Skip to main content
Chapter 2 of 14
NCERT Solutions

Mechanical Properties of Solids

Mizoram Board · Class 11 · Physics

NCERT Solutions for Mechanical Properties of Solids — Mizoram Board Class 11 Physics.

61 questions24 flashcards5 concepts

Interactive on Super Tutor

Studying Mechanical Properties of Solids? Get the full interactive chapter.

Quizzes, flashcards, AI doubt-solver and a step-by-step study plan — built for ncert solutions and more.

1,000+ Class 11 students started this chapter today

16 Questions Solved · 1 Section

EXERCISES

8.1A steel wire of length 4.7 m and cross-sectional area 3.0×10⁻⁵ m² stretches by the same amount as a copper wire of length 3.5 m and cross-sectional area of 4.0×10⁻⁵ m² under a given load. What is the ratio of the Young's modulus of steel to that of copper?Show solution
Given:
- Length of steel wire: Ls=4.7L_s = 4.7 m
- Cross-sectional area of steel wire: As=3.0×105A_s = 3.0 \times 10^{-5}
- Length of copper wire: Lc=3.5L_c = 3.5 m
- Cross-sectional area of copper wire: Ac=4.0×105A_c = 4.0 \times 10^{-5}
- Both wires stretch by the same amount (ΔL\Delta L) under the same load (FF).

Concept/Formula:
Y=FLAΔLY = \frac{F \cdot L}{A \cdot \Delta L}

For steel:
Ys=FLsAsΔLY_s = \frac{F \cdot L_s}{A_s \cdot \Delta L}

For copper:
Yc=FLcAcΔLY_c = \frac{F \cdot L_c}{A_c \cdot \Delta L}

Working:
Dividing the two expressions:
YsYc=FLsAsΔL×AcΔLFLc\frac{Y_s}{Y_c} = \frac{F \cdot L_s}{A_s \cdot \Delta L} \times \frac{A_c \cdot \Delta L}{F \cdot L_c}

YsYc=LsLc×AcAs\frac{Y_s}{Y_c} = \frac{L_s}{L_c} \times \frac{A_c}{A_s}

YsYc=4.73.5×4.0×1053.0×105\frac{Y_s}{Y_c} = \frac{4.7}{3.5} \times \frac{4.0 \times 10^{-5}}{3.0 \times 10^{-5}}

YsYc=4.73.5×4.03.0=1.343×1.3331.79\frac{Y_s}{Y_c} = \frac{4.7}{3.5} \times \frac{4.0}{3.0} = 1.343 \times 1.333 \approx 1.79

Answer: The ratio of Young's modulus of steel to that of copper is approximately 1.79\boxed{1.79}.
8.2Figure 8.9 shows the strain-stress curve for a given material. What are (a) Young's modulus and (b) approximate yield strength for this material?Show solution
Note: From the standard Fig. 8.9 in NCERT, the stress-strain graph shows a linear region up to a stress of about 150×106150 \times 10^6 N m⁻² at a strain of 0.0020.002 (i.e., 2×1032 \times 10^{-3}), and the curve departs from linearity (yield point) at approximately 300×106300 \times 10^6 N m⁻².

(a) Young's Modulus:

Concept: Young's modulus is the slope of the linear (elastic) portion of the stress-strain curve.

Y=StressStrain=150×106 N m20.002Y = \frac{\text{Stress}}{\text{Strain}} = \frac{150 \times 10^6 \text{ N m}^{-2}}{0.002}

Y=7.5×1010 N m2\boxed{Y = 7.5 \times 10^{10} \text{ N m}^{-2}}

(b) Approximate Yield Strength:

The yield strength is the stress at which the material begins to deform plastically (where the curve departs from linearity).

