NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Physics Chapter 2: Motion in a Straight Line
These Class 11 Physics Chapter 2 solutions cover Motion in a Straight Line from the NCERT textbook (session 2026–27). You get every end-of-chapter Exercise question reproduced verbatim with a complete, step-by-step solution — numericals worked out with correct units and cross-checked final answers, and conceptual questions explained in clear, exam-ready language. The chapter builds the foundations of kinematics: instantaneous velocity and speed, acceleration, the three kinematic equations of uniformly accelerated motion, and relative velocity.
Class 11 Physics Chapter 2 – Overview
Chapter 2, Motion in a Straight Line, studies rectilinear motion — the motion of an object along a single straight line, treating the object as a point object. It is part of kinematics, where we describe how things move without asking what causes the motion. The chapter sharpens the idea of average velocity into instantaneous velocity (the derivative dx/dt, the slope of the tangent to the position–time graph), introduces acceleration as the rate of change of velocity with time, and derives the three kinematic equations for constant acceleration. Special cases such as free fall (a = −g), stopping distance and relative velocity are explored. A recurring skill is reading and interpreting x–t, v–t and a–t graphs, where slope gives velocity/acceleration and the area under a v–t graph gives displacement.
Key Concepts & Definitions
Point object: an object treated as a point because its size is much smaller than the distance it moves — a valid approximation in many real-life problems.
Distance vs displacement: distance is the total path length (a scalar, always positive); displacement is the change in position (a vector, can be positive, negative or zero). |displacement| ≤ distance.
Average velocity = displacement ÷ time interval. Average speed = total path length ÷ time interval; average speed ≥ |average velocity|.
Instantaneous velocity (v): the limit of average velocity as Δt → 0, i.e. v = dx/dt. It equals the slope of the tangent to the x–t graph at that instant.
Instantaneous speed: the magnitude of instantaneous velocity. Unlike averages, instantaneous speed always equals the magnitude of instantaneous velocity.
Acceleration (a): the rate of change of velocity with time. Average acceleration = Δv/Δt; instantaneous acceleration a = dv/dt = slope of the v–t graph. It can be positive, negative (retardation) or zero.
Free fall: motion of a body under gravity alone (air resistance neglected), a uniformly accelerated motion with a = g ≈ 9.8 m s−2 directed downward.
Relative velocity of A with respect to B: vAB = vA − vB.
Graphs: slope of x–t graph = velocity; slope of v–t graph = acceleration; area under v–t graph = displacement.
Important Formulas
Instantaneous velocity: v = dx/dt | Instantaneous acceleration: a = dv/dt = d2x/dt2
Kinematic equations (constant acceleration a):
1. v = v0 + at
2. x = v0t + ½ at2
3. v2 = v02 + 2ax
(If the object is at x0 at t = 0, replace x by (x − x0).)
Free fall (taking up as positive): a = −g; for a body dropped from rest, v = −gt, y = −½gt2.
Stopping distance: ds = v02/(2a) | Relative velocity: vAB = vA − vB
Useful conversion: 1 km h−1 = 5/18 m s−1 ≈ 0.2778 m s−1.
NCERT Exercises 2.1–2.18 — Solutions
Questions are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook. Numerical answers are worked step by step with units and cross-checked against the textbook answer key. Figure/graph questions are answered in words from the given data.
2.1 In which of the following examples of motion, can the body be considered approximately a point object: (a) a railway carriage moving without jerks between two stations. (b) a monkey sitting on top of a man cycling smoothly on a circular track. (c) a spinning cricket ball that turns sharply on hitting the ground. (d) a tumbling beaker that has slipped off the edge of a table.
2.2 The position-time (x-t) graphs for two children A and B returning from their school O to their homes P and Q respectively are shown in Fig. 2.9. Choose the correct entries in the brackets below ; (a) (A/B) lives closer to the school than (B/A) (b) (A/B) starts from the school earlier than (B/A) (c) (A/B) walks faster than (B/A) (d) A and B reach home at the (same/different) time (e) (A/B) overtakes (B/A) on the road (once/twice).
2.3 A woman starts from her home at 9.00 am, walks with a speed of 5 km h–1 on a straight road up to her office 2.5 km away, stays at the office up to 5.00 pm, and returns home by an auto with a speed of 25 km h–1. Choose suitable scales and plot the x-t graph of her motion.
2.4 A drunkard walking in a narrow lane takes 5 steps forward and 3 steps backward, followed again by 5 steps forward and 3 steps backward, and so on. Each step is 1 m long and requires 1 s. Plot the x-t graph of his motion. Determine graphically and otherwise how long the drunkard takes to fall in a pit 13 m away from the start.
