Question detail

Forces and elasticity scenario: a car driver reacts, brakes, and transfers kinetic energy thermally. Which answer best addresses Stretching and deformation and the objective to describe what happens when an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Forces and elasticity

Question

  1. A. In the car braking scenario, apply limit of proportionality to describe what happens when an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality while keeping elastic versus plastic deformation separate.
  2. B. In the car braking scenario, mix up elastic versus plastic deformation and ignore limit of proportionality.
  3. C. Use a general revision statement without applying Stretching and deformation to the situation.
  4. D. Choose a different forces topic instead of explaining describe what happens when an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality.

Answer

The correct answer is: In the car braking scenario, apply limit of proportionality to describe what happens when an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality while keeping elastic versus plastic deformation separate.

Explanation

The correct option is In the car braking scenario, apply limit of proportionality to describe what happens when an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality while keeping elastic versus plastic deformation separate.. It is correct because the scenario says a car driver reacts, brakes, and transfers kinetic energy thermally, which must be interpreted through Stretching and deformation. This directly supports the learning objective to describe what happens when an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality. Use values 6, 10, and 17 only if the question asks for a calculation. The answer earns credit by naming the relevant force or motion quantity, using units when needed, and avoiding the boundary error elastic versus plastic deformation.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding Limit of Proportionality

Students often think that once an object is stretched beyond the limit of proportionality, it will return to its original shape.

Clarify that beyond the limit of proportionality, the object undergoes inelastic deformation and does not return to its original shape.

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