From the graph:
Yield Strength300×106 N m2=3×108 N m2\boxed{\text{Yield Strength} \approx 300 \times 10^6 \text{ N m}^{-2} = 3 \times 10^8 \text{ N m}^{-2}}
8.3The stress-strain graphs for materials A and B are shown in Fig. 8.10. The graphs are drawn to the same scale. (a) Which of the materials has the greater Young's modulus? (b) Which of the two is the stronger material?Show solution
Note: From the standard NCERT Fig. 8.10, material A has a steeper slope in the linear region, and material B has a higher stress at the fracture/breaking point.

(a) Greater Young's Modulus:

Concept: Young's modulus = slope of the linear portion of the stress-strain curve. A steeper slope means a greater Young's modulus.

Since material A has a greater slope (steeper linear region) than material B, material A has the greater Young's modulus.

(b) Stronger Material:

Concept: The strength of a material is determined by the stress it can withstand before fracture (breaking stress). The material that fractures at a higher stress value is stronger.

From the graph, material B fractures at a higher value of stress than material A. Therefore, material B is the stronger material.
8.4Read the following two statements below carefully and state, with reasons, if it is true or false. (a) The Young's modulus of rubber is greater than that of steel; (b) The stretching of a coil is determined by its shear modulus.Show solution
(a) The Young's modulus of rubber is greater than that of steel.

Answer: FALSE

Reason: Young's modulus measures the resistance of a material to elastic deformation under longitudinal stress. Steel requires a very large force to produce a small elongation, while rubber stretches easily under a small force. Therefore, steel has a much larger Young's modulus (Ysteel2×1011Y_{\text{steel}} \approx 2 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²) compared to rubber (Yrubber106Y_{\text{rubber}} \approx 10^610710^7 N m⁻²). A material that stretches less for a given load is considered more elastic (has higher Young's modulus).

(b) The stretching of a coil is determined by its shear modulus.

Answer: TRUE

Reason: When a coil (helical spring) is stretched or compressed, the individual elements of the wire making up the coil are not under simple tension or compression — they undergo twisting, which is a shear deformation. Therefore, the stretching (extension) of a coil spring is governed by the shear modulus (modulus of rigidity) of the material, not by the Young's modulus.
8.5Two wires of diameter 0.25 cm, one made of steel and the other made of brass are loaded as shown in Fig. 8.11. The unloaded length of steel wire is 1.5 m and that of brass wire is 1.0 m. Compute the elongations of the steel and the brass wires.Show solution
Given:
- Diameter of each wire: d=0.25d = 0.25 cm =0.25×102= 0.25 \times 10^{-2} m
- Radius: r=0.125×102r = 0.125 \times 10^{-2} m
- Cross-sectional area: A=πr2=π×(0.125×102)2=π×1.5625×106A = \pi r^2 = \pi \times (0.125 \times 10^{-2})^2 = \pi \times 1.5625 \times 10^{-6}
A=4.91×106 m2A = 4.91 \times 10^{-6} \text{ m}^2
- Length of steel wire: Ls=1.5L_s = 1.5 m
- Length of brass wire: Lb=1.0L_b = 1.0 m
- Ysteel=2.0×1011Y_{\text{steel}} = 2.0 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²
- Ybrass=0.91×1011Y_{\text{brass}} = 0.91 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²

Note: From Fig. 8.11 (standard NCERT figure), the steel wire supports a load of 6 kg (from the 6 kg mass) plus the 4 kg mass below it, so total load on steel = 10 kg. The brass wire supports only the 6 kg mass.

Actually, from the standard figure: Steel wire is at the top, carrying both masses (6 kg + 4 kg = 10 kg). Brass wire is below, carrying only 6 kg.

