1. Which statement best describes electric charge in elementary electrostatics?
ⓐ. A vector quantity whose direction is decided by the sign
ⓑ. A vector quantity whose direction is always along the field
ⓒ. A scalar quantity that can only have positive value
ⓓ. A scalar quantity with positive or negative sign
Correct Answer: A scalar quantity with positive or negative sign
Explanation: Electric charge is treated as a scalar physical quantity in elementary electrostatics. The signs \(+\) and \(-\) distinguish two kinds of charge, but they do not represent directions in space. A vector quantity needs a spatial direction, such as along an axis or along a field, while charge has no such direction. A charge such as \(+3\,\text{C}\) and a charge such as \(-3\,\text{C}\) differ in type, not in vector direction. The sign is important because it helps decide whether two charges attract or repel. Therefore, electric charge is a scalar quantity with positive or negative sign.
2. Assertion: Two electric field lines cannot intersect each other.
Reason: At one point in space, the electric field cannot have two different directions simultaneously.
ⓐ. 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
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason explains Assertion
Explanation: Electric field lines never intersect in electrostatics. The tangent to a field line at any point gives the direction of \(\vec{E}\) at that point. If two field lines intersected, two different tangents could be drawn at the same point. That would mean two different directions of electric field at one point, which is not physically possible for a unique electric field. The Reason gives the exact explanation of why the Assertion is true. Hence, both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason explains the Assertion.
3. Two point charges \(+2\,\mu\text{C}\) and \(+6\,\mu\text{C}\) are separated by \(30\,\text{cm}\) in a medium of dielectric constant \(3\). The charge \(+2\,\mu\text{C}\) is attached to a small body of mass \(2.0\times10^{-4}\,\text{kg}\). What is the magnitude of its acceleration due to the electrostatic force? Take \(k=9.0\times10^9\,\text{N m}^2\text{C}^{-2}\).
ⓐ. \(6.0\times10^3\,\text{m s}^{-2}\)
ⓑ. \(4.5\times10^3\,\text{m s}^{-2}\)
ⓒ. \(2.0\times10^3\,\text{m s}^{-2}\)
ⓓ. \(6.7\times10^2\,\text{m s}^{-2}\)
Correct Answer: \(2.0\times10^3\,\text{m s}^{-2}\)
Explanation: \( \textbf{Given:} \) \(q_1=2\times10^{-6}\,\text{C}\), \(q_2=6\times10^{-6}\,\text{C}\), \(r=0.30\,\text{m}\), \(K=3\), \(m=2.0\times10^{-4}\,\text{kg}\).
\( \textbf{Required:} \) Acceleration of the body carrying \(+2\,\mu\text{C}\).
\( \textbf{Force in medium:} \)
\[
F=\frac{k|q_1q_2|}{Kr^2}
\]
\( \textbf{Substitution:} \)
\[
F=\frac{(9.0\times10^9)(2\times10^{-6})(6\times10^{-6})}{3(0.30)^2}
\]
\( \textbf{Numerator:} \)
\[
(9.0\times10^9)(12\times10^{-12})=0.108
\]
\( \textbf{Denominator:} \)
\[
3(0.30)^2=3(0.09)=0.27
\]
\( \textbf{Electrostatic force:} \)
\[
F=\frac{0.108}{0.27}=0.40\,\text{N}
\]
\( \textbf{Acceleration relation:} \)
\[
a=\frac{F}{m}
\]
\( \textbf{Final calculation:} \)
\[
a=\frac{0.40}{2.0\times10^{-4}}=2.0\times10^3\,\text{m s}^{-2}
\]
\( \textbf{Final answer:} \) The acceleration is \(2.0\times10^3\,\text{m s}^{-2}\).
