This MCQ module is based on: Dimensions and Analysis
Dimensions and Analysis
This assessment will be based on: Dimensions and Analysis
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Dimensions and Analysis
1.4 Dimensions of Physical Quantities
Every physical quantity can be expressed in terms of the fundamental (base) quantities. The dimensional formula expresses which base quantities are involved and with what powers (exponents).
We use the following symbols for dimensions of the seven base quantities:
| Base Quantity | Dimension Symbol |
|---|---|
| Mass | [M] |
| Length | [L] |
| Time | [T] |
| Electric Current | [A] |
| Temperature | [K] |
| Amount of Substance | [mol] |
| Luminous Intensity | [cd] |
In mechanics, most quantities involve only [M], [L], and [T].
Dimensional Formulas of Common Quantities
| Physical Quantity | Expression | Dimensional Formula |
|---|---|---|
| Velocity | displacement / time | \([M^0\,L\,T^{-1}]\) |
| Acceleration | velocity / time | \([M^0\,L\,T^{-2}]\) |
| Force | mass × acceleration | \([M\,L\,T^{-2}]\) |
| Work / Energy | force × displacement | \([M\,L^2\,T^{-2}]\) |
| Power | work / time | \([M\,L^2\,T^{-3}]\) |
| Pressure | force / area | \([M\,L^{-1}\,T^{-2}]\) |
| Momentum | mass × velocity | \([M\,L\,T^{-1}]\) |
| Gravitational constant G | \(F = \frac{Gm_1 m_2}{r^2}\) | \([M^{-1}\,L^3\,T^{-2}]\) |
| Planck's constant h | \(E = h\nu\) | \([M\,L^2\,T^{-1}]\) |
1.6 Dimensional Analysis and Its Applications
Dimensional analysis is a powerful method with three main applications:
Application 1: Checking Dimensional Consistency
An equation is dimensionally correct if the dimensions of every term on both sides match. Note that a dimensionally correct equation is not necessarily physically correct, but a dimensionally inconsistent equation is always wrong.
Example 1: Check dimensional consistency of \(v = u + at\)
LHS: \([v] = [M^0\,L\,T^{-1}]\)
RHS term 1: \([u] = [M^0\,L\,T^{-1}]\)
RHS term 2: \([at] = [M^0\,L\,T^{-2}] \times [T] = [M^0\,L\,T^{-1}]\)
All terms have the same dimensions \([M^0\,L\,T^{-1}]\).
\(\boxed{\text{The equation is dimensionally consistent.}}\)
Example 2: Check dimensional consistency of \(s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2\)
LHS: \([s] = [M^0\,L\,T^0] = [L]\)
RHS term 1: \([ut] = [L\,T^{-1}][T] = [L]\)
RHS term 2: \([\frac{1}{2}at^2] = [L\,T^{-2}][T^2] = [L]\)
(Note: \(\frac{1}{2}\) is dimensionless)
All terms have dimensions \([L]\). \(\boxed{\text{Dimensionally consistent.}}\)
Application 2: Deriving Relations (Method of Dimensions)
Example 3: Derive the expression for the time period of a simple pendulum
Assume the time period \(T\) of a simple pendulum depends on: mass \(m\), length \(l\), and acceleration due to gravity \(g\). Find the relation using dimensional analysis.
Let \(T = k\, m^a\, l^b\, g^c\), where \(k\) is a dimensionless constant.
Writing dimensions:
\[[M^0\,L^0\,T^1] = [M]^a \cdot [L]^b \cdot [L\,T^{-2}]^c\] \[[M^0\,L^0\,T^1] = [M^a\,L^{b+c}\,T^{-2c}]\] Equating exponents:
Mass: \(a = 0\)
Length: \(b + c = 0 \Rightarrow b = -c\)
Time: \(-2c = 1 \Rightarrow c = -\frac{1}{2}\)
Therefore: \(b = \frac{1}{2}\), \(a = 0\), \(c = -\frac{1}{2}\)
\[T = k\, m^0\, l^{1/2}\, g^{-1/2} = k\sqrt{\frac{l}{g}}\] \[\boxed{T = k\sqrt{\frac{l}{g}}}\] The dimensionless constant \(k\) turns out to be \(2\pi\) (determined experimentally), so \(T = 2\pi\sqrt{l/g}\).
Key observation: The time period does not depend on mass!
Application 3: Converting Units Between Systems
Example 4: Convert 1 newton to CGS (dyne)
Force has dimensions \([M\,L\,T^{-2}]\).
In SI: \(1\text{ N} = 1\text{ kg}\cdot\text{m}\cdot\text{s}^{-2}\)
Converting each base unit to CGS:
\(1\text{ kg} = 1000\text{ g} = 10^3\text{ g}\)
\(1\text{ m} = 100\text{ cm} = 10^2\text{ cm}\)
\(1\text{ s} = 1\text{ s}\)
\[1\text{ N} = 1 \times (10^3\text{ g}) \times (10^2\text{ cm}) \times (1\text{ s})^{-2}\] \[= 10^3 \times 10^2 \times 1 = 10^5 \text{ dyne}\] \[\boxed{1\text{ N} = 10^5\text{ dyne}}\]
Example 5: Convert 1 joule to erg
Energy has dimensions \([M\,L^2\,T^{-2}]\).
