017
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*2664559192*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB17 11_0625_22/4RP
© UCLES 2017 [Turn over
2
The diagrams show the experiment and the volume of oil in the measuring cylinder at the start of
the experiment, and one minute later.
80 80
cm3 cm3
60 60
40 40
20 20
What is the rate of flow of oil through the funnel during the one minute?
2 Four balls with different masses are dropped simultaneously from the heights shown.
A B C D
4.0 kg
3.0 kg
2.0 kg
2.0 m
1.0 kg
1.5 m
1.0 m
0.5 m ground
3 The gravitational field strength on the Earth is greater than the gravitational field strength on the
Moon. The Earth has an atmosphere, but the Moon does not.
Which speed-time graph represents the motion of a light ball dropped from a great height near
the surface of the Earth and near the surface of the Moon?
A B
Earth
Moon
speed speed
Earth
Moon
0 0
0 time 0 time
C D
Earth
Earth
speed speed
Moon Moon
0 0
0 time 0 time
spring
metal
A friction
B mass
C pressure
D weight
5 A body of mass m has a weight W in a location where the gravitational field strength is g.
6 An object is pivoted at point P. A student ties a length of string to a peg on the object. He pulls
the string with a force F.
string
s t
peg
r
q P
object
7 Each diagram shows a metal plate with four parallel forces acting on it. These are the only forces
acting on the plates.
A B
C D
8 The diagram shows an incomplete scale drawing to find the resultant of two 10 N forces acting at
a point in the directions shown.
10 N
10 N
A 7.5 N B 8.6 N C 18 N D 20 N
9 A ball has a mass of 0.30 kg. It moves horizontally with a speed of 3.0 m / s in the direction shown.
wall wall
ball ball
3.0 m / s 2.0 m / s
The ball rebounds from the wall with a horizontal speed of 2.0 m / s.
A 10 3
B 40 10
C 100 25
D 2000 250
height
length
Which information is not needed to calculate the rate at which the student is doing work against
gravity?
cm vacuum
90
80
metre rule 70
60
50
40
30
20
10
mercury
A 12 cm B 74 cm C 86 cm D 100 cm
Which diagram shows the most likely movement of the pollen grain?
A B C D
15 The diagram shows an air-filled rubber toy. A child sits on the toy and its volume decreases.
How does the air pressure in the toy change and why?
pressure reason
16 The diagram shows a glass flask, sealed with a small volume of mercury in a glass tube. When
the flask is gently warmed the mercury rises up the tube.
glass tube
mercury
air
water
20 The diagram represents plane wavefronts of a water wave about to strike a solid barrier.
wavefronts
Which diagram shows the position of the wavefronts after reflection at the barrier?
A B
reflected
reflected
C D
reflected
reflected
21 The diagram shows an object O in front of a thin converging lens of focal length f.
At which point will the lens form a sharp image of the object?
A
O
f f
C
D
22 The diagram shows a ray of light incident on the surface of a rectangular glass block at 90° to the
surface.
ray of light
glass block
Which quantities remain unchanged as the light enters the glass block?
A electric fire
B electric generator
C electric motor
D electromagnet
24 The Moon is 380 000 km from the Earth. A laser light beam is directed from the Earth to the
Moon. The beam is reflected back to the Earth.
How long does it take for the light to travel to the Moon and back to the Earth?
Which row correctly compares the speed of sound in ice and the speed of sound in steam with
the speed of sound in water?
27 A student finds that it takes sound 0.33 seconds to travel 100 metres.
A 30 m / s B 60 m / s C 300 m / s D 600 m / s
28 A train of steel nails and a train of iron nails hang from a strong magnet.
magnet
train of train of
steel nails iron nails
The owner wants to use the watch again. He must demagnetise the watch.
A Insert the watch in a solenoid that carries alternating current and then slowly remove it.
B Insert the watch in a solenoid that carries direct current and then slowly remove it.
C Pass alternating current through the watch.
D Pass direct current through the watch.
30 Which diagram represents the electric field due to a negatively-charged conducting sphere?
A B C D
– – – –
Four pieces of metal wire of the same material are connected, in turn, between points P and Q in
the circuit.
