Area of a Rectangle: 2 Videos
Video 1: Area of a rectangle
Video 2: Examples pertaining to areas of rectangles
Video 1: Area of a rectangle
Video 2: Examples pertaining to areas of rectangles
Video 1: Area of a triangle
Video 2: Examples pertaining to the area of triangles
Video 3: Common mistakes made when calculating the area of a triangle
Note: Click on the 'back button' to return to the VLE after watching each video
The Earth behaves like a giant bar magnet and as such there is a magnetic field present around it. The Earth’s magnetic field is thought to be caused by flowing liquid metals in the outer core of the planet which causes electric currents and a magnetic field.
In this unit you will learn about:
In this lesson you will learn about:
The idea of the electric field, how it's useful, and explains how the electric field is defined.
Introduction to magnetism: Wikipedia article that provides an overview of the concept.
In this lesson you will learn about:
The force that acts across the air gaps between magnets is the same force that creates wonders such as the Aurora Borealis. In fact, magnetic effects pervade our lives in myriad ways, from electric motors to medical imaging and computer memory. In this chapter, we introduce magnets and learn how they work and how magnetic fields and electric currents interact.
Forces at a distance are explained by fields (gravitational, electric, and magnetic) permeating space that can transfer energy through space. Magnets or electric currents cause magnetic fields; electric charges or changing magnetic fields cause electric fields.