17 March 2026

Internal Resistance – What It Is, How We Measure It, and Why It Matters


 

Internal Resistance – What It Is, How We Measure It, and Why It Matters

In school physics we often treat power supplies and batteries as if they provide a perfect, constant voltage. In reality, every battery and power supply has something hidden inside it called internal resistance.

Understanding this idea is crucial for GCSE and A-Level Physics, because it explains why the voltage of a battery drops when we draw current from it.


What is Internal Resistance?

Inside every cell or battery there are materials that resist the movement of charge. This resistance is caused by:

  • The electrolyte in the cell

  • The electrodes and internal wiring

  • Chemical reactions occurring inside the battery

This means that some of the electrical energy supplied by the battery is lost as heat inside the battery itself.

Because of this, the voltage available to the external circuit is less than the battery’s emf.

The relationship is given by the well-known equation:

V = 𝓔 − Ir

Where:

  • V = terminal potential difference across the circuit

  • 𝓔 (emf) = electromotive force of the battery

  • I = current

  • r = internal resistance

As the current increases, the voltage lost inside the battery (Ir) increases.


Why Does Voltage Drop When You Use a Battery?

If you connect a battery to a device:

  1. Current flows through the external circuit.

  2. The same current must also pass through the battery’s internal resistance.

  3. Energy is lost inside the battery as heat.

So the voltage you measure across the terminals becomes:

Terminal voltage = emf − voltage lost internally

This is why a battery that reads 1.5 V when unused might drop to 1.3 V when powering a motor or lamp.


Measuring Internal Resistance in the Lab

One of the most useful school experiments measures internal resistance directly.

Equipment needed

  • Power supply or cell

  • Voltmeter

  • Ammeter

  • Variable resistor (or rheostat)

  • Switch

  • Connecting wires

Method

  1. Connect the circuit with the ammeter in series and voltmeter across the cell.

  2. Use the variable resistor to change the current in the circuit.

  3. Record several pairs of readings of current (I) and terminal voltage (V).

Typical results look something like this:

Current (A)Voltage (V)
0.101.48
0.201.46
0.301.43
0.401.39

As the current increases, the voltage falls.


Using a Graph to Find Internal Resistance

Plot a graph of:

Terminal Voltage (V) vs Current (I)

You obtain a straight line with a negative gradient.

From the equation:

V = 𝓔 − Ir

  • The y-intercept = emf (𝓔)

  • The gradient = −r

So:

Internal resistance = − gradient of the graph

This is a beautiful example of physics linking theory, experiment, and graph analysis.


Why Internal Resistance Is So Important

Internal resistance affects many real-world technologies:

1. Batteries in phones and laptops
As batteries age, internal resistance increases. This is why older batteries discharge quickly.

2. Electric vehicles
Battery efficiency depends heavily on keeping internal resistance low.

3. High-current devices
Things like motors or heating elements draw large currents, which can cause large voltage drops.

4. Power losses
Energy lost inside a battery becomes heat, reducing efficiency.


A Simple Demonstration for Students

A good classroom demonstration is to:

  1. Measure the open-circuit voltage of a battery.

  2. Connect a small motor or lamp.

  3. Measure the voltage again.

Students immediately see the voltage drop under load, making internal resistance very real.

Using sensors such as PASCO current and voltage probes, you can even capture the data live and plot the graph instantly.


Final Thought

Internal resistance reminds us that real electrical systems are never perfect.

Every battery, from a small AA cell to the massive batteries in electric cars, loses some energy internally. Understanding this helps physicists and engineers design more efficient power systems.

And it also explains why your phone battery seems to struggle when it gets old!

16 March 2026

Biology – How to Answer Those Long A-Level Questions

 


Biology – How to Answer Those Long A-Level Questions

In A-Level Biology, the longer questions — often worth 6, 8, or even 25 marks — can feel intimidating. Students frequently understand the science but struggle to structure their answers clearly enough to earn full marks.

After teaching Biology for many years, I have noticed that the difference between a middle-grade answer and a top-grade answer is rarely knowledge alone. It is usually about organisation, clarity, and using the correct scientific language.

Let’s look at how to tackle these questions effectively.


