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Kunal
05/09/2025
Physics
Waves notes
39
•
5 Sept 2025
•
Kunal
@wantedbythecia
Waves are fundamental phenomena that help us understand how energy... Show more
Wave motion is a fundamental concept in physics that describes how energy travels through matter and space. Understanding wave diffraction and superposition helps explain numerous natural phenomena, from ocean waves to sound and light.
The basic properties of waves include amplitude , wavelength , frequency , and period . Wave speed, calculated using v = wavelength × frequency, determines how quickly the wave travels through a medium.
Definition: Wave speed (v) represents the distance traveled by a wave per unit time, measured in meters per second (m/s).
The difference between longitudinal and transverse waves lies in their particle motion relative to wave direction. In longitudinal waves like sound, particles move parallel to wave propagation. Transverse waves, like water ripples or electromagnetic radiation, involve particle motion perpendicular to wave direction.
When studying waves, calculating wave speed and phase difference becomes crucial for understanding wave behavior. Phase difference measures how much one wave lags behind another, typically expressed in degrees or radians.
Vocabulary: Phase difference refers to the displacement between corresponding points on two waves, while wavelength represents the distance between consecutive wave peaks.
Wave superposition occurs when multiple waves overlap, creating either constructive interference (waves add together) or destructive interference (waves cancel out). This principle explains phenomena like standing waves in musical instruments and interference patterns in light.
Electromagnetic waves, including visible light, radio waves, and X-rays, all travel at 3.0 × 10⁸ m/s in vacuum. These waves demonstrate both particle and wave properties, making them unique in nature.
Standing waves form when two waves with identical frequency and wavelength travel in opposite directions. These waves create fixed points called nodes (no displacement) and antinodes (maximum displacement).
Example: A guitar string produces standing waves when plucked. The ends of the string are nodes, while the points of maximum vibration are antinodes.
The formation of standing waves requires specific conditions, including matching frequencies and wavelengths. In musical instruments, standing waves determine the possible frequencies or notes that can be produced.
Wave intensity represents the power transferred per unit area and varies with amplitude. For electromagnetic waves, intensity decreases with distance according to the inverse square law.
Wave diffraction occurs when waves encounter obstacles or pass through openings, causing them to bend around corners or spread out. This phenomenon explains why we can hear sound around corners and affects wave behavior in various applications.
Highlight: Wave diffraction is crucial in technologies like fiber optics, telecommunications, and medical imaging.
The coherence of waves describes their ability to maintain a constant phase relationship. Coherent light sources, like lasers, produce waves with identical frequencies and fixed phase differences, enabling applications in holography and interferometry.
Wave refraction occurs when waves change speed while entering a new medium at an angle, causing them to change direction. This principle is fundamental to optical instruments and explains natural phenomena like rainbows.
The behavior of waves and their interaction with different materials is fundamental to understanding many physical phenomena. When light travels through different media, its behavior is governed by specific properties and laws that help us predict and explain various optical effects.
The refractive index of a material is a crucial property that measures how much light slows down when passing through it. This relationship is expressed as the ratio between the speed of light in a vacuum and the speed of light in the material. When light moves from one medium to another, it changes direction according to Snell's Law, which states that the product of the refractive index and sine of the angle remains constant across the boundary.
Definition: The refractive index is calculated as n = c/v, where c is the speed of light in vacuum and v is the speed of light in the material.
Critical angle and total internal reflection occur when light travels from a medium with a higher refractive index to one with a lower refractive index. At the critical angle, light is refracted along the boundary between the materials. Beyond this angle, total internal reflection happens, where all light is reflected back into the original medium.
Lenses are optical devices that manipulate light through refraction to form images. Understanding how different types of lenses work is essential for many practical applications, from eyeglasses to microscopes.
Example: A converging lens focuses parallel light rays to a point called the principal focus, while a diverging lens causes light rays to spread out as if they originated from a virtual focus point.
The power of a lens measures its ability to bend light and is inversely proportional to its focal length. When working with multiple lenses, their combined power can be calculated by adding the individual powers. This principle is crucial in designing optical instruments that require precise image formation.
Real and virtual images have distinct characteristics. Real images can be projected onto a screen because light rays actually pass through the image point, while virtual images cannot be projected because the light rays only appear to come from the image point.
Thin lenses are optical elements whose thickness is negligible compared to their focal lengths. This property allows for simplified calculations and reduces optical aberrations. When combining thin lenses, the total power of the system can be calculated by adding the individual powers of each lens.