4. Match the quantities in the two columns.
| Column I | Column II |
| P. Charge quantisation | 1. \(F_m=\frac{F_{\text{vacuum}}}{K}\) |
| Q. Conservation of charge | 2. \(Q=q_1+q_2+q_3+\cdots\) |
| R. Additivity of charge | 3. \(q=ne\), where \(n\in\mathbb{Z}\) |
| S. Coulomb force in a dielectric medium | 4. Net charge of an isolated system remains constant |
ⓐ. P-2, Q-4, R-3, S-1
ⓑ. P-3, Q-4, R-2, S-1
ⓒ. P-3, Q-2, R-4, S-1
ⓓ. P-4, Q-3, R-2, S-1
Correct Answer: P-3, Q-4, R-2, S-1
Explanation: Charge quantisation means that charge occurs in integral multiples of elementary charge, so it matches \(q=ne\), where \(n\in\mathbb{Z}\). Conservation of charge means that the net charge of an isolated system remains constant. Additivity of charge means that the total charge is the algebraic sum \(Q=q_1+q_2+q_3+\cdots\). In a dielectric medium of dielectric constant \(K\), Coulomb force becomes \(F_m=\frac{F_{\text{vacuum}}}{K}\). Thus, the correct matching is P-3, Q-4, R-2, S-1.
5. A small positive test charge is used to define electric field at a point. Why should the test charge be very small?
ⓐ. So that it produces no gravitational force
ⓑ. So that its charge becomes zero during measurement
ⓒ. So that electric field becomes a scalar quantity
ⓓ. So that it does not appreciably disturb the source charge distribution
Correct Answer: So that it does not appreciably disturb the source charge distribution
Explanation: Electric field at a point is defined as force per unit positive test charge, \( \vec{E}=\frac{\vec{F}}{q_0} \). The test charge is only a probe used to detect the field produced by the source charges. If the test charge is large, it can exert a significant force on the source charges and disturb their arrangement. A disturbed source distribution would change the field being measured, so the measurement would no longer represent the original field. The test charge is taken positive so that the direction of electric field matches the direction of force on it. Therefore, the test charge should be very small and positive.
6. Study the table and identify the row that contains an incorrect relation.
| Row | Situation | Relation |
| P | Point charge field | \(E\propto r^{-2}\) |
| Q | Far dipole field | \(E\propto r^{-3}\) |
| R | Infinite line charge field | \(E\propto r^{-1}\) |
| S | Single infinite sheet field | \(E\propto r^{-2}\) |
ⓐ. Row S
ⓑ. Row R
ⓒ. Row Q
ⓓ. Row P
Correct Answer: Row S
Explanation: For a point charge, electric field varies as \(E\propto r^{-2}\), so row P is correct. Far from an electric dipole, the field varies as \(E\propto r^{-3}\), so row Q is also correct. For an infinitely long line charge, \(E=\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0 r}\), so \(E\propto r^{-1}\), making row R correct. A single infinite sheet has field \(E=\frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0}\), which is independent of distance from the sheet. Therefore, row S is incorrect because it wrongly assigns inverse-square variation to a single infinite sheet.
7. Electric charge is quantised, so any isolated charge must be an integral multiple of ______.
ⓐ. \(\varepsilon_0\)
ⓑ. \(k\)
ⓒ. \(e\)
ⓓ. \(\lambda\)
Correct Answer: \(e\)
Explanation: Quantisation of charge means that any isolated charge can be written as \(q=ne\), where \(n\) is an integer and \(e\) is the elementary charge. The elementary charge has magnitude \(1.6\times10^{-19}\,\text{C}\). This rule does not involve \(\varepsilon_0\), because \(\varepsilon_0\) is permittivity. It also does not involve \(k\), which is Coulomb's constant, or \(\lambda\), which is linear charge density. Therefore, the blank must be \(e\).
8. Read the situation below and answer the question.
A positive charge \(+q\) and a negative charge \(-q\) are fixed at two ends of a straight line segment. Point \(M\) is exactly midway between them. A small positive test charge is placed at \(M\).
What is the direction of the net electric field at \(M\)?
ⓐ. From \(-q\) toward \(+q\)
ⓑ. From \(+q\) toward \(-q\)
ⓒ. Perpendicular to the line segment
ⓓ. Zero because the charges have equal magnitudes
Correct Answer: From \(+q\) toward \(-q\)
Explanation: Electric field due to a positive charge points away from the positive charge, so at the midpoint \(M\), the field due to \(+q\) points from \(+q\) toward \(-q\). Electric field due to a negative charge points toward the negative charge, so at \(M\), the field due to \(-q\) also points toward \(-q\). Thus, the two field contributions are in the same direction and add. Equal magnitudes of the charges do not imply zero field here because the two fields are not opposite at the midpoint. The net electric field at \(M\) is from \(+q\) toward \(-q\).