1. Read the Question Carefully

Before writing anything, read the question twice.

Look for key command words such as:

  • Explain – Give reasons for why something happens

  • Describe – State what happens

  • Evaluate – Give advantages, disadvantages, and a conclusion

  • Discuss – Present both sides of an argument

Also underline key biological concepts in the question.

Example:

Explain the importance of gradients in biological systems.

Important clues here are:

  • Explain → causes and mechanisms required

  • Gradients → concentration gradients, diffusion, active transport, etc.

  • Biological systems → examples from organisms (lungs, fish gills, plants, membranes).


2. Plan Before You Write

Students often rush straight into writing and then run out of ideas halfway through.

Spend 30 seconds planning.

A quick plan might look like:

  • Gas exchange in lungs

  • Counter-current flow in fish gills

  • Diffusion across membranes

  • Active transport in plant roots

This ensures your answer covers multiple examples, which examiners like to see.


3. Use the PEEL Structure

A simple way to structure extended answers is the PEEL method:

P – Point
State the key biological idea.

E – Explain
Explain the mechanism using correct terminology.

E – Example
Give a biological example.

L – Link
Link back to the question.

Example paragraph:

Point:
A steep concentration gradient increases the rate of diffusion.

Explain:
Diffusion occurs when particles move from a region of high concentration to low concentration, and the steeper the gradient the faster the net movement.

Example:
In the lungs, ventilation and a good blood supply maintain a steep oxygen gradient between the alveoli and the blood.

Link:
This allows oxygen to diffuse rapidly into the bloodstream.


4. Use Correct Biological Terminology

Examiners reward precise vocabulary.

For example:

Instead of writing

oxygen moves into the blood

Write

oxygen diffuses down a concentration gradient across the alveolar membrane into the capillaries

Using the correct terms can gain several extra marks.


5. Include Multiple Examples

Long answers often require breadth of knowledge.

For example, when discussing gradients you might include:

  • Gas exchange in mammalian lungs

  • Counter-current exchange in fish gills

  • Active transport in plant root hairs

  • Diffusion across cell membranes

Each additional relevant example can gain marks.


6. Don’t Forget the Basics

Even strong students sometimes lose marks by forgetting simple things:

  • Write in full sentences

  • Use clear paragraphs

  • Keep explanations logical

  • Avoid repeating the same point

Examiners reward clarity and scientific accuracy.


7. Practice Makes Perfect

The best way to improve at long questions is to practice exam-style answers regularly.

When marking practice answers, ask yourself:

  • Did I explain the mechanism?

  • Did I use correct terminology?

  • Did I include examples?

  • Did I structure the answer clearly?

With practice, long questions become an opportunity to gain marks, rather than something to fear.


Final Thought

A-Level Biology is not just about remembering facts. It is about explaining how biological systems work.

When students combine knowledge, structure, and clear explanation, those long questions become much easier — and often where the top grades are won.

15 March 2026

Technology, Productivity and Production: why better machines do not always mean better business

 

Technology, Productivity and Production: why better machines do not always mean better business

When people hear the word technology in Business Studies, they often think of robots, shiny computers and factories full of flashing lights. In reality, technology is much broader than that. It includes everything from a spreadsheet and barcode scanner to CAD software, automated production lines, cloud systems and artificial intelligence.

At its heart, technology is about helping a business produce goods or services more effectively. That usually means making production faster, cheaper, more accurate, or more consistent. But here is the important point for students: technology does not automatically guarantee success. A business has to choose the right technology, train staff properly, and use it in a way that actually improves productivity.

What do we mean by production?

Production is the process of turning inputs into outputs.

A business takes in resources such as:

  • labour

  • raw materials

  • machinery

  • energy

  • information

It then transforms them into something of value, such as a product or service.

For example:

  • A car manufacturer turns steel, plastic, labour and machinery into cars.

  • A bakery turns flour, yeast, labour and ovens into bread.

  • A school or tuition business turns teacher time, resources and knowledge into education.

Technology can improve this process at nearly every stage.

What is productivity?

Productivity measures how efficiently inputs are turned into outputs.

