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AIEEE Work Energy and Power

The document contains 23 multiple choice questions related to work, energy and power concepts in physics. The questions cover topics such as work done by stretching forces, kinetic energy, potential energy, work done by springs, collisions, power, and mass-energy equivalence. Sample calculations are provided for determining work, kinetic energy, maximum velocity, momentum, compression of springs, and energy changes during collisions and explosions.

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Vansh Singh
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
46 views

AIEEE Work Energy and Power

The document contains 23 multiple choice questions related to work, energy and power concepts in physics. The questions cover topics such as work done by stretching forces, kinetic energy, potential energy, work done by springs, collisions, power, and mass-energy equivalence. Sample calculations are provided for determining work, kinetic energy, maximum velocity, momentum, compression of springs, and energy changes during collisions and explosions.

Uploaded by

Vansh Singh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Sri

Pratyangira Institute
{Plot no. – 3, 3 – A Sector 2, PNB Road, Rachna Vaishali, GZB, (U.P)}
(Mob. no. 9871948232, 8742904739)

Class 11th
Work, Energy and Power

1. When a rubber band is stretched by a distance !, it exerts a restoring force of
magnitude " = $! + &! ' , where $ and & are constants. The work done in streching
the unstretched rubber band by ( is
*
(a) $(' + &() (b) $(' + &()
'
+,- .,/ * +,- .,/
(c) + (d) + [JEE Main 14]
' ) ' ' )
2. A force " = (53 + 35 + 27)N is applied over a particle which displaces it form its
origin to the point : = 23 − 5 m. The work done on the particle (in joule) is
(a) −7 (b) +7
(c) +10 (d) +13 [AIEEE 04]
3. An athlete in the Olympic games covers a distance of 100 m in 10 s. His kinetic
energy can be estimated in the range
(a) 200 J − 500 J (b) 2 × 10B J − 3 × 10B J
(c) 20,000 − 50,000 J (d) 2000 J − 5000 J [AIEEE 08]
4. A particle of mass 100 g is thrown vertically upwards with a speed of 5 ms F* . The
work done by the force of gravity during the time the particle goes up is
(a) 1.25 J (b) 0.5 J
(c) −0.5 J (d) −1.25 J [AIEEE 06]
5. A ball whose kinetic energy is HI is projected at an angle of 45° to the horizontal. The
kinetic energy of the ball at the highest point is
(a) H (b) H / 2
(c) H/2 (d) zero [AIEEE 02]
6. A particle is projected at an angle of 60° to the horizontal was a kinetic energy H.
The kinetic energy at the highest point is
(a) H (b) H / 4
(b) H/2 (d) zero [AIEEE 07]
7. A particle moves in a straight line with retardation proportional to its displacement.
Its loss of kinetic energy for any displacement ! is proportional to
(a) ! ' (b) N O
(c) ! (d) log R ! [AIEEE 05]
8. The potential energy of a 1 kg particle free to move along the X − axis is given by
OV O-
U ! = − (in joule)
W '
The total mechanical energy of the particle is 2 J. Then the maximum speed
(in ms F* ) is
(a) 1 / 2 (b) 2
(c) 3 / 2 (d) 2 [AIEEE 06]

9. A particle is moving in a circle of radius : under the action of a force " = α: ' which
is directed towards centre of the circle. Total mechanical energy (kinetic energy +
potential energy) of the particle (take potential energy = 0 for : = 0) is
* B
(a) α: ) (b) α: )
' [
W
(c) α: ) (d) α: ) [JEE Main 15 Online]
)
10. Consider the following two statements:
(A) Linear momentum of a system of particle is zero.
(B) Kinetic energy of a system of a particle is zero.
Then
(a) \ does not imply ] and ] does not imply \
(b) \ implies ] but ] does not imply \
(c) \ does not imply ] but ] implies \
(d) \ implies ] and ] implies \ [AIEEE 03]
11. A spherical ball of mass 20 7g is stationary at the top of a hill of height 100 m. It rolls
down a smooth surface to the ground, then climbs up another hill of height 30 m
and finally rolls down to a horizontal base at a height of 20 m above the ground. The
velocity attained by the ball is
(a) 10 ms F* (b) 10 30 ms F*
(c) 40 ms F* (d) 20 ms F* [AIEEE 05]
12. A uniform chain of length 2 m is kept on a table such that a length of 60 cm hangs
freely from the edge of the table. The total mass of the chain is 4 kg. What is the
work done in pulling the entire chain in the table?
(a) 7.2 J (b) 3.6 J
(c) 120 J (d) 1,200 J [AIEEE 04]
13. A mass of _ kg is suspended by a weightless string. The horizontal force that is
required to displace it, until the string makes an angle 45° with the initial vertical
direction, is
(a) _` / 2 (b) 2 − 1 _`
(c) 2 + 1 _` (d) 2 _` [AIEEE 06]
) F*
14. A spring of spring constant 5 × 10 Nm is stretched initially by 5 cm from the
unstretched position. Then the work required to stretch it further by another 5 cm is
(a) 12.50 Nm (b) 18.75 Nm
(c) 25.00 Nm (d) 6.25 N [AIEEE 03]
F*
15. A spring of force constant 800 Nm has an extension of 5 cm. The work done in
extending it from 5cm to 15cm is
(a) 16 J (b) 8 J
(c) 32 J (d) 24 J [AIEEE 02]
16. The block of mass _ moving on the frictionless horizontal surface collides with the
spring of spring
7
_ d

constant 7 and compresses it by length (. The maximum momentum of the block
after collision is
b,- c,-
(a) (b)
c ' b

