A coil of one loop is made from a wire of length L and thereafter a coil of two loops is made from same wire. The ratio of magnetic field at the centre of the coils will be:
1. 1 : 4
2. 1 : 1
3. 1 : 8
4. 4 : 1
Resistance of a Galvanometer coil is \(8~\Omega\) and \(2~\Omega\) shunt resistance is connected with it. If main current is \(1\) A then the current flow through \(2~\Omega\) resistance will be:
1. \(0.2\) A
2. \(0.8\) A
3. \(0.1\) A
4. \(0.4\) A
Two long parallel wires are at a distance of \(1\) m. If both of them carry one ampere of current in the same direction, then the force of attraction on the unit length of the wires will be:
1. \(2\times10^{-7}\) N/m
2. \(4\times10^{-7}\) N/m
3. \(8\times10^{-7}\) N/m
4. \(10^{-7}\) N/m
A current-carrying coil (I = 5A, R = 10 cm) has 50 turns. The magnetic field at its centre will be:
1. 1.57 mT
2. 3.14 mT
3. 1 mT
4. 2 mT
Two identically charged particles A and B initially at rest, are accelerated by a common potential difference V. They enter into a transverse uniform magnetic field B. If they describe a circular path of radii respectively, then their mass ratio is:
1.
2.
3.
4.
For the adjoining figure, the magnetic field at a point 'P' will be:
1.
2.
3.
4.
A charge having q/m equal to 108 c/kg and with velocity 3 × 105 m/s enters into a uniform magnetic field B = 0.3 tesla at an angle 30º with the direction of field. Then the radius of curvature will be:
1. 0.01 cm
2. 0.5 cm
3. 1 cm
4. 2 cm
An electron having mass 'm' and kinetic energy E enter in a uniform magnetic field B perpendicularly. Its frequency will be:
1.
2.
3.
4.
In the Thomson mass spectrograph where \(\vec{E}\perp\vec{B}\) the velocity of the undeflected electron beam will be:
1. \(\frac{\left| \vec{E}\right|}{\left|\vec{B} \right|}\)
2. \(\vec{E}\times \vec{B}\)
3. \(\frac{\left| \vec{B}\right|}{\left|\vec{E} \right|}\)
4. \(\frac{E^{2}}{B^{2}}\)
The tangent galvanometer is used to measure:
1. Potential difference
2. Current
3. Resistance
4. In measuring the charge