A simple way to think about it is:

Productivity = Output ÷ Input

This could mean:

  • output per worker

  • output per hour

  • output per machine

  • output per £1 of cost

If a business produces more with the same resources, productivity has increased. If it needs fewer workers or fewer hours to make the same amount, productivity has also increased.

This is why businesses are so interested in technology. If technology helps workers complete tasks faster and with fewer mistakes, it can raise productivity and improve competitiveness.

How technology improves productivity

Technology can improve productivity in several ways.

1. Speed

Machines and software can often complete tasks faster than humans. A computerised stock control system can update inventory instantly, while a worker doing it by hand would take much longer.

2. Accuracy

Technology can reduce human error. In manufacturing, automated cutting machines can produce identical parts over and over again. In offices, accounting software reduces calculation mistakes.

3. Consistency

Customers like reliable quality. Technology helps firms produce goods to a consistent standard, which improves reputation and reduces waste.

4. Better communication

Cloud systems, email, video meetings and shared online documents allow teams to work together more quickly, even when they are in different places. The Office for National Statistics reported that cloud-based systems were used by 69% of UK firms in 2023, making them by far the most widely adopted advanced technology in that survey.

5. Automation of routine tasks

Repetitive jobs can be done by machines or software, freeing people to focus on customer service, problem-solving and decision-making. The Bank of England notes that AI can save time on a wide range of tasks and potentially boost productivity by improving decisions and tailoring products and services more effectively.

Technology and methods of production

Technology also affects the type of production a business uses.

Job production

This is when one item is made at a time, often customised for a particular customer.
Examples include a wedding cake, a tailored suit or a bespoke website.

Technology helps through design software, digital communication and specialist machinery, but job production still relies heavily on skilled labour.

Batch production

This is when groups of identical items are made together.
Examples include baking 500 loaves of bread or producing a run of school blazers.

Technology helps by making it easier to switch from one batch to another, manage stock and maintain quality.

Flow production

This is continuous, large-scale production, often on an assembly line.
Examples include car manufacturing, bottling drinks or processing food.

This is where technology has perhaps the greatest effect. Automation, robotics and sensors can keep production moving quickly and efficiently. But it also requires large capital investment.

Why technology is not a magic answer

This is where good Business Studies thinking comes in. Technology sounds wonderful, but it comes with costs and risks.

High initial cost

Machinery, software, training and maintenance can be expensive. Small firms may struggle to afford the latest systems.

Need for training

A business can buy brilliant equipment, but if staff do not know how to use it properly, productivity may actually fall at first.

Breakdowns and cyber risks

When production depends heavily on technology, a system failure can stop the whole business. A broken machine, faulty update or cyberattack can cause delays and lost revenue.

Impact on workers

Some workers may fear job losses if automation replaces manual tasks. Others may need retraining for more technical roles. In late 2025, ONS data showed that a minority of businesses using or planning AI expected reductions in workforce headcount, showing that technology can change employment patterns as well as output.

Not every technology fits every business

A giant automated production line may suit a car factory, but it would be ridiculous for a small artisan bakery making handmade cakes. The best technology is the one that fits the size, aims and budget of the business.

Technology depends on management too

One of the most interesting findings from the ONS is that firms with stronger management practices were much more likely to adopt advanced technology. In 2023, 88% of firms in the top decile for management practice scores had adopted at least one major technology such as AI, cloud systems, robotics, specialised software or specialised equipment, compared with just 51% in the bottom decile.

That matters because it shows the real story is not just “buy more technology”. It is also about:

  • planning properly

  • organising staff well

  • setting targets

  • training employees

  • monitoring performance

In other words, good management and technology often work together.

Real business judgement

A smart business asks questions such as:

  • Will this technology reduce costs?

  • Will it increase output?

  • Will it improve quality?

  • Will customers notice the difference?

  • How long will it take to pay for itself?

  • Can staff use it effectively?

If the answers are sensible, technology may raise productivity and profits. If not, it may simply become a very expensive gadget.

Final thought

Technology, productivity and production are tightly linked. Technology can transform the way a business produces goods and services, helping it work faster, more accurately and more efficiently. But productivity improves only when technology is used well.

