Tag: Chapter – 8 Class 9th Science NCERT Solutions

  • Class 9th Science Chapter-8 Exercises

    Exercises – Force and Laws of Motion (Class 9)


    Question 1

    An object experiences a net zero external unbalanced force. Is it possible for the object to be travelling with a non-zero velocity? If yes, state the conditions.

    Answer:

    Yes, it is possible.

    Condition:

    If the object is already moving and all external forces are balanced (net force = 0), then the object will continue to move with a constant (non-zero) velocity in a straight line.

    Example:

    A car moving on a straight road at constant speed.


    Question 2

    When a carpet is beaten with a stick, dust comes out of it. Explain.

    Answer:

    When the carpet is beaten, the carpet moves suddenly, but the dust particles tend to remain at rest due to inertia of rest.
    As a result, the dust gets detached and falls off.


    Question 3

    Why is it advised to tie any luggage kept on the roof of a bus with a rope?

    Answer:

    When the bus starts, stops, or turns suddenly, the luggage tends to maintain its state of motion due to inertia and may fall off.
    Tying the luggage prevents it from falling by providing the necessary force.


    Question 4

    A batsman hits a cricket ball which then rolls on a level ground. After covering a short distance, the ball comes to rest. The ball slows to a stop because:

    (a) the batsman did not hit the ball hard enough.

    (b) velocity is proportional to the force exerted on the ball.

    (c) there is a force on the ball opposing the motion.

    (d) there is no unbalanced force on the ball, so the ball

    would want to come to rest.

    Correct Answer:

    (c) there is a force on the ball opposing the motion.

    Explanation:

    Friction between the ball and the ground opposes motion and gradually reduces the speed to zero.


    Question 5

    A truck starts from rest and rolls down a hill with a constant acceleration. It travels 400 m in 20 s. Find its acceleration and the force acting on it if its mass is 7 tonnes.

    Given:

    • Initial velocity, u=0

    • Distance, s=400m

    • Time, t=20s

    • Mass, m=7 tonnes=7000kg


    Step 1: Find acceleration

    Using:

    s=ut+12at2
    400=0+12a(20)2
    400=200a
    a=2m s2


    Step 2: Find force

    Using:

    F=ma
    F=7000×2=14000N

    Answer:

    • Acceleration = 2 m s⁻²

    • Force acting = 14,000 N


    Question 6

    A stone of 1 kg is thrown with a velocity of 20 m s⁻¹ on ice and comes to rest after 50 m. Find the force of friction.

    Given:

    • Mass, m=1kg

    • Initial velocity, u=20m s1

    • Final velocity, v=0

    • Distance, s=50m


    Step 1: Find acceleration

    Using:

    v2=u2+2as
    0=400+100a
    a=4m s2


    Step 2: Find friction force

    F=ma=1×(4)=4N

    Answer:

    Force of friction = 4 N (opposite to motion)


    Question 7

    An 8000 kg engine pulls 5 wagons of 2000 kg each. Engine force = 40000 N, friction = 5000 N. Find:
    (a) net accelerating force
    (b) acceleration


    Step 1: Total mass

    m=8000+(5×2000)=18000kg


    Step 2: Net force

    Fnet=400005000=35000N


    Step 3: Acceleration

    a=Fm=3500018000

    a1.94m s2

    Answer:

    • Net accelerating force = 35,000 N

    • Acceleration = 1.94 m s⁻²


    Question 8

    An automobile of mass 1500 kg is stopped with a negative acceleration of 1.7 m s⁻². Find the force between the vehicle and the road.

    Given:

    • Mass, m=1500kg

    • Acceleration, a=1.7m s2


    Calculation:

    F=ma=1500×(1.7)=2550N

    Answer:

    Force = 2550 N (opposite to direction of motion)

    Question 9

    What is the momentum of an object of mass m, moving with velocity v?

    Correct answer:
    (d) mv

    Explanation:
    Momentum p=m×v

    Question 10

    Using a horizontal force of 200 N, a wooden cabinet is moved across the floor at constant velocity. What is the friction force acting on the cabinet?

    Answer:

    When an object moves with constant velocity, net force = 0.

    Applied force=Friction force

    Friction force=200N

    Friction force = 200 N (opposite to motion)


    Question 11

    A student says that when we push a parked truck, the equal and opposite forces cancel each other, so the truck does not move. Comment on this logic.

    Answer:

    The student’s logic is incorrect.