(c) _e ( (d) zero [AIEEE 05]


17. A 2 kg block slides on a horizontal floor with a speed of 4ms F* . It strikes an
uncompressed string and compresses it, till the block is motionless. The force of
kinetic friction is 15 N and spring constant is 10,000 NmF* . The spring compresses
by
(a) 5.5 cm (b) 2.5 cm
(c) 11.0 cm (d) 8.5 cm [AIEEE 07]
18. A body of mass f accelerates uniformly from rest to d* in time g* . The
instantaneous power delivered to the body as a function of time g is
hij k hij- k
(a) (b)
kj kj-
hij k - hij- k
(c) (d) [AIEEE 04, 05]
kj kj
19. A body is moved along a straight line by a machine delivering a constant power. The
distance moved by the body in time g proportional to [AIEEE 03]
)/W )/'
(a) g (b) g
*/W
(c) g (d) g */'
20. If mass energy equivalence is taken into account, when water is cooled to form ice,
the mass of water should [AIEEE 02]
(a) increase (b) remain unchanged
(c) decrease (d) first increase then decrease
21. A bomb of mass 16 kg at rest explodes into two pieces of masses 4 kg and 12 kg.
The velocity of the 12 kg masses is 4 ms F* . The kinetic energy of the other mass is

(a) 192 J (b) 96 J
(c) 144 J (d) 288 J [AIEEE 08]
22. A block of mass 0.50 kg is moving with a speed of 2.00 ms F* on a smooth surface. I
strikes another mass of 1.00 kg and then move together as a single body. The energy
loss during the collision is
(a) 0.16 J (b) 1.00 J
(c) 0.67 J (d) 0.34 J [AIEEE 08]
23. A mass f moves with a velocity d and collides elastically with another identical mass
at rest. After
d / √3

f
f
After collision
d f

2
1 1
collision the first mass moves with a velocity d / √3 in a direction perpendicular to
the initial direction of motion. Find the speed of the second mass after collision.
(a) d (b) 3 d
(c) 2d / 3 (d) d / 3 [AIEEE 05]
24. A particles of mass f moving in ! direction with speed 2d is hit by another particle
of mass 2f moving in the n direction with speed d. If the collision is perfectly
inelastic, the percentage loss in the energy during the collision is close to
(a) 44% (b) 50%

(c) 56% (d) 62% [JEE Main 15]


25. A block of mass f = 0.1 kg is connected to a spring of unknown spring constant 7. It
O
is compressed to a distance ! from rest. After approaching half the distance
'
from equilibrium position, it hits another block and comes to rest momentarily,
while the other block moves with a velocity 3 ms F* . The total initial energy of the
spring is
(a) 0.3 J (b) 0.6 J
(c) 1.5 J (d) 0.8 J [JEE Main 15 Online]
26. Statement 1. If stretched by the same amount, work done on p* , will be more than
that on p' .
Statement 2. 7* < 7'
(a) Statement 1 is false, Statement 2 is true.
(b) Statement 1 is true, Statement 2 is false.
(c) Statement 1 is true, Statement 2 is true, Statement 2 is the correct explanation
for Statement 1
(d) Statement 1 is true, Statement 2 is true, Statement 2 is not the correct
explanation of Statement 1. [AIEEE 12]
27. Statement 1. A point particle of mass f moving with speed d collides with
stationary point particle of mass _. If the maximum energy loss possible is given as

* h
r fd ' , then r = .
' b s h

Statement 2. Maximum energy loss occurs when the particles get stuck together as
result of the collision.
(a) Statement 1 is true, Statement 2 is true, Statement 2 is the correct explanation of
Statement 1.
(b) Statement 1 is true, Statement 2 is true, Statement 2 is not the correct
explanation of Statement 1.
(c) Statement 1 is true, Statement 2 is false.
(d) Statement 1 is false, Statement 2 is true. [JEE Main 13]
28. Statement – 1. Two particles moving in the same direction do not lose all their
energy in a completely inelastic collision.
Statement – 2. Principle of conservation of momentum holds true for all kinds of
collision.
(a) Statement – 1 is true, Statement – 2 is false
(b) Statement – 1 is true, Statement – 2 is true; Statement – 2 is the correct
explanation of Statement – 1
(c) Statement – 1 is true, Statement – 2 is true; Statement – 2 is not the correct.
explanation of Statement – 1.
(d) Statement – 1 is false, Statement – 2 is true [AIEEE 2010]

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