This MCQ module is based on: NCERT Exercises and Solutions: Gravitation
NCERT Exercises and Solutions: Gravitation
This assessment will be based on: NCERT Exercises and Solutions: Gravitation
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NCERT Exercises and Solutions: Gravitation
Chapter Summary — Gravitation at a Glance
Newton's universal law of gravitation and Kepler's planetary laws form the foundation of celestial mechanics. From an apple's fall to spacecraft escaping the solar system, the same inverse-square law governs all gravitational phenomena.
| Concept | Formula |
|---|---|
| Newton's Law of Gravitation | F = GMm/r² |
| Acceleration due to gravity | g = GM/R² |
| g at altitude h | g(h) ≈ g(1 − 2h/R) |
| g at depth d | g(d) = g(1 − d/R) |
| g with latitude λ | g'(λ) = g − Rω²cos²λ |
| Gravitational PE | U = −GMm/r |
| Gravitational Potential | V = −GM/r |
| Escape velocity | v_e = √(2GM/R) = √(2gR) |
| Orbital velocity | v_o = √(GM/r) |
| Period of satellite (Kepler) | T² = (4π²/GM) r³ |
| Total energy of satellite | E = −GMm/(2r) |
Important Conceptual Points
- Gravity is always attractive; it is the weakest of the four fundamental forces.
- Inside a spherical shell of matter, the gravitational field is exactly zero (Shell Theorem corollary).
- Escape velocity is independent of the projectile's mass and direction of projection.
- Kepler's second law is equivalent to conservation of angular momentum under any central force.
- A satellite is in continuous free fall; weightlessness is the absence of contact force, not the absence of gravity.
NCERT Exercises with Worked Solutions
Exercise 7.1: Which is correct?
(a) Acceleration due to gravity (g) (i) is independent of the mass of the Earth (ii) increases with depth (iii) increases with height (iv) is independent of the mass of the body.
(i) Wrong — g = GM/R², so g depends on M.
(ii) Wrong — g decreases with depth.
(iii) Wrong — g decreases with height.
(iv) Correct — F = mg, but g itself is independent of the body's mass m being accelerated.
Exercise 7.2: Choose the correct alternatives
(a) Acceleration due to gravity increases/decreases with increasing altitude. (b) Acceleration due to gravity increases/decreases with increasing depth (assume Earth to be a sphere of uniform density). (c) Acceleration due to gravity is independent of mass of the Earth/mass of the body. (d) Formula −GMm(1/r₂ − 1/r₁) is more/less accurate than the formula mg(r₂ − r₁) for the difference of potential energy.
(b) Decreases with depth (g ∝ R − d)
(c) Independent of the mass of the body
(d) The formula −GMm(1/r₂ − 1/r₁) is more accurate because it does not assume constant g; it works at any altitude.
Exercise 7.3: Suppose there existed a planet that went around the Sun twice as fast as the Earth. What would be its orbital size as compared to that of the Earth?
By Kepler's 3rd law: T² ∝ a³ ⇒ a_p/a_E = (T_p/T_E)^(2/3) = (1/2)^(2/3) \[a_p/a_E = 0.63\] So the planet's orbital semi-major axis is about 0.63 AU (closer than Venus).
Exercise 7.4: Io, one of the satellites of Jupiter, has an orbital period of 1.769 days and the radius of orbit is 4.22 × 10⁸ m. Show that the mass of Jupiter is about one-thousandth that of the Sun.
Exercise 7.5: Let us assume that our galaxy consists of 2.5 × 10¹¹ stars each of one solar mass. How long will a star at a distance of 50,000 ly from the galactic centre take to complete one revolution? Take the diameter of the Milky Way to be 10⁵ ly.
r = 50,000 ly = 5×10⁴ × 9.46×10¹⁵ m = 4.73×10²⁰ m \[T = 2\pi\sqrt{\frac{r^3}{GM}} = 2\pi\sqrt{\frac{(4.73\times10^{20})^3}{6.67\times10^{-11}\times 5\times10^{41}}}\] \[T \approx 1.12\times10^{16}\,\text{s}\approx \boxed{3.5\times10^8\,\text{years}}\] About 350 million years per galactic year. Our Sun (at 26,000 ly) takes about 225 million years.