Load on steel wire: Fs=(4+6)×9.8=10×9.8=98F_s = (4 + 6) \times 9.8 = 10 \times 9.8 = 98 N

Load on brass wire: Fb=6×9.8=58.8F_b = 6 \times 9.8 = 58.8 N

Formula: ΔL=FLAY\Delta L = \frac{F L}{A Y}

Elongation of steel wire:
ΔLs=FsLsAYs=98×1.54.91×106×2.0×1011\Delta L_s = \frac{F_s \cdot L_s}{A \cdot Y_s} = \frac{98 \times 1.5}{4.91 \times 10^{-6} \times 2.0 \times 10^{11}}

ΔLs=1479.82×105=1.497×104 m\Delta L_s = \frac{147}{9.82 \times 10^{5}} = 1.497 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}

ΔLs1.5×104 m\boxed{\Delta L_s \approx 1.5 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}}

Elongation of brass wire:
ΔLb=FbLbAYb=58.8×1.04.91×106×0.91×1011\Delta L_b = \frac{F_b \cdot L_b}{A \cdot Y_b} = \frac{58.8 \times 1.0}{4.91 \times 10^{-6} \times 0.91 \times 10^{11}}

ΔLb=58.84.468×105=1.316×104 m\Delta L_b = \frac{58.8}{4.468 \times 10^{5}} = 1.316 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}

ΔLb1.3×104 m\boxed{\Delta L_b \approx 1.3 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}}
8.6The edge of an aluminium cube is 10 cm long. One face of the cube is firmly fixed to a vertical wall. A mass of 100 kg is then attached to the opposite face of the cube. The shear modulus of aluminium is 25 GPa. What is the vertical deflection of this face?Show solution
Given:
- Edge of cube: L=10L = 10 cm =0.1= 0.1 m
- Mass attached: m=100m = 100 kg
- Shear modulus of aluminium: G=25G = 25 GPa =25×109= 25 \times 10^9 N m⁻²
- g=9.8g = 9.8 m s⁻²

Concept/Formula:
Shear stress =FA= \frac{F}{A}, Shear strain =ΔLL= \frac{\Delta L}{L}

G=Shear StressShear Strain=F/AΔL/LG = \frac{\text{Shear Stress}}{\text{Shear Strain}} = \frac{F/A}{\Delta L / L}

ΔL=FLAG\Delta L = \frac{F \cdot L}{A \cdot G}

Working:
- Force applied (weight): F=mg=100×9.8=980F = mg = 100 \times 9.8 = 980 N
- Area of the face: A=L2=(0.1)2=0.01A = L^2 = (0.1)^2 = 0.01
- Height of cube (= LL): L=0.1L = 0.1 m

ΔL=980×0.10.01×25×109\Delta L = \frac{980 \times 0.1}{0.01 \times 25 \times 10^9}

ΔL=982.5×108=3.92×107 m\Delta L = \frac{98}{2.5 \times 10^8} = 3.92 \times 10^{-7} \text{ m}

Answer: The vertical deflection of the face is ΔL3.92×107 m\boxed{\Delta L \approx 3.92 \times 10^{-7} \text{ m}}.
8.7Four identical hollow cylindrical columns of mild steel support a big structure of mass 50,000 kg. The inner and outer radii of each column are 30 and 60 cm respectively. Assuming the load distribution to be uniform, calculate the compressional strain of each column.Show solution
Given:
- Total mass of structure: M=50,000M = 50{,}000 kg
- Number of columns: n=4n = 4
- Inner radius: r=30r = 30 cm =0.30= 0.30 m
- Outer radius: R=60R = 60 cm =0.60= 0.60 m
- Young's modulus of mild steel: Y=2×1011Y = 2 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²
- g=9.8g = 9.8 m s⁻²

Working:

Load on each column:
F=Mg4=50000×9.84=4900004=1.225×105 NF = \frac{Mg}{4} = \frac{50000 \times 9.8}{4} = \frac{490000}{4} = 1.225 \times 10^5 \text{ N}

Cross-sectional area of each hollow column:
A=π(R2r2)=π[(0.60)2(0.30)2]A = \pi(R^2 - r^2) = \pi\left[(0.60)^2 - (0.30)^2\right]
A=π[0.360.09]=π×0.27=0.8482 m2A = \pi[0.36 - 0.09] = \pi \times 0.27 = 0.8482 \text{ m}^2

Compressional stress on each column:
Stress=FA=1.225×1050.8482=1.445×105 N m2\text{Stress} = \frac{F}{A} = \frac{1.225 \times 10^5}{0.8482} = 1.445 \times 10^5 \text{ N m}^{-2}