That is the real lesson for Business Studies students. Businesses do not become successful just because they own advanced machines or clever software. They become successful when they combine the right technology with skilled workers, effective management and a clear sense of purpose.

A computer on every desk is not a strategy. Neither is a robot in every corner. The winning formula is choosing the right tool for the right job — and then using it properly.

14 March 2026

Computing: How Does a Hard Disk Drive Work?


 Computing: How Does a Hard Disk Drive Work?

Most of us store thousands of files on a computer without thinking about how the machine actually knows where everything is. Inside a traditional Hard Disk Drive (HDD) there is a remarkable combination of mechanics, electronics, and clever organisation that allows data to be written and retrieved in milliseconds.

Let’s explore what is happening inside the drive.


1. The Physical Structure of a Hard Disk

A hard disk drive contains several key components:

Platters

  • Circular metal disks coated with a magnetic material.

  • They spin very quickly (typically 5400–7200 revolutions per minute in laptops and desktops).

Spindle Motor

  • Spins the platters at a constant speed.

Read/Write Head

  • A tiny electromagnetic sensor that reads and writes data.

  • It floats just nanometres above the platter surface on a cushion of air.

Actuator Arm

  • Moves the read/write head across the disk surface to reach different areas.

The combination works rather like a record player, but instead of grooves, the disk stores information using magnetic patterns.


2. How Data Is Stored Magnetically

Data on a hard disk is stored as binary numbers (1s and 0s).

The magnetic coating on the platter contains tiny magnetic domains.
These domains can be magnetised in different directions.

  • One direction represents 1

  • The opposite direction represents 0

When writing data:

  • The write head generates a small magnetic field.

  • This field changes the orientation of the magnetic domains.

When reading data:

  • The read head detects changes in magnetisation.

  • These changes are converted into electrical signals.

  • The computer interprets these signals as binary data.


3. How the Disk Is Organised



To find information quickly, the disk surface is organised in a logical structure.

Tracks
Circular paths on the platter.

Sectors
Small segments of each track where data is stored.

Clusters (or blocks)
Groups of sectors used by the operating system to store files.

You can imagine the disk like a circular library shelf, divided into small numbered sections.


4. What Happens When You Format a Disk?

When a drive is formatted, the operating system prepares it to store files.

Formatting does several things:

1. Creates the File System

This is the system that keeps track of files.
Examples include:

  • NTFS (Windows)

  • FAT32

  • exFAT

2. Divides the Disk into Clusters

The disk is organised into blocks where files can be stored.

3. Builds the File Allocation Table or Master File Table

This is essentially a map of the disk.

It records:

  • Which clusters are used

  • Which clusters are free

  • Which clusters belong to each file

Without this table, the computer would have no idea where any file is located.


5. Writing a File to the Disk

When you save a file, several steps occur:

  1. The operating system checks the file table for free clusters.

  2. It chooses suitable empty clusters.

  3. The read/write head moves to those locations.

  4. Data is written as magnetic patterns.

  5. The file system records where each piece of the file is stored.

A single file is often split across multiple clusters on the disk.

This is called fragmentation.


6. Reading a File

When opening a file:

  1. The operating system checks the file table.

  2. It finds the clusters where the file is stored.

  3. The actuator arm moves the read head to those locations.

  4. Magnetic signals are detected and converted back into binary data.

  5. The data is reassembled into the file.

Even though this sounds slow, modern drives do this in milliseconds.


7. Why SSDs Are Replacing Hard Disks

Traditional hard disks rely on moving mechanical parts, which means:

  • They are slower than solid-state drives (SSDs).

  • They can be damaged by shocks.

SSDs store data in flash memory chips, with no moving parts, making them:

  • Faster

  • More reliable

  • More energy efficient

However, HDDs are still widely used for large, low-cost storage.


In summary

A hard disk works by:

  1. Storing binary data as magnetic patterns on spinning platters.

  2. Organising the disk into tracks, sectors, and clusters.

  3. Using a file system created during formatting to map where files are stored.

  4. Moving a read/write head to retrieve or write information extremely quickly.

It’s a beautiful combination of physics, engineering, and computer science—and one that quietly powers the digital world.

13 March 2026

Chemistry: Turning a Metal Carbonate into a Salt (and Why the Lab Gets Fizzy!)