9. Use the graph description below.
A graph is plotted between Coulomb force \(F\) and \(\frac{1}{r^2}\) for two fixed point charges in vacuum. The graph is a straight line through the origin.
What does the slope of this graph represent?
ⓐ. \(k|q_1q_2|\)
ⓑ. \(\frac{k}{|q_1q_2|}\)
ⓒ. \(\frac{|q_1q_2|}{k}\)
ⓓ. \(k|q_1+q_2|\)
Correct Answer: \(k|q_1q_2|\)
Explanation: For two fixed point charges in vacuum, Coulomb's law gives \(F=k\frac{|q_1q_2|}{r^2}\). Since the horizontal axis is \(\frac{1}{r^2}\), the equation can be read as \(F=(k|q_1q_2|)\left(\frac{1}{r^2}\right)\). This has the form \(y=mx\), where \(F\) behaves like \(y\), \(\frac{1}{r^2}\) behaves like \(x\), and \(k|q_1q_2|\) is the slope. Since the charges are fixed, this coefficient remains constant. Therefore, the slope of the graph represents \(k|q_1q_2|\).
10. Consider the following statements about electric flux.
Statement I: Electric flux is a scalar quantity.
Statement II: In \(\Phi_E=EA\cos\theta\), \(\theta\) is the angle between \(\vec{E}\) and the area vector \(\vec{A}\).
Statement III: For a closed surface, outward flux is taken as positive by convention.
Which statements are correct?
ⓐ. I and II only
ⓑ. II and III only
ⓒ. I and III only
ⓓ. I, II and III
Correct Answer: I, II and III
Explanation: Electric flux is a scalar quantity because it is obtained from the dot product \(\vec{E}\cdot\vec{A}\). In the formula \(\Phi_E=EA\cos\theta\), the angle \(\theta\) is measured between the electric field vector and the area vector, not between the field and the surface plane. For a closed surface, the area vector is taken outward by convention. Therefore, field lines leaving the surface contribute positive flux, while field lines entering the surface contribute negative flux. All three statements are correct.
11. Use the arrangement described below and answer the question.
Four point charges are placed at the corners of a square. The top-left and bottom-right corners carry \(+q\), while the top-right and bottom-left corners carry \(-q\). Point \(O\) is the centre of the square.
What is the net electric field at \(O\)?
ⓐ. Along one diagonal toward the top-left corner
ⓑ. Along one side of the square toward the right
ⓒ. Zero
ⓓ. Perpendicular to the plane of the square
Correct Answer: Zero
Explanation: The centre \(O\) is equidistant from all four corners of the square. The top-left \(+q\) and bottom-right \(+q\) produce equal electric fields at \(O\) in opposite directions along one diagonal, so their fields cancel. The top-right \(-q\) and bottom-left \(-q\) also produce equal fields at \(O\) in opposite directions along the other diagonal, so they also cancel. Electric field is a vector quantity, so these directional cancellations are important. Therefore, the net electric field at \(O\) is zero.
12. An electric dipole has charges \(+3\,\mu\text{C}\) and \(-3\,\mu\text{C}\) separated by \(8\,\text{cm}\). It is placed in a uniform electric field of \(2.0\times10^5\,\text{N C}^{-1}\) at an angle \(30^\circ\) with the field. If the moment of inertia of the dipole about its centre is \(4.8\times10^{-5}\,\text{kg m}^2\), what is the initial angular acceleration?
ⓐ. \(2.5\times10^2\,\text{rad s}^{-2}\)
ⓑ. \(5.0\times10^2\,\text{rad s}^{-2}\)
ⓒ. \(1.0\times10^3\,\text{rad s}^{-2}\)
ⓓ. \(5.0\times10^1\,\text{rad s}^{-2}\)
Correct Answer: \(5.0\times10^2\,\text{rad s}^{-2}\)
Explanation: \( \textbf{Given:} \) \(q=3\times10^{-6}\,\text{C}\), separation \(=8\,\text{cm}=0.08\,\text{m}\), \(E=2.0\times10^5\,\text{N C}^{-1}\), \(\theta=30^\circ\), and \(I=4.8\times10^{-5}\,\text{kg m}^2\).
\( \textbf{Required:} \) Initial angular acceleration \(\alpha\).
