R Thermocouple Type Then
R Thermocouple Type Then
1. On the Celsius scale the absolute zero of 12. ‘Stem Correction’ in platinum resistance
temperature is at thermometers are eliminated by the use of
[CBSE PMT 1994] (a) Cells (b) Electrodes
(a) 0°C (b) – 32°C (c) Compensating leads (d) None of the above
(c) 100°C (d) – 273.15°C 13. The absolute zero is the temperature at which
2. Oxygen boils at – 183°C. This temperature is [AIIMS 1998]
approximately
(a) Water freezes
[CPMT 1992]
(b) All substances exist in solid state
(a) 215°F (b) – 297°F
(c) Molecular motion ceases
(c) 329°F (d) 361°F
(d) None of the above
3. Recently, the phenomenon of superconductivity
has been observed at 95 K. This temperature is 14. Absolute scale of temperature is reproduced in
nearly equal to the laboratory by making use of a
[CPMT 1990] (a) Radiation pyrometer
(a) – 288°F (b) – 146°F (b) Platinum resistance thermometer
(c) – 368°F (d) +178°F (c) Constant volume helium gas thermometer
4. The temperature of a substance increases by 27°C. (d) Constant pressure ideal gas thermometer
On the Kelvin scale this increase is equal to[CPMT 1993]
15. Absolute zero (0 K) is that temperature at which
(a) 300 K (b) 2.46 K
[AFMC 1993]
(c) 27 K (d) 7 K
(a) Matter ceases to exist
5. The resistance of a resistance thermometer has
values 2.71 and 3.70 ohm at 10°C and 100°C. The (b) Ice melts and water freezes
temperature at which the resistance is 3.26 ohm (c) Volume and pressure of a gas becomes zero
is [CPMT 1994]
(d) None of these
(a) 40°C (b) 50°C
16. On which of the following scales of temperature,
(c) 60°C (d) 70°C the temperature is never negative
6. No other thermometer is as suitable as a platinum (a) Celsius (b) Fahrenheit
resistance thermometer to measure temperature
(c) Reaumur (d) Kelvin
in the entire range of
[MNR 1993]
17. The temperature on Celsius scale is 25°C. What is
the corresponding temperature on the Fahrenheit
(a) 0°C to 100°C (b) 100°C to 1500°C scale
(c) – 50°C to +350°C (d) – 200°C to 600°C [AFMC 2001]
(a) 40°F (b) 77°F
7. The temperature of the sun is measured with (c) 50°F (d) 45°F
[Pb. PMT 1998; CPMT 1998; Pb. PET 1997, 2001] 18. One quality of a thermometer is that its heat
(a) Platinum thermometer capacity should be small. If P is a mercury
thermometer, Q is a resistance thermometer and
(b) Gas thermometer
R thermocouple type then [CPMT 1997]
(c) Pyrometer
(a) P is best, R worst (b) R is best, P worst
(d) Vapour pressure thermometer
(c) R is best, Q worst (d) P is best, Q worst
8. Absolute temperature can be calculated by[AFMC 1994]
19. Two thermometers are used to record the
(a) Mean square velocity (b) Motion of the temperature of a room. If the bulb of one is
molecule wrapped in wet hanky
(c) Both (a) and (b) (d) None of the above [AFMC 1997]
9. Thermoelectric thermometer is based on (a) The temperature recorded by both will be
[CPMT 1993, 95; AFMC 1998] same
(a) Photoelectric effect (b) Seeback effect (b) The temperature recorded by wet-bulb
thermometer will be greater than that
(c) Compton effect (d) Joule effect
recorded by the other
10. Maximum density of H 2O is at the temperature
(c) The temperature recorded by dry-bulb
[CPMT 1996; Pb. PMT 1996] thermometer will be greater than that
(a) 32°F (b) 39.2°F recorded by the other
11. The study of physical phenomenon at low 20. The temperature of a body on Kelvin scale is
temperatures (below liquid nitrogen temperature) found to be x K. When it is measured by
is called [CPMT 1992]
Fahrenheit thermometer, it is found to be x°F,
then the value of x is
(a) Refrigeration (b) Radiation
[UPSEAT 2000; Pb. CET 2004]
(c) Cryogenics (d) Pyrometry
(a) Maintaining vacuum above mercury column in 1. When a copper ball is heated, the largest
the stem of the thermometer percentage increase will occur in its
(b) Filling nitrogen gas at high pressure above the (a) Diameter (b) Area
mercury column (c) Volume (d) Density
(c) Filling nitrogen gas at low pressure above the 2. A vertical column 50 cm long at 50°C balances
mercury level another column of same liquid 60 cm long at
(d) Filling oxygen gas at high pressure above the 100°C. The coefficient of absolute expansion of
mercury column the liquid is [EAMCET 1990]
28. A device used to measure very high temperature (a) 0.005/°C (b) 0.0005/°C
is
(c) 0.002/°C (d) 0.0002/°C
(c) 10
–3
(d) 10
–4 (d) Data insufficient to arrive at a conclusion
20. Coefficient of real expansion of mercury is 0.18 28. The length of a metallic rod is 5m at 0°C and
–3 becomes 5.01 m, on heating upto 100°C. The
10 /°C. If the density of mercury at 0°C is 13.6
linear expansion of the metal will be
gm/cc. its density at 473K is [DPMT 1996]
