You are on page 1of 14

Sec: ISR_*CO-SC(MODEL-A) CTM-20 Date: 16-04-23

Time: 3 Hrs JEE-MAIN Max. Marks: 300


KEY SHEET
PHYSICS
1 C 2 B 3 D 4 D 5 1
6 C 7 D 8 B 9 A 10 C
11 B 12 C 13 A 14 B 15 A
16 D 17 A 18 B 19 A 20 D
21 6 22 2 23 8 24 81 25 1
26 8 27 2 28 150 29 10 30 40

CHEMISTRY
31 B 32 B 33 C 34 A 35 C
36 C 37 B 38 C 39 A 40 D
41 C 42 A 43 C 44 D 45 C
46 A 47 B 48 D 49 B 50 B
51 3 52 6 53 2 54 4 55 5
56 30 57 14 58 5 59 5 60 4

MATHEMATICS
61 C 62 B 63 B 64 A 65 A
66 B 67 C 68 D 69 C 70 D
71 D 72 A 73 A 74 A 75 B
76 A 77 C 78 C 79 D 80 C
81 4 82 1 83 32 84 1 85 11
86 58 87 150 88 290 89 98 90 276
Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
SOLUTIONS
PHYSICS
2
 2  1  1
1. Fraction of incident energy reflected =   
 2  1  4
3
Hence fraction incident energy transmitted is .
4
0 x 
T 
x
2. g eff dx  0 x 2 g eff
0
L 2L
0 x g eff
2

v  15 x
 0 
2L  x 
L 
dx
   dt
15 t

0
15 x 0

 t  2s
3.   A sin( kx   t )
d
Pex   B   BAk cos(kx  t )
dx
Amplitude of Pex  BAk
 2 
 (5  105 )(104 )    5  10
2

 0.2 
4. The velocity at A  v1   T1
The velocity at B  v2   T2
 T1   T2
Average velocity =
2
displacement 2l
Time = Time  
velocity   T1  T2 
5. Let x be the length of the part of the rod in tumbler and y the length of the outer part. Then length of
x y
the rod =  x  y  . The centre of mass of rod is at a distance from its ends and at a distance of
2
yx
from the outer end of tumbler
2
The condition for equilibrium is the equality to zero of the sum of the momnts of forces about the
brim of tumbler
Weight of the ball Fb  mb g  V  Al g
V
Buoyant force on the ball Fa   w g
2
Taking moments about the brim
Mg  y  x 
 Fb  Fa  x 
2
JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 2
Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL


4 3
  
4 3
 
 y  x   103
 A1 r w g r  x 4.4
 3 6  2
y 5
Solving we get 
x 3
x2
6. Since K + U = 2  K  2  U  2 
4
At x = 0, K is minimum
1
 mv 2  2  v  2m / s
2
7. Using PV = nRT
Initially PV = 1xRx300
Finally P 'V  2  R  3000
M x  M 2 x2
8. xcm  1 1
M1  M 2
9. Since water falls at maximum distance from wall so the hole should be made at h.
For toppling, av 2  h  r 2 2hg  r
r 3
 a2gh  h  r 2hgr  h 
2

a
    
3
10. p1  4T r 3  p2  8T r
R r 2
2
P
11. I 0
2 v
q q q
12.  
R 2 R 3R
ds dv
13. v  3t 2  12m / s, at   6t  12m / s 2
dt dt

v R  a
2 2
a t
2

14. CONCEPTUAL

15. 1 m v 2  u 2   Area under than centre


2  
KE : U s  k  A2  x 2  : 1 kx 2
1
16.
2 2
Mgh M
17. P 
t t
18. mT  constant
1 1 1
T1 : T2 : T3 :: : :
3 4 5
Q   AT 4

22 42 62
QA : QB : QC :: 4 : 4 : 4
3 4 5
QB will be maximum.
19. mg sin    mg cos 
tan  

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 3


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
dy 1
 tan    
dx 2
2
x 1
 , x  1
2 2
1
y m
6
20. Net force on any one particle
GM 2 GM 3 GM 2
  cos 450
 cos 450
 2R  R 2   
2 2 2
R 2
GM 2  1 1 
 
