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NCERT Solutions

Force and Laws of Motion

Tripura Board · Class 9 · Science

NCERT Solutions for Force and Laws of Motion — Tripura Board Class 9 Science.

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21 Questions Solved · 2 Sections

Exercises

1An 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 that must be placed on the magnitude and direction of the velocity.Show solution
Given/Concept: Net external unbalanced force = 0. By Newton's First Law of Motion, an object continues in its state of rest or of uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an unbalanced external force.

Answer: Yes, it is absolutely possible for the object to be travelling with a non-zero velocity even when the net external unbalanced force is zero.

Conditions:
- The object must be moving with a constant (uniform) velocity — i.e., no change in speed.
- The direction of motion must remain unchanged (straight line).
- There should be no acceleration (since F=maF = ma, if F=0F = 0 then a=0a = 0).

For example, a hockey puck sliding on a frictionless ice surface moves with constant velocity because no net unbalanced force acts on it.
2When a carpet is beaten with a stick, dust comes out of it. Explain.Show solution
Concept Used: Newton's First Law of Motion (Law of Inertia).

Explanation:
- When a carpet is beaten with a stick, the carpet is suddenly set into motion.
- The dust particles on the carpet, due to their inertia of rest, tend to remain in their original position (at rest).
- Since the carpet moves forward but the dust particles stay behind (due to inertia), the dust gets separated from the carpet and falls off.

This is a direct application of the property of inertia — every object resists a change in its state of rest or motion.
3Why is it advised to tie any luggage kept on the roof of a bus with a rope?Show solution
Concept Used: Newton's First Law of Motion (Inertia of motion and inertia of rest).

Explanation:
- When the bus suddenly accelerates (starts moving), the luggage on the roof tends to remain at rest due to inertia of rest, and may fall backward.
- When the bus suddenly brakes (stops), the luggage tends to continue moving forward due to inertia of motion, and may fall forward.
- When the bus takes a sharp turn, the luggage tends to continue in a straight line due to inertia and may slide off sideways.

Therefore, it is advised to tie the luggage with a rope so that it moves along with the bus and does not fall off due to inertia.
4A 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.
Show solution
Correct Option: (c) there is a force on the ball opposing the motion.

Justification: After the ball leaves the bat, the only horizontal force acting on it is the force of friction between the ball and the ground, which opposes the motion of the ball. This unbalanced frictional force decelerates the ball and eventually brings it to rest. Options (a), (b), and (d) are incorrect because the ball's stopping has nothing to do with how hard it was hit, velocity is not proportional to force (acceleration is), and there IS an unbalanced force (friction) acting on the ball.
5A truck starts from rest and rolls down a hill with a constant acceleration. It travels a distance of 400 m in 20 s. Find its acceleration. Find the force acting on it if its mass is 7 tonnes (Hint: 1 tonne = 1000 kg).Show solution
Given:
- Initial velocity, u=0u = 0 (starts from rest)
- Distance, s=400s = 400 m
- Time, t=20t = 20 s
- Mass, m=7m = 7 tonnes =7×1000=7000= 7 \times 1000 = 7000 kg

Step 1: Find acceleration using the equation of motion s=ut+12at2s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2

s=ut+12at2s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2
400=0×20+12×a×(20)2400 = 0 \times 20 + \frac{1}{2} \times a \times (20)^2
400=12×a×400400 = \frac{1}{2} \times a \times 400
400=200a400 = 200a
a=400200=2 m s2a = \frac{400}{200} = 2 \text{ m s}^{-2}

Step 2: Find force using Newton's Second Law F=maF = ma

F=ma=7000×2=14000 NF = ma = 7000 \times 2 = 14000 \text{ N}

Answer: Acceleration =2 m s2= 2 \text{ m s}^{-2} and Force =14000 N= 14000 \text{ N}.
6A stone of 1 kg is thrown with a velocity of 20 m s⁻¹ across the frozen surface of a lake and comes to rest after travelling a distance of 50 m. What is the force of friction between the stone and the ice?Show solution
Given:
- Mass of stone, m=1m = 1 kg
- Initial velocity, u=20u = 20 m s1^{-1}
- Final velocity, v=0v = 0 (comes to rest)
- Distance, s=50s = 50 m