–5 –5
(a) 2.33 10 /°C (b) 6.0 10 /°C
(a) 13.11 gm/cc (b) 26.22 gm/cc –5 –5
(c) 4.0 10 /°C (d) 2.0 10 /°C
(c) 52.11 gm/cc (d) None of these
29. A metal rod of silver at 0°C is heated to 100°C.
21. The real coefficient of volume expansion of It's length is increased by 0.19 cm. Coefficient of
glycerine is 0.000597 per°C and linear coefficient
cubical expansion of the silver rod is
of expansion of glass is 0.000009 per°C. Then the
–5 –5
apparent volume coefficient of expansion of (a) 5.7 10 /°C (b) 0.63 10 /°C
–5 –5
glycerine is [AIIMS 2000] (c) 1.9 10 /°C (d) 16.1 10 /°C
(a) 0.000558 per°C (b) 0.00057 per°C 30. A brass disc fits simply in a hole of a steel plate.
(c) 0.00027 per°C (d) 0.00066 per°C The disc from the hole can be loosened if the
system [UPSEAT 2001]
22. A beaker is completely filled with water at 4°C. It
will overflow if [EAMCET 1992; BHU 1994; AFMC 2005] (a) First heated then cooled (b)First cooled then heated
(a) Heated above 4°C (c) Is heated (d) Is cooled
(b) Cooled below 4°C 31. An iron bar of length 10 m is heated from 0°C to
(c) Both heated and cooled above and below 4°C 100°C. If the coefficient of linear thermal expansion
–6
respectively of iron is 10 10 /°C, the increase in the length of
(d) None of the above bar is [UPSEAT 2005]
23. The volume of a metal sphere increases by 0.24% (a) 0.5 cm (b) 1.0 cm
when its temperature is raised by 40°C. The
(c) 1.5 cm (d) 2.0 cm
coefficient of linear expansion of the metal is
.......... °C [Kerala PMT 2005] 32. If a cylinder of diameter 1.0 cm at 30°C is to be
(a) 2 10
–5
(b) 6 10
–5 solid into a hole of diameter 0.9997 cm in a steel
–5 –5
plate at the same temperature, then minimum
(c) 2.1 10 (d) 1.2 10 required rise in the temperature of the plate is :
24. Ratio among linear expansion coefficient (), (Coefficient of linear expansion of steel
areal expansion coefficient () and volume 12 10 6 / C ) [EAMCET 2001]
expansion coefficient () is [RPMT 2000]
(a) 25°C (b) 35°C
(a) 1 : 2 : 3 (b) 3 : 2 : 1
(c) 45°C (d) 55°C
(c) 4 : 3 : 2 (d) None of these
33. Surface of the lake is at 2°C. Find the temperature
25. If on heating liquid through 80°C, the mass of the bottom of the lake [
th
expelled is (1/100) of mass still remaining, the
(a) 2°C (b) 3°C
coefficient of apparent expansion of liquid is [RPMT 2004]
–4 –4 (c) 4°C (d) 1°C
(a) 1.25 10 /°C (b) 12.5 10 /°C
–5 34. Two rods, one of aluminum and the other made of
(c) 1.25 10 /°C (b) None of these
steel, having initial length l1 and l2 are connected
26. In cold countries, water pipes sometimes burst, together to form a single rod of length l1 l2 . The
because coefficients of linear expansion for aluminum and
(a) Pipe contracts steel are a and s respectively. If the length of
(b) Water expands on freezing each rod increases by the same amount when
their temperature are raised by t o C , then find the
(c) When water freezes, pressure increases
l1
ratio [IIT-JEE (Screening) 2003]
(d) When water freezes, it takes heat from pipes (l1 l2 )
27. A cylindrical metal rod of length L0 is shaped into s a
a ring with a small gap as shown. On heating the (a) (b)
a s
system
s a
X (c) (d)
( a s ) ( a s )
r Calorimetry
1. When vapour condenses into liquid [CPMT 1990]
d
[Type text] Page 4
Thermodynamics
(a) It absorbs heat (b) It liberates heat 12. Heat required to convert one gram of ice at 0°C
(c) Its temperature increases (d) Itsinto steam at 100°C