Vocabulary: Polarization refers to the restriction of wave oscillations to a single plane. Only transverse waves can be polarized.
Light waves can be polarized using various methods, including polarizing filters that only allow waves oscillating in a specific direction to pass through. This property has numerous applications, from LCD screens to sunglasses that reduce glare.
The magnification of an optical system is defined as the ratio of image height to object height. This relationship helps us understand how lenses and mirrors affect the size of images they produce.
Understanding wave diffraction and superposition is crucial for explaining how waves behave when encountering obstacles or passing through openings. Diffraction occurs when waves spread out after passing through a small opening or around an obstacle.
Huygens' Principle explains wave propagation by treating each point on a wavefront as a source of secondary wavelets. This principle helps us understand diffraction patterns and wave behavior at interfaces. Diffraction gratings, which contain many equally spaced slits, demonstrate these principles clearly.
Highlight: The de Broglie relation connects particle and wave properties, stating that all particles exhibit wave-like behavior. This fundamental principle of quantum mechanics is expressed through the equation λ = h/p, where h is Planck's constant and p is momentum.
The wave-particle duality of light and matter is demonstrated through various experiments, including electron diffraction. This phenomenon shows that particles like electrons can exhibit wave-like behavior, producing interference patterns similar to those created by waves.
The photoelectric effect demonstrates the particle nature of electromagnetic radiation through the emission of electrons when light strikes certain metallic surfaces. When photons interact with electrons in a metal, they transfer their energy, potentially causing electron ejection if sufficient energy is provided.
Definition: The photoelectric effect occurs when light particles (photons) strike a metal surface and transfer enough energy to release electrons (photoelectrons) from the metal's surface.
The process involves several key concepts including work function and threshold frequency. The work function represents the minimum energy required to liberate an electron from the metal's surface, while threshold frequency is the minimum frequency of incident light needed to initiate electron emission. These parameters are related through Einstein's photoelectric equation: E = hf - φ, where E is the kinetic energy of the ejected electron, h is Planck's constant, f is the frequency of incident light, and φ is the work function.
Understanding atomic line spectra provides crucial evidence for the quantum nature of atomic energy levels. When electrons transition between different energy states within an atom, they emit or absorb specific wavelengths of light, producing characteristic spectral lines. This phenomenon can be observed by passing light through a diffraction grating, revealing discrete spectral lines unique to each element.
Example: When white light passes through a hydrogen gas tube and then through a diffraction grating, specific colored lines appear rather than a continuous spectrum. These lines correspond to electron transitions between different energy levels in hydrogen atoms.
The wave-particle duality of light explains both classical wave phenomena and quantum effects like the photoelectric effect. While wave theory successfully describes diffraction and interference, it fails to explain several key observations in the photoelectric effect, including the immediate emission of electrons and the existence of a threshold frequency.
Highlight: The photoelectric effect demonstrates that light energy is quantized into discrete packets called photons, contradicting the classical wave theory which predicted that increasing light intensity would increase electron kinetic energy rather than the number of electrons emitted.
Energy transitions in atoms occur in discrete steps, not continuously as classical physics would suggest. When electrons move between energy levels, they emit or absorb photons with specific energies equal to the difference between the levels . This quantization explains why atomic spectra show distinct lines rather than continuous bands of color.
The practical applications of these principles are widespread, from solar cells to spectroscopy. Understanding electron behavior and energy transitions enables technologies like fluorescent lighting, where electrons in mercury vapor are excited by electrical discharge and emit ultraviolet photons, which then cause a phosphor coating to fluoresce and produce visible light.
Vocabulary: Spectral lines are specific wavelengths of light emitted or absorbed by atoms during electron transitions between energy levels, creating a unique "fingerprint" for each element.
Our AI Companion is a student-focused AI tool that offers more than just answers. Built on millions of Knowunity resources, it provides relevant information, personalised study plans, quizzes, and content directly in the chat, adapting to your individual learning journey.
You can download the app from Google Play Store and Apple App Store.
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The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good
Thomas R
iOS user
Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.
Basil
Android user
This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.
Rohan U
Android user
I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.
Xander S
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now
Paul T
iOS user
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good
Thomas R
iOS user
Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.
Basil
Android user
This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.
Rohan U
Android user
I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.
Xander S
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now
Paul T
iOS user
Kunal
@wantedbythecia
Waves are fundamental phenomena that help us understand how energy moves through space and matter.