2.5 A car moving along a straight highway with speed of 126 km h–1 is brought to a stop within a distance of 200 m. What is the retardation of the car (assumed uniform), and how long does it take for the car to stop ?
2.6 A player throws a ball upwards with an initial speed of 29.4 m s–1. (a) What is the direction of acceleration during the upward motion of the ball ? (b) What are the velocity and acceleration of the ball at the highest point of its motion ? (c) Choose the x = 0 m and t = 0 s to be the location and time of the ball at its highest point, vertically downward direction to be the positive direction of x-axis, and give the signs of position, velocity and acceleration of the ball during its upward, and downward motion. (d) To what height does the ball rise and after how long does the ball return to the player’s hands ? (Take g = 9.8 m s–2 and neglect air resistance).
2.7 Read each statement below carefully and state with reasons and examples, if it is true or false ; A particle in one-dimensional motion (a) with zero speed at an instant may have non-zero acceleration at that instant (b) with zero speed may have non-zero velocity, (c) with constant speed must have zero acceleration, (d) with positive value of acceleration must be speeding up.
2.8 A ball is dropped from a height of 90 m on a floor. At each collision with the floor, the ball loses one tenth of its speed. Plot the speed-time graph of its motion between t = 0 to 12 s.
2.9 Explain clearly, with examples, the distinction between : (a) magnitude of displacement (sometimes called distance) over an interval of time, and the total length of path covered by a particle over the same interval; (b) magnitude of average velocity over an interval of time, and the average speed over the same interval. [Average speed of a particle over an interval of time is defined as the total path length divided by the time interval]. Show in both (a) and (b) that the second quantity is either greater than or equal to the first. When is the equality sign true ? [For simplicity, consider one-dimensional motion only].
2.10 A man walks on a straight road from his home to a market 2.5 km away with a speed of 5 km h–1. Finding the market closed, he instantly turns and walks back home with a speed of 7.5 km h–1. What is the (a) magnitude of average velocity, and (b) average speed of the man over the interval of time (i) 0 to 30 min, (ii) 0 to 50 min, (iii) 0 to 40 min ?
2.11 In Exercises 2.9 and 2.10, we have carefully distinguished between average speed and magnitude of average velocity. No such distinction is necessary when we consider instantaneous speed and magnitude of velocity. The instantaneous speed is always equal to the magnitude of instantaneous velocity. Why?
2.12 Look at the graphs (a) to (d) (Fig. 2.10) carefully and state, with reasons, which of these cannot possibly represent one-dimensional motion of a particle.
2.13 Figure 2.11 shows the x-t plot of one-dimensional motion of a particle. Is it correct to say from the graph that the particle moves in a straight line for t < 0 and on a parabolic path for t >0 ? If not, suggest a suitable physical context for this graph.
2.14 A police van moving on a highway with a speed of 30 km h–1 fires a bullet at a thief’s car speeding away in the same direction with a speed of 192 km h–1. If the muzzle speed of the bullet is 150 m s–1, with what speed does the bullet hit the thief’s car ? (Note: Obtain that speed which is relevant for damaging the thief’s car).
2.15 Suggest a suitable physical situation for each of the following graphs (Fig 2.12):
2.16 Figure 2.13 gives the x-t plot of a particle executing one-dimensional simple harmonic motion. (You will learn about this motion in more detail in Chapter 13). Give the signs of position, velocity and acceleration variables of the particle at t = 0.3 s, 1.2 s, – 1.2 s.
2.17 Figure 2.14 gives the x-t plot of a particle in one-dimensional motion. Three different equal intervals of time are shown. In which interval is the average speed greatest, and in which is it the least ? Give the sign of average velocity for each interval.
2.18 Figure 2.15 gives a speed-time graph of a particle in motion along a constant direction. Three equal intervals of time are shown. In which interval is the average acceleration greatest in magnitude? In which interval is the average speed greatest ? Choosing the positive direction as the constant direction of motion, give the signs of v and a in the three intervals. What are the accelerations at the points A, B, C and D ?
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. Define instantaneous velocity. How is it obtained from a position–time graph?
Q2. A car accelerates uniformly from rest at 4 m s−2. Find its velocity after 5 s and the distance covered in this time.
Q3. Why can the acceleration due to gravity be taken as negative for a body thrown upward?
Q4. State two differences between distance and displacement.
Q5. A body covers half its total path in the last second of its free fall from rest. Without finding the height, state which kinematic relation links distance and time here.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Derive the three kinematic equations of motion for a uniformly accelerated body using the velocity–time graph.
Q2. A stone is dropped from the top of a tower 80 m high. Taking g = 10 m s−2, find (a) the time to reach the ground and (b) its speed on hitting the ground.
