12 May 2026

Is Light a Wave… or a Particle? The Experiment That Broke Physics

 


Is Light a Wave… or a Particle? The Experiment That Broke Physics

Light behaves like a wave… until it behaves like a particle. No wonder students get confused.

Few A-Level Physics topics generate as much head-scratching as wave-particle duality.

Students often learn a list of facts:

  • Light diffracts.
  • Light interferes.
  • Light comes in photons.
  • The photoelectric effect proves something important.

And then hope the exam questions are kind.

The problem is that this topic represents one of the greatest scientific crises in history.

For centuries, physicists thought they understood light.

Then the experiments started causing trouble.

A lot of trouble.


The Early Argument – Wave or Particle?

Newton thought light was made of particles.

This seemed sensible.

Light travels in straight lines.

It reflects from mirrors.

It can be focused with lenses.

Tiny particles sounded reasonable.

Then along came experiments suggesting something very different.

Because waves can do things particles simply cannot.

They can:

  • bend round corners
  • overlap
  • interfere
  • cancel each other out
  • reinforce each other

And light started doing exactly that.


Young’s Double Slit Experiment – The Trouble Begins

This is the experiment that really caused problems.

Imagine shining a beam of monochromatic light through two very narrow slits.

If light were simply particles, you might expect:

  • two bright patches on the screen behind

Instead…

You get a beautiful pattern of alternating bright and dark bands.

This is called an interference pattern.

Why?

Because the light from each slit behaves like a wave.

The waves spread out.

Where crest meets crest:

constructive interference → bright fringe

Where crest meets trough:

destructive interference → dark fringe

That simply should not happen if light were just tiny billiard balls.

Suddenly the wave theory looked convincing.


Making This Real in the Lab

This is one of those topics that becomes much easier when students actually see it.

In the studio/lab I would demonstrate:

Laser + Double Slit

A laser produces clear interference fringes.

Students can:

  • measure slit separation
  • measure fringe spacing
  • calculate wavelength

Now the theory becomes measurable reality.


Hair Diffraction Experiment

A single human hair works beautifully.

The hair acts as an obstacle.

Light bends around it and produces diffraction fringes.

A wonderfully cheap experiment.

Also surprisingly dramatic.


CD or DVD as a Diffraction Grating

Hold a laser against a CD.

Suddenly:

multiple diffraction spots.

This shows the microscopic track spacing acting as a diffraction grating.

Students love this because it uses familiar technology.

Physics hidden in everyday objects.




PASCO Light Sensor Investigation

A PASCO light sensor lets students measure intensity across the fringe pattern.

Instead of simply seeing bright and dark fringes…

they can generate actual data.

Physics becomes experimental rather than decorative.


Diffraction – Light Bending Around Obstacles

Diffraction is another major clue that light behaves as a wave.

When waves pass through small gaps or around obstacles, they spread out.

Light does exactly this.

Key exam idea:

More diffraction occurs when aperture size becomes similar to wavelength.

Students often memorise this.

Much better to actually show it.

Using adjustable slits makes this immediately obvious.


Then Physics Gets Broken Again

By the late 1800s, wave theory looked unbeatable.

Light clearly behaved as a wave.

Case closed.

Or so everyone thought.

Then came the photoelectric effect.

And physics fell apart.


The Photoelectric Effect – The Big Problem

Shine light onto a metal surface.

Electrons are emitted.

Simple enough.

But the results were bizarre.

Classical wave theory predicted:

Brighter light = more energy delivered

So eventually electrons should be emitted regardless of frequency.

But experiments showed:

No electrons at all below a certain frequency.

Even if the light was intensely bright.

Yet dim ultraviolet light worked instantly.

This made no sense.


Why Classical Physics Failed

According to wave theory:

Energy should spread continuously across the wavefront.

Electrons should gradually absorb energy.

Eventually enough builds up.

But that does not happen.

Instead:

Below threshold frequency:

nothing

Above threshold frequency:

electrons emitted immediately

This was a disaster for classical physics.


Einstein’s Radical Explanation

Einstein suggested something outrageous.

Light comes in packets.

Discrete chunks of energy.

We now call them photons.

Each photon carries:

E=hfE = hf

where:

  • EE = photon energy
  • hh = Planck’s constant
  • ff = frequency

This changed everything.

Now the photoelectric effect made sense.

A low-frequency photon simply does not contain enough energy.

No matter how many arrive.

A high-frequency photon does.

One photon → one electron interaction.

Suddenly the impossible results became logical.