Understanding wave diffraction and superpositionis essential for grasping how waves behave in the real world. When waves encounter obstacles or pass through openings, they... Show more
Access to all documents
Improve your grades
Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Wave motion is a fundamental concept in physics that describes how energy travels through matter and space. Understanding wave diffraction and superposition helps explain numerous natural phenomena, from ocean waves to sound and light.
The basic properties of waves include amplitude , wavelength , frequency , and period . Wave speed, calculated using v = wavelength × frequency, determines how quickly the wave travels through a medium.
Definition: Wave speed (v) represents the distance traveled by a wave per unit time, measured in meters per second (m/s).
The difference between longitudinal and transverse waves lies in their particle motion relative to wave direction. In longitudinal waves like sound, particles move parallel to wave propagation. Transverse waves, like water ripples or electromagnetic radiation, involve particle motion perpendicular to wave direction.
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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
When studying waves, calculating wave speed and phase difference becomes crucial for understanding wave behavior. Phase difference measures how much one wave lags behind another, typically expressed in degrees or radians.
Vocabulary: Phase difference refers to the displacement between corresponding points on two waves, while wavelength represents the distance between consecutive wave peaks.
Wave superposition occurs when multiple waves overlap, creating either constructive interference (waves add together) or destructive interference (waves cancel out). This principle explains phenomena like standing waves in musical instruments and interference patterns in light.
Electromagnetic waves, including visible light, radio waves, and X-rays, all travel at 3.0 × 10⁸ m/s in vacuum. These waves demonstrate both particle and wave properties, making them unique in nature.
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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Standing waves form when two waves with identical frequency and wavelength travel in opposite directions. These waves create fixed points called nodes (no displacement) and antinodes (maximum displacement).
Example: A guitar string produces standing waves when plucked. The ends of the string are nodes, while the points of maximum vibration are antinodes.
The formation of standing waves requires specific conditions, including matching frequencies and wavelengths. In musical instruments, standing waves determine the possible frequencies or notes that can be produced.
Wave intensity represents the power transferred per unit area and varies with amplitude. For electromagnetic waves, intensity decreases with distance according to the inverse square law.
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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Wave diffraction occurs when waves encounter obstacles or pass through openings, causing them to bend around corners or spread out. This phenomenon explains why we can hear sound around corners and affects wave behavior in various applications.
Highlight: Wave diffraction is crucial in technologies like fiber optics, telecommunications, and medical imaging.
The coherence of waves describes their ability to maintain a constant phase relationship. Coherent light sources, like lasers, produce waves with identical frequencies and fixed phase differences, enabling applications in holography and interferometry.
Wave refraction occurs when waves change speed while entering a new medium at an angle, causing them to change direction. This principle is fundamental to optical instruments and explains natural phenomena like rainbows.
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Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
The behavior of waves and their interaction with different materials is fundamental to understanding many physical phenomena. When light travels through different media, its behavior is governed by specific properties and laws that help us predict and explain various optical effects.
The refractive index of a material is a crucial property that measures how much light slows down when passing through it. This relationship is expressed as the ratio between the speed of light in a vacuum and the speed of light in the material. When light moves from one medium to another, it changes direction according to Snell's Law, which states that the product of the refractive index and sine of the angle remains constant across the boundary.
Definition: The refractive index is calculated as n = c/v, where c is the speed of light in vacuum and v is the speed of light in the material.
Critical angle and total internal reflection occur when light travels from a medium with a higher refractive index to one with a lower refractive index. At the critical angle, light is refracted along the boundary between the materials. Beyond this angle, total internal reflection happens, where all light is reflected back into the original medium.
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Lenses are optical devices that manipulate light through refraction to form images. Understanding how different types of lenses work is essential for many practical applications, from eyeglasses to microscopes.
Example: A converging lens focuses parallel light rays to a point called the principal focus, while a diverging lens causes light rays to spread out as if they originated from a virtual focus point.
The power of a lens measures its ability to bend light and is inversely proportional to its focal length. When working with multiple lenses, their combined power can be calculated by adding the individual powers. This principle is crucial in designing optical instruments that require precise image formation.
Real and virtual images have distinct characteristics. Real images can be projected onto a screen because light rays actually pass through the image point, while virtual images cannot be projected because the light rays only appear to come from the image point.
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Improve your grades
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Thin lenses are optical elements whose thickness is negligible compared to their focal lengths. This property allows for simplified calculations and reduces optical aberrations. When combining thin lenses, the total power of the system can be calculated by adding the individual powers of each lens.