P Q
diameter / mm length / m
A 0.10 1.0
B 0.10 2.0
C 0.20 1.0
D 0.20 2.0
32 The graph shows the way in which one physical quantity y varies with another physical quantity x.
0
0 x
y x
33 The potential difference across a car headlamp is 12 V. The current in the lamp is 2.5 A.
34 The diagram shows a circuit with a fixed resistor connected in series with a thermistor and an
ammeter.
Which row shows how temperature change affects the resistance of the thermistor and the
current in the circuit?
resistance of
temperature current in circuit
thermistor
0 0 W
0 1 X
1 0 Y
1 1 Z
W X Y Z
A 0 0 0 1
B 0 1 1 1
C 1 0 0 0
D 1 1 1 0
36 The diagram shows a wire hanging freely between the poles of a magnet. There is a current in
the wire in the direction shown.
wire
S N
current
37 A 100% efficient transformer has 6000 turns on its primary coil and 600 turns on its secondary
coil. The output voltage of the transformer is 12 V.
output voltage 12 V
power 24 W
38 In the diagram, the circle represents an atom (not to scale) with the nucleus at its centre.
A particle is emitted by a radioactive source and approaches the nucleus of the atom. The curved
arrow shows the path of the particle.
nucleus
path of
particle
A α-particle negative
B α-particle positive
C β-particle negative
D β-particle positive
39 Which row describes the behaviour of γ-rays in an electric field and in a magnetic field?
A deflected deflected
B deflected undeflected
C undeflected deflected
D undeflected undeflected
A detector near the source shows a reading of 6000 counts per second.
BLANK PAGE
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.
Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) October/November 2018
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*3081874355*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB18 11_0625_22/3RP
© UCLES 2018 [Turn over
2
012 40
mm
35
30
What is the smallest reading that can be achieved using this micrometer screw gauge?
speed
0
0 A B C D
time
A 8+6
2
(8 × 10) + (6 × 12)
B
22
(8 ÷ 10) + (6 ÷ 12)
C
22
(10 ÷ 8) + (12 ÷ 6)
D
22
4 A helium balloon is tied to a top-pan balance. A metal block of mass 100 g is placed on the
balance. The reading on the balance is 91 g.
helium balloon
metal block
91 g
5 The diagram shows four blocks of different metals. Each block has a mass of 12 g.
A B
1 cm
1 cm
2 cm
1 cm
2 cm 2 cm
C D
1 cm
1 cm
2 cm
1 cm
3 cm 3 cm
6 The graph shows how the length of a spring changes when the stretching force is increased.
30
length of 25
spring / cm
20
15
10
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
force / N
In the Hooke’s law region, what is the spring constant for this spring?
7 Point X is the centre of mass of a lamina in the shape of a triangle with sides of equal length. The
top of the triangle is cut off along the dotted line shown.
8 An object of mass 3.0 kg, travelling at a speed of 6.0 m / s, collides with an object of mass 2.0 kg,
travelling in the opposite direction at a speed of 2.0 m / s.
6.0 m / s 2.0 m / s
3.0 kg 2.0 kg
What is the speed and direction of the combined mass after the collision?
A an a.c. generator
B a battery-powered torch
C a car engine
D a wind-up mechanical clock
P
R
10 cm
Q
P is 10 cm higher than Q.
11 A crane on a building site lifts bricks of total mass 200 kg, initially at rest on the ground, with
uniform acceleration.
When the bricks are 5.0 m from the ground, they have a speed of 5.0 m / s.
manometer
connection
to gas supply
h
liquid
13 A washbasin has an exit pipe covered with a plug of area 12 cm2. A chain is attached to the
centre of the plug to assist in pulling the plug away from the exit hole. The washbasin contains
water to a depth of 0.080 m.
chain
plug
diagram 1 diagram 2
eye
random
movement
microscope
air molecules
light and
smoke particles
A The changes in the momentum of the gas molecules striking the walls of the container
increase.
B The forces of attraction between the gas molecules and the walls of the container increase.
C The gas molecules collide with each other more frequently.
D The gas molecules lose more energy when they strike the walls of the container.
