Surface Tension and Viscosity - NEET Physics Questions
← Back to Solid and Fluids

Surface Tension and Viscosity

Question 1: easy

Assertion (A): A raindrop after falling through some height attains a constant velocity.


Reason (R): At constant velocity the viscous drag plus buoyant force is just equal to its weight.


 

1. (1) Both (A) & (R) are true and the (R) is the correct explanation of the (A)
2. (2) Both (A) & (R) are true but the (R) is not the correct explanation of the (A)
3. (3) (A) is true but (R) is false
4. (4) Both (A) and (R) are false
View Answer

Assertion (A) is true, as falling objects in a fluid reach terminal velocity when resistive forces balance gravity.


Reason (R) is true, stating the force balance condition for constant velocity: Weight = viscous drag + buoyant force. (R) correctly explains (A).

Question 2: easy

Assertion (A): Water flows faster than honey.


Reason (R): The co-efficient of viscosity of water is less than honey.


 

1. (1) Both (A) & (R) are true and the (R) is the correct explanation of the (A)
2. (2) Both (A) & (R) are true but the (R) is not the correct explanation of the (A)
3. (3) (A) is true but (R) is false
4. (4) Both (A) and (R) are false
View Answer

Concept: Viscosity and fluid resistance. Viscosity is a measure of a fluid's resistance to flow. A fluid with lower viscosity flows more easily and thus faster. Water has a significantly lower coefficient of viscosity than honey. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason correctly explains Assertion.

Question 3: easy

Assertion (A): The angle of contact of a liquid decreases with increase in temperature.


Reason (R): With increase in temperature, the surface tension of liquid increases.


 

1. (1) Both (A) & (R) are true and the (R) is the correct explanation of the (A)
2. (2) Both (A) & (R) are true but the (R) is not the correct explanation of the (A)
3. (3) (A) is true but (R) is false
4. (4) Both (A) and (R) are false
View Answer

Concept: Effect of temperature on liquid properties. Assertion (A) is true; generally, the angle of contact decreases with increasing temperature as intermolecular forces weaken. Reason (R) is false; surface tension of a liquid *decreases* with an increase in temperature, not increases, because the kinetic energy of molecules increases, reducing cohesive forces.

Question 4: easy

Assertion (A): The shape of a liquid drop is spherical.


Reason (R): The pressure inside the drop is greater than that of outside.


 

1. (1) Both (A) & (R) are true and the (R) is the correct explanation of the (A)
2. (2) Both (A) & (R) are true but the (R) is not the correct explanation of the (A)
3. (3) (A) is true but (R) is false
4. (4) Both (A) and (R) are false
View Answer

Concept: Surface tension and pressure difference. Assertion (A) is true because surface tension tends to minimize the surface area of a liquid for a given volume, and a sphere has the minimum surface area. Reason (R) is true; due to surface tension, there is an excess pressure inside a spherical liquid drop, given by \(P_{in} - P_{out} = \frac{2T}{R}\). This excess pressure balances the inward pull of surface tension, thus R correctly explains A.

Question 5: easy

Assertion (A): Surface energy of an oil drop is same whether placed on glass or water surface.


Reason (R): Surface energy is dependent only on the properties of oil.


 

1. (1) Both (A) & (R) are true and the (R) is the correct explanation of the (A)
2. (2) Both (A) & (R) are true but the (R) is not the correct explanation of the (A)
3. (3) (A) is true but (R) is false
4. (4) Both (A) and (R) are false
View Answer

Concept: Interfacial surface energy. Surface energy (or surface tension) is a property of the interface between two phases. It depends on the intermolecular forces between the molecules of *both* substances forming the interface. Therefore, an oil-glass interface will have different surface energy than an oil-water interface. Both Assertion and Reason are false.