\( \textbf{Dipole moment:} \)
\[
p=q(2a)
\]
Here the separation between charges is already \(2a=0.08\,\text{m}\).
\( \textbf{Calculation of \(p\):} \)
\[
p=(3\times10^{-6})(0.08)=2.4\times10^{-7}\,\text{C m}
\]
\( \textbf{Torque on dipole:} \)
\[
\tau=pE\sin\theta
\]
\( \textbf{Substitution:} \)
\[
\tau=(2.4\times10^{-7})(2.0\times10^5)\sin30^\circ
\]
\( \textbf{Torque value:} \)
\[
\tau=(2.4\times10^{-7})(2.0\times10^5)\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)=2.4\times10^{-2}\,\text{N m}
\]
\( \textbf{Rotational relation:} \)
\[
\tau=I\alpha
\]
\( \textbf{Angular acceleration:} \)
\[
\alpha=\frac{\tau}{I}=\frac{2.4\times10^{-2}}{4.8\times10^{-5}}=5.0\times10^2\,\text{rad s}^{-2}
\]
\( \textbf{Final answer:} \) The initial angular acceleration is \(5.0\times10^2\,\text{rad s}^{-2}\).
13. The electric field at a point is defined as force per unit ______ test charge.
ⓐ. positive
ⓑ. negative
ⓒ. neutral
ⓓ. induced
Correct Answer: positive
Explanation: Electric field direction is defined using a small positive test charge. If a positive test charge is placed at a point, the direction of force on it gives the direction of \(\vec{E}\) at that point. A negative charge would experience force opposite to the electric field direction, so it is not used for defining the field direction. A neutral body cannot be used in the definition because the electric force on it is not represented by \(q_0\vec{E}\). Therefore, the blank is positive.
14. Which situation best shows charging by induction?
ⓐ. A glass rod becomes charged after rubbing with silk
ⓑ. A charged metal sphere touches a neutral metal sphere
ⓒ. A charged rod is brought near a neutral conductor, the conductor is earthed, and then the earth connection is removed
ⓓ. A charged object loses charge after being connected to the ground
Correct Answer: A charged rod is brought near a neutral conductor, the conductor is earthed, and then the earth connection is removed
Explanation: Charging by induction occurs without direct contact between the charged body and the conductor being charged. When a charged rod is brought near a neutral conductor, charges inside the conductor redistribute. Earthing then allows electrons to enter or leave the conductor. If the earth connection is removed before the inducing rod is taken away, the conductor can be left with a permanent charge. Rubbing glass with silk is charging by friction, and touching a charged sphere to a neutral sphere is charging by conduction. Therefore, the described earthing sequence represents charging by induction.
15. Match the symbols in Column I with their meanings in Column II.
| Column I | Column II |
| P. \(\lambda\) | 1. Electric flux |
| Q. \(\sigma\) | 2. Volume charge density |
| R. \(\rho\) | 3. Linear charge density |
| S. \(\Phi_E\) | 4. Surface charge density |
ⓐ. P-4, Q-3, R-2, S-1
ⓑ. P-3, Q-2, R-4, S-1
ⓒ. P-2, Q-4, R-3, S-1
ⓓ. P-3, Q-4, R-2, S-1
Correct Answer: P-3, Q-4, R-2, S-1
Explanation: The symbol \(\lambda\) represents linear charge density, so P matches 3. The symbol \(\sigma\) represents surface charge density, so Q matches 4. The symbol \(\rho\) represents volume charge density, so R matches 2. The symbol \(\Phi_E\) is used for electric flux, so S matches 1. The unit check also supports this: \(\lambda\) has unit \(\text{C m}^{-1}\), \(\sigma\) has unit \(\text{C m}^{-2}\), and \(\rho\) has unit \(\text{C m}^{-3}\). Hence, the matching is P-3, Q-4, R-2, S-1.
16. Read the situation below and answer the question.
A charge \(+Q\) is placed inside a closed surface \(S\). Another charge \(+2Q\) is placed outside the same closed surface. The external charge changes the electric field at many points on the surface.
What is the net electric flux through \(S\)?
