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MathsMediumNumerical2023 ยท 25 Jan Shift 1

Q65.Let A1, A2, A3 be the three A.P. with the same common difference d and having their first terms as A, A + 1, A + 2, respectively. Let a, b, c be the 7th , 9th , 17th terms of A1, A2, A3 , respectively such that a 7 1 2b 17 1 + 70 = 0 . If a = 29, then the sum of first 20 terms of an AP whose first term is c โˆ’a โˆ’b and c 17 1 common difference is d , is equal to _____ . 12 JEE Main 2023 (25 Jan Shift 1) JEE Main Previous Year Paper ar ) is equal to

What This Question Tests

The question involves setting up equations based on the terms of three different APs, solving for common difference and initial terms, and then finding the sum of terms for a new AP.

Concepts Tested

nth term of an APSum of an APSolving linear equations

Formulas Used

an = A + (n-1)d

Sn = n/2 * (2A + (n-1)d)

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9.20 (a) (i) Let a parallel beam be the incident from the left on the convex lens first. f1 = 30 cm and u1 = โ€“ ๏‚ฅ, give v1 = + 30 cm. This image becomes a virtual object for the second lens. f2 = โ€“20 cm, u 2 = + (30 โ€“ 8) cm = + 22 cm which gives, v2 = โ€“ 220 cm. The parallel incident beam appears to diverge from a point 216 cm from the centre of the two-lens system. (ii) Let the parallel beam be incident from the left on the concave lens first: f1 = โ€“ 20 cm, u1 = โ€“ ยฅ, give v1 = โ€“ 20 cm. This image becomes a real object for the second lens: f2 = + 30 cm, u2 = โ€“ (20 + 8) cm = โ€“ 28 cm which gives, v2 = โ€“ 420 cm. The parallel incident beam appears to diverge from a point 416 cm on the left of the centre of the two-lens system. Clearly, the answer depends on which side of the lens system the parallel beam is incident. 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(c) Magnifying power = 3.5 Yes, the magnifying power (when the image is produced at 25 cm) is equal to the magnitude of magnification. 9.24 Magnification = ( 6.25 / 1) = 2.5 v = +2.5u 1 1 1 ๏€ซ ๏€ญ ๏€ฝ 2.5u u 10 i.e.,u = โ€“ 6 cm |v| = 15 cm The virtual image is closer than the normal near point (25 cm) and cannot be seen by the eye distinctly. 9.25 (a) Even though the absolute image size is bigger than the object size, the angular size of the image is equal to the angular size of the object. The magnifier helps in the following way: without it object would be placed no closer than 25 cm; with it the object can be placed much closer. The closer object has larger angular size than the same object at 25 cm. It is in this sense that angular magnification is achieved. (b) Yes, it decreases a little because the angle subtended at the eye is then slightly less than the angle subtended at the lens. The Reprint 2025-26 Answers effect is negligible if the image is at a very large distance away. [Note: When the eye is separated from the lens, the angles subtended at the eye by the first object and its image are not equal.] (c) First, grinding lens of very small focal length is not easy. More important, if you decrease focal length, aberrations (both spherical and chromatic) become more pronounced. So, in practice, you cannot get a magnifying power of more than 3 or so with a simple convex lens. However, using an aberration corrected lens system, one can increase this limit by a factor of 10 or so. (d) Angular magnification of eye-piece is [(25/fe) + 1] ( fe in cm) which increases if fe is smaller. Further, magnification of the objective v O 1 = is given by | u O | (| u O |/ f O ) โˆ’ 1 which is large when |u O | is slightly greater than fO. The micro- scope is used for viewing very close object. So |u O | is small, and so is fO. 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