Compressional strain:
Strain=StressY=1.445×1052×1011\text{Strain} = \frac{\text{Stress}}{Y} = \frac{1.445 \times 10^5}{2 \times 10^{11}}

Strain=7.22×107\boxed{\text{Strain} = 7.22 \times 10^{-7}}
8.8A piece of copper having a rectangular cross-section of 15.2 mm × 19.1 mm is pulled in tension with 44,500 N force, producing only elastic deformation. Calculate the resulting strain.Show solution
Given:
- Cross-section dimensions: 15.215.2 mm ×\times 19.119.1 mm
- Tensile force: F=44,500F = 44{,}500 N
- Young's modulus of copper: Y=1.2×1011Y = 1.2 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²

Working:

Cross-sectional area:
A=15.2×103×19.1×103=290.32×106 m2A = 15.2 \times 10^{-3} \times 19.1 \times 10^{-3} = 290.32 \times 10^{-6} \text{ m}^2
A=2.9032×104 m2A = 2.9032 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}^2

Tensile stress:
Stress=FA=445002.9032×104=1.532×108 N m2\text{Stress} = \frac{F}{A} = \frac{44500}{2.9032 \times 10^{-4}} = 1.532 \times 10^{8} \text{ N m}^{-2}

Resulting strain:
Strain=StressY=1.532×1081.2×1011\text{Strain} = \frac{\text{Stress}}{Y} = \frac{1.532 \times 10^8}{1.2 \times 10^{11}}

Strain=1.277×1031.28×103\boxed{\text{Strain} = 1.277 \times 10^{-3} \approx 1.28 \times 10^{-3}}
8.9A steel cable with a radius of 1.5 cm supports a chairlift at a ski area. If the maximum stress is not to exceed 10⁸ N m⁻², what is the maximum load the cable can support?Show solution
Given:
- Radius of steel cable: r=1.5r = 1.5 cm =1.5×102= 1.5 \times 10^{-2} m
- Maximum allowable stress: σmax=108\sigma_{\max} = 10^8 N m⁻²

Working:

Cross-sectional area of cable:
A=πr2=π×(1.5×102)2=π×2.25×104A = \pi r^2 = \pi \times (1.5 \times 10^{-2})^2 = \pi \times 2.25 \times 10^{-4}
A=7.069×104 m2A = 7.069 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}^2

Maximum load:
Fmax=σmax×A=108×7.069×104F_{\max} = \sigma_{\max} \times A = 10^8 \times 7.069 \times 10^{-4}

Fmax=7.07×104 N\boxed{F_{\max} = 7.07 \times 10^4 \text{ N}}

This is the maximum load (force) the cable can support.
8.10A rigid bar of mass 15 kg is supported symmetrically by three wires each 2.0 m long. Those at each end are of copper and the middle one is of iron. Determine the ratios of their diameters if each is to have the same tension.Show solution
Given:
- Mass of bar: M=15M = 15 kg (supported symmetrically, so each wire has the same tension TT)
- Length of each wire: L=2.0L = 2.0 m
- End wires: copper; Middle wire: iron
- Each wire has the same tension.
- Yiron=1.9×1011Y_{\text{iron}} = 1.9 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²
- Ycopper=1.2×1011Y_{\text{copper}} = 1.2 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²

Concept:
Since the bar is rigid and supported symmetrically, all three wires have the same length and must undergo the same elongation ΔL\Delta L.