Step 1: Find acceleration using v2=u2+2asv^2 = u^2 + 2as

v2=u2+2asv^2 = u^2 + 2as
0=(20)2+2×a×500 = (20)^2 + 2 \times a \times 50
0=400+100a0 = 400 + 100a
a=400100=4 m s2a = \frac{-400}{100} = -4 \text{ m s}^{-2}

(Negative sign indicates deceleration/retardation)

Step 2: Find force of friction using F=maF = ma

F=ma=1×(4)=4 NF = ma = 1 \times (-4) = -4 \text{ N}

The negative sign indicates the force opposes the motion.

Answer: The force of friction between the stone and the ice is 44 N (opposing the motion).
7A 8000 kg engine pulls a train of 5 wagons, each of 2000 kg, along a horizontal track. If the engine exerts a force of 40000 N and the track offers a friction force of 5000 N, then calculate: (a) the net accelerating force and (b) the acceleration of the train.Show solution
Given:
- Mass of engine, me=8000m_e = 8000 kg
- Number of wagons =5= 5, each of mass =2000= 2000 kg
- Total mass of wagons =5×2000=10000= 5 \times 2000 = 10000 kg
- Total mass of train (engine + wagons), m=8000+10000=18000m = 8000 + 10000 = 18000 kg
- Force exerted by engine =40000= 40000 N
- Friction force =5000= 5000 N

(a) Net accelerating force:

Fnet=FengineFfrictionF_{net} = F_{engine} - F_{friction}
Fnet=400005000=35000 NF_{net} = 40000 - 5000 = 35000 \text{ N}

(b) Acceleration of the train:

Using Newton's Second Law: F=maF = ma
a=Fnetm=3500018000a = \frac{F_{net}}{m} = \frac{35000}{18000}
a1.9441.94 m s2a \approx 1.944 \approx 1.94 \text{ m s}^{-2}

Answer: (a) Net accelerating force =35000= 35000 N; (b) Acceleration 1.94\approx 1.94 m s2^{-2}.
8An automobile vehicle has a mass of 1500 kg. What must be the force between the vehicle and road if the vehicle is to be stopped with a negative acceleration of 1.7 m s⁻²?Show solution
Given:
- Mass of vehicle, m=1500m = 1500 kg
- Acceleration (retardation), a=1.7a = -1.7 m s2^{-2}

Using Newton's Second Law: F=maF = ma

F=1500×(1.7)F = 1500 \times (-1.7)
F=2550 NF = -2550 \text{ N}

The negative sign indicates that the force acts opposite to the direction of motion (i.e., it is a braking/retarding force).

Answer: The force between the vehicle and the road must be 25502550 N (acting opposite to the direction of motion).
9What is the momentum of an object of mass mm, moving with a velocity vv?
(a) (mv)2(mv)^2
(b) mv2mv^2
(c) 12mv2\frac{1}{2}mv^2
(d) mvmv
Show solution
Correct Option: (d) mvmv

Justification: By definition, momentum (pp) is the product of the mass of an object and its velocity:
p=mvp = mv
It is a vector quantity with the same direction as the velocity. Its SI unit is kg m s1^{-1}. Options (a), (b), and (c) represent other physical quantities (related to kinetic energy, etc.) and are not momentum.
10Using a horizontal force of 200 N, we intend to move a wooden cabinet across a floor at a constant velocity. What is the friction force that will be exerted on the cabinet?Show solution
Given:
- Applied horizontal force =200= 200 N
- The cabinet moves at constant velocity (i.e., zero acceleration)

Concept: Since the cabinet moves at constant velocity, the net force on it is zero (Newton's First Law).