Exercise 7.6: Choose the correct alternative
(a) If the zero of potential energy is at infinity, the total energy of an orbiting satellite is negative of its kinetic/potential energy. (b) The energy required to launch an orbiting satellite out of Earth's gravitational influence is more/less than the energy required to project a stationary object at the same height (as the satellite) out of Earth's influence.
(b) Less. A satellite already has KE = (1/2)GMm/r; to escape it only needs the difference. A stationary object at the same height has no KE, so it requires GMm/r — double the satellite's energy need.
Exercise 7.7: Does the escape speed of a body from the Earth depend on (a) the mass of the body, (b) the location from where it is projected, (c) the direction of projection, (d) the height of the location from where the body is launched?
(b) No (for same altitude; v_e depends on r = R + h).
(c) No. Escape requires only enough KE; direction can be anywhere outward (though tangential is fuel-efficient practically).
(d) Yes. v_e decreases with height because r increases.
Exercise 7.8: A comet orbits the Sun in a highly elliptical orbit. Does the comet have a constant (a) linear speed, (b) angular speed, (c) angular momentum, (d) kinetic energy, (e) potential energy, (f) total energy throughout its orbit? Neglect any mass loss of the comet when it comes very close to the Sun.
(b) No — angular speed ω = v/r varies.
(c) Yes — L is conserved (central force).
(d) No — KE varies inversely with PE.
(e) No — PE varies with r.
(f) Yes — Total E = KE + U is conserved.
Exercise 7.9: Which of the following symptoms is likely to afflict an astronaut in space — (a) swollen feet, (b) swollen face, (c) headache, (d) orientation problem?
(a) Unlikely — feet actually become smaller.
(b) Likely — face puffs up due to fluid pooling.
(c) Likely — fluid pressure in the head causes headaches.
(d) Likely — the vestibular system relies on gravity for orientation.
Exercise 7.10: Choose the correct answer from among the given ones: The gravitational intensity at the centre of a hemispherical shell of uniform mass density has the direction indicated by the arrow (see Fig.) — (i) a, (ii) b, (iii) c, (iv) 0.
Exercise 7.11: A rocket is fired vertically with a speed of 5 km s⁻¹ from the Earth's surface. How far from the Earth does the rocket go before returning to the Earth?
Exercise 7.12: The escape speed of a projectile on the earth's surface is 11.2 km s⁻¹. A body is projected out with thrice this speed. What is the speed of the body far away from the Earth? Ignore the presence of the Sun and other planets.
Exercise 7.13: A satellite orbits the Earth at a height of 400 km above the surface. How much energy must be expended to rocket the satellite out of the Earth's gravitational influence? Mass of the satellite = 200 kg; mass of the Earth = 6.0 × 10²⁴ kg; radius of the Earth = 6.4 × 10⁶ m; G = 6.67 × 10⁻¹¹ N m² kg⁻².
Quick Self-Check Tool
Type a planet mass (×10²⁴ kg) and radius (×10⁶ m) to compute g, v_e and v_o.
g = 9.77 m/s² | v_e = 11.2 km/s | v_o = 7.91 km/s
Quick Competency-Based Recap
Q1. State Kepler's three laws of planetary motion.L1 Remember
Q2. Derive the expression v_e = √(2gR).L3 Apply
Q3. Why is the orbital velocity of a satellite less than its escape velocity?L4 Analyse
Q4. A geostationary satellite is at h ≈ 36,000 km. Why can't it be placed at h = 10,000 km?L5 Evaluate
Q5. HOT: Suggest two ways a future mission could detect dark matter using only gravitational measurements.L6 Create
Final Assertion–Reason Pairs
A: Two bodies of different masses, dropped from the same height in vacuum, hit the ground at the same time.
R: Acceleration due to gravity is independent of the mass of the falling body.
A: If the Earth stopped rotating, weight would increase everywhere except at the poles.
R: The centripetal effect of rotation currently reduces the apparent weight by Rω²cos²λ.
A: The orbital period of a low Earth satellite is approximately 90 minutes.
R: For h ≪ R, T = 2π√(R/g) ≈ 84 minutes.