South Africa CAPS

Grade 10 Physical Sciences Past Papers 2022

CAPS-aligned question papers and memorandums for Grade 10 Physical Sciences (2022) covering all nine South African provinces.

3 papers availableGrade 10Physical Sciences2022

2022

Term 2

Gauteng

Physical Sciences Grade 10 2022 P1 (Gauteng)

Grade 10 • Term 2

Gauteng

Physical Sciences Grade 10 2022 P2 (Gauteng)

Grade 10 • Term 2

2022

Term 4

Gauteng

Physical Sciences Grade 10 2022 P1 (Gauteng)

Grade 10 • Term 4

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Paper 1 & 2 Study Guide

CAPS Curriculum · NSC Grade 10 Physical Sciences Exam Papers

Grade 10 Physical Sciences — Core CAPS Topics

Grade 10 Physical Sciences lays the essential CAPS curriculum foundation for all NSC learning to follow. Paper 1 (Physics) covers Vectors and Scalars, 1D Motion, and Waves; Paper 2 (Chemistry) covers the Periodic Table, Chemical Change, and Magnetism and Electrostatics. Mastering the Physical Constants, measurement conventions, and core conceptual vocabulary at Grade 10 is the most important investment a learner can make before tackling NSC Grade 11 and 12. Use the 2022 past papers above alongside these notes for the best exam preparation.

Vectors and Scalars is the first major conceptual distinction of Grade 10 CAPS Physical Sciences Paper 1. Scalar quantities carry magnitude only (distance, speed, mass, temperature), while vector quantities carry both magnitude and direction (displacement, velocity, acceleration, force). Learners represent vectors graphically using scaled arrows and combine them in one dimension by adding or subtracting components — a skill that underpins all mechanics to follow in Grades 11 and 12.

1D Motion introduces the equations of motion and their graphical representations. The critical distinction between speed (scalar) — distance divided by time — and velocity (vector) — displacement divided by time — is tested in every NSC Grade 10 exam paper. Position-time, velocity-time, and acceleration-time graphs are sketched and interpreted: the gradient of a position-time graph gives velocity; the gradient of a velocity-time graph gives acceleration; and the area under a velocity-time graph gives displacement. The physical constants g = 9,8 m·s⁻² and c = 3 × 10⁸ m·s⁻¹ are introduced here and applied throughout CAPS Grade 10 Paper 1.

The Waves chapter introduces Grade 10 learners to the fundamental properties of transverse and longitudinal waves. Amplitude, period, frequency, and wavelength are identified from wave diagrams and used in the Wave Equation (v = fλ), which relates wave speed, frequency, and wavelength. This equation is applied in calculation questions involving sound waves (speed ≈ 340 m·s⁻¹ in air) and electromagnetic radiation (c = 3 × 10⁸ m·s⁻¹ in a vacuum) — both governed by the same relationship.

The Electromagnetic Spectrum — radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays — is arranged in order of increasing frequency and decreasing wavelength, and learners must state practical applications for each region. The Doppler effect — the apparent change in observed frequency when a wave source moves relative to an observer — is introduced conceptually at Grade 10 CAPS level. Learners explain why the pitch of an ambulance siren rises as it approaches and falls as it recedes, linking the phenomenon to compression and expansion of wavefronts. This qualitative understanding prepares learners for the quantitative Doppler calculations examined in Grade 12.

Matter and Materials forms the chemistry foundation of Grade 10 CAPS Paper 2. The Periodic Table is studied in terms of atomic structure — proton number, neutron number, electron configuration, periods, and groups — and used to predict the valency and bonding behaviour of elements. Learners distinguish ionic bonds (metal + non-metal, electron transfer, giant ionic lattice) from covalent bonds (non-metal + non-metal, electron sharing, discrete molecules) and write correct Lewis diagrams for simple molecules.

Physical changes — melting, boiling, dissolving — involve no formation of new substances and are reversible. They are clearly contrasted with chemical changes — combustion, oxidation, acid-base reactions — which produce new substances with different properties and are generally irreversible. The law of conservation of mass (no atoms are created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, only rearranged) underpins all Grade 10 CAPS Chemical Change calculations and NSC Grade 10 exam paper questions on balancing equations and calculating molar masses.

Magnetic fields — represented by closed field lines running from north to south poles outside a magnet — describe the force region around permanent magnets and current-carrying conductors. Grade 10 CAPS learners classify materials as ferromagnetic (strongly attracted), paramagnetic (weakly attracted), or diamagnetic (slightly repelled), and apply the right-hand rule to determine the direction of the magnetic field around a straight current-carrying wire. This conceptual grounding leads directly into Grade 11 electrodynamics and Grade 12 electromagnetic induction.

Electrostatics covers the two types of electric charge (positive and negative), charging by friction, contact, and induction, and Coulomb's Law at a qualitative CAPS level. Electric Circuits introduce Ohm's Law (V = IR), series and parallel circuit configurations, and the correct use of ammeters (in series) and voltmeters (in parallel) — all of which form the quantitative backbone of Grade 11 and 12 NSC Paper 1 electricity questions. NSC Grade 10 exam papers regularly test circuit diagrams, resistance calculations, and the distinction between conductors and insulators.

New to Physical Sciences? Start strong.

Our Introduction to Science bridging course covers Vectors and Scalars, Chemical Change, Magnetism and Electrostatics, and all Grade 10 CAPS foundations — giving every learner the vocabulary and confidence needed to excel in NSC Grade 10 exam papers and beyond.

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