Fnet=FappliedFfriction=0F_{net} = F_{applied} - F_{friction} = 0
Ffriction=Fapplied=200 NF_{friction} = F_{applied} = 200 \text{ N}

Answer: The friction force exerted on the cabinet is 200200 N, acting in the direction opposite to the motion.
11According to the third law of motion when we push on an object, the object pushes back on us with an equal and opposite force. If the object is a massive truck parked along the roadside, it will probably not move. A student justifies this by answering that the two opposite and equal forces cancel each other. Comment on this logic and explain why the truck does not move.Show solution
Comment on the student's logic: The student's logic is incorrect. The action and reaction forces in Newton's Third Law always act on two different bodies — they never act on the same body. Therefore, they cannot cancel each other.

Correct Explanation:
- When we push the truck (action force on the truck), the truck pushes back on us (reaction force on us). These two forces act on different bodies (truck and person), so they do NOT cancel each other.
- The truck does not move because the force we apply on the truck is not large enough to overcome the static friction between the truck's tyres and the road.
- The net force on the truck = Applied force − Static friction force. Since static friction is large enough to balance our push, the net force on the truck is zero, and it does not accelerate.

Conclusion: The truck remains stationary not because action and reaction cancel, but because the applied force is insufficient to overcome static friction acting on the truck.
12A hockey ball of mass 200 g travelling at 10 m s⁻¹ is struck by a hockey stick so as to return it along its original path with a velocity at 5 m s⁻¹. Calculate the magnitude of change of momentum occurred in the motion of the hockey ball by the force applied by the hockey stick.Show solution
Given:
- Mass of hockey ball, m=200m = 200 g =0.2= 0.2 kg
- Initial velocity, u=10u = 10 m s1^{-1} (let this be positive direction)
- Final velocity, v=5v = -5 m s1^{-1} (returns along original path, so negative direction)

Initial momentum:
pi=mu=0.2×10=2 kg m s1p_i = mu = 0.2 \times 10 = 2 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Final momentum:
pf=mv=0.2×(5)=1 kg m s1p_f = mv = 0.2 \times (-5) = -1 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Change in momentum:
Δp=pfpi=12=3 kg m s1\Delta p = p_f - p_i = -1 - 2 = -3 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Magnitude of change in momentum:
Δp=3 kg m s1|\Delta p| = 3 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Answer: The magnitude of change of momentum of the hockey ball is 33 kg m s1^{-1}.
13A bullet of mass 10 g travelling horizontally with a velocity of 150 m s⁻¹ strikes a stationary wooden block and comes to rest in 0.03 s. Calculate the distance of penetration of the bullet into the block. Also calculate the magnitude of the force exerted by the wooden block on the bullet.Show solution
Given:
- Mass of bullet, m=10m = 10 g =0.01= 0.01 kg
- Initial velocity, u=150u = 150 m s1^{-1}
- Final velocity, v=0v = 0 (comes to rest)
- Time, t=0.03t = 0.03 s

Step 1: Find acceleration (retardation)

a=vut=01500.03=1500.03=5000 m s2a = \frac{v - u}{t} = \frac{0 - 150}{0.03} = \frac{-150}{0.03} = -5000 \text{ m s}^{-2}

Step 2: Find distance of penetration using s=ut+12at2s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2

s=ut+12at2s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2
s=150×0.03+12×(5000)×(0.03)2s = 150 \times 0.03 + \frac{1}{2} \times (-5000) \times (0.03)^2
s=4.5+12×(5000)×0.0009s = 4.5 + \frac{1}{2} \times (-5000) \times 0.0009
s=4.52.25=2.25 ms = 4.5 - 2.25 = 2.25 \text{ m}

Alternatively using v2=u2+2asv^2 = u^2 + 2as:
0=(150)2+2×(5000)×s0 = (150)^2 + 2 \times (-5000) \times s
s=2250010000=2.25 ms = \frac{22500}{10000} = 2.25 \text{ m}

Step 3: Find force exerted by wooden block on bullet

F=ma=0.01×(5000)=50 NF = ma = 0.01 \times (-5000) = -50 \text{ N}

Magnitude of force =50= 50 N (opposing the motion of the bullet).

