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20
MATHS
sin 2 tan 2
1. + + cos 2 =
1 + cot (1 + tan )
2 2 2
2
3 5
3) sec2 + 2sin 2 − tan 2 c) 3
2 3
4) tan 120 + cos 150 − sin 2 3000
2 0 2 0
d) 1
The correct match for List-I from List-II is
(a) 1-c, 2-a, 3-d, 4-b (b) 1-b, 2-d, 3-a, 4-c (c) 1-a, 2-b, 3-c, 4-d (d) 1-d, 2-c, 3-b, 4-a
3
4.The expression 3 sin 4 − + sin 4 (3 − ) − 2 sin 6 + + sin 6 ( 5 − ) ) is equal to
2 2
(a) 0 (b) 1 (c) 2 (d) -1
5. If tan and tan are the roots of the equation 8x2 – 26x + 15 = 0 then cos ( + ) is equal to
2 2
627 627 725
(a) − (b) (c) − (d) – 1
725 725 627
6. If sin 1 + sin 2 + sin 3 = 3 ,then cos 1 + cos 2 + cos 3 =
(a) 3 (b) 2 (c) 1 (d) 0
7. The maximum value of sin ( x + / 6) + cos ( x + / 6) in the interval ( 0, / 2 ) is attained at
10.
9cos 2 x + 4sin 2 x = 5 tan x =
4 6 4 6 6 6
13. Number of solutions of the equation Tan x + Sec x = 2 Cos x in the interval 0,2 is
(a) 0 (b) 1 (c) 2 (d) 3
1
1−
14. Most general solution of 2 sinx + 2 cosx = 2 2
is
5
(a) n − (b) 2n + (c) n + ( −1) (d) 2n
n
4 4 4 4
15. The general value of x for the equation 9
Cosx
− 2.3Cosx + 1 = 0 is
n
(a) n (b) (c) 2n (d) ( 2n + 1)
2 2
B) sin x + 2cos x = 2
2 2
2) x = sin -1 (1/3)
C) sin x =1/3 3) x = sin -1 (-1)
4) x =
3
A B C
(a) 1 2 3
(b) 2 1 4
(c) 3 1 2
(d) 4 1 2
19. Assertion (A): 3 sinx+ 4 cos x =7 has no solution
IV) cosec 2 =1 d) n / 2
e) n / 8
(a) b,d,a,c (b) c,a,e,b (c) b,c,a,d (d) d,a,b,c
SUBJECTIVE TYPE QUESTIONS
21.The number of solutions of the pair of equations
2 sin 2 θ- cos2θ = 0, 2 cos 2 θ- 3sinθ = 0 in the interval [0, 2π] is.
22.The number of solutions of the equation tanx +secx = 2cosx lying in the interval [0, 2π] is.
𝜋
23.If y =(1 + tan A) (1 - tanB) where A – B = 4 , then (y+1) y+ 1 is equal to.
cot 𝜃 5𝜋
24.Let f(θ) = 1− 𝑐𝑜𝑡𝜃 and α + β = , then the value of f(α) . f(β) is.
4
𝜋 3𝜋 5𝜋 7𝜋 9𝜋
25. The values of cos 11 + cos + cos + cos + cos is.
11 11 11 11
PHYSICS
26. A particle of mass 0.3 kg is subjected to a force F = −kx with k = 15 N / m. What will be its initial acceleration
if it is released from a point 20 cm away from the origin
(a) 5 m/s2 (b) 10 m/s2 (c) 3 m/s2 (d) 15 m/s2
27. At a place where the acceleration due to gravity is 10 m sec −2 a force of 5 kg-wt acts on a body of mass 10
kg initially at rest. The velocity of the body after 4 second is
(a) 5 m sec −1 (b) 10 m sec −1 (c) 20 m sec −1 (d) 50 m sec −1
28.A man is standing on a weighing machine placed in a lift. When stationary his weight is recorded as 40
kg. If the lift is accelerated upwards with an acceleration of 2 m / s 2 , then the weight recorded in the machine
will be (g = 10 m / s 2 )
(a)32 kg (b) 40 kg (c)42 kg (d)48 kg
29. A body of mass 4 kg weighs 4.8 kg when suspended in a moving lift. The acceleration of the lift is
(a) 9.80 ms −2 downwards (b)9.80 ms −2 upwards (c)1.96 ms −2 downwards (d) 1.96 ms −2 upwards
1
30.A vehicle of 100 kg is moving with a velocity of 5 m/sec. To stop it in sec , the required force in opposite
10
direction is
(a)5000 N (b) 500 N (c)50 N (d)1000 N
31. The time period of a simple pendulum measured inside a stationary lift is found to be T. If the lift starts
accelerating upwards with an acceleration g/3, the time period is
(a) T 3 (b) T 3 / 2 (c) T / 3 (d) T / 3
32.A cork is submerged in water by a spring attached to the bottom of a pail. When the pail is kept in a
elevator moving with an acceleration downwards, the spring length
(a)Increases (b) Decreases (c)Remains unchanged (d)Data insufficient
33.Two trolleys of mass m and 3m are connected by a spring. They were compressed and released once, they
move off in opposite direction and comes to rest after covering distances S 1 and S 2 respectively. Assuming
the coefficient of friction to be uniform, the ratio of distances S 1 : S 2 is