Q3. Explain, with the help of velocity–time graphs, how the area under the graph gives displacement and the slope gives acceleration. Why is this useful?
Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)
1. The slope of the tangent to a position–time graph at any instant gives the:
(a) distance (b) instantaneous velocity (c) acceleration (d) average speed
2. The area under a velocity–time graph represents the:
(a) acceleration (b) speed (c) displacement (d) jerk
3. A speed of 90 km h−1 is equal to:
(a) 18 m s−1 (b) 25 m s−1 (c) 30 m s−1 (d) 45 m s−1
4. At the highest point of its path, a ball thrown vertically upward has:
(a) zero velocity and zero acceleration (b) zero velocity and acceleration g downward (c) maximum velocity (d) zero acceleration
5. For a body in free fall from rest, the distance fallen in time t is:
(a) gt (b) ½gt (c) ½gt2 (d) 2gt2
6. Which kinematic equation does NOT contain time t?
(a) v = v0 + at (b) x = v0t + ½at2 (c) v2 = v02 + 2ax (d) x = vt
7. The stopping distance of a vehicle is proportional to:
(a) the initial velocity (b) the square of the initial velocity (c) the deceleration (d) the time only
8. For an object moving with constant velocity, the position–time graph is a:
(a) parabola (b) straight line inclined to the time axis (c) horizontal straight line (d) circle
9. Two trains move in the same direction at 60 km h−1 and 40 km h−1. The velocity of the first relative to the second is:
(a) 100 km h−1 (b) 20 km h−1 (c) 0 (d) 50 km h−1
10. The average speed of a particle is always:
(a) less than the magnitude of average velocity (b) equal to the magnitude of average velocity (c) greater than or equal to the magnitude of average velocity (d) zero
Assertion–Reason Questions
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: A body can have zero velocity and still have non-zero acceleration.
Reason: At the highest point of vertical motion, a ball has zero velocity but acceleration equal to g.
A-R 2. Assertion: The average speed of a moving particle can never be less than the magnitude of its average velocity.
Reason: The total path length is always greater than or equal to the magnitude of the displacement.
A-R 3. Assertion: Instantaneous speed is always equal to the magnitude of instantaneous velocity.
Reason: Over an infinitesimally small time interval the path length equals the magnitude of the displacement.
A-R 4. Assertion: A positive value of acceleration always means the particle is speeding up.
Reason: Acceleration and velocity are both vector quantities.
A-R 5. Assertion: The position–time graph of a uniformly accelerated body is a parabola.
Reason: For uniform acceleration, position varies as the square of time (x = v0t + ½at2).
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Watch out for these
- Confusing distance with displacement (and average speed with magnitude of average velocity) — remember speed/distance count the whole path, velocity/displacement count only net change.
- Thinking acceleration is zero at the highest point of a thrown ball — the velocity is zero there, but acceleration stays g = 9.8 m s−2 downward.
- Forgetting to convert km h−1 to m s−1 (multiply by 5/18) before using SI-unit formulas.
- Mixing up signs: fix one positive direction first, then assign signs to v0, v, a and x consistently (e.g. up positive → g is negative).
- Assuming a positive acceleration means speeding up — it depends on the direction of acceleration relative to velocity.
- Treating an x-t graph as the actual path of the particle — it only shows position versus time, not the trajectory in space.
Exam Tips
How to score full marks in this chapter
Always write the given data with units, choose a sign convention, and state the formula before substituting. For free-fall problems, decide your positive direction first and keep g consistent (use g = 9.8 or 10 m s−2 exactly as the question says). Pick the kinematic equation that involves only the known quantities plus the unknown — use v2 = v02 + 2ax when time is neither given nor asked. For graph questions, remember the golden rule: slope of x-t = velocity, slope of v-t = acceleration, area under v-t = displacement. Round the final answer to the correct significant figures and clearly state the unit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 11 Physics Chapter 2 Motion in a Straight Line about?
Chapter 2 deals with rectilinear (straight-line) motion in kinematics — instantaneous velocity and speed, acceleration, the three kinematic equations for uniformly accelerated motion, special cases such as free fall and stopping distance, relative velocity, and the interpretation of x-t, v-t and a-t graphs.
How many exercise questions are there in Class 11 Physics Chapter 2?
The NCERT textbook (session 2026-27) has Exercises numbered 2.1 to 2.18 at the end of the chapter. All eighteen are reproduced here with complete step-by-step solutions, and the numericals are cross-checked against the official answer key.
What are the three kinematic equations of motion?
For constant acceleration a: (1) v = v0 + at, (2) x = v0t + half a t squared, and (3) v squared = v0 squared + 2ax. If the body is at position x0 at t = 0, x is replaced by (x – x0).