    • According to Newton’s third law, action and reaction forces act on different objects, not on the same object.

    • The force applied by the person acts on the truck, while the reaction force acts on the person.

    • The truck does not move because its large mass (high inertia) and friction with the road require a much larger force to produce noticeable acceleration.


    Question 12

    A hockey ball of mass 200 g moving at 10 m s⁻¹ returns with velocity 5 m s⁻¹. Find the magnitude of change in momentum.

    Given:

    • Mass, m=200g=0.2kg

    • Initial velocity, u=+10m s1

    • Final velocity, v=5m s1 (opposite direction)


    Calculation:

    Initial momentum:

    p1=mu=0.2×10=2kg m s1

    Final momentum:

    p2=mv=0.2×(5)=1kg m s1

    Change in momentum:

    Δp=p2p1=12=3

    Magnitude of change in momentum = 3 kg m s⁻¹


    Question 13

    A bullet of mass 10 g moving at 150 m s⁻¹ stops in 0.03 s. Find the distance penetrated and the force exerted.

    Given:

    • Mass, m=10g=0.01kg

    • Initial velocity, u=150m s1

    • Final velocity, v=0

    • Time, t=0.03s


    Step 1: Acceleration

    a=vut=01500.03=5000m s2


    Step 2: Distance penetrated

    s=ut+12at2

    s=150(0.03)+12(5000)(0.03)2
    s=4.52.25=2.25m


    Step 3: Force exerted

    F=ma=0.01×(5000)=50N

    Answers:

    • Distance of penetration = 2.25 m

    • Force exerted = 50 N (opposite to motion)


    Question 14

    A 1 kg object moving at 10 m s⁻¹ sticks to a stationary 5 kg block. Find momentum before and after collision and final velocity.

    Given:

    • m1=1kg,u1=10m s1

    • m2=5kg,u2=0


    Momentum before collision

    p=(1×10)+(5×0)=10kg m s1


    Momentum after collision

    Momentum is conserved:

    p=10kg m s1


    Final velocity

    v=pm1+m2=106=1.67m s1

    Answers:

    • Momentum before impact = 10 kg m s⁻¹

    • Momentum after impact = 10 kg m s⁻¹

    • Final velocity = 1.67 m s⁻¹


    Question 15

    A 100 kg object accelerates from 5 m s⁻¹ to 8 m s⁻¹ in 6 s. Find initial momentum, final momentum and force.

    Given:

    • m=100kg

    • u=5m s1

    • v=8m s1

    • t=6s


    Initial momentum

    p1=mu=100×5=500kg m s1

    Final momentum

    p2=mv=100×8=800kg m s1


    Force

    a=vut=36=0.5m s2
    F=ma=100×0.5=50N

    Answers:

    • Initial momentum = 500 kg m s⁻¹

    • Final momentum = 800 kg m s⁻¹

    • Force = 50 N


    Question 16

    An insect hits a moving car’s windscreen. Comment on the views of Akhtar, Kiran and Rahul.

    Correct Explanation:

    Rahul is correct.

    Reason:

    • According to Newton’s third law, the insect and the car exert equal and opposite forces on each other.

    • The change in momentum of both is equal in magnitude, but:

      • The insect has a very small mass, so it undergoes large acceleration and gets crushed.

      • The car has a very large mass, so its acceleration is negligible.

    Why others are wrong:

    • Kiran: Change in momentum is equal, not greater for insect.

    • Akhtar: Force on both bodies is equal, not larger on insect.

    Question 17

    How much momentum will a dumb-bell of mass 10 kg transfer to the floor if it falls from a height of 80 cm?
    (Take downward acceleration = 10 m s⁻²)


    Given:

    • Mass of dumb-bell,

      m=10 kg

    • Height,

      h=80 cm=0.8 m

    • Acceleration due to gravity,

      g=10 m s2


    Step 1: Find velocity just before hitting the floor

    Using the equation of motion:

    v2=u2+2gh

    Since the dumb-bell is dropped from rest:

    u=0
    v2=2×10×0.8
    v2=16
    v=4 m s1


    Step 2: Calculate momentum

    Momentum transferred to the floor equals the momentum of the dumb-bell just before impact.

    p=mv
    p=10×4
    p=40 kg m s1


    Final Answer

    Momentum transferred to the floor = 40 kg m s⁻¹

  • Class 9th Science Chapter-8 In-Text Questions

    Chapter – 8 Force and the Laws of Motion

    Page No. 91 – Questions & Answers

    Question 1

    Which of the following has more inertia?
    (a) a rubber ball and a stone of the same size
    (b) a bicycle and a train
    (c) a five-rupees coin and a one-rupee coin

    Answer:

    (a) Stone
    → Because the stone has greater mass than the rubber ball.