The jar is placed in a warm oven until the jar and the lid reach the same temperature. The lid is
now easily unscrewed.
17 A block of iron of mass M is heated and gains 10 kJ of internal energy. The temperature of the
block rises by θ °C.
A second block of iron of mass 2M is heated and gains 5.0 kJ of internal energy.
A θ B θ C 2θ D 4θ
4 2
20 A lamp has a metal filament that glows when heated by an electric current.
The middle of the filament is at a very high temperature. The ends of the filament, which are
connected to the base of the lamp, are cooler.
21 Plane water waves travel from a shallow region into a deeper region. They travel more quickly in
the deeper water.
shallow water
boundary
wave
direction
deep water
A B C D
22 A thin converging lens has a focal length of 6.0 cm. An observer looks through the lens at an
object which is placed 4.0 cm from the lens.
4.0 cm
eye
object
23 A transmitter produces radio waves of wavelength 1500 m. It takes the waves 0.025 s to travel
from the transmitter to a radio receiver.
What is the distance between the radio transmitter and the receiver?
24 Different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum are used for different purposes. Below are four
statements about parts of the spectrum.
25 A sheet of ice floats on water. A source of sound S is positioned at the edge of the ice sheet.
air
B
D S
ice
water
26 The diagram shows a bar magnet at rest on a smooth horizontal surface. A length of soft-iron
wire is held parallel to the magnet.
soft-iron wire
magnet
S
What happens?
C The wire’s centre stays in its present position and the wire rotates through 90° in a clockwise
direction.
D The wire’s centre stays in its present position and the wire rotates through 90° in an
anticlockwise direction.
+ –
+ –
+ –
+ X –
+ –
+ –
A B C D
28 A bar magnet is placed inside a current-carrying coil. The diagram shows four different
experiments.
1 2
+ –
3 4
+ –
29 Copper wire is available in fixed lengths but in various diameters d. Each diameter has a different
resistance R.
A R is directly proportional to d.
B R is directly proportional to d 2.
C R is inversely proportional to d.
D R is inversely proportional to d 2.
ammeter voltmeter
31 The circuit shown is used to change the voltage Vout as the temperature of device X changes.
+6.0 V
device Vout
X
0V
32 The circuit diagram shows a d.c. power supply connected to two resistors R1 and R2 and four
diodes.
R1 R2
+ –
A OR, AND
B OR, NAND
C NOR, AND
D NOR, NAND
34 Either a fuse or a circuit-breaker can be used to protect electrical cables from large currents that
could cause overheating.
X cable
live
electrical Y appliance
supply
neutral
cable
When a fuse is used, where should it be connected, and when a circuit-breaker is used, where
should it be connected?
position position of
of fuse circuit-breaker
A X X
B X Y
C Y X
D Y Y
35 Electrical power is transmitted at 400 kV and transformed down to 240 V before being delivered to
consumers.
20 turns
N S
+ –
power
supply
A B C D
key
– – – –
neutron
++ ++ + proton
+ ++
+ – electron
– – –
220 212
38 A radioactive nucleus 86 Rn decays in two stages to produce 82 Pb .
C two α-particles
D two β-particles
39 The diagram shows the paths of three different types of radiation X, Y and Z.
2 mm of 10 mm of 50 mm
plastic aluminium of lead
X Y Z
40 The count rate measured when near a radioactive source drops from 542 counts per minute to
94 counts per minute in 12 hours. The background count remains constant at 30 counts per
minute.
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.
Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) October/November 2019
45 minutes
Additional Materials: Multiple Choice Answer Sheet
Soft clean eraser
*9597730633*
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions. For each question there are four possible
answers A, B, C and D.
Choose the one you consider correct and record your choice in soft pencil on the separate Answer Sheet.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done in this booklet.
Electronic calculators may be used.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
This syllabus is regulated for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificate.
IB19 11_0625_22/5RP
© UCLES 2019 [Turn over
2
2 The graph shows how the speed of a car varies during part of a journey.
20.0
speed
m / s 15.0
10.0
5.0
0
0 2.0 4.0 6.0 8.0 10.0 12.0
time / s
4 A box is placed on the ground. An upward force of 15 N is needed to lift the box at constant
speed.