Vocabulary: Polarization refers to the restriction of wave oscillations to a single plane. Only transverse waves can be polarized.
Light waves can be polarized using various methods, including polarizing filters that only allow waves oscillating in a specific direction to pass through. This property has numerous applications, from LCD screens to sunglasses that reduce glare.
The magnification of an optical system is defined as the ratio of image height to object height. This relationship helps us understand how lenses and mirrors affect the size of images they produce.
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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Understanding wave diffraction and superposition is crucial for explaining how waves behave when encountering obstacles or passing through openings. Diffraction occurs when waves spread out after passing through a small opening or around an obstacle.
Huygens' Principle explains wave propagation by treating each point on a wavefront as a source of secondary wavelets. This principle helps us understand diffraction patterns and wave behavior at interfaces. Diffraction gratings, which contain many equally spaced slits, demonstrate these principles clearly.
Highlight: The de Broglie relation connects particle and wave properties, stating that all particles exhibit wave-like behavior. This fundamental principle of quantum mechanics is expressed through the equation λ = h/p, where h is Planck's constant and p is momentum.
The wave-particle duality of light and matter is demonstrated through various experiments, including electron diffraction. This phenomenon shows that particles like electrons can exhibit wave-like behavior, producing interference patterns similar to those created by waves.
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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
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The photoelectric effect demonstrates the particle nature of electromagnetic radiation through the emission of electrons when light strikes certain metallic surfaces. When photons interact with electrons in a metal, they transfer their energy, potentially causing electron ejection if sufficient energy is provided.
Definition: The photoelectric effect occurs when light particles (photons) strike a metal surface and transfer enough energy to release electrons (photoelectrons) from the metal's surface.
The process involves several key concepts including work function and threshold frequency. The work function represents the minimum energy required to liberate an electron from the metal's surface, while threshold frequency is the minimum frequency of incident light needed to initiate electron emission. These parameters are related through Einstein's photoelectric equation: E = hf - φ, where E is the kinetic energy of the ejected electron, h is Planck's constant, f is the frequency of incident light, and φ is the work function.
Understanding atomic line spectra provides crucial evidence for the quantum nature of atomic energy levels. When electrons transition between different energy states within an atom, they emit or absorb specific wavelengths of light, producing characteristic spectral lines. This phenomenon can be observed by passing light through a diffraction grating, revealing discrete spectral lines unique to each element.
Example: When white light passes through a hydrogen gas tube and then through a diffraction grating, specific colored lines appear rather than a continuous spectrum. These lines correspond to electron transitions between different energy levels in hydrogen atoms.
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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
The wave-particle duality of light explains both classical wave phenomena and quantum effects like the photoelectric effect. While wave theory successfully describes diffraction and interference, it fails to explain several key observations in the photoelectric effect, including the immediate emission of electrons and the existence of a threshold frequency.
Highlight: The photoelectric effect demonstrates that light energy is quantized into discrete packets called photons, contradicting the classical wave theory which predicted that increasing light intensity would increase electron kinetic energy rather than the number of electrons emitted.
Energy transitions in atoms occur in discrete steps, not continuously as classical physics would suggest. When electrons move between energy levels, they emit or absorb photons with specific energies equal to the difference between the levels . This quantization explains why atomic spectra show distinct lines rather than continuous bands of color.
The practical applications of these principles are widespread, from solar cells to spectroscopy. Understanding electron behavior and energy transitions enables technologies like fluorescent lighting, where electrons in mercury vapor are excited by electrical discharge and emit ultraviolet photons, which then cause a phosphor coating to fluoresce and produce visible light.
Vocabulary: Spectral lines are specific wavelengths of light emitted or absorbed by atoms during electron transitions between energy levels, creating a unique "fingerprint" for each element.
Our AI Companion is a student-focused AI tool that offers more than just answers. Built on millions of Knowunity resources, it provides relevant information, personalised study plans, quizzes, and content directly in the chat, adapting to your individual learning journey.
You can download the app from Google Play Store and Apple App Store.
That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.
App Store
Google Play
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good
Thomas R
iOS user
Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.
Basil
Android user
This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.
Rohan U
Android user
I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.
Xander S
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now
Paul T
iOS user
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good
Thomas R
iOS user
Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.
Basil
Android user
This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.
Rohan U
Android user
I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.
Xander S
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now
Paul T
iOS user