Answer: Distance of penetration =2.25= 2.25 m; Force exerted by wooden block on bullet =50= 50 N.
14An object of mass 1 kg travelling in a straight line with a velocity of 10 m s⁻¹ collides with, and sticks to, a stationary wooden block of mass 5 kg. Then they both move off together in the same straight line. Calculate the total momentum just before the impact and just after the impact. Also, calculate the velocity of the combined object.Show solution
Given:
- Mass of object, m1=1m_1 = 1 kg; initial velocity, u1=10u_1 = 10 m s1^{-1}
- Mass of wooden block, m2=5m_2 = 5 kg; initial velocity, u2=0u_2 = 0 (stationary)
- After collision, they stick together: combined mass =m1+m2=6= m_1 + m_2 = 6 kg

Total momentum just before impact:
pbefore=m1u1+m2u2=(1×10)+(5×0)=10 kg m s1p_{before} = m_1 u_1 + m_2 u_2 = (1 \times 10) + (5 \times 0) = 10 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

By the Law of Conservation of Momentum:
Total momentum is conserved (no external unbalanced force).
pafter=pbefore=10 kg m s1p_{after} = p_{before} = 10 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Velocity of the combined object after collision:
pafter=(m1+m2)×vp_{after} = (m_1 + m_2) \times v
10=6×v10 = 6 \times v
v=106=531.67 m s1v = \frac{10}{6} = \frac{5}{3} \approx 1.67 \text{ m s}^{-1}

Answer:
- Total momentum just before impact =10= 10 kg m s1^{-1}
- Total momentum just after impact =10= 10 kg m s1^{-1}
- Velocity of combined object 1.67\approx 1.67 m s1^{-1}
15An object of mass 100 kg is accelerated uniformly from a velocity of 5 m s⁻¹ to 8 m s⁻¹ in 6 s. Calculate the initial and final momentum of the object. Also, find the magnitude of the force exerted on the object.Show solution
Given:
- Mass, m=100m = 100 kg
- Initial velocity, u=5u = 5 m s1^{-1}
- Final velocity, v=8v = 8 m s1^{-1}
- Time, t=6t = 6 s

Initial momentum:
pi=mu=100×5=500 kg m s1p_i = mu = 100 \times 5 = 500 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Final momentum:
pf=mv=100×8=800 kg m s1p_f = mv = 100 \times 8 = 800 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Force exerted on the object (using Newton's Second Law):
F=pfpit=8005006=3006=50 NF = \frac{p_f - p_i}{t} = \frac{800 - 500}{6} = \frac{300}{6} = 50 \text{ N}

Answer:
- Initial momentum =500= 500 kg m s1^{-1}
- Final momentum =800= 800 kg m s1^{-1}
- Force exerted on the object =50= 50 N
16Akhtar, Kiran and Rahul were riding in a motorcar moving with high velocity on an expressway when an insect hit the windshield and got stuck on the windscreen. Kiran suggested that the insect suffered a greater change in momentum. Akhtar said the motorcar exerted a larger force on the insect. Rahul said both experienced the same force and change in momentum. Comment on these suggestions.Show solution
Analysis of each suggestion:

Kiran's suggestion (insect suffered greater change in momentum): This is incorrect.
By the Law of Conservation of Momentum, the change in momentum of the insect is equal in magnitude to the change in momentum of the motorcar. The total momentum of the system is conserved. Although the change in velocity of the insect is much larger (because its mass is very small), the change in momentum (Δp=mΔv\Delta p = m \Delta v) is the same in magnitude for both.

