Class 11 Physics |100 Questions & Answers| Gravitation MCQs
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Class 11 Physics | Gravitation MCQs with Answers – Part 4

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301. Tidal effects are mainly produced because the gravitational force of the Moon on Earth
ⓐ. varies slightly across Earth’s diameter
ⓑ. is identical at every point on Earth
ⓒ. acts only on oceans and not on land
ⓓ. becomes repulsive on Earth’s far side
302. The term gravitational gradient in the context of tides refers to
ⓐ. Earth’s speed changes in its orbit around the Sun
ⓑ. field or force changes with position
ⓒ. Earth’s density changes from place to place
ⓓ. the constant \(G\) changes from place to place
303. The Moon produces noticeable tides on Earth mainly because
ⓐ. the Moon has greater mass than the Sun and pulls uniformly
ⓑ. the Moon changes \(G\) across Earth because it is close
ⓒ. the Moon is close, so its field varies across Earth
ⓓ. lunar gravity repels seawater on the far side of Earth
304. A common statement says, “Tides happen because the Moon pulls only the water nearest to it.” The best correction is that the Moon
ⓐ. pulls all parts of Earth by different amounts
ⓑ. pulls only the nearest ocean and not the rest of Earth
ⓒ. has no effect on solid Earth
ⓓ. repels the far-side ocean instead of attracting it
305. Use the arrangement described below. The Moon is to the right of Earth. Point P is on Earth’s surface nearest the Moon, Point Q is at Earth’s centre, and Point R is on the far side. The Moon’s gravitational pull is strongest at
ⓐ. Point P
ⓑ. all three points equally
ⓒ. Point R
ⓓ. Point Q
306. The following table compares three points on Earth along the Earth-Moon line.
PointPosition relative to MoonLunar gravitational pull
PNear side of EarthStrongest among the three
QEarth’s centreIntermediate
RFar side of EarthWeakest among the three
The table supports the idea that tides are related to
ⓐ. changing universal constant across Earth’s diameter
ⓑ. same lunar pull on near and far sides of Earth
ⓒ. different lunar pulls at different Earth points
ⓓ. absence of gravity at Earth’s near-side surface
307. Assertion: Tides are more closely connected with the difference in gravitational pull across Earth than with the same pull applied equally to all parts of Earth. Reason: Equal gravitational acceleration of every part would not produce stretching of Earth’s oceans relative to Earth.
ⓐ. The assertion is true, but the reason is false
ⓑ. Both assertion and reason are true, and the reason explains the assertion
ⓒ. Both assertion and reason are true, but the reason does not explain the assertion
ⓓ. The assertion is false, but the reason is true
308. A compact passage says: “The Sun pulls Earth more strongly than the Moon does, but the Moon has a larger tidal influence than one might expect from its mass alone.” The most suitable explanation is that tidal influence depends strongly on
ⓐ. whether the attracting body emits its own light
ⓑ. brightness variation across Earth, larger for closer bodies
ⓒ. mass of seawater alone instead of distance variation
ⓓ. pull variation across Earth, larger for closer bodies
309. For two fixed masses, a graph of gravitational force \(F\) against \(\frac{1}{r^2}\) should be
ⓐ. a straight line not through the origin
ⓑ. a straight line through the origin
ⓒ. a curve decreasing with \(r^2\)
ⓓ. a horizontal line above the axis
310. In a graph of \(F\) against \(\frac{1}{r^2}\) for two fixed masses \(m_1\) and \(m_2\), the slope is
ⓐ. \(\frac{m_1m_2}{G}\)
ⓑ. \(G\frac{m_1}{m_2}\)
ⓒ. \(\frac{G}{m_1m_2}\)
ⓓ. \(Gm_1m_2\)
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