ⓐ. \(\frac{3Q}{\varepsilon_0}\)
ⓑ. \(\frac{Q}{\varepsilon_0}\)
ⓒ. \(\frac{2Q}{\varepsilon_0}\)
ⓓ. Zero
Correct Answer: \(\frac{Q}{\varepsilon_0}\)
Explanation: Gauss's law states that the net electric flux through a closed surface is \(\Phi_E=\frac{q_{\text{enc}}}{\varepsilon_0}\). Only the charge enclosed by the closed surface contributes to the net flux. The charge \(+Q\) is inside \(S\), while \(+2Q\) is outside it. The outside charge can change the electric field at different points on the surface, but its net contribution to the closed-surface flux is zero. Therefore, the net electric flux through \(S\) is \(\frac{Q}{\varepsilon_0}\).
17. Assertion: A dipole placed in a uniform electric field has zero net force.
Reason: The forces on the two charges of the dipole are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.
ⓐ. 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
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason explains Assertion
Explanation: A dipole consists of equal and opposite charges separated by a small distance. In a uniform electric field, \(+q\) experiences force along the field and \(-q\) experiences force opposite to the field. These two forces have equal magnitude \(qE\) and opposite directions, so their vector sum is zero. The dipole can still experience torque if it is not aligned with the field, but its net force in a uniform field is zero. The Reason correctly explains the Assertion. Hence, both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason explains the Assertion.
18. Use the graph description below.
A graph of electric field \(E\) versus \(\frac{1}{r}\) for an infinitely long uniformly charged wire is a straight line through the origin.
What does the slope of this graph represent?
ⓐ. \(2\pi\varepsilon_0\lambda\)
ⓑ. \(\frac{2\pi\varepsilon_0}{\lambda}\)
ⓒ. \(\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0}\)
ⓓ. \(\frac{1}{2\pi\varepsilon_0\lambda}\)
Correct Answer: \(\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0}\)
Explanation: For an infinitely long uniformly charged wire, the electric field at distance \(r\) is \(E=\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0 r}\). Since the graph is drawn between \(E\) and \(\frac{1}{r}\), the relation can be written as \(E=\left(\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0}\right)\left(\frac{1}{r}\right)\). Comparing this with \(y=mx\), the slope is \(\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0}\). This graph is different from the point-charge field graph because a line charge gives \(E\propto \frac{1}{r}\), not \(E\propto \frac{1}{r^2}\). Therefore, the slope represents \(\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0}\).
19. Study the table for closed surfaces and enclosed charges.
| Closed surface | Charges enclosed |
| S1 | \(+q\) and \(-q\) |
| S2 | \(+2q\) |
| S3 | \(-q\) |
| S4 | \(+q\) and \(+q\) |
Which closed surface has zero net electric flux?
ⓐ. S2
ⓑ. S3
ⓒ. S4
ⓓ. S1
Correct Answer: S1
Explanation: According to Gauss's law, the net flux through a closed surface is \(\Phi_E=\frac{q_{\text{enc}}}{\varepsilon_0}\). Surface S1 encloses \(+q\) and \(-q\), so its net enclosed charge is zero. Therefore, the net flux through S1 is also zero. Surface S2 encloses \(+2q\), surface S3 encloses \(-q\), and surface S4 encloses \(+2q\), so none of them has zero net enclosed charge. Hence, S1 has zero net electric flux.
20. Why is Gauss's law not always useful for directly finding electric field even though it is always valid for closed surfaces?
ⓐ. Gauss's law works only for spherical surfaces
ⓑ. Electric field cannot be pulled out of the flux integral without suitable symmetry
ⓒ. Gauss's law fails when external charges are present
ⓓ. Electric flux is not defined for irregular closed surfaces
Correct Answer: Electric field cannot be pulled out of the flux integral without suitable symmetry
Explanation: Gauss's law is valid for every closed surface, but it becomes directly useful for finding electric field only when there is enough symmetry. The law is \(\oint\vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}=\frac{q_{\text{enc}}}{\varepsilon_0}\). To obtain \(E\) easily, the field magnitude must be constant over useful parts of the Gaussian surface or the flux through some parts must be zero by symmetry. Without such symmetry, \(E\) changes from point to point and cannot be taken out of the integral. External charges do not invalidate Gauss's law, but they can make the local field more complicated. Therefore, suitable symmetry is needed to use Gauss's law as a practical field-finding tool.