temperature is (given Lsteam = 536 cal/gm)[Pb. PMT
decreases
2. At NTP water boils at 100°C. Deep down the mine, (a) 100 calorie (b) 0.01 kilocalorie
water will boil at a temperature (c) 716 calorie
[CPMT 1996] (d) 1 kilocalorie
(a) 100°C (b) > 100°C 13. 80 gm of water at 30°C are poured on a large
(c) < 100°C (d) Will not boil at all block of ice at 0°C. The mass of ice that melts is [
(a) 30 gm (b) 80 gm
3. If specific heat of a substance is infinite, it means
(c) 1600 gm (d) 150 gm
[AIIMS 1997]
14. The saturation vapour pressure of water at 100°C
(a) Heat is given out is
(b) Heat is taken in [EAMCET 1997]
(c) No change in temperature takes place whether (a) 739 mm of mercury (b) 750 mm of mercury
heat is taken in or given out (c) 760 mm of mercury (d) 712 mm of mercury
(d) All of the above 15. Two spheres made of same substance have
4. A gas in an airtight container is heated from 25°C diameters in the ratio 1 : 2. Their thermal
to 90°C. The density of the gas will capacities
[BCECEare1997]
in the ratio of
(a) Increase slightly (b) Increase [JIPMER 1999]
considerably (a) 1 : 2 (b) 1 : 8
(c) Remain the same (d) Decrease slightly (c) 1 : 4 (d) 2 : 1
5. A quantity of heat required to change the unit 16. Work done in converting one gram of ice at –10°C
mass of a solid substance, from solid state to into steam at 100°C is
liquid state, while the temperature remains [MP PET/PMT 1988; EAMCET (Med.) 1995; MP PMT 2003]
constant, is known as [AIIMS 1998]
(a) 3045 J (b) 6056 J
(a) Latent heat (b) Sublimation
(c) 721 J (d) 616 J
(c) Hoar frost (d) Latent heat of fusion
17. If mass energy equivalence is taken into account,
6. The latent heat of vaporization of a substance is
when water is cooled to form ice, the mass of
always
water should
[SCRA 1998]
[AIEEE 2002]
(a) Greater than its latent heat of fusion
(a) Increase (b) Remain unchanged
(b) Greater than its latent heat of sublimation
(c) Decrease (d) First increase then
(c) Equal to its latent heat of sublimation decrease
(d) Less than its latent heat of fusion 18. Compared to a burn due to water at 100°C, a burn
7. The factor not needed to calculate heat lost or due to steam at 100°C is [KCET 1999; UPSEAT 1999]
gained when there is no change of state is [AFMC 1997; BHU 1997]
(a) More dangerous (b) Less dangerous
(a) Weight (b) Specific heat
(c) Equally dangerous (d) None of these
(c) Relative density (d) Temperature change
19. 50 gm of copper is heated to increase its
8. 540 g of ice at 0°C is mixed with 540 g of water at temperature by 10°C. If the same quantity of heat
80°C. The final temperature of the mixture is[AFMC 1994] is given to 10 gm of water, the rise in its
(a) 0°C (b) 40°C temperature is (Specific heat of copper = 420
–1 –1
Joule-kg °C ) [EAMCET (Med.) 2000]
(c) 80°C (d) Less than 0°C
(a) 5°C (b) 6°C
9. Water is used to cool radiators of engines,
because (c) 7°C (d) 8°C
[AFMC 2001] 20. Two liquids A and B are at 32°C and 24°C. When
(a) Of its lower density (b) It is easily available mixed in equal masses the temperature of the
mixture is found to be 28°C. Their specific heats
(c) It is cheap (d) It has high specific
are in the ratio of [DPMT 1996]
heat
10. How much heat energy is gained when 5 kg of (a) 3 : 2 (b) 2 : 3
water at 20°C is brought to its boiling point (c) 1 : 1 (d) 4 : 3
–1 –1
(Specific heat of water = 4.2 kJ kg c ) [BHU 2001] 21. A beaker contains 200 gm of water. The heat