R 2  4 2 
M
u
u
450
M M
450

u u
M
This force will be equal to centripetal force so
Mu 2 GM 2 1  2 2 
  
R R2  4 

u
GM 
4R 
1  2 2  
1 GM
2 R

2 2 1 
1 T
21. The functional frequency of the sonometer string is given by n 
2l m
Where l and m the mass per unit length of the wire and T is the tension.
Since l and m are constants, T  n 2 where T is equal to the suspended weight.
Let the weights be W1, W2 and W3 in air, water and liquid, respectively.
The specific gravity of the liquid
loss of weight of the mass in liquid W1  W3 n12  n32  500  140
2 2

    6
loss of weight of the mass in water W1  W2 n12  n22  500 2   460 2
y
22. tan    2
x
1 1
tan   tan    tan  tan   1 ,
2 2
tan   tan  90        90

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 4


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
23. Applying momentum conservation
200  10  40  v  10   100v
v  8m / s
24. Let f1 and f 2 be the friction force between A and B and between B and horizontal surface
respectively. Limiting values if these frictional forces will be

A T1
f1
C
f1
T B 2T1
f2

f L1  0.3  50  10  150 N
f L2  0.3  120  10  360 N
The FBD of the three blocks are shown in figure
Let m is the mass of block C. For A and B to remain at rest, block C should also remain at rest
For block C : T  mg
For block A : T1  f1
For block B : T  f1  f 2  2T1
For largest value of mass of C , the friction f 2 must be towards left
T  3 f1  f 2  mg
f1  f L1 and f 2  f L 2
Hence mg  3 f L1  f L 2 or m  81
 maximum value of m  81kg
25. velocity of efflux v  2 gy
2h
Range x  2 gy 
g
A
---------------
- - - - - - - - - - - -y- - a
--------------- v
--------------
h ---------- ----
-------------
---------------
- - - - - - - - - - - ----
- - - - - - - - - - - - - --
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
x
dx
The velocity of block must be
dt
dx 2h 1 dy
vb    2g 
dt g 2 y dt
h dy
 ---------------(i)
y dt
Using equation of continuity

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 5


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
dy
A  a 2 gy --------------(ii)
dt
From equation (i) and (ii)
h a
vb   2 gy
y A
a 1
 2 gh   20   1ms 1
A 20
26. m  0.5  5  1  80  100
20
m 8
25
27. Let  is the charge density and l is the edge length of cube. We know that potential at any point has
to be proportional to charge and inversely proportional to side length of cube so
Q l 3
V   l 2
l l
Now, to find potential at centre, the cube of edge length l can be considered as 8 cubes of length
l / 2 so the potential at centre of original can be obtained as sum of potentials due to 8 cubes (of
length l / 2 ) at the corners
 l  8l
2 2
Vcentre  8       2l 2
2 4
V 2l 2
 centre  2  2
V l
Hence   2
10  3 0.8
F    
2
28.    10
2 8

50 F

50
= 5 × 100 × 0.3 = 150N
29. Vertical component does not change
2v0 sin  2 100  sin 300
t    10sec
g 10
30.
f N

600 ma
mg
w.r.t elevator
f  mg sin 60  ma sin 600
0

N  mg cos 600  ma cos 600


N  400N
Mass measured = 40kg

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 6


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
MATHS
61. From the figure, 12  x  r  8
 12  (r  5) 2  25  r  8
 12  r 2  10r  r  8
 (4  r) 2  r 2  10r
 18r  16
8
r
9
62. Point of intersection of curves is (1, 0)
y  3x 1 ln x
3x 1
 y'   ln x.3x 1.ln 3
x
 m1  1
Now, y  x x (1  ln x)
 m2  1
11
So, tan   tan   0
11
   0  cos 0º  1

B  A1  3A 33  ...   2n  1 A 2n 1 
2n 1
63.
BT    A1  3A 33  ...  (2n  1)(A 2r 1 ) 2r 1 
 B
Thus, B is skew symmetric
 C  C C
sin  A   sin  A    sin
k  2 k 1  2 2 B A
64.     cot cot
1 C k 1  C C 2 2
sin sin  A    sin
2  2 2
 
65. 1  2    
2 2
 4  1   3  8  4  6 2
cos 2          
 5   3   5   3  15
A negative number
Therefore, 2 is obtuse and hence 1 is acute.
1  2
 1 1 1 
66. y  x  3  2  2  2  ..... 
2 4 6 
 1 1 1 
x  z   2  2  2  ..... 
2 4 6 
 (y  x)  3(x  z)
4x  y  3z
x y z
2  
3 6 2