 




Chemistry: Turning a Metal Carbonate into a Salt (and Why the Lab Gets Fizzy!)

If you drop a metal carbonate into an acid in the laboratory, something rather satisfying happens — it fizzes vigorously. That fizzing is carbon dioxide gas being produced as the carbonate reacts with the acid to form a salt, water, and carbon dioxide.

This reaction is one of the most common practical experiments in GCSE and A-Level chemistry, and it neatly demonstrates how acids react with carbonates.

The General Reaction

When a metal carbonate reacts with an acid, the products are always:

  • A salt

  • Water

  • Carbon dioxide gas

Metal carbonate + Acid  Salt + CO₂ + Water

The bubbles you see during the reaction are CO₂ escaping from the solution.

A common school experiment uses calcium carbonate (marble chips) and hydrochloric acid.

The reaction is:

CaCO₃ + 2HCl → CaCl₂ + CO₂ + H₂O

Here:

  • Calcium carbonate reacts with hydrochloric acid

  • The salt produced is calcium chloride

  • Carbon dioxide gas bubbles off

  • Water remains in solution


How Students Identify the Gas

One of the nicest parts of this experiment is testing the gas produced.

Carbon dioxide is confirmed by bubbling the gas through limewater.

If the gas is CO₂:

  • Limewater turns milky white

  • This happens because calcium carbonate precipitates.

This test is often used in both GCSE required practicals and introductory A-Level work.


Making Different Salts from Carbonates

Different acids produce different salts.

Acid UsedSalt ProducedExample Reaction
Hydrochloric acidChloride saltCaCl₂
Sulfuric acidSulfate saltCuSO₄
Nitric acidNitrate saltZn(NO₃)₂

For example:

Copper carbonate + sulfuric acid → copper sulfate + CO₂ + water


Why Teachers Love This Reaction

This simple reaction demonstrates several key chemistry ideas:

  • Acid–base chemistry

  • Gas evolution reactions

  • Identification of carbon dioxide

  • Salt preparation techniques

It is also visually satisfying — the fizzing makes it very clear that a chemical reaction is happening.


Tip for students:
If you ever see a question in an exam involving carbonates and acids, remember the rule:

Carbonates always produce carbon dioxide.

12 March 2026

PASCO Ball Capture with a Smart Cart – A Beautiful Physics Demonstration


 PASCO Ball Capture with a Smart Cart – A Beautiful Physics Demonstration

One of the most elegant demonstrations of motion in A-Level Physics involves the PASCO Smart Cart with the Ball Launcher.

In this experiment the cart moves along a track at a constant velocity. At some point the cart automatically fires a small ball vertically upwards.

You might expect the ball to land somewhere behind the cart, but something surprising happens…

👉 The ball lands straight back into the cart.

For many students this initially feels impossible. Surely the cart should move forward while the ball is in the air? So why does the ball fall neatly back into the launcher?

Let’s explore the physics.


What is Happening?

When the ball is fired vertically, it already has the same horizontal velocity as the cart.

This is because the ball and cart were moving together before launch. When the launcher pushes the ball upwards, it only changes the vertical component of velocity, not the horizontal one.

So the ball now has two motions at the same time:

  • Horizontal motion: same constant velocity as the cart

  • Vertical motion: up and down due to gravity

This combination produces projectile motion.


The Key Physics Principle

This demonstration beautifully shows the principle of independence of horizontal and vertical motion.

In A-Level terms:

  • Horizontal acceleration = 0

  • Vertical acceleration = g (9.81 m s⁻² downward)

So the horizontal motion continues unchanged while gravity only affects the vertical motion.

Since the cart also continues moving at the same constant velocity, the cart and ball travel the same horizontal distance during the flight time.

Therefore:

The ball returns to exactly the same horizontal position relative to the cart.

And it drops neatly back inside.


A Useful Way to Think About It

Imagine performing the experiment inside a train moving at constant speed.

If you throw a ball straight up:

  • It comes back down to your hand, not the back of the train.

The same physics applies to the Smart Cart.


