Chapter 3: Work, Energy, Power & System of Particles (Set-3)

Work done by a force is positive when:

A Force opposes motion
B Force and displacement are in same direction
C Force is perpendicular
D Body is at rest

Work–energy theorem relates work to:

A Change in PE
B Change in KE
C Change in mass
D Change in acceleration

A body’s kinetic energy becomes zero when:

A Net work is positive
B Net work is negative
C Velocity becomes zero
D Mass decreases

Work done by a constant force depends on:

A Time
B Displacement
C Temperature
D Mass only

If work done is zero, then:

A Force is zero
B Displacement is zero or perpendicular
C Body must be at rest
D KE increases

A force of 5 N acts through 2 m at 60°. Work =

A 2.5 J
B 5 J
C 10 J
D 20 J

KE of a body is 40 J. If speed doubles, KE becomes:

A 80 J
B 160 J
C 20 J
D 100 J

Work done by an ideal spring is:

A Positive
B Negative
C Zero
D Can be positive or negative

At maximum height of projectile, work done by gravity is:

A Positive
B Zero
C Negative
D Infinite

Work done by a variable force is obtained from:

A Area under v–t graph
B Area under F–x graph
C Area under F–t graph
D Area under KE–t graph

The essential feature of a conservative force is:

A Work depends on path
B Work always increases KE
C Work in closed path is zero
D Work reduces PE

Potential energy exists only for:

A Conservative forces
B Non-conservative forces
C Random forces
D Very strong forces

In presence of friction, mechanical energy:

A Increases
B Decreases
C Remains constant
D Becomes infinite

Which force is not conservative?

A Gravity
B Electric force
C Magnetic force
D Friction

Work done by gravitational force:

A Depends on path
B Depends on final height
C Is always zero
D Is always positive

A non-conservative force:

A Stores energy
B Converts mechanical energy into heat
C Gives back energy
D Performs no work

Work done by spring force from x = 0 to x is:

A +½kx²
B −½kx²
C kx
D Zero

If mechanical energy is decreasing, the force involved is:

A Gravity
B Spring force
C Friction
D Electrostatic

Centre of mass of two particles lies closer to:

A Lighter one
B Heavier one
C Depends on speed
D Always midway

COM of a semicircular wire lies:

A At centre
B On diameter
C Outside the arc
D At centre of curvature

COM of a moving system is affected only by:

A Internal forces
B External forces
C Both
D Temperature

COM of a triangular lamina lies at:

A Centroid
B Vertex
C Midpoint of a side
D Outside the lamina

If net external force = 0, momentum of system:

A Increases
B Decreases
C Remains constant
D Becomes zero

In a collision, COM of system:

A Jumps
B Moves irregularly
C Moves uniformly
D Restarts motion

If two masses 2 kg and 6 kg are 4 m apart, COM measured from 2 kg is:

A 1 m
B 2 m
C 3 m
D 4 m

COM can be outside body in:

A Solid cube
B Ring
C Sphere
D Cylinder

Momentum is conserved in:

A Any motion
B Systems with external forces
C Absence of external forces
D Rotational motion only

A 5 kg mass moving at 2 m/s has momentum:

A 5
B 10
C 2
D 7

Impulse equals:

A Change in KE
B Change in PE
C Change in momentum
D Change in power

Perfectly elastic collision conserves:

A KE only
B Momentum only
C Both KE & momentum
D Neither

A bullet embeds in a block. This is:

A Elastic
B Perfectly inelastic
C Explosion
D Oblique collision

Unit of momentum is:

A Joule
B Watt
C Newton
D kg·m/s

Force equals rate of change of:

A KE
B Power
C Displacement
D Momentum

A 3 kg body experiences impulse 9 Ns. Change in velocity =

A 1 m/s
B 2 m/s
C 3 m/s
D 4 m/s

When two bodies collide, momentum is conserved if:

A Forces are equal
B No external force acts
C Bodies have equal mass
D KE decreases

Total mechanical energy of system is conserved when:

A Only friction acts
B Only conservative forces act
C External force acts
D Mass increases

A falling body’s KE increases because:

A Air resistance helps
B PE converts to KE
C Mass increases
D Time increases

Energy cannot be created/destroyed is:

A Newton’s law
B Kepler’s law
C Conservation of energy
D Work–energy theorem

Compressed spring stores energy as:

A KE
B Thermal energy
C Chemical energy
D Elastic PE

When velocity triples, KE becomes:

A
B
C
D 12×

Work done by uniform gravity from h₁ to h₂ is:

A mgh₂
B mg(h₂−h₁)
C ½mg(h₂−h₁)
D Zero

Power =

A Work × time
B Work ÷ time
C Mass ÷ time
D Force × time

If W = 100 J in 2 s, power =

A 25 W
B 50 W
C 75 W
D 100 W

Work = 0 when displacement is:

A Parallel
B Opposite
C Perpendicular
D Same direction

KE = ½mv² indicates KE depends on:

A Only mass
B Only velocity
C Mass and square of velocity
D Force

A 4 kg body moving at 3 m/s has KE =

A 6 J
B 18 J
C 36 J
D 9 J

If ME is constant, forces acting are:

A Non-conservative
B Always zero
C Conservative
D Internal

A force produces no change in KE when:

A Work = 0
B Mass decreases
C Friction acts
D Speed decreases

A body moves in a circle. Work done by centripetal force:

A Positive
B Negative
C Zero
D Infinite

Net external force = 0 implies:

A KE constant
B Momentum constant
C Position constant
D Energy increases