Akhtar's suggestion (motorcar exerted larger force on insect): This is also incorrect.
By Newton's Third Law of Motion, the force exerted by the motorcar on the insect is equal in magnitude to the force exerted by the insect on the motorcar. The forces are equal and opposite. The insect died because its small mass resulted in a very large acceleration (deceleration) when the same force acted on it.

Rahul's suggestion (both experienced the same force and change in momentum): This is correct.
- By Newton's Third Law, the force exerted on the insect by the car equals the force exerted on the car by the insect (equal and opposite).
- By the Law of Conservation of Momentum, the magnitude of change in momentum of the insect equals the magnitude of change in momentum of the motorcar.

Conclusion: Rahul's explanation is scientifically correct. The insect and the motorcar experience equal forces (Newton's Third Law) and equal magnitudes of change in momentum (Conservation of Momentum). The insect dies because the same force causes a much larger acceleration in the insect due to its very small mass.
17How much momentum will a dumb-bell of mass 10 kg transfer to the floor if it falls from a height of 80 cm? Take its downward acceleration to be 10 m s⁻².Show solution
Given:
- Mass of dumb-bell, m=10m = 10 kg
- Height, h=80h = 80 cm =0.80= 0.80 m
- Initial velocity, u=0u = 0 (falls from rest)
- Acceleration due to gravity, g=10g = 10 m s2^{-2}

Step 1: Find velocity just before hitting the floor using v2=u2+2ghv^2 = u^2 + 2gh

v2=0+2×10×0.80=16v^2 = 0 + 2 \times 10 \times 0.80 = 16
v=4 m s1v = 4 \text{ m s}^{-1}

Step 2: Calculate momentum just before hitting the floor

p=mv=10×4=40 kg m s1p = mv = 10 \times 4 = 40 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

The dumb-bell comes to rest after hitting the floor (final momentum = 0).

Momentum transferred to the floor:
Δp=400=40 kg m s1\Delta p = 40 - 0 = 40 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Answer: The dumb-bell will transfer a momentum of 4040 kg m s1^{-1} to the floor.

Additional Exercises

A1The following is the distance-time table of an object in motion:
| Time (s) | Distance (m) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 8 |
| 3 | 27 |
| 4 | 64 |
| 5 | 125 |
| 6 | 216 |
| 7 | 343 |
(a) What conclusion can you draw about the acceleration? Is it constant, increasing, decreasing, or zero?
(b) What do you infer about the forces acting on the object?
Show solution
Observation: The distance values are 0,1,8,27,64,125,216,3430, 1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, which are 03,13,23,33,43,53,63,730^3, 1^3, 2^3, 3^3, 4^3, 5^3, 6^3, 7^3.

So, s=t3s = t^3.

Finding velocity and acceleration:

Velocity: v=dsdt=3t2v = \frac{ds}{dt} = 3t^2 (velocity increases with time — non-uniform)

Acceleration: a=dvdt=6ta = \frac{dv}{dt} = 6t (acceleration increases with time)

Let us verify by calculating distances covered in successive seconds:
- 00 to 11 s: 10=11 - 0 = 1 m
- 11 to 22 s: 81=78 - 1 = 7 m
- 22 to 33 s: 278=1927 - 8 = 19 m
- 33 to 44 s: 6427=3764 - 27 = 37 m
- 44 to 55 s: 12564=61125 - 64 = 61 m
- 55 to 66 s: 216125=91216 - 125 = 91 m
- 66 to 77 s: 343216=127343 - 216 = 127 m

The distances covered in successive equal time intervals keep increasing by larger and larger amounts, confirming that acceleration is increasing (non-uniform acceleration).

(a) Conclusion about acceleration: The acceleration is increasing with time (non-uniform/non-constant acceleration).