Why This Experiment Is Brilliant for Teaching

The PASCO setup makes this demonstration especially powerful because:

✔ The Smart Cart keeps a constant velocity
✔ The launcher fires automatically at the same height each time
✔ Sensors can measure velocity and acceleration simultaneously
✔ Students can compare real motion data with theoretical projectile equations

It connects several A-Level topics:

  • Constant velocity motion

  • Projectile motion

  • Vector components of velocity

  • Frames of reference


The Question for Students

A great exam-style prompt for students is:

A Smart Cart moves with constant velocity along a track. A ball is fired vertically upwards from the cart and lands back in it. Explain why the ball returns to the cart despite the cart moving forward.

Key marking points would include:

  • Ball retains horizontal velocity of cart

  • Horizontal velocity remains constant

  • Gravity only affects vertical motion

  • Ball and cart travel the same horizontal distance


Why Students Love This Demonstration

It’s one of those experiments where intuition initially fails.

Students often expect the ball to land behind the cart. When it doesn’t, curiosity kicks in — and suddenly the mathematics of projectile motion makes perfect sense.

That moment of surprise is exactly what makes physics such fun to teach.

11 March 2026

The Trapezium Rule – Estimating Areas When Shapes Get Complicated

 


The Trapezium Rule – Estimating Areas When Shapes Get Complicated

In mathematics we often learn neat formulas for the area of simple shapes: rectangles, triangles and circles. But what happens when the shape is irregular, perhaps defined by a curve on a graph rather than straight lines?

This is where the Trapezium Rule becomes extremely useful. It allows us to estimate the area under a curve by breaking the region into several trapeziums (trapezoids).

This idea appears frequently in A-Level Mathematics, Physics, and even engineering, where we often need to estimate areas from measured data rather than perfect equations.


The Basic Idea

Imagine we have a curve on a graph and want to estimate the area underneath it between two values of xx.

Instead of trying to calculate the exact curved area, we:

  1. Divide the region into equal widths.

  2. Replace the curve between each pair of points with a straight line.

  3. This forms a series of trapeziums.

  4. We calculate the area of each trapezium and add them together.

The more divisions we use, the more accurate the estimate becomes.


The Formula

If the interval width is h, and the function values are:

y0,y1,y2,...,yny_0, y_1, y_2, ..., y_n

then the trapezium rule gives the estimated area:

Areah2[y0+yn+2(y1+y2+...+yn1)]\text{Area} \approx \frac{h}{2}\left[y_0 + y_n + 2(y_1 + y_2 + ... + y_{n-1})\right]

Notice something interesting:

  • The first and last values appear once

  • All the middle values are multiplied by two

This is because each middle height belongs to two trapeziums.


Worked Example

Suppose we want to estimate the area under a curve using the following data:

xy
01
13
24
32

The interval width is:

h=1h = 1

Using the trapezium rule:

Area=12[1+2+2(3+4)]\text{Area} = \frac{1}{2} [1 + 2 + 2(3 + 4)]
=12[3+14]= \frac{1}{2} [3 + 14]
=172=8.5= \frac{17}{2} = 8.5

So the estimated area is 8.5 square units.


Why It Matters

The trapezium rule is far more than just a classroom exercise. It is widely used in:

  • Physics – calculating distance from velocity–time graphs

  • Engineering – estimating loads and energy

  • Computer simulations – numerical integration

  • Environmental science – estimating river flow and areas from sampled data

In fact, many modern computer calculations of integrals still rely on variations of this simple numerical technique.


A Practical Tip for Students

If you are tackling trapezium rule questions in exams:

  1. Lay your values out in a table first.

  2. Clearly identify hh.

  3. Add the middle values first, multiply by two, then add the ends.

  4. Only multiply by h/2h/2 at the end.

This reduces arithmetic mistakes under exam pressure.


Final Thought

The trapezium rule is a wonderful example of how mathematics solves real problems. When an exact answer is difficult or impossible to find, mathematicians simply approximate the curve with many small straight lines.

Sometimes a clever estimate is far more powerful than chasing a perfect answer.

Internal Resistance – What It Is, How We Measure It, and Why It Matters

  Internal Resistance – What It Is, How We Measure It, and Why It Matters In school physics we often treat power supplies and batteries as ...