For each wire: ΔL=TLAY\Delta L = \frac{T L}{A Y}

Since TT, LL, and ΔL\Delta L are the same for all wires:
TLAironYiron=TLAcopperYcopper\frac{T L}{A_{\text{iron}} Y_{\text{iron}}} = \frac{T L}{A_{\text{copper}} Y_{\text{copper}}}

AironYiron=AcopperYcopperA_{\text{iron}} \cdot Y_{\text{iron}} = A_{\text{copper}} \cdot Y_{\text{copper}}

AironAcopper=YcopperYiron\frac{A_{\text{iron}}}{A_{\text{copper}}} = \frac{Y_{\text{copper}}}{Y_{\text{iron}}}

Since A=πd24A = \frac{\pi d^2}{4}:
diron2dcopper2=YcopperYiron=1.2×10111.9×1011=1.21.9\frac{d_{\text{iron}}^2}{d_{\text{copper}}^2} = \frac{Y_{\text{copper}}}{Y_{\text{iron}}} = \frac{1.2 \times 10^{11}}{1.9 \times 10^{11}} = \frac{1.2}{1.9}

dirondcopper=1.21.9=0.6316=0.794\frac{d_{\text{iron}}}{d_{\text{copper}}} = \sqrt{\frac{1.2}{1.9}} = \sqrt{0.6316} = 0.794

dirondcopper1:1.26\boxed{\frac{d_{\text{iron}}}{d_{\text{copper}}} \approx 1 : 1.26}

Or equivalently, dcopper:diron1.26:1d_{\text{copper}} : d_{\text{iron}} \approx 1.26 : 1.
8.11A 14.5 kg mass, fastened to the end of a steel wire of unstretched length 1.0 m, is whirled in a vertical circle with an angular velocity of 2 rev/s at the bottom of the circle. The cross-sectional area of the wire is 0.065 cm². Calculate the elongation of the wire when the mass is at the lowest point of its path.Show solution
Given:
- Mass: m=14.5m = 14.5 kg
- Unstretched length of steel wire: L=1.0L = 1.0 m
- Angular velocity: ω=2\omega = 2 rev/s =2×2π= 2 \times 2\pi rad/s =4π= 4\pi rad/s
- Cross-sectional area: A=0.065A = 0.065 cm² =0.065×104= 0.065 \times 10^{-4}=6.5×106= 6.5 \times 10^{-6}
- Young's modulus of steel: Y=2×1011Y = 2 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²
- g=9.8g = 9.8 m s⁻²

Concept:
At the lowest point of the vertical circle, the net upward force provides centripetal acceleration. The tension TT in the wire must support the weight and provide centripetal force:

Tmg=mω2LT - mg = m\omega^2 L

T=m(g+ω2L)T = m(g + \omega^2 L)

Working:
ω2=(4π)2=16π2157.9 rad2s2\omega^2 = (4\pi)^2 = 16\pi^2 \approx 157.9 \text{ rad}^2\text{s}^{-2}

T=14.5×(9.8+157.9×1.0)T = 14.5 \times (9.8 + 157.9 \times 1.0)
T=14.5×(9.8+157.9)T = 14.5 \times (9.8 + 157.9)
T=14.5×167.7=2431.65 NT = 14.5 \times 167.7 = 2431.65 \text{ N}

Elongation:
ΔL=TLAY=2431.65×1.06.5×106×2×1011\Delta L = \frac{T \cdot L}{A \cdot Y} = \frac{2431.65 \times 1.0}{6.5 \times 10^{-6} \times 2 \times 10^{11}}

ΔL=2431.651.3×106=1.87×103 m\Delta L = \frac{2431.65}{1.3 \times 10^{6}} = 1.87 \times 10^{-3} \text{ m}

ΔL1.87×103 m1.87 mm\boxed{\Delta L \approx 1.87 \times 10^{-3} \text{ m} \approx 1.87 \text{ mm}}
8.12Compute the bulk modulus of water from the following data: Initial volume = 100.0 litre, Pressure increase = 100.0 atm (1 atm = 1.013 × 10⁵ Pa), Final volume = 100.5 litre. Compare the bulk modulus of water with that of air (at constant temperature). Explain in simple terms why the ratio is so large.Show solution
Given:
- Initial volume: V=100.0V = 100.0 litre =100.0×103= 100.0 \times 10^{-3}
- Final volume: V=100.5V' = 100.5 litre =100.5×103= 100.5 \times 10^{-3}
- Pressure increase: Δp=100.0\Delta p = 100.0 atm =100×1.013×105=1.013×107= 100 \times 1.013 \times 10^5 = 1.013 \times 10^7 Pa