(a)1 : 9 (b)1 : 3 (c)3 : 1 (d)9 : 1
34.A boy of 50 kg is in a lift moving down with an acceleration 9 .8 ms −2 . The apparent weight of the body is
(g = 9.8 ms −2 )
50
(a) 50 9.8 N (b)Zero (c)50 N (d) N
9 .8
35.An automobile travelling with a speed of 60 km / h, can brake to stop within a distance of 20 m. If the car is
going twice as fast, i.e. 120 km/h, the stopping distance will be
(a)20 m (b) 40 m (c)60 m (d)80 m
36.The velocity of a body at time t = 0 is 10 2 m/s in the north-east direction and it is moving with an
acceleration of 2 m/s2 directed towards the south. The magnitude and direction of the velocity of the body
after 5 sec will be
(a)10 m/s, towards east (b)10 m/s, towards north
(c)10 m/s, towards south (d)10 m/s, towards north-east
37.A solid disc of mass M is just held in air horizontally by throwing 40 stones per sec vertically upwards to
strike the disc each with a velocity 6 ms −1 . If the mass of each stone is 0.05 kg what is the mass of the disc
(g = 10 ms −2 )
44.A block of mass M is pulled along a horizontal frictionless surface by a rope of mass m. If a force P is
applied at the free end of the rope, the force exerted by the rope on the block will be
Pm PM Pm
(a) P (b) (c) (d)
M +m M +m M −m
45.A block A of mass 7 kg is placed on a frictionless table. A thread tied to it passes over a frictionless pulley
and carries a body B of mass 3 kg at the other end. The acceleration of the system is (given g = 10 ms −2 )
(a) 100 ms −2
A
(b) 3ms −2
(c) 10 ms −2 B
(d) 30 ms −2
CHEMISTRY
Passage Type Questions
The gases which strictly follow the general equation (PV = nRT) are called ideal or perfect gases. Actually,there is
no gas which is perfect or ideal. A real gas is one which actually exists, whether it obeys gas laws strictly or
not.Under ordinary conditions, only those gases nearly behave as ideal or perfect which have very low boiling points
such as nitrogen, hydrogen, etc. The most easily liquefiable and highly soluble gases such as ammonia, carbon
dioxide, sulphur dioxide show large deviations.
A very convenient method of studing deviation of real gases from ideal behavior is through a compressibility factor
PV
(Z). Z =
nRT
(i) Z = 1, for ideal gases. (ii) Z 1, for real gases.
Answer the following questions:
PV
51.Consider the equation Z = ; which of the following statements is correct?
nRT
(a)When Z > 1, real gases are easier to compress than the ideal gas
(b) When Z = 1, real gases get compressed easily
(c) When Z > 1, real gases are difficult to compress
(d) When Z = 1, real gases are difficult to compress
52.The compressibility of a gas is less than unity at STP, therefore:
(a)Vm > 22.4 L (b) Vm < 22.4 L (c) Vm = 22.4 L (d) Vm = 44.8 L
53.At low pressure, the vander Waals’ equation is reduced to:
PVm aP PVm bP PVm a
(a) Z = = 1− (b) Z = = 1+ (c) PVm = RT (d) Z = = 1−
RT RT RT RT RT RT
54.At Boyle’s temperature, compressibility factor Z for a real gas is:
(a)Z = 1 (b)Z = 0 (c)Z > 1 (d)Z < 1
[Hint : At Boyle’s temperature, the real gas behaves like an ideal gas.]
55.The behaviour of a real gas is usually depicted by plotting compressibility factor Z versus pressure P at a constant
temperature. At high temperature and pressure, Z is usually more than one. This fact can be explained by van der
Waals’ equation when:
(a)the constant ‘a’ is negligible but not ‘b’ (b)the constant ‘b’ is negligible but not ‘a’
(c)both the constants ‘a’ and ‘b’ are negligible (d) both the constants ‘a’ and ‘b’ are not negligible
56.The units of compressibility factor are:
(a)atm L-1 (b)atm-1 (c)L-1 (d)unitless
57.The volume temperature graphs of a given mass of an ideal gas at constant pressure are shown below: What is the
correct order of pressure?
