Back to ShikshaPal ExplainerClass 12 / Physics
ShikshaPal
Class 12·Physics
CBSE · NCERT · Class 12

Physics

Build intuition for motion, forces, energy, electricity, optics, and modern physics through first-principles reasoning.

01
Electric Charges and FieldsElectricity begins with a simple observation: certain materials attract each other when rubbed.
02
Electrostatic Potential and CapacitanceJust as water flows downhill from high to low potential, electric charges naturally move from high potential to low potential.
03
Current ElectricityWhen charges flow, magic happens. A river of electrons moving through a wire creates the current that powers civilization.
04
Moving Charges and MagnetismA current-carrying wire deflects a compass needle. This simple observation reveals a profound truth: electricity and magnetism are intimately connected.
05
Magnetism and MatterWhy are some materials attracted to magnets while others are repelled? The answer lies within atoms themselves.
06
Electromagnetic InductionA compass needle moves when a current flows nearby. A light bulb flickers when a transformer is switched on.
07
Alternating CurrentUnlike the constant voltage of a battery, household electricity oscillates sinusoidally—it swaps direction 50 or 60 times per second depending on your…
08
Electromagnetic WavesLight is not the only electromagnetic wave.
09
Ray Optics and Optical InstrumentsWhen light wavelengths are tiny compared to objects it encounters, we can treat light as rays traveling in straight lines until they reflect or refract.
10
Wave OpticsRay optics breaks down when light encounters obstacles smaller than its wavelength.
11
Dual Nature of Radiation and MatterLight behaves like a wave in some experiments (interference, diffraction) and like particles in others (photoelectric effect, Compton scattering).
12
AtomsAtoms are the building blocks of matter, yet they're not indivisible as ancient Greeks believed.
13
NucleiAt the heart of every atom lies the nucleus—a tiny, dense collection of protons and neutrons bound together by the strong nuclear force, the most…
14
Semiconductor Electronics: Materials, Devices and Simple CircuitsBefore the transistor (1948), electronics meant vacuum tubes—fragile, hot, and power-hungry.