Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 1 Solutions (NCERT 2026–27) – Exploration: Entering the World of Secondary Science

These Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 1 solutions cover Exploration: Entering the World of Secondary Science from the new NCF-2023 textbook (2026–27).

Class: 9 Subject: Science Book: Exploration Chapter: 1 Type: Introductory (Activity + Pause and Ponder) Session: 2026–27

Note: Chapter 1 is an introductory chapter and does not have a “Revise, Reflect, Refine” exercise. Its questions are Activity 1.1 and the three “Pause and Ponder” prompts, all answered below.

Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 1 Solutions – Overview

Chapter 1 of Exploration, Entering the World of Secondary Science, is about how science works rather than a single topic. It shows how scientists build models by keeping the details that matter and ignoring those that do not, why science uses a precise language of terms, symbols and SI units, and how mathematics helps express relationships. It explains the meaning of laws, theories and principles, the power of prediction, the value of estimation, and how the branches of science are deeply connected. These Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 1 solutions answer every in-chapter question step by step.

Key Concepts & Definitions

Model: a simplified description of a situation that keeps the important quantities and ignores the unimportant details.

Scientific language & SI units: quantities such as mass, velocity, force and current use defined symbols (m, v, F, I) and standard international (SI) units so results can be compared worldwide.

Law: describes a regular pattern observed in nature (e.g. Newton’s laws of motion).

Theory: explains why a pattern occurs, based on evidence (e.g. atomic theory). A theory is not a guess.

Principle: a broad idea applied to many situations (e.g. conservation of energy).

Prediction: a reasoned expectation from evidence and theory — not guesswork. Estimation: a rough calculation to check whether an answer is reasonable.

Activity 1.1 — Solution

Activity 1.1: Let us model. Suppose you ride a bicycle from your school to your home. You want to model the time it takes to go home from school. What details would you keep? What details could you ignore? Suggest why ignoring some details may actually be useful.

ANSWER Keep (the details that affect the time): the distance from school to home, your average cycling speed, and major stops such as traffic signals or crossings. Ignore (details that hardly affect the time): the colour or brand of the bicycle, what you are wearing, the number of gears, and small bumps on the road. Why ignoring helps: a simple model with only the relevant quantities (time ≈ distance ÷ speed) is quick to use and still gives a useful estimate. Adding every tiny detail would make the model complicated without changing the answer much.

“Pause and Ponder” Questions — Answers

1. Think of a prediction you or your family made recently (for example, the outcome of a cricket match). Was it based on evidence and reasoning, or mainly on guesswork? How can scientific thinking improve such predictions?

ANSWER Example: predicting a cricket result. If it is based on the teams’ recent form, the pitch report and past head-to-head records, it uses evidence and reasoning; if it is based only on “my favourite team always wins”, it is guesswork. Scientific thinking improves predictions by collecting relevant data, identifying the factors that really matter, reasoning carefully, and then checking the prediction against the actual outcome to refine it next time.

2. Describe one situation where an approximate answer is good enough, and one where you would need a very exact value.

ANSWER Approximate is enough: estimating how much rice to cook for guests, or roughly how long a journey will take. Exact value needed: the dose of a medicine, the amount of money in a bank transaction, or a measurement while building a bridge or machine part — small errors here can be dangerous or costly.

3. Choose a real-life object (maybe a pressure cooker or a mobile phone) or a problem (maybe a traffic jam near your school). Make a sketch listing what kind of ideas from physics, chemistry, biology, earth science, or mathematics are involved. Show how at least two branches of science connect with your example.

ANSWER Example — a pressure cooker: Physics explains how increased pressure raises the boiling point of water and how heat is transferred; Chemistry explains the cooking reactions in the food and the materials of the cooker; Mathematics describes the pressure–temperature relationship. This shows at least two branches connecting: physics (pressure and heat) works together with chemistry (cooking changes) to make the cooker useful. (Your own sketch and example are accepted.)

“Threads of Curiosity” — Answers

Q. Why is the speed of light denoted by ‘c’? The symbol comes from the Latin word celeritas, meaning “speed”. Today the speed of light is a defined physical constant, exactly 299,792,458 m/s.
Q. Why is a kilogram used everywhere? Because measurements are based on agreed international (SI) standards, not local objects. A kilogram means the same amount everywhere, which lets scientific results be compared and ensures fairness in trade and daily life.
Q. Is eating food harmful during an eclipse? No. An eclipse is just a play of shadows. There is no significant change in temperature and no physical, chemical or biological mechanism that would make food harmful — so the “viral” claim is disproved by simple scientific questioning.

Worked Examples (from the chapter)

Example 1.2: Varsha says, “It will rain this afternoon because the clouds look dark.” What questions could Meghna ask to make this prediction scientifically testable?

ANSWER Meghna should ask for measurable evidence and past patterns, e.g. “What was the humidity the last time it rained — was it above 80%? What is today’s humidity, wind speed and direction? Is the temperature dropping as it did before recent rains?” Such questions use data rather than just “the clouds look dark”.

Example 1.3: Estimate how many litres of air you breathe in one day.

ANSWER At rest we take about 12–15 breaths per minute × 1440 minutes/day ≈ 20,000 breaths a day. One breath is roughly 0.5 litre (about 4–5 breaths fill a 2-litre balloon). So air breathed ≈ 20,000 × 0.5 = about 10,000 litres a day. A cross-check (filling ~3 balloons a minute) gives about 8,640 litres — close enough, which shows the estimate is reasonable.