Working:

Change in volume:
ΔV=VV=100.5100.0=0.5 litre=0.5×103 m3\Delta V = V' - V = 100.5 - 100.0 = 0.5 \text{ litre} = 0.5 \times 10^{-3} \text{ m}^3

Volume strain:
ΔVV=0.5×103100.0×103=5×103\frac{\Delta V}{V} = \frac{0.5 \times 10^{-3}}{100.0 \times 10^{-3}} = 5 \times 10^{-3}

Bulk modulus of water:
B=ΔpΔV/V=1.013×1075×103B = \frac{\Delta p}{\Delta V / V} = \frac{1.013 \times 10^7}{5 \times 10^{-3}}

Bwater=2.026×109 N m22.026 GPa\boxed{B_{\text{water}} = 2.026 \times 10^9 \text{ N m}^{-2} \approx 2.026 \text{ GPa}}

Bulk modulus of air (at constant temperature, isothermal): Bair=Patm=1.013×105B_{\text{air}} = P_{\text{atm}} = 1.013 \times 10^5 N m⁻²

Ratio:
BwaterBair=2.026×1091.013×1052×104\frac{B_{\text{water}}}{B_{\text{air}}} = \frac{2.026 \times 10^9}{1.013 \times 10^5} \approx 2 \times 10^4

Explanation: The ratio is very large because air is highly compressible — its molecules are far apart and can be pushed closer together easily. Water molecules, on the other hand, are already closely packed (intermolecular distances are small), and the strong intermolecular repulsive forces resist compression strongly. Hence, water requires a much larger pressure to achieve the same fractional change in volume as air.
8.13What is the density of water at a depth where pressure is 80.0 atm, given that its density at the surface is 1.03 × 10³ kg m⁻³?Show solution
Given:
- Pressure at depth: p=80.0p = 80.0 atm =80.0×1.013×105=8.104×106= 80.0 \times 1.013 \times 10^5 = 8.104 \times 10^6 Pa
- Surface density: ρ0=1.03×103\rho_0 = 1.03 \times 10^3 kg m⁻³
- Bulk modulus of water: B=2.2×109B = 2.2 \times 10^9 N m⁻² (standard value)

Concept:
B=ΔpΔV/VB = \frac{\Delta p}{\Delta V / V}

ΔVV=ΔpB=8.104×1062.2×109=3.684×103\frac{\Delta V}{V} = \frac{\Delta p}{B} = \frac{8.104 \times 10^6}{2.2 \times 10^9} = 3.684 \times 10^{-3}

Working:
Let V0V_0 be the initial volume and VV be the volume at depth.
V=V0ΔV=V0(1ΔVV0)=V0(13.684×103)V = V_0 - \Delta V = V_0\left(1 - \frac{\Delta V}{V_0}\right) = V_0(1 - 3.684 \times 10^{-3})

Since mass is constant: ρV=ρ0V0\rho V = \rho_0 V_0

ρ=ρ0V0V=ρ01ΔV/V0\rho = \frac{\rho_0 V_0}{V} = \frac{\rho_0}{1 - \Delta V/V_0}

ρ=1.03×10313.684×103=1.03×1030.99632\rho = \frac{1.03 \times 10^3}{1 - 3.684 \times 10^{-3}} = \frac{1.03 \times 10^3}{0.99632}

ρ1.034×103 kg m3\boxed{\rho \approx 1.034 \times 10^3 \text{ kg m}^{-3}}
8.14Compute the fractional change in volume of a glass slab, when subjected to a hydraulic pressure of 10 atm.Show solution
Given:
- Hydraulic pressure: p=10p = 10 atm =10×1.013×105=1.013×106= 10 \times 1.013 \times 10^5 = 1.013 \times 10^6 N m⁻²
- Bulk modulus of glass: B=37×109B = 37 \times 10^9 N m⁻² (standard value)

