CBSE Class 7 Science Heat Electric Current And Its Effects Worksheet

Read and download free pdf of CBSE Class 7 Science Heat Electric Current And Its Effects Worksheet. Students and teachers of Class 7 Science can get free printable Worksheets for Class 7 Science Chapter 14 Electric Current and its Effects in PDF format prepared as per the latest syllabus and examination pattern in your schools. Class 7 students should practice questions and answers given here for Science in Class 7 which will help them to improve your knowledge of all important chapters and its topics. Students should also download free pdf of Class 7 Science Worksheets prepared by school teachers as per the latest NCERT, CBSE, KVS books and syllabus issued this academic year and solve important problems with solutions on daily basis to get more score in school exams and tests

Worksheet for Class 7 Science Chapter 14 Electric Current and its Effects

Class 7 Science students should refer to the following printable worksheet in Pdf for Chapter 14 Electric Current and its Effects in Class 7. This test paper with questions and answers for Class 7 will be very useful for exams and help you to score good marks

Class 7 Science Worksheet for Chapter 14 Electric Current and its Effects

HEAT

Do you know, why?

1. The thick glass tumblers break when hot liquid is poured into them

Ans: If boiling hot water is poured in a thick glass tumbler, it cracks because glass is a bad conductor of heat. Thus, the inner surface of tumbler expands more than the outer surface. Due to this uneven expansion, the glass cracks.

2. Gaps are left between rail joints to allow for expansion

Ans: A small gap is kept at joints to allow for the expansion of tracks. If no gap is left for expansion or contraction, they will bend in summer. Thus, result in derailment of trains.

3. Slabs of ice are covered with sawdust or gunny bags

Ans: The saw dust or gunny bags contain large amount of trapped air which acts as an insulator. So, it doesn‟t allow the heat from outside to reach ice.

4. If we walk barefoot on a stone floor,it appears to be very cold but if walk on a carpet in the same room it feels warmer.

Ans: It is so because stone floor being a good conductor of heat, conducts away heat quickly from our feet. Our feet lose heat and make us feel cold. On the other hand, the carpet being a bad conductor of heat does not allow the heat of our feet to escape and hence feels warmer.

5. Solar cookers and solar water heaters are painted black from inside. Ans: This is because black surfaces are good absorber of heat.

6. Convection currents are produced inside the earth‟s crust.

Ans: Molten rocks close to the earth‟s core are hottest. It rises towards the crust. Molten rocks closer to the earth‟s crust are cooler. It is heavier and sinks. This exchange of material between core and crust create convection currents which move huge pieces of earth‟s crust known as tectonic plates. The tectonic plates move close together or farther, forming mountains and trenches.

MODULE – 1

I. Fill in the blanks:

(i) The liquid used in thermometer usually is____________ .

(ii) Normal body temperature of a human is _____ C &______F.

(iii) SI unit of heat is ________.

Q.1 Give one word for the following:

a. The mode of transfer of heat from one particle to another in solids.

b. Safety device in an electric circuit.

c. Filament of a bulb is made up of this metal.

d. Thermometer ranges from 35 C to 42 C.

e. Principle on which room heater works.

Q.2 Give reason for the following statements:

a. MCBs are used in place of fuses in homes and offices nowadays.

b. CFLs are being encouraged to be used in place of bulbs.

c. We prefer wearing dark coloured clothes in winters.

d. Ventilators are made close of the ceiling.

e. Electromagnets are temporary magnets.

Q.3 Shyam used a fuse wire with a specification of 5 A in a circuit connected to an air conditioner which draws a current of 10 A. What will happen when the air conditioner is switched on? What can be advised him to do?