(a) P1 > P3 > P2 (b) P1 > P2 > P3 (c) P2 > P3 > P1 (d) P2 > P1 > P3
58.0.5 mole of each of H2, SO2 and CH4 are kept in a container. A hole was made in the container. After 3 hours, the
order of partial pressures in the container will be
(a) pSO2 PCH 4 PH 2 (b) pH 2 PSO2 PCH 4 (c) pCH 4 PSO2 PH 2 (d) pH 2 PCH 4 PSO2
59.For gaseous state, if most probable speed is denoted by C*, average speed by C and mean square speed by C, then
for a large number of molecules the ratios of these speeds are
(a) C* : C : C = 1 : 1.128 : 1.225 (b) C* : C : C = 1 : 1.225 : 1.128
(c) C* : C : C = 1 : 1.225 : 1.128 : 1 (d) C* : C : C = 1.128 : 1.225 : 1
60.For H2 gas, the compressibility factor, Z = PV/n RT is :
(a)equal to 1 (b)equal to 0
(c)always greater than 1 (d)initially less than 1 and then becomes greater than 1 at high pressures
61.’a’ and ‘b’ are vander Waals constants for gases. Chlorine is more easily liquefied than ethane because
(a)a and b for Cl2 < a and b for C2H6 (b)a for Cl2 < a for C2H6 but b for Cl2 > b for C2H6
(c)a for Cl2 > a for C2H6 but b for Cl2 < b for C2H6 (d) a and b for Cl2 > a and b for C2H6
62.In a hospital, an oxygen cylinder holds 10 L of oxygen at 200 atm pressure. If a patient breaths in 0.50 mL of
oxygen at 1 atm with each breath, the number of breaths for which the cylinder will be sufficient will be (Assume
that all the data is at 37oC)
(a) 1 X 106 (b)2 X 106 (c)3 X 106 (d)4 X 106
63.According to Charles’ law, volume of a gas can be plotted against temperature in Celsius as shown in the fig. If
V0 is the volume of a gas at 0oC and V is the volume at toC, the slope of the straight line will be
V V0 1
(a)V0 (b) (c) (d)
273 273 273
64.50 litre of dry nitrogen is passed through 36 g H2O at 27oC. After the passage of the gas, the mass of water was
reduced to 34.80 g. The aqueous tension of water at 27oC is close to
(a)22 mm (b)23 mm (c)24 mm (d)25 mm
65.The composition of the equilibrium mixture (Cl2 2 Cl)which is attained at 1200oC is determined by
measuring the rate of effusion through a pin-hole. It isobserved that at 1.80 mm Hg pressure, the mixture effuses
1.16 times as fast as Krypton under the same conditions. The fraction of chlorine molecules dissociated into atoms
will be (At. Wt. Of Kr = 84)
(a)0.117 (b)0.127 (c)0.137 (d)0.147
66.A closed vessel contains equal number of oxygen and hydrogen molecules at a total pressure of 740 mm. If
oxygen is removed from the system, the pressure :
(a)becomes half of 740 mm (b)remains unchanged
(c)becomes 1/9 th of 740 mm (d) becomes double of 740 mm
67.A gas is effusing in vacuum at rate r1 and in air at rate r2, then:
(a)I is observed for ideal gases and for real gases under high temperature and low pressure
(b)XY nature of II is observed at low pressure and after Y, at high pressure
(c)III is observed for light gases
(d)All are correct statements
70.TC of CO2 gas is 31oC. CO2 is
(a) a gas at 35oC and vapour at 25oC (b) a gas at 35oC as well as at 25oC
(c)vapour at 35oCas well as at 25oC (d)a gas at 35oC and liquid at 25oC
SUBJECTIVE TYPE QUESTIONS
71.The excluded volume of a molecule in motion is x times the actual volume of a molecule in rest. The value of x is :
72.The volume of a gas at atmospheric pressure is one litre. If its temperature is raised to double of original
temperature, find out its volume at 380 mm pressure.
73.The ratio of mean squar speed of H2 gas at 50 K and that of O2 gas at 800 K is :
74.The temperature of an ideal gas is increased from 140 K to 560 K. If at 140K the root mean square velocity of the
gas molecules is u, at 560 K it becomes x u. The value of x is :
75.At identical temperature and pressure the rate of diffusion of hydrogen gas is 3 3 times that of a hydrocarbon
having molecular formula CnH2n-2. The value of n is :