Common Misconceptions to Avoid

Watch out for these

  • Thinking a scientific theory is “just a guess” — it is an explanation built on careful testing and evidence.
  • Believing science gives final, unchangeable truths — good science is open to revision when new evidence appears.
  • Thinking a good model must include every detail — the best models keep only the relevant quantities.
  • Treating estimation as careless — it is a skill used to check whether an answer is reasonable.
  • Confusing a scientific prediction with a guess — predictions are reasoned from evidence.
  • Mixing up units (e.g. pounds and kilograms) — always use standard SI units to avoid errors.

Extra Practice Questions

Very Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. What does the symbol ‘c’ stand for in science?

ANSWERThe speed of light (299,792,458 m/s).

Q2. Give one example of a scientific law.

ANSWERNewton’s laws of motion.

Q3. Why do scientists use SI units?

ANSWERSo that a measurement means the same amount everywhere and results can be compared and shared.

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. Differentiate between a law and a theory in science.

ANSWERA law describes a regular pattern observed in nature (often as a relationship); a theory goes further and explains why that pattern occurs, based on evidence. A scientific theory is not a guess.

Q2. Why is making a model useful in science?

ANSWERA model keeps the important quantities and ignores unimportant details, making a situation simpler to understand and solve while still giving useful, reliable results.

Long Answer Type Question

Q1. “The failure of a prediction is a strength of science.” Explain this statement.

ANSWERWhen a prediction does not match observation, scientists do not reject ideas based on opinion or belief — they re-examine their assumptions, models or measurements using evidence. Every theory is open to correction by nature itself, and it is this willingness to be corrected that makes science reliable and drives deeper exploration and understanding.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. In science, a “theory” means:

(a) a guess    (b) an explanation based on careful testing    (c) a personal opinion    (d) an unproven idea

2. The symbol used for the speed of light is:

(a) s    (b) v    (c) c    (d) l

3. A scientific law:

(a) explains why things happen    (b) describes a regular observed pattern    (c) is a guess    (d) cannot be tested

4. Standard (SI) units are used so that:

(a) numbers look bigger    (b) results are comparable everywhere    (c) only experts understand    (d) calculations are avoided

5. Making a simple model means:

(a) including every detail    (b) ignoring all data    (c) keeping relevant details and ignoring unimportant ones    (d) guessing the answer

6. The speed of light is defined as exactly:

(a) 3,00,000 m/s    (b) 299,792,458 m/s    (c) 9.8 m/s    (d) 1,000 m/s

7. Newton’s laws of motion are an example of a:

(a) theory    (b) law    (c) guess    (d) unit

8. The conservation of energy is best described as a:

(a) principle    (b) guess    (c) unit    (d) symbol

9. A good scientific prediction is based on:

(a) belief    (b) evidence and reasoning    (c) opinion    (d) luck

10. Estimation in science is mainly used to:

(a) get exact answers    (b) replace experiments    (c) check whether an answer is reasonable    (d) avoid measurements

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(b), 4-(b), 5-(c), 6-(b), 7-(b), 8-(a), 9-(b), 10-(c).

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: In science, a theory is an explanation based on evidence.

Reason: A theory is simply a guess or an untested idea.

A-R 2. Assertion: SI units are used all over the world.

Reason: Standard units make measurements comparable and ensure fairness.

A-R 3. Assertion: A good model ignores some details.

Reason: Ignoring unimportant details makes a model simpler and still useful.

A-R 4. Assertion: Scientific theories can change as new evidence appears.

Reason: Science is always open to being corrected by evidence.

A-R 5. Assertion: A scientific prediction is the same as a guess.

Reason: Scientific predictions are reasoned expectations based on evidence.

Answer key: 1-(C), 2-(A), 3-(A), 4-(A), 5-(D).

Quick Revision Summary

  • Science is a human activity of careful observation, questioning, testing and reasoning — not just a set of facts.
  • A model keeps the relevant quantities and ignores unimportant details.
  • Science uses precise terms, symbols and SI units so results can be shared and compared.
  • Law = describes a pattern; theory = explains it (evidence-based, not a guess); principle = a broad idea applied widely.
  • Prediction is reasoned from evidence; failed predictions lead scientists to refine their ideas.
  • Estimation checks whether an answer is reasonable; the branches of science are deeply connected.

Real-life Applications

Using SI units consistently prevents real disasters — an aircraft once ran low on fuel because pounds were confused with kilograms. Weather forecasting uses measurements and models to predict the next few hours or days. Simple estimation tells us, for instance, roughly how much rice would feed a family for a month, and understanding even a mask’s working draws on physics, chemistry, biology and mathematics together.

How to score full marks in this chapter

Learn the exact difference between a law, a theory and a principle, and give the textbook examples. For “why” questions, write the reason in one or two clear sentences with evidence. Remember the speed-of-light fact and the importance of SI units, and practise simple estimation by stating your assumptions first.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 1 about?

It introduces how science works — models, the precise language of science, SI units, laws, theories and principles, prediction, estimation, and the connected nature of the science disciplines.

Does Chapter 1 have a “Revise, Reflect, Refine” exercise?

No. It is an introductory chapter, so it has Activity 1.1 and three “Pause and Ponder” questions instead, all answered on this page.

What is the difference between a law and a theory?

A law describes a regular pattern in nature; a theory explains why that pattern occurs, based on evidence. A theory is not a guess.

Are these Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 1 solutions free?

Yes. All solutions are free and follow the official NCERT Exploration textbook for 2026–27.

Scroll to Top