\[1\text{ J} = 1\text{ kg}\cdot\text{m}^2\cdot\text{s}^{-2}\] \[= (10^3\text{ g})(10^2\text{ cm})^2(1\text{ s})^{-2}\] \[= 10^3 \times 10^4 \times 1 = 10^7\text{ erg}\] \[\boxed{1\text{ J} = 10^7\text{ erg}}\]
Example 6: Find the dimensions of the gravitational constant G
From Newton's law of gravitation: \(F = \frac{Gm_1 m_2}{r^2}\)
Rearranging: \(G = \frac{Fr^2}{m_1 m_2}\)
\[[G] = \frac{[M\,L\,T^{-2}] \cdot [L^2]}{[M] \cdot [M]}\] \[= \frac{[M\,L^3\,T^{-2}]}{[M^2]}\] \[= [M^{-1}\,L^3\,T^{-2}]\] \[\boxed{[G] = [M^{-1}\,L^3\,T^{-2}]}\] SI unit of G: \(\text{N}\cdot\text{m}^2\cdot\text{kg}^{-2}\) or equivalently \(\text{m}^3\,\text{kg}^{-1}\,\text{s}^{-2}\).
Limitations of Dimensional Analysis
(i) Cannot determine dimensionless constants (like \(2\pi\) in the pendulum formula, or \(\frac{1}{2}\) in \(s = \frac{1}{2}at^2\)).
(ii) Cannot derive equations involving trigonometric, exponential, or logarithmic functions (since these are dimensionless).
(iii) Cannot distinguish between two quantities having the same dimensions (e.g., work and torque both have \([M\,L^2\,T^{-2}]\)).
(iv) If a quantity depends on more than three unknowns (in mechanics), the method fails because we have only three equations (from M, L, T).
- Write down the dimensional formula of each term in the equation \(v^2 = u^2 + 2as\).
- Check whether all terms have the same dimensions.
- Now consider a made-up equation: \(v = u + at^2\). Check its dimensional consistency.
- What does this tell you about the validity of each equation?
For \(v^2 = u^2 + 2as\):
\([v^2] = [L^2\,T^{-2}]\), \([u^2] = [L^2\,T^{-2}]\), \([2as] = [L\,T^{-2}]\times[L] = [L^2\,T^{-2}]\)
All terms match — dimensionally consistent.
For \(v = u + at^2\):
\([v] = [L\,T^{-1}]\), \([u] = [L\,T^{-1}]\), \([at^2] = [L\,T^{-2}][T^2] = [L]\)
The third term has dimensions [L], not [L T¹] — dimensionally inconsistent. This equation is definitely wrong!
Interactive: Dimension Checker L3 Apply
Select a physical quantity to see its dimensional formula:
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L2 Understand What is the dimensional formula of centripetal force \(F = mv^2/r\)?
Q2. L3 Apply Using dimensional analysis, derive the relationship between the speed \(v\) of transverse waves on a stretched string, the tension \(T\) (force), and the linear mass density \(\mu\) (mass per unit length). (3 marks)
Let \(v = k\,T^a\,\mu^b\) where \(k\) is dimensionless.
\([L\,T^{-1}] = [M\,L\,T^{-2}]^a \cdot [M\,L^{-1}]^b\)
\([L\,T^{-1}] = [M^{a+b}\,L^{a-b}\,T^{-2a}]\)
Equating: M: \(a+b = 0\), L: \(a-b = 1\), T: \(-2a = -1\)
From T: \(a = \frac{1}{2}\), then \(b = -\frac{1}{2}\)
Check L: \(\frac{1}{2}-(-\frac{1}{2}) = 1\) ✓
\[\boxed{v = k\sqrt{\frac{T}{\mu}}}\]
Q3. L3 Apply Convert the gravitational constant \(G = 6.67 \times 10^{-11}\) N m² kg² to CGS units. (3 marks)
\([G] = [M^{-1}\,L^3\,T^{-2}]\)
\[G_{\text{CGS}} = 6.67 \times 10^{-11} \times \frac{(10^3)^{-1} \times (10^2)^3}{(1)^2}\] \[= 6.67 \times 10^{-11} \times 10^{-3} \times 10^6 \times 1\] \[= 6.67 \times 10^{-11} \times 10^3\] \[\boxed{G = 6.67 \times 10^{-8}\;\text{dyne}\cdot\text{cm}^2\cdot\text{g}^{-2}}\]
Q4. L4 Analyse A student uses dimensional analysis to derive the formula for kinetic energy and gets \(E = k\,m\,v^2\). Why can't dimensional analysis determine whether \(k = \frac{1}{2}\), \(k = 1\), or \(k = 2\)? (2 marks)
Q5. L5 Evaluate The equation \(v = \sqrt{\frac{2GM}{R}}\) gives the escape velocity from a planet of mass \(M\) and radius \(R\). Verify that this equation is dimensionally correct. (3 marks)
LHS: \([v] = [L\,T^{-1}]\)
RHS: \(\left[\sqrt{\frac{GM}{R}}\right] = \left[\frac{[M^{-1}\,L^3\,T^{-2}][M]}{[L]}\right]^{1/2}\)
\(= \left[\frac{[L^3\,T^{-2}]}{[L]}\right]^{1/2} = [L^2\,T^{-2}]^{1/2} = [L\,T^{-1}]\)
LHS = RHS = \([L\,T^{-1}]\). The equation is dimensionally consistent. ✓
Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): A dimensionally correct equation is not necessarily a physically correct equation.
Reason (R): Dimensional analysis cannot account for dimensionless constants and functions like sine, cosine, or exponential.
Assertion (A): Work and torque have the same dimensional formula \([M\,L^2\,T^{-2}]\).
Reason (R): They are physically the same quantity.
Assertion (A): 1 joule = 10&sup7; erg.
Reason (R): Energy has dimensions \([M\,L^2\,T^{-2}]\), and 1 kg = 10³ g, 1 m = 10² cm.