(b) Inference about forces: Since the acceleration is increasing (non-uniform), the net force acting on the object is also increasing with time. The force is not constant — it increases as time progresses.
A2Two persons manage to push a motorcar of mass 1200 kg at a uniform velocity along a level road. The same motorcar can be pushed by three persons to produce an acceleration of 0.2 m s⁻². With what force does each person push the motorcar? (Assume that all persons push the motorcar with the same muscular effort.)Show solution
Given:
- Mass of motorcar, m=1200m = 1200 kg
- Two persons push at uniform velocity (acceleration =0= 0)
- Three persons push with acceleration =0.2= 0.2 m s2^{-2}
- Each person exerts the same force FF.

Step 1: Find friction force using the two-person case.

When two persons push at uniform velocity, net force =0= 0:
2Ff=0f=2F2F - f = 0 \quad \Rightarrow \quad f = 2F

where ff is the friction force.

Step 2: Apply Newton's Second Law for the three-person case.

3Ff=ma3F - f = ma
3F2F=1200×0.23F - 2F = 1200 \times 0.2
F=240 NF = 240 \text{ N}

Step 3: Verify friction force:
f=2F=2×240=480 Nf = 2F = 2 \times 240 = 480 \text{ N}

Answer: Each person pushes the motorcar with a force of 240240 N.
A3A hammer of mass 500 g, moving at 50 m s⁻¹, strikes a nail. The nail stops the hammer in a very short time of 0.01 s. What is the force of the nail on the hammer?Show solution
Given:
- Mass of hammer, m=500m = 500 g =0.5= 0.5 kg
- Initial velocity, u=50u = 50 m s1^{-1}
- Final velocity, v=0v = 0 (hammer stops)
- Time, t=0.01t = 0.01 s

Step 1: Find acceleration (retardation)

a=vut=0500.01=5000 m s2a = \frac{v - u}{t} = \frac{0 - 50}{0.01} = -5000 \text{ m s}^{-2}

Step 2: Find force using F=maF = ma

F=ma=0.5×(5000)=2500 NF = ma = 0.5 \times (-5000) = -2500 \text{ N}

The negative sign indicates the force is directed opposite to the motion of the hammer (i.e., the nail exerts a retarding force on the hammer).

Answer: The force of the nail on the hammer is 25002500 N (directed opposite to the hammer's motion).
A4A motorcar of mass 1200 kg is moving along a straight line with a uniform velocity of 90 km/h. Its velocity is slowed down to 18 km/h in 4 s by an unbalanced external force. Calculate the acceleration and change in momentum. Also calculate the magnitude of the force required.Show solution
Given:
- Mass of motorcar, m=1200m = 1200 kg
- Initial velocity, u=90u = 90 km/h =90×10003600=25= 90 \times \frac{1000}{3600} = 25 m s1^{-1}
- Final velocity, v=18v = 18 km/h =18×10003600=5= 18 \times \frac{1000}{3600} = 5 m s1^{-1}
- Time, t=4t = 4 s

Step 1: Calculate acceleration

a=vut=5254=204=5 m s2a = \frac{v - u}{t} = \frac{5 - 25}{4} = \frac{-20}{4} = -5 \text{ m s}^{-2}

(Negative sign indicates retardation/deceleration)

Step 2: Calculate change in momentum

Δp=m(vu)=1200×(525)=1200×(20)=24000 kg m s1\Delta p = m(v - u) = 1200 \times (5 - 25) = 1200 \times (-20) = -24000 \text{ kg m s}^{-1}

Magnitude of change in momentum =24000= 24000 kg m s1^{-1}

Step 3: Calculate force required

F=ma=1200×(5)=6000 NF = ma = 1200 \times (-5) = -6000 \text{ N}

Magnitude of force =6000= 6000 N

Answer:
- Acceleration =5= -5 m s2^{-2} (retardation of 55 m s2^{-2})
- Change in momentum =24000= -24000 kg m s1^{-1} (magnitude =24000= 24000 kg m s1^{-1})
- Force required =6000= 6000 N (opposing the motion)

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