(a) 1680 kJ (b) 1700 kJ capacity of the beaker is equal to that of 20 gm of
(c) 1720 kJ (d) 1740 kJ water. The initial temperature of water in the
beaker is 20°C. If 440 gm of hot water at 92°C is
11. Melting point of ice [CBSE PMT 1993]
poured in it, the final temperature (neglecting
(a) Increases with increasing pressure radiation loss) will be nearest to [NSEP 1994]
(b) Decreases with increasing pressure (a) 58°C (b) 68°C
(c) Is independent of pressure
(c) 73°C (d) 78°C
(d) Is proportional to pressure
(a) Water will boil 37. 0.93 watt-hour of energy is supplied to a block of
ice weighing 10 gm. It is found that
(b) Water will freeze
[NCERT 1973; DPMT 1999]
(c) Nothing will happen on it
(a) Half of the block melts
(d) It will decompose into H 2 and O 2
(b) The entire block melts and the water attains a
29. The thermal capacity of 40 gm of aluminium temperature of 4°C
(specific heat = 0.2 cal/gm/°C) is [CBSE
(c) The PMT
entire 1990]
block just melts
(a) 40 cal/°C (b) 160 cal/°C (d) The block remains unchanged
5
(c) 200 cal/°C (d) 8 cal/°C 38. The weight of a person is 60 kg. If he gets 10
30. If temperature scale is changed from °C to °F, the calories heat through food and the efficiency of
numerical value of specific heat will [CPMT 1984]
43. Of two masses of 5 kg each falling from height of 51. A lead bullet of 10 g travelling at 300 m/s strikes
10 m, by which 2kg water is stirred. The rise in against a block of wood and comes to rest.
Assuming 50% of heat is absorbed by the bullet,
temperature of water will be [RPET 1997]
the increase in its temperature is
(a) 2.6°C (b) 1.2°C
(Specific heat of lead = 150J/kg, K) [EAMCET 2001]
(c) 0.32°C (d) 0.12°C (a) 100°C (b) 125°C
44. A lead ball moving with a velocity V strikes a wall (c) 150°C (d) 200°C
and stops. If 50% of its energy is converted into
52. The temperature at which the vapour pressure of
heat, then what will be the increase in
a liquid becomes equals to the external
temperature (Specific heat of lead is S)
(atmospheric) pressure is its
[RPMT 1996]
[Kerala (Engg.) 2001]
2 2
2V V
(a) (b) (a) Melting point (b) Sublimation point
JS 4 JS
(c) Critical temperature (d) Boiling point
V2 V 2S
(c) (d) 53. When the pressure on water is increased the
J 2J boiling temperature of water as compared to
45. The mechanical equivalent of heat J is[MP PET 2000] 100°C will be
(a) Lower
(c) A conversion factor (d) None of the above
(b) The same
46. Water falls from a height of 210m. Assuming
whole of energy due to fall is converted into heat (c) Higher
(d) On the critical temperature
76. Three liquids with masses m1 , m 2 , m 3 are 1. A glass flask is filled up to a mark with 50 cc of
mercury at 18ºC. If the flask and contents are
thoroughly mixed. If their specific heats are
heated to 38ºC, how much mercury will be
c1 , c 2 , c 3 and their temperatures T1 , T2 , T3 –6
above the mark ? ( for glass is 9 × 10 /ºC and
respectively, then the temperature of the mixture coefficient of real expansion of mercury is 180
–6
is × 10 /ºC) [EAMCET 1997]
m 1 c 1 T1 m 2 c 2 T2 m 3 c 3 T3 6
/ºC, then that of glass is
(c)
m 1T 1 m 2 T 2 m 3 T3
[EAMCET 1997]
m 1 T1 m 2 T2 m 3 T3 –6
(a) 9 × 10 /ºC
–6
(b) 6 × 10 /ºC
(d)
c 1T 1 c 2 T 2 c 3 T 3 –6
(c) 36 × 10 /ºC
–6
(d) 27 × 10 /ºC
77. The point on the pressure temperature phase 3. Solids expand on heating because [
diagram where all the phases co-exist is called[MH CET 2005]
