Class 12 Physics MCQs | Chapter 1: Electric Charges And Fields – Part 1
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Class 12 Physics MCQs | Chapter 1: Electric Charges and Fields – Part 1

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11. Use the arrangement described below.
Two identical light pith balls are suspended by insulating threads. Ball P is given charge \(+q\), and ball Q is also given charge \(+q\). The balls are brought near each other without touching.
What is the expected electrostatic behaviour?
ⓐ. They attract because both have equal magnitudes
ⓑ. They repel because both charges are positive
ⓒ. They remain unaffected because charge is scalar
ⓓ. They attract first and then repel after contact
12. Which option correctly compares charge and electrostatic force?
ⓐ. Charge is vector and electrostatic force is scalar
ⓑ. Both charge and electrostatic force are scalars
ⓒ. Charge is scalar, while electrostatic force is vector
ⓓ. Both charge and electrostatic force are vectors because both can be positive or negative
13. Why do metals behave as good conductors in electrostatics?
ⓐ. Their positive ions move freely throughout the metal
ⓑ. Their electrons are free to move through the body
ⓒ. Their atoms do not contain any bound charges
ⓓ. Their net charge must always be zero
14. Which statement best distinguishes a conductor from an insulator?
ⓐ. A conductor allows charge redistribution, while an insulator restricts it
ⓑ. A conductor can have electric charge, while an insulator can never have electric charge
ⓒ. A conductor always has positive charge, while an insulator always has negative charge
ⓓ. A conductor attracts charges, while an insulator repels all charges
15. A charged plastic rod touches one small region of an insulating rubber sheet. After contact, the excess charge remains mainly near the touched region. Which property of the rubber sheet explains this observation?
ⓐ. It has no atoms that can hold charge
ⓑ. It allows positive ions to move freely
ⓒ. It restricts charge movement through its body
ⓓ. It converts electric charge into heat immediately
16. Assertion: Excess charge given to a metal sphere can spread over its surface. Reason: A metal has mobile electrons that can redistribute under electrostatic forces.
ⓐ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason explains Assertion
ⓑ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, but Reason does not explain Assertion
ⓒ. Assertion is true, but Reason is false
ⓓ. Assertion is false, but Reason is true
17. A neutral metal sphere is placed near a positively charged rod without touching it. What happens inside the sphere?
ⓐ. Electrons shift slightly toward the rod, causing charge redistribution
ⓑ. Protons move toward the rod and leave the metal lattice
ⓒ. The sphere becomes permanently positively charged without any charge exchange
ⓓ. All charges inside the sphere disappear
18. Study the table and identify the row with the correct material behaviour.
RowMaterial typeCharge behaviour
PConductorExcess charge can redistribute through mobile charges
QInsulatorExcess charge always spreads instantly over the whole body
RMetalConduction occurs mainly by free proton motion
SInsulatorIt cannot contain electric charge
ⓐ. Row Q
ⓑ. Row R
ⓒ. Row S
ⓓ. Row P
19. A conducting sphere and an insulating sphere are both touched at one point by the same negatively charged rod. Which comparison is most reasonable immediately after charging?
ⓐ. Conductor redistributes electrons; insulator keeps them near contact
ⓑ. The insulator redistributes excess electrons faster because its charges are bound
ⓒ. Both bodies must spread charge uniformly through their volumes
ⓓ. Neither body can receive charge because both were neutral initially
20. Complete the statement correctly: Grounding a charged conductor means connecting it to Earth so that ______.
ⓐ. protons are removed from all atoms of the conductor
ⓑ. the conductor becomes an insulator
ⓒ. the total charge of the universe becomes zero
ⓓ. charge can flow between the conductor and Earth
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