Class 12 Physics MCQs | Chapter 3: Current Electricity – Part 3
GK Aim: A Treasure of MCQs

Class 12 Physics MCQs | Chapter 3: Current Electricity – Part 3

Timer: Off
Random: Off

211. A \(4\,\text{V}\) cell of internal resistance \(1\,\Omega\) is connected in series opposing with a \(1.5\,\text{V}\) cell of internal resistance \(0.5\,\Omega\). The combination is connected to \(3.5\,\Omega\). Which direction and magnitude of current are correct?
ⓐ. \(0.50\,\text{A}\), in the direction of the \(4\,\text{V}\) cell
ⓑ. \(0.50\,\text{A}\), in the direction of the \(1.5\,\text{V}\) cell
ⓒ. \(1.10\,\text{A}\), in the direction of the \(4\,\text{V}\) cell
ⓓ. \(1.10\,\text{A}\), in the direction of the \(1.5\,\text{V}\) cell
212. Consider the following statements about cells in series. Statement I: In series aiding, emfs add. Statement II: In series opposing, internal resistances subtract. Statement III: In series connection, the same current passes through each cell. Which statements are correct?
ⓐ. I and II only
ⓑ. I and III only
ⓒ. II and III only
ⓓ. I, II and III
213. In a series combination of cells, why is the arrangement not always better than using one cell?
ⓐ. Series cells always reduce total emf
ⓑ. Series cells make current zero in every case
ⓒ. Internal resistance disappears in series
ⓓ. Internal resistance also increases in series
214. Identical cells are connected in parallel with the same polarity. If each cell has emf \(\mathcal{E}\) and internal resistance \(r\), what are the equivalent emf and internal resistance for \(n\) cells?
ⓐ. \(\mathcal{E}_{\text{eq}}=n\mathcal{E}\), \(r_{\text{eq}}=nr\)
ⓑ. \(\mathcal{E}_{\text{eq}}=\mathcal{E}\), \(r_{\text{eq}}=\frac{r}{n}\)
ⓒ. \(\mathcal{E}_{\text{eq}}=\frac{\mathcal{E}}{n}\), \(r_{\text{eq}}=nr\)
ⓓ. \(\mathcal{E}_{\text{eq}}=n\mathcal{E}\), \(r_{\text{eq}}=\frac{r}{n}\)
215. Three identical cells, each of emf \(1.5\,\text{V}\) and internal resistance \(0.6\,\Omega\), are connected in parallel with the same polarity. The combination is connected to an external resistance of \(1.3\,\Omega\). What current flows?
ⓐ. \(0.50\,\text{A}\)
ⓑ. \(1.50\,\text{A}\)
ⓒ. \(3.00\,\text{A}\)
ⓓ. \(1.00\,\text{A}\)
216. For \(n\) identical cells connected in parallel to an external resistance \(R\), each cell has emf \(\mathcal{E}\) and internal resistance \(r\). Which expression gives the current in the external circuit?
ⓐ. \(I=\frac{n\mathcal{E}}{R+nr}\)
ⓑ. \(I=\frac{\mathcal{E}}{R+\frac{r}{n}}\)
ⓒ. \(I=\frac{\mathcal{E}}{nR+r}\)
ⓓ. \(I=\frac{n\mathcal{E}}{R+\frac{r}{n}}\)
217. Two identical cells, each of emf \(2\,\text{V}\) and internal resistance \(1\,\Omega\), are connected in parallel to a \(1\,\Omega\) external resistor. What is the current through the external resistor?
ⓐ. \(0.67\,\text{A}\)
ⓑ. \(1.0\,\text{A}\)
ⓒ. \(1.33\,\text{A}\)
ⓓ. \(2.0\,\text{A}\)
218. Which statement best explains why identical cells are often connected in parallel?
ⓐ. To increase the emf in proportion to the number of cells
ⓑ. To reduce internal resistance and share current
ⓒ. To make the terminal voltage always zero
ⓓ. To make each cell oppose the others
219. Two identical cells are available, each with emf \(\mathcal{E}\) and internal resistance \(r\). For a very large external resistance \(R\), which connection gives the larger current approximately?
ⓐ. Series, because emf nearly doubles when \(R\) is very large
ⓑ. Parallel, because the effective internal resistance becomes zero
ⓒ. Both give exactly the same current
ⓓ. Neither gives current when \(R\) is large
220. Two identical cells are available, each with emf \(\mathcal{E}\) and internal resistance \(r\). For a very small external resistance \(R\), which connection is generally better for supplying larger external current?
ⓐ. Series, because it doubles emf without changing internal resistance
ⓑ. Both always supply the same current for every \(R\)
ⓒ. Opposing series, because it cancels internal resistance
ⓓ. Parallel, because it reduces effective internal resistance
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Scroll to Top