Threshold Frequency

This is a favourite exam topic.

Each metal has a minimum energy needed to release an electron.

This is the work function.

Equivalent minimum frequency:

threshold frequency

Below threshold:

no emission.

Above threshold:

electrons emitted.

Important distinction:

Increasing intensity increases the number of photons.

So:

  • more emitted electrons

But frequency determines photon energy.

So:

  • greater electron kinetic energy

Students confuse this constantly.


A Nice Practical Approximation – LEDs

A neat demonstration.

LEDs only begin conducting above a threshold voltage.

This roughly links to photon energy concepts.

Different coloured LEDs:

different photon energies.

Not a perfect photoelectric experiment.

But a lovely visual analogy.


The Truly Weird Bit

So what is light?

Wave?

Particle?

The deeply annoying answer:

both

Light behaves like a wave when:

  • interfering
  • diffracting

Light behaves like particles when:

  • transferring energy in discrete packets

This is wave-particle duality.

Physics refusing to behave itself.


Common Exam Mistakes

1. Confusing Intensity with Frequency

Students often write:

“Brighter light means higher energy photons.”

Wrong.

Brighter usually means:

more photons

Not more energetic photons.


2. Thinking Electrons Slowly Absorb Energy

Classical thinking.

Incorrect.

Photoelectric emission is effectively immediate.


3. Forgetting the Work Function

Threshold frequency depends on the metal.

Different metals behave differently.


4. Mixing Diffraction and Interference

Related but different.

Diffraction:

wave spreading.

Interference:

wave overlap.


5. Blind Formula Use

Students often plug numbers into:

E=hf

without understanding what the symbols mean.

Examiners spot this instantly.


Why This Topic Matters

Wave-particle duality is more than an awkward A-Level chapter.

It represents the moment scientists realised nature does not behave according to common sense.

And that is exactly why physics is so fascinating.


How We Teach This at Hemel Private Tuition

This is not a topic best taught from a worksheet alone.

Students understand far more when they can see:

  • diffraction
  • interference
  • light intensity measurements
  • threshold effects
  • practical demonstrations

Our studio/lab setup allows theory and experiment to work together.

Because physics should be something you experience.

Not merely memorise.


Need Help with A-Level Physics?

If wave-particle duality feels more like wave-particle confusion, you are not alone.

At Hemel Private Tuition, we teach A-Level Physics using practical demonstrations, real experiments, and clear explanations designed to make difficult topics finally click.

Online or in-person 1:1 tuition available.

11 May 2026

The Great Water Mystery – How Does Water Travel So High Up a Plant?

 


The Great Water Mystery – How Does Water Travel So High Up a Plant?

You can stand underneath a giant tree that is over 30 metres tall and realise something rather astonishing.

Every single leaf at the very top is supplied with water.

Not by pumps.
Not by electricity.
Not by tiny hearts hidden inside the trunk.

Yet somehow water travels from the roots all the way to the highest leaves continuously throughout the day.

For many students, transpiration feels almost magical. The textbook often says:

“Water moves up the xylem due to transpiration pull.”

And that is where the confusion begins.

How can simply losing water from leaves pull tonnes of water upwards against gravity?

At Hemel Private Tuition we investigate this properly using experiments, microscopes, PASCO sensors, and practical demonstrations so students can actually see what is happening rather than just memorising words for an examination.


First Clue – Plants Lose Water All the Time

Plants constantly lose water vapour from tiny holes in the leaves called stomata.

This process is called transpiration.

The strange thing is that plants appear to “waste” huge amounts of water. A large tree can lose hundreds of litres in a single day.

So why do it?

Because transpiration helps:

  • Move minerals through the plant
  • Keep cells rigid
  • Cool the leaves
  • Drive the transport system

The key idea is that evaporation from the leaf creates a pulling force.

Rather like pulling on a rope.


Looking Inside the Plant

Using microscopes and prepared slides, students can see the transport tissues inside stems and roots.

The important structure is the xylem.




Xylem vessels are:

  • Long hollow tubes
  • Made from dead cells
  • Reinforced with lignin
  • Designed to transport water

Under the microscope they look almost like tiny drinking straws running through the plant.

But the real mystery remains:

Why doesn’t gravity simply pull the water back down?


The Cohesion Theory – Water Molecules Stick Together

One of the most important ideas in Biology is that water molecules are slightly attracted to each other.

This is called cohesion.

Water molecules form a continuous column inside the xylem.

When water evaporates from the leaf surface, it pulls the next molecule upwards… which pulls the next… and the next…

Eventually the entire water column moves upwards from the roots.

