Young's modulus is a material property and it also depends on temperature of material.
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A weight of $200 \,kg$ is suspended by vertical wire of length $600.5\, cm$. The area of cross-section of wire is $1\,m{m^2}$. When the load is removed, the wire contracts by $0.5 \,cm$. The Young's modulus of the material of wire will be
A brass rod of length $2\,m$ and cross-sectional area $2.0\,cm^2$ is attached end to end to a steel rod of length $L$ and cross-sectional area $1.0\,cm^2$ . The compound rod is subjected to equal and opposite pulls of magnitude $5 \times 10^4\,N$ at its ends. If the elongations of the two rods are equal, then length of the steel rod $(L)$ is ........... $m$ $(Y_{Brass}=1.0\times 10^{11}\,N/m^2$ and $Y_{Steel} = 2.0 \times 10^{11}\,N/m^2)$
A rectangular block of size $10\,cm \times 8\,cm \times 5\,cm$ is kept in three different positions $P, Q$ and $R$ in turn as shown in the figure. In each case, the shaded area is rigidly fixed and a definite force $F$ is applied tangentially to the opposite face to deform the block. The displacement of the upper face will be
Young's modules of material of a wire of length ' $L$ ' and cross-sectional area $A$ is $Y$. If the length of the wire is doubled and cross-sectional area is halved then Young's $modules$ will be :
A steel wire of length ' $L$ ' at $40^{\circ}\,C$ is suspended from the ceiling and then a mass ' $m$ ' is hung from its free end. The wire is cooled down from $40^{\circ}\,C$ to $30^{\circ}\,C$ to regain its original length ' $L$ '. The coefficient of linear thermal expansion of the steel is $10^{-5} { }^{\circ}\,C$, Young's modulus of steel is $10^{11}\, N /$ $m ^2$ and radius of the wire is $1\, mm$. Assume that $L \gg $ diameter of the wire. Then the value of ' $m$ ' in $kg$ is nearly
A block of weight $100 N$ is suspended by copper and steel wires of same cross sectional area $0.5 cm ^2$ and, length $\sqrt{3} m$ and $1 m$, respectively. Their other ends are fixed on a ceiling as shown in figure. The angles subtended by copper and steel wires with ceiling are $30^{\circ}$ and $60^{\circ}$, respectively. If elongation in copper wire is $\left(\Delta \ell_{ C }\right)$ and elongation in steel wire is $\left(\Delta \ell_{ s }\right)$, then the ratio $\frac{\Delta \ell_{ C }}{\Delta \ell_{ S }}$ is. . . . . .
[Young's modulus for copper and steel are $1 \times 10^{11} N / m ^2$ and $2 \times 10^{11} N / m ^2$ respectively]
A rubber cord catapult has cross-sectional area $25\,m{m^2}$ and initial length of rubber cord is $10\,cm.$ It is stretched to $5\,cm.$ and then released to project a missile of mass $5gm.$ Taking ${Y_{rubber}} = 5 \times {10^8}N/{m^2}$ velocity of projected missile is ......... $ms^{-1}$
The ratio of two specific heats of gas ${C_p}/{C_v}$ for argon is $1.6$ and for hydrogen is $1.4$. Adiabatic elasticity of argon at pressure $P$ is $E.$ Adiabatic elasticity of hydrogen will also be equal to $E$ at the pressure