A-Level Physics Revision
Topic-by-topic revision for Physics, with worked examples, exam-style questions and practice. Choose a topic below to get started.
At a glance
- What this page is
- Topic map for A-Level Physics on StudyVector—jump into groups and topics for revision and practice.
- Who it’s for
- Students sitting A-Level Physics with exam-style questions and explanations.
- Exam boards
- Content is aligned to major UK boards (AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), SQA, IB, AP); choose your specification in the app.
- Exams & admissions
- This hub is GCSE/A-Level focused. Admissions tests (UCAT, STEP, etc.) have a separate hub. Admissions hub
- Free plan
- You can start on the free tier (3 days uncapped, then 30 min practice/day) and upgrade for unlimited practice and full features. Pricing
- What makes it different
- Weak-topic routing and next-best question selection—not a static PDF or generic chat.
Board-specific revision
Physics
Curated launch topics
Start with the strongest A-Level Physics topic pages
High-intent A-Level Physics pages built around measurement, waves, electricity, fields, induction, and practical-analysis routes where equation use and explanation must stay tightly linked. These are the topic pages we are shaping first for search-led students and fast onboarding into practice.
Paper 1 — Particles, Waves & Electricity
Measurements & Their Errors
Handle uncertainty, percentage error, and data quality more confidently so practical-method questions stop leaking procedural marks.
Paper 1 — Particles, Waves & Electricity
Waves
Link wave behaviour, equations, and graph interpretation so core wave questions stop splitting into separate memory tasks.
Paper 1 — Particles, Waves & Electricity
Current Electricity
Keep current, emf, resistance, resistivity, and circuit reasoning distinct enough to survive multi-step explanations.
Paper 2 — Thermal, Fields & Nuclear
Electric Fields
Turn field ideas into controllable force, potential, and motion reasoning instead of abstract definitions.
Paper 2 — Thermal, Fields & Nuclear
Electromagnetic Induction
Connect flux change, direction, and induced effects so induction questions become a method rather than a memory test.
Paper 3 — Practical Skills & Optional Topics
Practical Skills & Data Analysis
Use graphs, uncertainty, and evaluation language precisely enough to convert practical knowledge into exam marks.