Rather like pulling a chain.

This is known as the transpiration stream.


Experiment 1 – Celery and Coloured Water

One of the simplest experiments is placing celery into coloured water.

After several hours the dye appears in the xylem.



7

When students cut thin sections and examine them:

  • The coloured dye clearly appears in the xylem vessels
  • The transport pathways become visible
  • Students finally see where the water is travelling

This transforms an abstract idea into something real.


Experiment 2 – Measuring Water Uptake with a Potometer

The potometer is one of those classic A-Level Biology practicals that initially terrifies students.

But once understood, it becomes beautifully logical.

A bubble inside a capillary tube moves as the plant takes up water.




Students can then investigate how transpiration changes with:

  • Light intensity
  • Wind speed
  • Temperature
  • Humidity

This also explains why leaves wilt on hot windy days.

The plant is losing water faster than it can replace it.


Why Tall Trees Don’t Collapse Under the Strain

This is perhaps the strangest part of all.

The water inside xylem is often under tension.

The column is literally being pulled upwards.

If air enters the xylem, the column can break. This is called embolism.

Plants have evolved specialised structures to minimise this risk.

It is extraordinary engineering created entirely through evolution.


Why Students Find Transpiration Difficult

Many students struggle because they try to memorise isolated facts:

  • cohesion
  • adhesion
  • xylem
  • transpiration pull

But they do not link them together into one flowing process.

The breakthrough usually comes when students realise:

Water is not being pushed up the plant.

It is being pulled upwards from the leaves.

That single idea suddenly makes the whole topic understandable.


Bringing Biology to Life

In lessons we combine:

  • Microscopy
  • Potometer experiments
  • Prepared slides
  • Real plants
  • Sensor-based measurements
  • Exam-style questions

because Biology makes far more sense when students can actually observe the processes happening.

A diagram in a revision guide is useful.

Watching coloured water move through a real plant is unforgettable.


Final Thoughts

Plants appear passive and still.

But inside them is a remarkable transport system operating continuously every second of the day.

No motors.
No pumps.
No electronics.

Just physics, chemistry, and biology working together perfectly.

And once students truly understand transpiration, they never look at a tree in quite the same way again.

10 May 2026

How to Prepare for A-Level Psychology Examinations


 

How to Prepare for A-Level Psychology Examinations

A-Level Psychology can feel overwhelming because it combines:

  • Huge amounts of content
  • Research studies and names
  • Evaluation points
  • Application questions
  • Essay writing
  • Scientific terminology

Many students revise Psychology by simply rereading notes and highlighting textbooks.

Unfortunately, that is usually one of the least effective ways to revise.

The students who achieve the highest grades tend to prepare in a very different way.


The Biggest Problem in A-Level Psychology

Psychology is not just about remembering facts.

It is about being able to:

  • Recall studies accurately
  • Explain theories clearly
  • Apply knowledge to new situations
  • Evaluate strengths and weaknesses
  • Write under time pressure

Many students feel they understand the topic when reading notes.

Then the exam question changes the context slightly and suddenly everything falls apart.

That is why revision must involve active retrieval and application, not passive reading.


Step 1 – Learn the Core Studies Properly

Many students know the “general idea” of a study but not enough detail.

For each study you need to know:

  • Aim
  • Procedure
  • Results
  • Conclusion
  • Evaluation
  • Key terminology

A simple structure works well:

The 6-Box Method

Create a page divided into six sections:

  1. Aim
  2. Method
  3. Findings
  4. Conclusion
  5. Strengths
  6. Weaknesses

Do this repeatedly until you can reproduce the page from memory.

Students who use visual layouts often remember material far better than those who only use paragraphs of text.


Step 2 – Turn Psychology Into Visual Revision

Psychology contains a huge amount of abstract information.

Visual revision helps enormously.

Try:

  • Mind maps
  • Flow diagrams
  • Colour-coded notes
  • Flashcards
  • Timelines
  • Comparison tables
  • Infographics

If you enjoy graphic design, this becomes even more powerful.

For example:

TopicVisual Idea
Memory ModelsDraw the information flow
AttachmentCreate comparison charts
ApproachesUse colour coding for assumptions
Research MethodsCreate experiment flow diagrams

Students often remember pictures more easily than blocks of text.


Step 3 – Use Flashcards Correctly

Flashcards only work if used actively.

Bad flashcard revision:

Read card → flip → “yes I knew that.”