A 1.5 kg 15 N
B 15 N 1.5 kg
C 15 N 150 kg
D 150 kg 15 N
5 The table gives the mass and the volume of three objects P, Q and R.
P 23 36
Q 170 720
R 240 340
A P and Q only
B P and R only
C Q and R only
D P, Q and R
100 N
hook
50 cm 40 cm
An upward force of 100 N is needed to lift the metal plate about the pivot, as shown.
A N B N / kg C N/m D Nm
It enters a channel where there is a current in the water from West to East. The speed of the
current is 20 m / s.
A B
v v W E
20 m / s 20 m / s
S
20 m / s 20 m / s
C D
20 m / s v 20 m / s v
20 m / s 20 m / s
9 A ball is at rest on the ground. A boy kicks the ball. The boy’s boot is in contact with the ball for
0.040 s.
The average force on the ball is 200 N. The ball leaves the boy’s boot with a speed of 20 m / s.
Which row gives the impulse of the boot on the ball and the average acceleration of the ball?
A 8 0.8
B 8 500
C 5000 0.8
D 5000 500
After the collision, P and Q stick together and then travel on together.
Into which form of energy is most of the kinetic energy converted as the car slows down?
A chemical
B elastic
C thermal
D sound
12 A box of mass 8.0 kg is lifted from the ground and placed on a shelf. The box gains 100 J of
potential energy.
The box falls off the shelf. Air resistance can be ignored.
A 3.5 m / s B 5.0 m / s C 25 m / s D 28 m / s
13 A car is moving along a straight horizontal road. The car has 1.6 MJ of kinetic energy. The car
accelerates for 20 s until the kinetic energy of the car increases to 2.5 MJ.
What is the minimum average power developed by the car engine for this acceleration?
A 45 W B 205 W C 45 kW D 205 kW
14 A drawing pin (thumb tack) has a sharp point at one end and a flat surface at the other end.
How do the pressure and the force at the sharp point compare with the pressure and the force on
the flat surface?
A greater than on the flat surface greater than on the flat surface
B greater than on the flat surface less than on the flat surface
C the same as on the flat surface greater than on the flat surface
D the same as on the flat surface less than on the flat surface
What is the pressure at the bottom of a column of mercury that has a height of 75.0 cm?
A 1.02 × 104 Pa
B 1.02 × 105 Pa
C 1.02 × 106 Pa
D 1.02 × 107 Pa
16 Which row describes the arrangement and the motion of the molecules in a gas?
arrangement motion
17 A bubble of air of volume 3.0 mm3 is under water. The bubble is at a depth where the pressure of
the air inside the bubble is four times atmospheric pressure.
The temperature of the air in the bubble stays the same as it rises to the surface.
What is the volume of the air in the bubble as it reaches the surface?
18 The same quantity of thermal energy is supplied to each of four blocks. Each block is made from
a different material.
A B C D
19 A liquid turns into a gas. This occurs only at one particular temperature, and the change happens
throughout the liquid.
A boiling
B condensation
C evaporation
D fusion
20 In a cold country, a bicycle has been left outside all night. The cyclist finds the plastic hand grips
feel less cold to the touch than the steel handlebars.
Which row correctly describes the temperature and the property of the two materials?
the temperature of the two materials the property of the two materials
A the temperature of the steel is the plastic is a better thermal
much lower than that of the plastic conductor than the steel
B the temperature of the steel is the steel is a better thermal
much lower than that of the plastic conductor than the plastic
C the steel and the plastic are the plastic is a better thermal
both at the same temperature conductor than the steel
D the steel and the plastic are the steel is a better thermal
both at the same temperature conductor than the plastic
new material
What type of material should the tent be made of to reflect the radiant energy from the Sun?
material material
texture surface colour
A dull black
B dull white
C shiny black
D shiny white
22 A large hill blocks the direct path between a transmitter of radio waves and a receiver, as shown.
transmitter
hill receiver
The receiver picks up the signal from the transmitter even though the radio waves do not travel
through the hill.
