Textbook Excercises
Important Notes
Practice Worksheets
1. Introduction
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We need to measure distances for various purposes like traveling, construction, and scientific studies.
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Early humans measured distances using body parts like hands, feet, and arms. However, these were not standard and led to variations in measurement.
2. History of Transport
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In ancient times, people traveled on foot or used animals like horses, camels, and elephants for transport.
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The invention of the wheel was a revolutionary step, leading to carts, bicycles, cars, trains, and airplanes.
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Today, we have advanced transport systems like metro trains, bullet trains, and airplanes.
3. Measurement and Standard Units
(a) What is Measurement?
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Measurement is the process of comparing an unknown quantity with a known standard quantity.
(b) Standard Units of Measurement
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Earlier, different regions used different units like cubit (elbow to fingertip), handspan, footstep, and fathom (length of outstretched arms).
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The need for standardization led to the International System of Units (SI Units).
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The SI unit of length is meter (m).
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1 km = 1000 m
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1 m = 100 cm
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1 cm = 10 mm
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4. How to Measure Length Accurately?
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Use a measuring tape, scale, or ruler.
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Place the ruler along the object without tilting.
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Read the measurement at eye level to avoid errors.
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Start measuring from zero.
5. Motion (Types of Motion)
Motion is the change in position of an object over time. It can be of different types:
(a) Rectilinear Motion
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An object moves in a straight line.
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Example: A car moving on a straight road, a falling ball.
(b) Circular Motion
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An object moves in a circular path around a fixed point.
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Example: Hands of a clock, movement of a fan blade.
(c) Periodic Motion
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Motion that repeats at regular intervals of time.
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Example: Swinging of a pendulum, revolution of Earth around the Sun.
(d) Rotational Motion
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An object rotates around its own axis.
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Example: Rotation of Earth, spinning of a top.
(e) Mixed Motion
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When an object shows more than one type of motion at the same time.
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Example: A bicycle in motion has rectilinear motion (moving forward) and rotational motion (wheels rotating).
6. Important Definitions
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Distance: The total length covered by a moving object.
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Rest: When an object does not change its position over time.
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Motion: When an object changes its position with respect to time.
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Measurement: The process of determining the length, volume, mass, or any other quantity using standard units.
7. Important Questions for Exams
(a) Fill in the blanks:
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The SI unit of length is ____. (Ans: meter)
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A ball rolling on the ground shows ____ motion. (Ans: Rotational & Rectilinear)
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The motion of a pendulum is an example of ____ motion. (Ans: Periodic)
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1 kilometer = ____ meters. (Ans: 1000 m)
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The rotation of the Earth is an example of ____ motion. (Ans: Rotational)
(b) True or False:
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The measurement of length was always the same in ancient times. (False)
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A fan’s blade shows rectilinear motion. (False, it is circular motion)
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The motion of a train on a straight track is rectilinear motion. (True)
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The SI unit of length is kilometer. (False, it is meter)
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The motion of a swing is periodic. (True)
(c) Short Answer Questions
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What is motion? Give two examples.
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Why do we need standard units of measurement?
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Explain circular motion with an example.
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What are the different types of motion?
(d) Long Answer Questions
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Explain different types of motion with suitable examples.
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Why is measurement important? How were measurements taken in ancient times?
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How has the development of transport changed human life?
8. Summary
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Measurement is essential in daily life.
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Standard units are necessary to avoid confusion.
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Motion can be rectilinear, circular, periodic, rotational, or a combination of these.
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The invention of the wheel revolutionized transport.
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SI unit of length = meter (m).