    (b) Train
    → A train has much larger mass than a bicycle.

    (c) Five-rupees coin
    → It has greater mass than a one-rupee coin.

     Key idea:
    Greater the mass, greater is the inertia.


    Question 2

    In the following example, try to identify the number of times the velocity of the ball changes and the agent supplying the force in each case:

    “A football player kicks a football to another player of his team who kicks the football towards the goal. The goalkeeper of the opposite team collects the football and kicks it towards a player of his own team.”

    Answer:

    Velocity of the ball changes 4 times.

    Event Change in velocity Agent supplying force
    First player kicks the ball At kick First player’s foot

    Second player kicks the ball

    At kick Second player’s foot
    Goalkeeper stops the ball While stopping Goalkeeper’s hands

    Goalkeeper kicks the ball back

    At kick Goalkeeper’s foot

    Question 3

    Explain why some of the leaves may get detached from a tree if we vigorously shake its branch.

    Answer:
    When the branch is shaken suddenly, the branch moves, but the leaves tend to remain at rest due to inertia. This causes the leaves to get detached from the branch and fall down.


    Question 4

    Why do you fall in the forward direction when a moving bus brakes to a stop and fall backwards when it accelerates from rest?

    Answer:

    • When the bus stops suddenly:
      Your feet stop with the bus, but the upper part of your body keeps moving forward due to inertia of motion, so you fall forward.

    • When the bus starts suddenly:
      Your feet move with the bus, but the upper part of your body tends to remain at rest due to inertia of rest, so you fall backward.



    EXTRA NOTES:

    Newton’s Laws of Motion 

    Sir Isaac Newton gave three fundamental laws to explain the motion of objects. These are called Newton’s Laws of Motion.


    1. First Law of Motion (Law of Inertia)

    Statement

    An object remains at rest or continues to move with uniform velocity in a straight line unless acted upon by an unbalanced external force.


    Explanation (Easy Language)

    • A body at rest will remain at rest unless a force acts on it.

    • A moving body will keep moving at the same speed and in the same direction unless a force changes its motion.

    • Only an unbalanced force can change the state of rest or motion.


    Examples

    1. A book lying on a table does not move unless pushed.

    2. Passengers fall forward when a moving bus stops suddenly.

    3. Passengers fall backward when a bus starts suddenly.


    Why it is called the Law of Inertia

    This law explains the property called inertia.


    Law of Inertia

    Definition

    Inertia is the natural tendency of an object to resist any change in its state of rest or motion.


    Types of Inertia

    1. Inertia of Rest – A body at rest resists motion
      Example: Dust falls off a carpet when beaten.

    2. Inertia of Motion – A moving body resists stopping
      Example: A person falls forward when a bus stops suddenly.

    3. Inertia of Direction – A body resists change in direction
      Example: A person leans sideways when a car takes a sharp turn.


    Relation between Mass and Inertia

    • Greater the mass → Greater the inertia

    • A train has more inertia than a bicycle.


    2. Second Law of Motion

    Statement

    The rate of change of momentum of an object is directly proportional to the applied unbalanced force and takes place in the direction of the force.


    Explanation

    • Force causes a change in momentum.

    • A larger force produces a greater acceleration.

    • The change occurs in the direction of the applied force.


    Mathematical Form

    Force=mass×acceleration

    F=ma


    Examples

    1. A cricket ball hurts more than a tennis ball because it has more mass.

    2. A footballer pulls his hands backward while catching a fast ball to reduce force.

    3. A loaded truck needs more force to move than an empty one.


    SI Unit of Force

    • Newton (N)

    • 1 N = force needed to give 1 kg mass an acceleration of 1 m s⁻²


    3. Third Law of Motion

    Statement

    For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.


    Explanation

    • Forces always act in pairs.

    • Action and reaction forces:

      • Are equal in magnitude

      • Act in opposite directions

      • Act on different objects


    Examples

    1. While walking, we push the ground backward; the ground pushes us forward.

    2. Recoil of a gun when a bullet is fired.

    3. Swimming: pushing water backward moves the swimmer forward.


    Important Note

    Action and reaction do not cancel each other because they act on different bodies.