23 A ray of light is incident on a plane mirror. A student measures the angle of incidence i and the
angle of reflection r.
incident i r reflected
ray ray
The student varies the angle of incidence and then plots a graph of r against i.
A B C D
r r r r
0 0 0 0
0 i 0 i 0 i 0 i
radio
γ-rays X-rays ultraviolet visible light infrared microwaves
waves
increasing ......................
A amplitude
B frequency
C speed
D wavelength
26 Which row gives a possible set of values for the speed of sound in ice, in water and in steam?
28 A plastic rod is rubbed with a dry cloth. The rod becomes positively charged.
29 There is a current of 2.0 A in a resistor for 30 s. The potential difference (p.d.) across the resistor
is 12 V.
X Y Z
What is the correct order of the resistances of the arrangements from the largest to the smallest?
A X→Y→Z
B Y→X→Z
C Z→X→Y
D Z→Y→X
31 Resistors of 1.0 Ω, 2.0 Ω and 3.0 Ω are connected in parallel with a cell.
A The current in each resistor is different but the potential difference (p.d.) across each resistor
is the same.
B The current in each resistor is the same but the potential difference across each resistor is
different.
C The potential difference across the 3.0 Ω is greater than the potential difference across the
1.0 Ω resistor.
D The sum of the potential differences across each resistor is equal to the electromotive force
(e.m.f.) of the cell.
33 Which single logic gate behaves the same as the combination of logic gates shown?
coil
S N
36 A step-down transformer is 100% efficient. It has an input voltage of 240 V a.c. and an output
voltage of 60 V a.c.
37 The diagrams show the simple atomic structure for two neutral atoms X and Y of different
elements.
X Y
A X X
B X Y
C Y X
D Y Y
A
238
94
Pu → 238
95
U + –10 α
B
238
94
Pu → 234
92
U + 42 α
C
238
94
Pu → 234
92
U + 42 α
D
238
94
Pu → 242
96
U + 42 α
A detector close to a sample of this isotope gives a count rate of 200 counts per minute.
Without the source, the background count is 20 counts per minute.
40 Why are some radioactive sources stored in boxes made from lead?
BLANK PAGE
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.
PHYSICS 0625/22
Paper 2 Multiple Choice (Extended) October/November 2020
45 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
There are forty questions on this paper. Answer all questions.
For each question there are four possible answers A, B, C and D. Choose the one you consider correct
and record your choice in soft pencil on the multiple choice answer sheet.
Follow the instructions on the multiple choice answer sheet.
Write in soft pencil.
Write your name, centre number and candidate number on the multiple choice answer sheet in the
spaces provided unless this has been done for you.
Do not use correction fluid.
Do not write on any bar codes.
You may use a calculator.
Take the weight of 1.0 kg to be 10 N (acceleration of free fall = 10 m / s2).
INFORMATION
The total mark for this paper is 40.
Each correct answer will score one mark. A mark will not be deducted for a wrong answer.
Any rough working should be done on this question paper.
IB20 11_0625_22/4RP
© UCLES 2020 [Turn over
2
35
0 1
30
mm
2 The graph shows how the speed of an object varies with time.
speed
0
P Q time
P Q
A at rest accelerating
B at rest decelerating
C moving with constant speed accelerating
D moving with constant speed decelerating
A B
speed speed
0 0
0 time 0 time
C D
speed speed
0 0
0 time 0 time
A acceleration
B force
C mass
D pressure
7 The diagram shows a beam lying on the ground. End Q is lifted from the ground by the force F.
3.0 m
1.0 m F
P Q
G
ground
beam
What is the size of the force F when it just raises end Q from the ground?
8 The diagram shows a stand. The stand holds a heavy mass above the bench.
heavy mass
stand
bench
base
Which two changes would definitely make the stand more stable?
12 To calculate the power produced by a force, the size of the force must be known.
the distance that the force the time for which the
moves the object force acts on the object
A key
B = needed
C = not needed
D
The average density of the water above the submarine is 1030 kg / m3.
The atmospheric pressure at the surface of the sea is 103 000 Pa.
How many times greater is the pressure due to the sea water than the atmospheric pressure?
