Class 12th Physics Chapter-2 Solutions

Go Back to Class 12th Physics

Question 2.1
Two charges +5×108C and 3×108C are located 16 cm apart. At what point(s) on the line joining the two charges is the electric potential zero? Take the potential at infinity to be zero.


Solution:

Let the positive charge +5×108C be at point O (origin).
The negative charge 3×108C is at point A, 16 cm to the right.

Electric potential at a point P on the line is

V=14πε0(q1r1+q2r2)

For V=0, the bracket must be zero.

Case 1: Point P between the charges (0<x<16 cm)

Distance from +5×108C = x
Distance from 3×108C = 16x

5x316x=0

5(16x)=3x805x=3xx=10 cm

Case 2: Point P beyond the negative charge (x>16 cm)

Distance from +5×108C = x
Distance from 3×108C = x16

5x3x16=0

5(x16)=3x5x80=3xx=40 cm


Question 2.2

A regular hexagon of side 10 cm has a charge 5μC at each of its vertices. Calculate the electric potential at the centre of the hexagon.


Given

  • Charge at each vertex:

    q=5μC=5×106C
  • Side of hexagon:

    a=10cm=0.10m
  • Number of vertices (charges): 6

For a regular hexagon, the distance from the centre to each vertex is equal to the side length:

r=a=0.10m

Electric potential is a scalar, so potentials due to all charges add algebraically.

Potential due to one charge at the centre

V1=14πε0qr

Total potential at the centre (due to 6 identical charges)

V=6V1=6×14πε0qr

Substitute values:

V=6×9×109×5×1060.10

V=6×9×109×5×105

V=27×105

V=2.7×106 V


Question 2.3
Two charges +2μC and 2μC are placed at points A and B, 6 cm apart.
(a) Identify an equipotential surface of the system.
(b) What is the direction of the electric field at every point on this surface?


(a) Equipotential surface

For equal and opposite charges (an electric dipole), the plane perpendicular to AB and passing through the midpoint of AB is an equipotential surface.

Reason:
At any point on this plane, the distances from the two charges are equal. Hence, the potentials due to +2μC and 2μC are equal in magnitude and opposite in sign, so the net potential is zero everywhere on this plane.

(b) Direction of the electric field on this surface.

The electric field is perpendicular (normal) to the equipotential surface at every point.

Specifically here:
On the perpendicular bisector plane, the electric field points along the line AB, from the positive charge toward the negative charge.


Question 2.4
A spherical conductor of radius 12 cm has a charge 1.6×107C uniformly distributed on its surface. Find the electric field
(a) inside the sphere
(b) just outside the sphere
(c) at a point 18 cm from the centre.


Given

  • Radius of sphere:

    R=12cm=0.12m
  • Charge on sphere:

    Q=1.6×107C
  • Coulomb constant:

    k=14πε0=9×109N m2/C2

(a) Electric field inside the sphere

For a conducting sphere, the electric field everywhere inside is zero.

E=0

(b) Electric field just outside the sphere

Just outside a charged conducting sphere, the field is the same as that due to a point charge Q at the centre.

E=kQR2

E=9×109×1.6×107(0.12)2

E=14.4×1020.0144=1.0×105N/C

E=1.0×105N/C (radially outward)

(c) Electric field at 18 cm from the centre

Distance:

r=18cm=0.18m

Outside the sphere, again treat it as a point charge at the centre:

E=kQr2

E=9×109×1.6×107(0.18)2

E=14.4×1020.03244.44×104N/C

E4.4×104N/C (radially outward)


Question 2.5
A parallel plate capacitor with air between the plates has a capacitance of 8pF. What will be the capacitance if

  • the distance between the plates is reduced to half, and

  • the space between them is filled with a dielectric of constant K=6?


Given

  • Initial capacitance (air):

    C0=8pF
  • New separation:

    d=d2
  • Dielectric constant:

    K=6

Key formula

For a parallel plate capacitor:

C=Kε0Ad

Capacitance is:

  • inversely proportional to plate separation d

  • directly proportional to dielectric constant K

Effect of changes

  1. Halving the distance (dd/2)

    C2C
  2. Filling dielectric of constant K=6

    C6C

New capacitance

C=2×6×C0

C=12×8pF

C=96pF


Question 2.6
Three capacitors, each of capacitance 9pF, are connected in series.
(a) Find the total capacitance of the combination.
(b) Find the potential difference across each capacitor when the combination is connected to a 120V supply.