Good flashcard revision:

  • Say the answer aloud first
  • Write the answer down
  • Explain it without looking
  • Shuffle cards constantly
  • Return frequently to difficult cards

A-Level Psychology requires repeated retrieval practice.

The brain strengthens pathways when forced to retrieve information.


Step 4 – Practise Application Questions

This is where many students lose marks.

They learn theories…

…but cannot apply them to scenarios.

For example:

A question may describe:

  • A classroom
  • A family
  • A workplace
  • A phobia
  • A criminal case

You then need to identify:

  • Which theory applies
  • Which terminology fits
  • Which evidence supports it

The only solution is practice.

Lots of practice.


Step 5 – Master Evaluation Skills

Top grades depend heavily on evaluation.

Many students write vague comments like:

“This study lacked validity.”

That gains very few marks.

Better evaluation explains:

  • Why validity was limited
  • What caused the problem
  • How it affected findings
  • Whether the issue actually matters

Strong evaluation often includes:

  • Methodological criticism
  • Ethical issues
  • Sample bias
  • Reliability
  • Validity
  • Real-world application
  • Contradictory evidence

A useful structure is:

Point → Because → Therefore

Example:

“The study lacked population validity because the sample only included male students, therefore the findings may not generalise to wider populations.”

That is far stronger than short unsupported comments.


Step 6 – Learn How Marks Are Awarded

One of the best revision methods is studying mark schemes.

Many students lose marks because they do not answer in the style examiners expect.

Look carefully at:

  • Command words
  • Number of marks
  • Timing
  • Structure
  • Model answers

Notice the difference between:

  • Describe
  • Explain
  • Discuss
  • Evaluate
  • Compare

These words completely change what the examiner wants.


Step 7 – Write Essays Under Time Pressure

Psychology is a writing-heavy subject.

You must train yourself to think quickly.

A useful technique:

15-Minute Essay Practice

  1. Choose a question
  2. Plan for 3 minutes
  3. Write for 12 minutes
  4. Mark it afterwards

Short regular practice is often better than occasional marathon revision sessions.


Step 8 – Research Methods Must Become Automatic

Research methods appear everywhere in Psychology.

Students often underestimate this section.

You need confidence with:

  • Variables
  • Experimental design
  • Reliability
  • Validity
  • Ethics
  • Sampling
  • Statistics
  • Graphs

Many Psychology students struggle because this section feels more scientific and mathematical.

The best solution is repeated small practice sessions.


Step 9 – Use Interleaving

Do not revise one topic for six hours straight.

Instead mix topics:

  • Memory
  • Research Methods
  • Attachment
  • Approaches
  • Psychopathology

Switching topics forces the brain to work harder and improves retention.


Step 10 – Teach Someone Else

One of the best revision techniques is teaching.

If you can explain:

  • Classical conditioning
  • Working memory model
  • Cognitive biases
  • Attachment types

…clearly to another person, then you probably understand them properly.

Even explaining topics aloud to yourself can help.


Common Mistakes Students Make

Reading Instead of Retrieving

Recognition is not the same as memory.


Ignoring Weak Topics

Students naturally revise what they enjoy.

The best improvement usually comes from tackling weaknesses.


Not Timing Essays

Knowledge alone is not enough.

Exams require speed.


Learning Without Application

Psychology questions nearly always change context.

Practice applying theories constantly.


Final Advice

Psychology rewards:

  • Consistency
  • Active revision
  • Practice questions
  • Structured answers
  • Repeated retrieval

It is not about being “naturally good” at Psychology.

It is about training your brain to:

  • Recall accurately
  • Apply knowledge
  • Evaluate effectively
  • Communicate clearly under pressure

Small daily revision sessions done properly are usually far more effective than last-minute cramming.

And remember:

Many students who eventually achieve A and A* grades originally believed they were “bad at Psychology.”

Usually they simply had not yet discovered how to revise it properly.

09 May 2026

The Secret to Revising A-Level Computing (It’s Not What Most Students Think)


 

The Secret to Revising A-Level Computing (It’s Not What Most Students Think)

A-Level Computing is one of those subjects that looks deceptively manageable.

Many students think:

“I use computers every day… how hard can it be?”

Then the exam arrives.

Suddenly they discover that:

  • knowing how to use technology,
  • and understanding how computers actually work,

are very different things.

And that’s where many students struggle.


The Biggest Mistake Students Make

The most common revision mistake in A-Level Computing is treating it like a memory-only subject.

Students often:

  • read notes repeatedly,
  • highlight textbooks,
  • watch videos passively,
  • memorise definitions,

but never actually apply the knowledge.