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 7


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
67. Let O = (0, 0), P = (6, 8) and Q = (12, 16) As shown in the figure the shortest route consists of
tangents OT, minor arc TR and tangent RQ.
Since OP = 10, Pt = 5, and OTP  90º
If follows that OPT  60º andOT  5 3
Similarly, PQ  10, PR  5
QPR  60º and QR  5 3
Also points O, P and Q are collinear as m OP  m PQ
5
RPT  60º , so arc TR is of length
.
3
68. (ABA) 2  (ABA)(ABA)  AB(AA)BA  AB2 A
(ABA)3  (AB2 A)(ABA)(ABA)  (AB3A)
(ABA) 4  (AB3 A)(ABA)  AB4 A
Continuing in this manner, we get C2009  AB2009 A
1 2  1 2  1 2 2 
B2     
0 1  0 1  0 1 
1 2 2  1 2  1 3 2 
B3     
0 1  0 1  0 1 
1 2009 2 
Continuing in this manner, we get B2009   
0 1 
1 2009 2 
 C2009  A  A
0 1 
 
69. lim x 2 sin  log e cos  (form 0  )
x  x

 
x 2 sin  log e cos 
 x    x2  
= lim  log cos  = lim x 2
.log cos  lim log  cos 
    x 
e e e
x  x  x x  2  x
 log e cos 
 x
     2  
x 2 log e 1   cos  1   2sin 
2   2x     2
2
  x   x2 
= lim  2sin  = lim .    
x      2x  x  2
  
2
 2x  4
2  cos  1  
 x   2x 
1
70. 0 x  1 and 0  ln | x | 1
2 1
 2 x  1  1  0 | x | e
 x 1
 x  (1, e)
71.   x 2  2x  2   0x 
mx 2  3x  4
  5  (m  5)x 2  7x  6  0x  R
x 2  2x  2
71
m5  0&D  0  m 
24

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 8


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
72. Let A be (, ) & B(, )
P(h, k) be midpoint
2h    , 2k    
  h  k;   (h  k)
         d 2  4k 2  4h 2  d 2
2 2

Which is a circle
73. D.R’s of PQ are x1  1, y1  1, z1  1
 1(x1  1)  1(y1  1)  1(z1  1)  0  x1  y1  z1  3
Also x1  2y1  3z1  4
x1  y1  z1  3
 (x1 , y1 , z1 ) is a point on the two planes
x  2y  3z  4
xyz 3
 line of intersection of these two planes will be the required locus which is
x y5 z  2
 
1 2 1
     
74.     
a  2b . c  2a  b  3c 
                
    
= a  2b . c  b  2a  b  6a  c = a. c  b  2b.(6a  c) = 11a. b  c  
2 1 2
  
 
So, 11a. b  c  3 1 1  319
1 1 4
x2 y z x  2 y z
75. So, L1 :   and L 2 :   ,S  0,   1
0 4   2 0 3 2
 tan 1[]  
 1 x 
dy 4 12x  
76.  e  1  x  x 2  2e 2   x 2  x  1
dx 2
dx 1
g '(y)    x 1 
dy  
2e  2   x 2  x  1
7
When y   then x = 1
6
dy  1 1
  
dx  x  7/6 2  3 5
77. When cot x  0
1
 0
sin x
 No possible value of x.
    3   5 
When cot x  0  x   ,     , 2    ,3 
2   2   2 
1
  cot x  cot x 
sin x
1
 cos x 
2

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 9


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL

78. Since f '(x)  2f (x)  0, x  1


dx
 e .f (x)   0, x  1
d 2x

h(x)  e 2x f (x) is increasing in x  1 . Now x > 1


 e 2x f (x)  e 2 .f (1)
 f (x)  e 2x  2 , x  1
79. f (3)  f (4)    12
x 2  12
f '(x) 
x(x 2  12)
 f '(c)  0
 (c)  12
3 4 5
80. Note D  1 2 3 (R 3  R 3  2R1  3R 2 )
4 4 4
3 4 5
= 1 2 3 0
0 0 0
Now let P3  4x  4y  4z    0 . If the system has solutions it will have infinite solution,
So P3  P1   P2
Hence 3    4 and 4  2  4    2 and   2
So for infinite solution 2  2    for 2    2
System inconsistent

81. f (x) is an even function


 1  1 1 1
f    f    f    f    0
 4  2 2  4
So, f(x) has at least four root in (2, 2)
 3  3
g   g   0
 4  4
So, g(x) has at least two roots in (2, 2)
Now number of root of f (x).g ''(x)  f '(x).g '(x)  0
d
It is same as number of roots of (f (x).g '(x))  0 will have atleast 4 roots in (–2, 2)
dx