Formula:
ΔVV=pB\frac{\Delta V}{V} = \frac{p}{B}

Working:
ΔVV=1.013×10637×109\frac{\Delta V}{V} = \frac{1.013 \times 10^6}{37 \times 10^9}

ΔVV=2.74×105\frac{\Delta V}{V} = 2.74 \times 10^{-5}

ΔVV2.74×105\boxed{\frac{\Delta V}{V} \approx 2.74 \times 10^{-5}}

The fractional change in volume is 2.74×1052.74 \times 10^{-5} (a decrease).
8.15Determine the volume contraction of a solid copper cube, 10 cm on an edge, when subjected to a hydraulic pressure of 7.0 × 10⁶ Pa.Show solution
Given:
- Edge of copper cube: a=10a = 10 cm =0.1= 0.1 m
- Hydraulic pressure: p=7.0×106p = 7.0 \times 10^6 Pa
- Bulk modulus of copper: B=140×109B = 140 \times 10^9 N m⁻² =1.4×1011= 1.4 \times 10^{11} N m⁻²

Working:

Initial volume:
V=a3=(0.1)3=103 m3V = a^3 = (0.1)^3 = 10^{-3} \text{ m}^3

Volume contraction:
ΔV=pVB=7.0×106×1031.4×1011\Delta V = \frac{p \cdot V}{B} = \frac{7.0 \times 10^6 \times 10^{-3}}{1.4 \times 10^{11}}

ΔV=7.0×1031.4×1011=5.0×108 m3\Delta V = \frac{7.0 \times 10^3}{1.4 \times 10^{11}} = 5.0 \times 10^{-8} \text{ m}^3

ΔV=5.0×108 m3\boxed{\Delta V = 5.0 \times 10^{-8} \text{ m}^3}
8.16How much should the pressure on a litre of water be changed to compress it by 0.10%?Show solution
Given:
- Volume of water: V=1V = 1 litre =103= 10^{-3}
- Fractional compression: ΔVV=0.10%=0.10100=1×103\frac{\Delta V}{V} = 0.10\% = \frac{0.10}{100} = 1 \times 10^{-3}
- Bulk modulus of water: B=2.2×109B = 2.2 \times 10^9 N m⁻²

Formula:
Δp=B×ΔVV\Delta p = B \times \frac{\Delta V}{V}

Working:
Δp=2.2×109×1×103\Delta p = 2.2 \times 10^9 \times 1 \times 10^{-3}

Δp=2.2×106 Pa=2.2 MPa\boxed{\Delta p = 2.2 \times 10^6 \text{ Pa} = 2.2 \text{ MPa}}

The pressure on the litre of water must be increased by 2.2×1062.2 \times 10^6 Pa to compress it by 0.10%.

Stuck on a step?

Ask Super Tutor AI to explain any solution on this page in a simpler way — free, 24x7.

Ask a Doubt Free

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the important topics in Mechanical Properties of Solids for Mizoram Board Class 11 Physics?
Mechanical Properties of Solids covers several key topics that are frequently asked in Mizoram Board Class 11 board exams. Focus on the core concepts listed on this page and practise related questions to build confidence.
How to score full marks in Mechanical Properties of Solids — Mizoram Board Class 11 Physics?
Understand the core concepts first, then work through the 61 practice questions available for this chapter. Revise formulas and definitions regularly, and use flashcards for quick recall before the exam.
Where can I get free NCERT Solutions for Mechanical Properties of Solids Class 11 Physics?
This page has free step-by-step NCERT Solutions for every exercise question in Mechanical Properties of Solids (Mizoram Board Class 11 Physics) — written the way examiners award marks: given, formula, working, answer.

Sources & Official References

Content is aligned to the official syllabus. Refer to the board website for the latest curriculum.

For serious students

Get the full Mechanical Properties of Solids chapter — for free.

Quizzes, flashcards, AI doubt-solver and a step-by-step study plan for Mizoram Board Class 11 Physics.