D
mercury
C
B
15 A student splashes water on to her face. Here are three statements about the effects.
16 A bimetallic strip is used to control the temperature of electrical appliances. It is made of two
different metals fixed together.
The diagram shows the shape of the bimetallic strip before and after heating.
metal P
metal Q
before heating after heating
18 Four blocks are made from different metals. Each block is heated for five minutes with an
identical heater.
The table gives the masses of the blocks and the temperature rises.
A 2.0 5.0
B 2.0 9.0
C 4.0 5.0
D 4.0 9.0
19 A scientist measures the air temperature at different heights from the floor in a cave. The results
are recorded in the table.
height / m temperature / C
0 10
10 11
20 13
30 14
40 16
Why does altering the height affect the temperature of the air?
A The molecules in warm air have less energy than the molecules in cool air.
B The molecules in cool air are further apart than the molecules in warm air.
C Warm air is less dense than cool air.
D Cool air rises above warm air.
20 Four solid spheres made of the same metal are heated to the same temperature.
Which sphere initially loses thermal energy by radiation at the greatest rate?
23 An optical lever is a very sensitive device for detecting small rotations. A lamp sends a narrow
beam of light on to a small plane mirror attached to a shaft whose rotation is to be measured. The
operation of the device is shown in plan view.
lamp lamp
shaft shaft
small small
mirror mirror
The beam from the lamp reflects from the mirror to give a small spot of light on a scale placed
just above the lamp. The shaft and mirror rotate through 1. The spot of light moves along the
scale.
The table shows the angle through which the reflected beam rotates and the conditions
required for high sensitivity.
A B D
red
violet
white
light
Which description of what happens as the light passes into the prism is correct?
A The speed of the red light is less than the speed of the violet light and the red light is the
least refracted.
B The speed of the red light is greater than the speed of the violet light and the red light is the
least refracted.
C The speed of the violet light is less than the speed of the red light and the violet light is the
least refracted.
D The speed of the violet light is greater than the speed of the red light and the violet light is the
least refracted.
26 A police car with its siren sounding is stationary in heavy traffic. A pedestrian notices that,
although the loudness of the sound produced does not change, the pitch varies.
Which row describes the amplitude and the frequency of the sound?
amplitude frequency
A constant constant
B constant varying
C varying constant
D varying varying
28 A student sets up four experiments using bar magnets and other metal objects. The N and S
poles of the bar magnets are labelled N and S.
1 2
S N S N S N iron
3 4
S N copper S N N S
29 Which diagram represents the strength and direction of the magnetic field around a
current-carrying conductor? (The direction of the current is into the page.)
A B C D
30 Which quantity is defined as the energy transferred by a cell in driving unit charge around a
complete circuit?
A current
B electromotive force (e.m.f.)
C power
D resistance
31 There is a current in a variable resistor when a potential difference (p.d.) is applied across it.
32 A student uses four ammeters P, Q, R and S to measure the current in different parts of the
circuit shown.
P Q
A A
R
A
S
A
inputs output
X Y Z
0 0 1
0 1 1
1 0 1
1 1 0
A B
X X
Z Z
Y Y
C D
X X
Z Z
Y Y
34 The diagram shows an a.c. generator used to power a lamp. The coil rotates in a clockwise
direction.
rotation
of coil
coil
X Y
X Y
A N pole N pole
B N pole S pole
C S pole N pole
D S pole S pole
NP NS
A 50 1 000
B 240 48 000
C 480 24
D 2000 100
The apparatus is in a region which is totally shielded from the Earth’s magnetic field.
+ –
soft-iron rod
Which row gives the numbers of protons and neutrons in this nucleus?
number of number of
protons neutrons
A 30 38
B 30 68
C 38 30
D 38 68
39 The diagram shows a beam of -particles passing through a strong electric field.
β-particles
–
209 0 209
A 82Pb + –1e 83Bi
209 0 209
B 82Pb + –1e 81Tl
209 209 0
C 82Pb 83Bi + –1e
209 209 0
D 82Pb 81Tl + –1e
BLANK PAGE
Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.
To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.
Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.