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PhysicsMediumGraph based2020 · 04 Sep Shift 1

Q20.Take the breakdown voltage of the zener diode used in the given circuit as 6V . For the input voltage shown in the figure below, the time variation of the output voltage is: (Graphs drawn are schematic and not to the scale) JEE Main 2020 (04 Sep Shift 1) JEE Main Previous Year Paper (1) (2) (3) (4)

What This Question Tests

This question tests the understanding of how a Zener diode functions as a voltage regulator, specifically its ability to maintain a constant output voltage when the input voltage exceeds its breakdown voltage.

Concepts Tested

Zener diode breakdown voltageVoltage regulationInput-output characteristics

📚 NCERT Sections This Tests

14.2Which Of The Statements Given In Exercise 14.1 Is True For P-Type

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 14

73% match

14.2 Which of the statements given in Exercise 14.1 is true for p-type semiconductos.

14.3Carbon, Silicon And Germanium Have Four Valence Electrons Each.

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 14

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14.3 Carbon, silicon and germanium have four valence electrons each. These are characterised by valence and conduction bands separated 341 Reprint 2025-26 Physics by energy band gap respectively equal to (Eg)C, (Eg)Si and (Eg)Ge. Which of the following statements is true? (a) (Eg)Si < (Eg)Ge < (Eg)C (b) (Eg)C < (Eg)Ge > (Eg)Si (c) (Eg)C > (Eg)Si > (Eg)Ge (d) (Eg)C = (Eg)Si = (Eg)Ge 14.4 In an unbiased p-n junction, holes diffuse from the p-region to n-region because (a) free electrons in the n-region attract them. (b) they move across the junction by the potential difference. (c) hole concentration in p-region is more as compared to n-region. (d) All the above. 14.5 When a forward bias is applied to a p-n junction, it (a) raises the potential barrier. (b) reduces the majority carrier current to zero. (c) lowers the potential barrier. (d) None of the above. 14.6 In half-wave rectification, what is the output frequency if the input frequency is 50 Hz. What is the output frequency of a full-wave rectifier for the same input frequency. Reprint 2025-26 Notes Reprint 2025-26 Physics APPENDICES APPENDIX A 1 THE GREEK ALPHABET APPENDIX A 2 COMMON SI PREFIXES AND SYMBOLS FOR MULTIPLES AND SUB-MULTIPLES Reprint 2025-26 AppendicesAnswers APPENDIX A 3 SOME IMPORTANT CONSTANTS OTHER USEFUL CONSTANTS 345 Reprint 2025-26 Physics ANSWERS CHAPTER 9 9.1 v = –54 cm. The image is real, inverted and magnified. The size of the image is 5.0 cm. As u ® f, v ® ¥; for u < f, image is virtual. 9.2 v = 6.7 cm. Magnification = 5/9, i.e., the size of the image is 2.5 cm. As u ® ¥; v ® f (but never beyond) while m ® 0. 9.3 1.33; 1.7 cm 9.4 nga = 1.51; nwa = 1.32; ngw = 1.144; which gives sin r = 0.6181 i.e., r ~ 38°. 9.5 r = 0.8 × tan ic and sin ci = 1/1.33 ≅ 0.75 , where r is the radius (in m) of the largest circle from which light comes out and ic is the critical angle for water-air interface, Area = 2.6 m2 9.6 n ≅ 1.53 and Dm for prism in water ≅ 10° 9.7 R = 22 cm 9.8 Here the object is virtual and the image is real. u = +12 cm (object on right; virtual) (a) f = +20 cm. Image is real and at 7.5 cm from the lens on its right side. (b) f = –16 cm. Image is real and at 48 cm from the lens on its right side. 9.9 v = 8.4 cm, image is erect and virtual. It is diminished to a size 1.8 cm. As u ® ¥, v ® f (but never beyond f while m ® 0). Note that when the object is placed at the focus of the concave lens (21 cm), the image is located at 10.5 cm (not at infinity as one might wrongly think). 9.10 A diverging lens of focal length 60 cm 9.11 (a) ve = –25 cm and fe = 6.25 cm give ue = –5 cm; vO = (15 – 5) cm = 10 cm, fO = uO = – 2.5 cm; Magnifying power = 20 (b) uO = – 2.59 cm. Magnifying power = 13.5. 9.12 Angular magnification of the eye-piece for image at 25 cm 25 25   1  11; | u e |= cm = 2 .27cm ; vO = 7.2 cm 2.5 11 Separation = 9.47 cm; Magnifying power = 88 9.13 24; 150 cm 9.14 (a) Angular magnification = 1500 346 (b) Diameter of the image = 13.7 cm. Reprint 2025-26 Answers

3.6Limitations Of Ohm’S Law

Physics Class 11 · Chapter 3

72% match

3.6 LIMITATIONS OF OHM’S LAW Although Ohm’s law has been found valid over a large class of materials, there do exist materials and devices used in electric circuits where the proportionality of V and I does not hold. The deviations broadly are one or more of the following FIGURE 3.5 The dashed line types: represents the linear Ohm’s (a) V ceases to be proportional to I (Fig. 3.5). law. The solid line is the voltage (b) The relation between V and I depends on the sign of V. In V versus current I for a good other words, if I is the current for a certain V, then reversing conductor. the direction of V keeping its magnitude fixed, does not produce a current of the same magnitude as I in the opposite direction (Fig. 3.6). This happens, for example, in a diode which we will study in Chapter 14. FIGURE 3.6 Characteristic curve FIGURE 3.7 Variation of current of a diode. Note the different versus voltage for GaAs. scales for negative and positive values of the voltage and current. (c) The relation between V and I is not unique, i.e., there is more than one value of V for the same current I (Fig. 3.7). A material exhibiting such behaviour is GaAs. Materials and devices not obeying Ohm’s law in the form of Eq. (3.3) are actually widely used in electronic circuits. In this and a few subsequent chapters, however, we will study the electrical currents in materials that obey Ohm’s law.