Given

  • Each capacitor:

    C=9pF
  • Number of capacitors: 3

  • Supply voltage:

    V=120V

(a) Total capacitance in series

For capacitors in series:

1Ceq=1C1+1C2+1C3

1Ceq=19+19+19=39=13

Ceq=3pF

(b) Potential difference across each capacitor

In a series combination:

  • The same charge flows on each capacitor.

  • For identical capacitors, the total voltage divides equally.

Veach=Vtotal3=1203

Veach=40V


Question 2.7
Three capacitors of capacitances 2pF, 3pF, and 4pF are connected in parallel.
(a) Find the total capacitance.
(b) Find the charge on each capacitor when connected to a 100V supply.


Given

  • C1=2pF

  • C2=3pF

  • C3=4pF

  • Applied voltage:

    V=100V

(a) Total capacitance (parallel combination)

For capacitors in parallel, capacitances add directly:

Ceq=C1+C2+C3

Ceq=2+3+4=9pF

(b) Charge on each capacitor

In a parallel combination, the potential difference across each capacitor is the same and equals the supply voltage.

Using Q=CV:

Charge on 2pF capacitor

Q1=C1V=2×1012×100=2×1010C

Charge on 3pF capacitor

Q2=3×1012×100=3×1010C

Charge on 4pF capacitor

Q3=4×1012×100=4×1010C


Question 2.8
In a parallel plate capacitor with air between the plates:

  • Area of each plate A=6×103m2

  • Separation d=3mm=3×103m

(a) Calculate the capacitance.
(b) If connected to a 100V supply, find the charge on each plate.


Given

  • ε0=8.85×1012F m1

  • Dielectric: air (K1)

(a) Capacitance of a parallel plate capacitor

C=ε0Ad

C=8.85×1012×6×1033×103

C=8.85×1012×2

C=1.77×1011F

orC=17.7pF

(b) Charge on each plate

Q=CV

Q=1.77×1011×100

Q=1.77×109C


Question 2.9
Explain what happens if, in the capacitor of Exercise 2.8, a 3 mm thick mica sheet (dielectric constant K=6) is inserted between the plates:
(a) while the voltage supply remains connected
(b) after the supply is disconnected

(Recall from Ex. 2.8: plate separation = 3 mm, so the dielectric completely fills the space.)


Basic idea (important for exams)

  • Inserting a dielectric increases capacitance by a factor K.

  • What changes next depends on whether voltage is fixed or charge is fixed.

(a) Supply connected (Voltage constant)

  • Voltage remains fixed at

    V=100V
  • New capacitance:

    C=KC=6C
  • Since Q=CV,

    Q=CV=6CV=6Q

What happens?

  • Capacitance increases 6 times

  • Charge on each plate increases 6 times

  • Extra charge flows from the battery to the plates

  • Electric field decreases inside the capacitor

  • Energy stored increases (battery supplies extra energy)

(b) Supply disconnected (Charge constant)

  • Charge on the plates remains fixed:

    Q=Q
  • Capacitance still increases:

    C=6C
  • Since V=Q/C,

    V=QC=V6

What happens?

  • Capacitance increases 6 times

  • Voltage across plates decreases to one-sixth

  • Electric field decreases

  • Energy stored decreases (energy is released as heat/mechanical work)


Question 2.10
A 12pF capacitor is connected to a 50V battery. How much electrostatic energy is stored in the capacitor?


Given

  • Capacitance:

    C=12pF=12×1012F
  • Voltage:

    V=50V

Formula for energy stored in a capacitor

U=12CV2

Calculation

U=12×12×1012×(50)2

U=6×1012×2500

U=1.5×108J


Question 2.11
A 600pF capacitor is charged by a 200V supply. It is then disconnected from the supply and connected to another uncharged 600pF capacitor. How much electrostatic energy is lost?


Given

  • C1=600pF=600×1012F

  • C2=600pF (uncharged)

  • Initial voltage:

    V=200V

Step 1: Initial energy stored

Energy in a charged capacitor:

Ui=12CV2

Ui=12×600×1012×(200)2

Ui=300×1012×40000

Ui=1.2×105J

Step 2: Situation after connection

  • The two capacitors are identical and connected together.

  • Total capacitance:

Ctotal=600+600=1200pF

  • Total charge is conserved.

  • Final voltage becomes half:

Vf=2002=100V

Step 3: Final energy stored

Uf=12CtotalVf2

Uf=12×1200×1012×(100)2

Uf=600×1012×10000

Uf=6.0×106J

Step 4: Energy lost

Energy lost=UiUf

=1.2×1056.0×106

=6.0×106J


 

 

👋Subscribe to
ProTeacher.in

Sign up to receive NewsLetters in your inbox.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.