Computing is much closer to Maths and Physics than many students realise.

You do not truly understand something until you can:

  • explain it,
  • apply it,
  • debug it,
  • or use it to solve a problem.

The Real Secret: Active Revision

The students who improve fastest are usually the ones who actively do things.

That means:

  • writing code,
  • tracing algorithms,
  • drawing diagrams,
  • explaining concepts aloud,
  • answering exam questions,
  • correcting mistakes.

Passive revision feels comfortable.

Active revision feels difficult.

But difficult revision is usually the revision that works.


1. Learn the Theory Like a Story

A-Level Computing contains a huge amount of theory:

  • CPU architecture,
  • networking,
  • databases,
  • cybersecurity,
  • operating systems,
  • logic gates,
  • legal and ethical issues.

Students often try to memorise isolated facts.

Instead, try to understand the story behind the technology.

For example:

Networking

Don’t just memorise:

  • packets,
  • routers,
  • protocols.

Understand what is physically happening.

Imagine:

  • a video call,
  • packets travelling,
  • delays,
  • lost packets,
  • reassembly,
  • encryption.

When the theory becomes visual and logical, it becomes far easier to remember.


2. Practise Programming Every Week

Programming is not something you revise once before the exam.

It is a practical skill.

Nobody learns piano by reading about piano playing.

Programming is similar.

The secret is frequency.

Even:

  • 20 minutes a day,
  • small coding exercises,
  • debugging old programs,

can make a massive difference.

The best programmers at A-Level are not usually the students who write the most advanced code.

They are the students who:

  • stay calm,
  • break problems down,
  • and debug methodically.

3. Learn to Trace Code Properly

One of the hidden superpowers in A-Level Computing is code tracing.

Students often rush.

Instead:

  • track variables carefully,
  • use tables,
  • follow loops step by step,
  • predict outputs before running code.

This is especially important for:

  • recursion,
  • searching,
  • sorting,
  • arrays,
  • file handling.

Examiners love questions where students panic and lose track halfway through.

Slow thinking often beats fast thinking.


4. Use Past Papers Early

Many students leave past papers too late.

That’s a mistake.

Past papers teach students:

  • how questions are worded,
  • what examiners actually want,
  • how marks are awarded,
  • common traps.

In Computing, exam technique matters enormously.

Two students may understand the same topic equally well —
but the student who understands exam structure usually scores higher.


5. Don’t Ignore the Written Questions

Students often focus entirely on programming.

But many marks are found in:

  • evaluation,
  • comparison,
  • advantages/disadvantages,
  • ethics,
  • impacts of technology.

These questions require:

  • precise language,
  • structured answers,
  • balanced arguments.

A surprising number of students lose easy marks simply because they answer too vaguely.


6. Build Things

One of the best ways to revise Computing is to create projects.

Small projects force students to combine:

  • logic,
  • planning,
  • debugging,
  • testing,
  • persistence.

That might be:

  • a simple game,
  • a database,
  • a weather app,
  • a revision quiz,
  • a Raspberry Pi project,
  • a website.

Real projects reveal understanding gaps very quickly.


7. Explain Concepts to Somebody Else

If you can teach a topic clearly, you probably understand it.

Try explaining:

  • RAM vs ROM,
  • TCP/IP,
  • binary shifts,
  • normalization,
  • object-oriented programming,

to:

  • a parent,
  • a friend,
  • or even an empty room.

The moment you struggle to explain something clearly usually reveals what you still need to revise.


AI Is Changing Revision

Modern students also have something previous generations never had:
AI tools.

Used properly, AI can:

  • generate practice questions,
  • explain difficult concepts,
  • create debugging exercises,
  • simulate interviews,
  • produce alternative examples.

But there is a danger.

If students let AI do all the thinking, they learn very little.

The real value comes when students:

  • attempt the problem first,
  • compare their thinking,
  • and analyse mistakes.

AI works best as a tutor — not as a shortcut.


Final Thought

The secret to revising A-Level Computing is not endless reading.

It is interaction.

The students who improve most are usually the ones who:

  • practise regularly,
  • make mistakes,
  • debug calmly,
  • explain ideas,
  • and actively engage with the subject.

Computing rewards thinkers.

And like programming itself, progress usually happens:
one bug fix at a time.

Is Light a Wave… or a Particle? The Experiment That Broke Physics

  Is Light a Wave… or a Particle? The Experiment That Broke Physics Light behaves like a wave… until it behaves like a particle. No wonder ...