Q90.If 12 identical balls are to be placed in 3 identical boxes, then the probability that one of the boxes contains exactly 3 balls is (1) 22( 13 )11 (2) 195 (3) 55( 32 )10 (4) 220( 31 )12 JEE Main 2015 (04 Apr) JEE Main Previous Year Paper
What This Question Tests
This question involves a challenging counting problem: distributing identical balls into identical boxes, where one box must contain exactly 3 balls. It requires enumerating partitions or applying combinatorial reasoning for specific conditions.
Concepts Tested
Formulas Used
Partitions of an integer
Stars and bars method (if boxes were distinguishable)
Conditional probability / specific case counting
📚 NCERT Sections This Tests
12.5 — A Hydrogen Atom Initially In The Ground Level Absorbs A Photon,
Physics Class 12 · Chapter 12
12.5 A hydrogen atom initially in the ground level absorbs a photon, which excites it to the n = 4 level. Determine the wavelength and frequency of photon.
11.3 — Zeroth Law Of Thermodynamics (A)
Physics Class 12 · Chapter 11
11.3 ZEROTH LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS (a) Imagine two systems A and B, separated by an adiabatic wall, while each is in contact with a third system C, via a conducting wall [Fig. 11.2(a)]. The states of the systems (i.e., their macroscopic variables) will change until both A and B come to thermal equilibrium with C. After this is achieved, suppose that the adiabatic wall between A and B is replaced by a conducting wall and C is insulated from A and B by an adiabatic wall [Fig.11.2(b)]. It is found that the states of A and B change no (b) further i.e. they are found to be in thermal Fig. 11.2 (a) Systems A and B are separated by an equilibrium with each other. This observation adiabatic wall, while each is in contact forms the basis of the Zeroth Law of with a third system C via a conducting Thermodynamics, which states that ‘two wall. (b) The adiabatic wall between A systems in thermal equilibrium with a third and B is replaced by a conducting wall, system separately are in thermal equilibrium while C is insulated from A and B by an adiabatic wall.with each other’. R.H. Fowler formulated this * Both the variables need not change. It depends on the constraints. For instance, if the gases are in containers of fixed volume, only the pressures of the gases would change to achieve thermal equilibrium. Reprint 2025-26 THERMODYNAMICS 229
12.1 — (A) No Different From
Physics Class 12 · Chapter 12
12.1 (a) No different from (b) Thomson’s model; Rutherford’s model (c) Rutherford’s model (d) Thomson’s model; Rutherford’s model (e) Both the models
📋 Question Details
- Chapter
- Probability
- Topic
- Combinations and Probability
- Year
- 2015
- Shift
- 04 Apr
- Q Number
- Q90
- Type
- MCQ
- NCERT Ref
- Class 11 Mathematics Ch 7: Permutations and Combinations | Class 12 Mathematics Ch 13: Probability
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