Everyday science phenomena and their reasons, instruments and their uses, SI base and derived units, scientists and their discoveries, branches of science, and high-frequency miscellaneous facts, built as the consolidation and revision sheet for the CAPF General Science module
This is the consolidation and revision sheet for the General Science module. It gathers the high-frequency "appreciation of everyday phenomena" facts that the CAPF clause explicitly asks for: why the sky is blue, why a star twinkles, the instrument-to-use list, the SI base units, and the scientist-to-discovery list. The CAPF syllabus uses the exact words "comprehension and appreciation of scientific phenomena of everyday observation", so this material is asked directly. Use this note for last-week revision after the topic notes; everything here is at the recognition level and pairs with the deeper treatment in physics everyday, chemistry everyday and the biology notes.
| Phenomenon | Reason |
|---|---|
| The sky is blue | scattering of sunlight by air; blue scatters most (Rayleigh scattering) |
| Sunrise and sunset look red | longer atmospheric path scatters away blue, leaving red |
| Stars twinkle, planets do not | refraction of starlight by moving layers of air (atmospheric refraction) |
| The Sun looks oval at sunrise and sunset | atmospheric refraction bends the lower edge more |
| A straw looks bent in water | refraction of light at the water surface |
| A swimming pool looks shallower | refraction makes the bottom appear raised |
| We see lightning before hearing thunder | light is far faster than sound |
| A rainbow forms | dispersion and internal reflection of sunlight in raindrops |
| Ice floats on water | ice is less dense than water (water expands on freezing) |
| Sweating cools the body | evaporation of sweat absorbs heat (latent heat) |
| An earthen pot keeps water cool | evaporation through the pores absorbs heat |
| A pressure cooker cooks faster | higher pressure raises the boiling point of water |
| It is harder to cook on a hill | lower pressure lowers the boiling point |
| A swimmer feels lighter in water | upward buoyant force (Archimedes' principle) |
| A ship floats though made of iron | it displaces water weighing more than the ship |
| Mirage on a hot road | total internal reflection and refraction in hot air layers |
| Sea breeze and land breeze | uneven heating of land and water (convection) |
| Soap cleans grease | soap breaks grease into droplets (emulsification) |
| Dew and fog form | condensation of water vapour on cooling |
| A cracking sound when ice melts on a glass | sudden thermal contraction |
| A ball comes back when thrown up | gravity pulls it down |
| Cyclists bend on a curve | to provide the centripetal force |
| Instrument | Measures or used for |
|---|---|
| Thermometer | temperature |
| Barometer | atmospheric pressure (predicting weather) |
| Hygrometer | humidity |
| Anemometer | wind speed |
| Seismograph | earthquakes |
| Lactometer | purity of milk (relative density) |
| Hydrometer | relative density of liquids |
| Sphygmomanometer | blood pressure |
| Stethoscope | listening to heart and lung sounds |
| Ammeter | electric current |
| Voltmeter | voltage (potential difference) |
| Galvanometer | small electric current |
| Tachometer | speed of rotation (rpm) |
| Speedometer | speed of a vehicle |
| Odometer | distance travelled by a vehicle |
| Periscope | viewing over or around obstacles (submarines) |
| Spectroscope | analysing light into a spectrum |
| Microscope | magnifying tiny objects |
| Telescope | viewing distant objects |
| Pyrometer | very high temperatures |
| Manometer | pressure of a gas |
| Altimeter | altitude (in aircraft) |
| Fathometer | depth of the sea (using sound) |
| Richter scale | magnitude of earthquakes |
| Quantity | SI unit | Symbol |
|---|---|---|
| Length | metre | m |
| Mass | kilogram | kg |
| Time | second | s |
| Electric current | ampere | A |
| Temperature | kelvin | K |
| Amount of substance | mole | mol |
| Luminous intensity | candela | cd |
| Quantity | SI unit | Symbol |
|---|---|---|
| Force | newton | N |
| Work and energy | joule | J |
| Power | watt | W |
| Pressure | pascal | Pa |
| Frequency | hertz | Hz |
| Electric charge | coulomb | C |
| Potential difference | volt | V |
| Resistance | ohm | (omega) |
| Scientist | Discovery or contribution |
|---|---|
| Isaac Newton | three laws of motion, universal gravitation |
| Albert Einstein | theory of relativity, E = mc squared, photoelectric effect |
| C. V. Raman | scattering of light (Raman effect, Nobel 1930) |
| J. C. Bose | response of plants, early radio and microwave work |
| Homi Bhabha | Indian nuclear programme |
| Vikram Sarabhai | Indian space programme |
| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam | India's missile programme (Missile Man) |
| Charles Darwin | theory of evolution by natural selection |
| Gregor Mendel | laws of heredity (father of genetics) |
| Louis Pasteur | germ theory, pasteurisation, rabies vaccine |
| Edward Jenner | first vaccine (smallpox) |
| Robert Koch | tuberculosis and cholera bacteria |
| Alexander Fleming | penicillin (first antibiotic) |
| Marie Curie | radioactivity (radium, polonium), two Nobel Prizes |
| Watson and Crick | structure of DNA |
| Robert Hooke | named the cell |
| J. J. Thomson | electron |
| Ernest Rutherford | proton and the nuclear model |
| James Chadwick | neutron |
| Michael Faraday | electromagnetic induction |
| Charles Babbage | the computer (analytical engine) |
| Tim Berners-Lee | the World Wide Web |
| Wilhelm Roentgen | X-rays |
| Branch | Study of |
|---|---|
| Cytology | cells |
| Histology | tissues |
| Ornithology | birds |
| Entomology | insects |
| Ichthyology | fish |
| Herpetology | reptiles and amphibians |
| Mycology | fungi |
| Pathology | diseases |
| Cardiology | the heart |
| Nephrology | the kidneys |
| Neurology | the nervous system |
| Seismology | earthquakes |
| Meteorology | weather and the atmosphere |
| Astronomy | celestial bodies |