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 10


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
82. N  M 2  M 4  ...  M 98
   2 I     2 I   ...    2 I 
2 49

 I   2   4   6  ...   98 
N   I   2   4   6 .....   98 

= I

 2 1    2 
49

1    2 
I 2 (1   98 )
N=
1  2
Now (I  m 2 )N  2I
 I .(1     2I
2 98

 I   I
2

1  2
 100   2  2
   1
1  cos 2)
83. 3cos 2 2  6 cos 2  10 5 0
2
 cos 2(3cos 2  1)  0
1
 cos 2  0,
3
1
Draw y  cos 2, y  0 and y  , find the pt. of intersection.
3
84. Draw y  cos 2 x and y  2x  2
85. For this limit to be defined 2x 3  7x 2  ax  b should also trend to 0 or x  1 .
 2.(1)3  7(1) 2  a.1  b  0
2  7  (a  b)  0
(a  b)  5 ....(i)
Now this becomes % form  we apply L’ lopital rule

lim
 3x 2  4x  1  x 2  1 lim cos  3x 2  4x  1  6x  4   2x
x 1 2x 3  7x 2  ax  b x 1 6x 2  14x  a
Now the numerator again  0 as x = 1
 6x 2  14x  a  0 ad x = 1
6.(1) 2  14  a  0
a 8 ….(ii)
ab5  a  b  8  (3)  11
(b  3)  from (i) & (ii)

2x  3y    5 
86.  infinitely many solution
x  5y     1 
2 3    5 
   
 5   1 
2 3   5
(i)  
 5  1

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 11


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL
5 2
  5x  25  3  3
3
 5  3  28
10
9  5  3  9   28
3
 30  28  58

87. a  2i  j  3k

b  3i  3j  k

c  c i  c j  c k
1 2 3

2 1 3
Coplanar  3 3 1 0
c1 c 2 c3
 2(3c3  c 2 )  1(3c3  c1 )  3(3c 2  3c1 )  0
 8c1  7c 2  12c3  0 ……(i)

a.c  5  2c1  c 2  3c3  5 …..(ii)

b.c  0  3c1  3c 2  c3  0 ….(iii)
Solving (i), (ii), (iii)
10 85 225
c1  , c2  , c3 
122 122 122
122  c1  c 2  c3   150
 2n, n  1, 2,3, 4,5
88.  f (n) 
2n  11, n  6, 7,8,9,10
 f (1)  2, f (2)  4,.....f (5)  10
And f (6)  1, f (7)  3, f (8)  5,..., f (10)  9
Now,
n  1, if n is odd
f (g(n))  
 n  1, if n is even
 f (g(10))  9  g(1)  1
f (g(2))  1  g(2)  6
f (g(3))  4  g(3)  2
f (g(4))  3  g(4)  7
f (g(5))  6  g(5)  3
 g(10)(g(1)  g(2)  g(3)  g(4)  g(5))  190
89. ,  are roots of x 2  4x  5  0
    4 and   5
Also ,  are roots of
 
x 2  3 2  2 3 x  7  3 3  0,   0
    3 2  2 3,   7  3 2
 is common root
 2  4  5  0 ….(i)
And

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 12


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL


 2  3 2  2 3   7  3 3  0  ….(ii)
From (i) – (ii); we get
2  3 3

3 2  2 3  4
    3 2
 4  3 2  2 3  2  3 2
4  6 3
 3 2  4  3 2  2 3 
3 2  2 3  4
 8 2  3  
3 2 2 43 6  0

 
6 2  3 3  9(11  4 6)  32 4  3 6  
16
  2
    2             
2 2

 
2
= 4 2 3 2

= 4 2  = 98
2
2 3
r
90. Tr 
 2r  2 2
1
r
=
 2r  1   2r 
2 2 2

1 4r
=
4  2r  2r  1 2r 2  2r  1
2

1 10  1 1 
S10     
4 r 1   2r 2  2r  1  2r 2  2r  1 
 
1 1 1 1 1 1 
= 1     ...  
4  5 5 13 181 221 
1 220 55 m
 S10  .  
4 221 221 n
 m  m  276

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 13


Narayana IIT Academy 16-04-23_ISR.IIT_*CO-SC(MODEL-A)_JEE-MAIN_CTM-20_KEY&SOL

JR.IIT_*CO-SC Page. No. 14

You might also like