Q.20 Consider a spherical particle of mass m and radius r moving in a medium. Its velocity at any time t is given by v=𝑣0 exp(-6𝜋xrt/m) ,where 𝑣0 is initial velocity of the particle. The dimensions of X are (A) MLT-1 (B) M-1LT (C) ML-1T-1 (D) Dimensionless

Q.20 Consider a spherical particle of mass m and radius r moving in a medium. Its velocity at any
time t is given by v=𝑣0 exp(-6𝜋xrt/m) ,where 𝑣0 is initial velocity of the particle. The
dimensions of X are
(A) MLT-1 (B) M-1LT (C) ML-1T-1 (D) Dimensionless

Dimensions of X in Spherical Particle Velocity Equation | Stokes Law Dimensional Analysis

The spherical particle velocity equation \( v = v_0 \exp\left(-\frac{6\pi X r t}{m}\right) \) models drag in viscous media per Stokes’ law. Determining dimensions of X ensures the exponential is dimensionless, vital for dimensional analysis in physics exams like CSIR NET. This guide solves the problem step-by-step, explains options, and links to Stokes law derivation.

Dimensional Analysis

The velocity equation is \( v = v_0 \exp\left(-\frac{6\pi X r t}{m}\right) \). The exponential argument must be dimensionless (\([M^0 L^0 T^0]\)), so \(\left[\frac{X r t}{m}\right] = [M^0 L^0 T^0]\).

Known dimensions are: mass \([m] = [M]\), radius \([r] = [L]\), time \([t] = [T]\). Thus, \([X] = \frac{[M]}{[L][T]} = [M L^{-1} T^{-1}]\).

Physical Context

This form arises from Stokes’ law drag force \( F_d = 6\pi \eta r v \), where \(\eta\) is viscosity with \([\eta] = [M L^{-1} T^{-1}]\).

Newton’s second law gives \( m \frac{dv}{dt} = -6\pi \eta r v \), solving to \( v = v_0 e^{-\frac{6\pi \eta r t}{m}} \).

Thus, X represents viscosity \(\eta\).

Option Analysis

(C) \([M L^{-1} T^{-1}]\): Correct

\([M L^{-1} T^{-1}][L][T]/[M] = [M^0 L^0 T^0]\).

  • (A) \([M L T^{-1}]\): Matches momentum; \([M L T^{-1}][L][T]/[M] = [L T^2]\) (not dimensionless).
  • (B) \([M^{-1} L T]\): \([M^{-1} L T][L][T]/[M] = [L^2 T^2 M^{-2}]\) (not dimensionless).
  • (D) Dimensionless: \([1][L][T]/[M] = [M^{-1} L T]\) (not dimensionless).

Why Dimensional Analysis Matters

Exponents in equations like this must yield dimensionless arguments. Here, velocity \([L T^{-1}]\) on both sides matches, but the exponent \(\frac{6\pi X r t}{m}\) requires \([X] = [M L^{-1} T^{-1}]\), matching viscosity \(\eta\) from \( F = 6\pi \eta r v \).

This confirms X as the viscosity coefficient.

Correct Answer

Option (C) \([M L^{-1} T^{-1}]\)

Detailed verification: \(\left[\frac{X r t}{m}\right] = [M L^{-1} T^{-1} \cdot L \cdot T / M] = 1\).

Other options fail dimensional balance, as analyzed above.

Keywords: spherical particle velocity, dimensions of X, Stokes law dimensional analysis

 

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