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High School Physics

Review the core ideas of high school physics with practice questions on motion, forces, energy, waves, electricity, and magnetism. These quizzes help you check definitions, apply formulas, and interpret graphs the way you’ll see them in class and exams.

3 Quizzes

Quizzes

Circuits basics: Ohm’s law and power

Circuits basics: Ohm’s law and power

Test your understanding of circuit fundamentals with a mixed-difficulty set on Ohm’s law and electric power. Work through real classroom-style scenarios involving voltage, current, resistance, and energy use. Great for quick revision or building confidence before a physics test.

4,660
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Newton’s laws: forces and free-body diagrams

Newton’s laws: forces and free-body diagrams

Test your understanding of Newton’s laws by translating real situations into clear free-body diagrams and net-force equations. Questions mix everyday contexts with classic physics setups, helping you spot action–reaction pairs, choose axes, and predict motion. Pick your preferred difficulty and number of questions to match your study goals.

3,905
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Kinematics graphs: slope and area

Kinematics graphs: slope and area

Turn kinematics graphs into quick, confident answers. This mixed-difficulty quiz focuses on reading slope and area on position–time, velocity–time, and acceleration–time graphs. Practice spotting acceleration, displacement, and average vs instantaneous values without getting tripped up by units or sign.

3,534
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What you'll find here

  • Curated quizzes focused on High School Physics
  • Difficulty spread from easy to hard
  • Randomized questions with instant feedback
  • Quizzes you can replay and compare on the leaderboard
Browse all quizzes→

See this category in other languages

Fyzika na strednej školeSKFyzika na střední školeCS

Category FAQ

How many quizzes are available?

There are 3 quizzes with 342 questions total.

Are these quizzes timed?

No. Each quiz has no timer, so you can work at your own pace.

How many answer choices does each question have?

Each question includes 4 multiple-choice options.

What topics are covered in High School Physics?

Expect core areas like motion and forces, energy and momentum, waves, and introductory electricity and magnetism.

Do the quizzes include both easy and hard questions?

Yes. Quiz difficulty and length vary, with a mix of basic concept checks and multi-step calculation problems.

More to explore

What you’ll practice

These High School Physics quizzes focus on the skills you use most in class: reading graphs, using units, rearranging formulas, and explaining cause-and-effect in physical systems.

You’ll cover topics like kinematics and Newton’s laws, work–energy and momentum, and basics of waves, electricity, and magnetism.

How the quizzes work

Each question has 4 answer options, and there’s no timer, so you can slow down to show your working or speed up for quick revision.

Difficulty and length vary by quiz, with a mix of straightforward concept checks and multi-step problems; you can repeat quizzes to improve accuracy and consistency.

Helpful context and quick tips

Physics connects simple models to real measurements, which is why units and assumptions matter as much as the final number. For example, many “constant acceleration” problems work because gravity near Earth’s surface is approximately constant at about 9.8 m/s².

  • Practice converting units (m/s to km/h, N to kg·m/s²) before plugging into formulas
  • Sketch a free-body diagram to avoid missing forces or directions
  • Use kinematics only when acceleration is constant; otherwise consider energy or momentum
  • Track significant figures and units to catch calculation mistakes early
  • Check answers with estimation (order of magnitude) to see if they make sense