(a) Kinetic energy of the atoms increases
(a) Sublimation (b) Fusion point
(b) Potential energy of the atoms increases
(c) Triple point (d) Vaporisation point
(c) Total energy of the atoms increases
78. Boiling water is changing into steam. At this stage
(d) The potential energy curve is asymmetric
the specific heat of water is [UPSEAT 1998]
about the equilibrium distance between
(a) < 1 (b) neighbouring atoms
(c) 60°C (d) 50°C 5. A glass flask of volume one litre at 0°C is filled,
level full of mercury at this temperature. The
80. The thermal capacity of a body is 80 cal, then its flask and mercury are now heated to 100°C. How
water equivalent is [UPSEAT 2001]
much mercury will spill out, if coefficient of
(a) 80 cal / gm (b) 8 gm volume expansion of mercury is 1.82 10 4 / C and
(c) 80 gm (d) 80 kg linear expansion of glass is 0.1 10 4 / C
81. A liquid of mass M and specific heat S is at a
respectively [MNR 1994]
temperature 2t. If another liquid of thermal
(a) 21.2 cc (b) 15.2 cc
[Type text] Page 9
Thermodynamics
–5 –5
(c) 1.52 cc (d) 2.12 cc (a) 3.316 × 10 /ºC (b) 2.316 × 10 /ºC
–5
6. A steel scale measures the length of a copper wire (c) 4.316 × 10 /ºC (d) None of these
as 80 .0 cm, when both are at 20 C (the calibration 12. It is known that wax contracts on solidification. If
temperature for scale). What would be the scale molten wax is taken in a large vessel and it is
read for the length of the wire when both are at allowed to cool slowly, then
40 C ? (Given steel 11 10 6 per°C and copper (a) It will start solidifying from the top
17 10 6 per C ) downward
[CPMT 2004] (b) It will start solidifying from the bottom
(a) 80 .0096 cm (b) 80 .0272 cm upward
(a) 7 kg (b) 6 kg
10. The coefficient of volumetric expansion of
mercury is (c) 4 kg (d) 2 kg
–5
18 × 10 /ºC. A thermometer bulb has a volume
–6 3 2 16. Water of volume 2 litre in a container is heated
10 m and cross section of stem is 0.004 cm .
with a coil of 1 kW at 27 C . The lid of the
Assuming that bulb is filled with mercury at 0ºC
then the length of the mercury column at 100ºC is container is open and energy dissipates at rate of
[Pb. PMT 1998, DPMT 1997, 2001] 160 J / s. In how much time temperature will rise
(c) Equal for both the balls 24. A one litre glass flask contains some mercury. It is
found that at different temperatures the volume of
(d) None is correct from the above three
air inside the flak remains the same. What is the
19. The temperature of equal masses of three volume of mercury in this flask if coefficient of
–6
different liquids A, B and C are 12ºC, 19ºC and linear expansion of glass is 9 10 /°C while of
–4
28ºC respectively. The temperature when A and B volume expansion of mercury is 1.8 10 /°C
are mixed is 16ºC and when B and C are mixed is (a) 50 cc (b) 100 cc
23ºC. The temperature when A and C are mixed is
(c) 150 cc (d) 200 cc
[Kerala PET 2005]
25. 10 gm of ice at – 20°C is dropped into a calorimeter
(a) 18.2ºC (b) 22ºC
containing 10 gm of water at 10°C; the specific
(c) 20.2ºC (d) 25.2ºC heat of water is twice that of ice. When
20. In an industrial process 10 kg of water per hour is equilibrium is reached, the calorimeter will
to be heated from 20°C to 80°C. To do this steam at contain
150°C is passed from a boiler into a copper coil (a) 20 gm of water
immersed in water. The steam condenses in the
(b) 20 gm of ice
coil and is returned to the boiler as water at 90°C.
