A wire, made of a certain material of length-l and area of cross section-a can withstand a maximum load $=\mathrm{W}$ without breaking. If, another wire of the same material and crosssectional area is used with double the original length, what will be the maximum load that the wire can withstand, without breaking?
Will be halved to 0.5 W
Will be doubled to 2 W
Remains the same $=\mathrm{W}$
Would be four times $=4 \mathrm{~W}$
A bullet, fired into a door gets embedded exactly at it's centre, causing the door to rotate about it's vertical axis, practically without friction, with an angular velocity of $0.625 \mathrm{rads}^{-1}$. The door is 1.0 m wide and weighs 12 kg . If the mass of the bullet is 10 g , find the speed with which it was fired. (Hint: The moment of inertia of the door about the vertical axis at one end is $\frac{M L^2}{3}$.
$645 \mathrm{~ms}^{-1}$
$342 \mathrm{~ms}^{-1}$
$124 \mathrm{~ms}^{-1}$
$500 \mathrm{~ms}^{-1}$
In the equation $X=G^{-1 / 2} h^{1 / 2} c^{5 / 2}$, where G- universal gravitation constant, $h$ - Planck's constant and c - velocity of light, the dimensions of X are that of
Stress
Energy
Upthrust
Momentum
Force constant of interatomic bond, in a certain element, is $7.1 \mathrm{Nm}^{-1}$. If the atom oscillates in SHM in a certain direction, what is its frequency?
Given: Mole weight of the given element is 108 g and Avagadro's number $=6.023 \times 10^{23} \mathrm{~g} \mathrm{~mol}^{-1}$
$3.45 \times 10^{22} s^{-1}$
$0.005 \times 10^{12} s^{-1}$
$1 \times 10^{12} s^{-1}$
$6.667 \times 10^{12} s^{-1}$
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