how many kg of steam is required per hour. (c) 10 gm ice and 10 gm water
(d) 5 gm ice and 15 gm water
(Specific heat of steam = 1 calorie per gm°C, Latent
heat of vaporisation = 540 cal/gm) 26. A rod of length 20 cm is made of metal. It expands
by 0.075cm when its temperature is raised from
(a) 1 gm (b) 1 kg
0°C to 100°C. Another rod of a different metal B
(c) 10 gm (d) 10 kg having the same length expands by 0.045 cm for
21. In a vertical U-tube containing a liquid, the two the same change in temperature. A third rod of
arms are maintained at different temperatures t 1 the same length is composed of two parts, one of
and t 2 . The liquid columns in the two arms have metal A and the other of metal B. This rod
expands by 0.060 cm for the same change in
heights l1 and l 2 respectively. The coefficient of
temperature. The portion made of metal A has the
volume expansion of the liquid is equal to length [CPMT 1991]
t1
t2
(a) 20 cm (b) 10 cm
l1
(c) 15 cm (d) 18 cm
l2
27. Steam is passed into 22 gm of water at 20°C. The
mass of water that will be present when the
l1 l 2 l1 l 2 water acquires a temperature of 90°C (Latent
(a) (b)
l 2 t 1 l1 t 2 l1 t 1 l 2 t 2 heat of steam is 540 cal/gm) is
l1 l 2 l1 l 2 [SCRA 1994]
(c) (d)
l 2 t 1 l1 t 2 l1 t 1 l 2 t 2 (a) 24.8 gm (b) 24 gm
Temperature
B(H2,T1)
210 D
(T°C)
O H B E
60
C
(a) T 2 is the melting point of the solid 30
A Time
(b) BC represents the change of state from solid
to liquid
(a) BC (b) CD
(c) (H 2 H1 ) represents the latent heat of fusion
of the substance (c) ED (d) EF
(d) (H 3 H1 ) represents the latent heat of 7. The variation of density of water with
vaporization of the liquid temperature is represented by the
converted to steam at 100°C. Which of the following curves represents the phenomenon qualitatively [IIT-JEE (Scre
Density
(a) (b)
Temperatu
Temperatu
Temperatur
re
re
e Temperatur
(c) (d)
e
Density
Density
Heat Heat
supplied supplied
(c) (d)
Temperatu
Temperatu
Temperatur Temperatur
e e
re
re
Temperature
4 A
0
80
4
Time (b)
°C
60
9 40 B
150
not the correct explanation of the assertion.
100 (c) If assertion is true but reason is false.
50 (d) If the assertion and reason both are false.
0 (e) If assertion is false but reason is true.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Time 1. Assertion : The melting point of ice decreases
(Minute) with increase of pressure.
(a) 500 cal, 50°C (b) 1000 cal, 100°C Reason : Ice contracts on melting. [AIIMS 2004]
(c) 1500 cal, 200°C (d) 200°C 2. Assertion : Fahrenheit is the smallest unit
12. The graph signifies [JIPMER 1999] measuring temperature.
Reason : Fahrenheit was the first temperature
Temperature
(a) Adiabatic expansion of a gas Reason : Latent heat is the heat required to
melt a unit mass of solid. [AIIMS 1998]
(b) Isothermal expansion of a gas
4. Assertion : Specific heat capacity is the cause
(c) Change of state from liquid to solid of formation of land and sea breeze.
(d) Cooling of a heated solid Reason : The specific heat of water is more
than land.
13. Which of the substances A, B or C has the highest [AIIMS 1995]
specific heat ? The temperature vs time graph is
5. Assertion : A brass disc is just fitted in a hole
shown in a steel plate. The system must be
cooled to loosen the disc from the
A
hole.
Temperature
B
Reason : The coefficient of linear expansion
(T)
1 b 2 c 3 a 4 a 5 d
6 b 7 a 8 a 9 a 10 bc
11 c 12 c 13 c 14 c
1 a 2 c 3 e 4 a 5 a
1 d 2 b 3 a 4 c 5 b
Thermometry C F 32 C (140 32 )
21. (c) C 60
5 9 5 9
1. (d) T 273 .15 tC 0 273 .15 tC C F 32 t t 32
22. (a) t 40
t 273 .15 C 5 9 5 9
C F 32 183 F 32 23. (d) Standardisation of thermometers is done with
2. (b) F 297 F
5 9 5 9 gas thermometer.
8. (a) v 2 T
9. (b) Thermoelectric thermometer is based on
Seeback Effect.
10. (b) Maximum density of water is at 4°C
C F 32 4 F 32
Also F 39 .2F
5 9 5 9
11. (c) Production and measurement of temperature
close to 0 K is done in cryogenics
12. (c)
13. (c) At absolute zero (i.e. 0 K) vrms becomes zero.
14. (c)
15. (c) We know that P P0 (1 t) and V V0 (1 t)