Q.4 Tick the correct option:

(1) Which colour absorbs minimum radiation?
a. white
b. Black
c. yellow d.silver

(2) The device used to close or open an electric circuit is
a. Switch
b. resistance
c. ammeter
d. voltmeter

(3) Who discovered the magnetic effect of current?
a. Joule
b. Maxwell
c. Oersted
d. Newton

(4) Room heater works on the principle of
a. Conduction
b. convection
c. Radiation
d. insulation

(5) An electric bell makes use of
a. Bar magnet
b. needle shaped magnet
c. electromagnet
d. none of these

Q1. List two main effects of heat.

Q2. Define Temperature.

Q3.What do you understand by upper fixed point and lower fixed point?

Q4.Why is mercury and not water used in thermometers?

Q5. Name the scales used to measure temperature.

Q6. Give reasons for the following

i) Table mats are made from cane or plastics.

ii) Ventilators are situated close to the ceiling.

iii) Handles of bikes and scooters are covered with rubber.

iv) We cannot use laboratory thermometer to measure our body temperature.

v) We prefer to wear white clothes in summer

vi) Heating coils of a room heater have a shiny curved metal surface.

vii) Solar cookers are painted black from inside.

Q7.When you keep an ice cube on your palm, it melts slowly. From where does the flow of heat takes place?

Q8. Distinguish between:

i) Conduction and Convection

ii) Conductors and Insulators

Q9. How laboratory thermometer does differ from clinical thermometer?

Q10. Draw a neat and labeled diagram of clinical thermometer and explain the purpose of the kink in its stem.

 

Matter In Our Surroundings - Inter Conversion of States of Matter
 
Inter conversion of states is the phenomenon of the change of matter from one state to another and back to original state, by altering the temperature.
The process where a solid changes to a liquid is called melting.
Latent heat of fusion is the amount of heat energy required to change 1kilograms of a solid into liquid.
The process where a liquid changes to gas as its boiling point is called vaporisation.
Latent heat of vaporisation is the amount of heat required to change a unit mass of liquid to gas at atmospheric pressure.
Evaporation is the process where a liquid changes into vapour at any temperature below its boiling point.
The factors effecting evaporation are:
 Surface area
 Temperature
 Wind speed
The process where vapour changes onto a liquid is called condensation.
The process where a liquid changes into a solid is freezing.
Sublimation is the process where a solid, on heating, directly changes into gas without changing into liquid, and gas on cooling directly changes to solid without changing into liquid. 
Applying pressure and reducing temperature can liquefy gases.
 
Specific Heat Capacity
The quantity of heat absorbed or emitted, “ΔQ”, by a body is directly proportional to its mass and change in temperature, “ΔT”.
Heat capacity ‘S’ of a body is defined as the heat absorbed or emitted per unit change in its temperature.
The SI unit of heat capacity is J/K.
Specific heat capacity ‘S’ is the quantity of heat absorbed or emitted by a unit mass of a substance for a change in its temperature of one unit.
The SI unit of specific heat capacity is J/Kg K.
When a given substance is expresses in “moles”, its specific heat capacity is known as molar specific heat capacity ‘c’.
The SI unit of molar specific heat capacity is J/mol K.
 
Calorimetry
Calorimetry is the science of measuring heat.
Principal of Calorimetry: when two or more bodies at different temperatures are brought into thermal contact, and if no heat is allowed to escape to the surroundings, then the total heat lost by the hot bodies must be equal to the total heat gained by the cold bodies.
The amount of heat lost or gained by the body is expresses by the equation:
Δ = msΔT
 
Change of State
Transition of matter from one state to another is called change of state.
The change of state from solid to liquid is called melting.
The change of state from solid to liquid is called fusion.
The change of state from liquid to gaseous state is called boiling or vaporisation.
The change of state from solid to liquid is called Condensation. 
The temperature at which the solid and liquid states of substance are the thermal equilibrium with each other is called the melting point.
The amount of heat absorbed by a unit mass of substance to convert it completely from one state to another state is called latent heat (L).
The latent heat absorbed in the case of solid-to-liquid transition is called latent heat of fusion (Lf).
The constant temperature at which the liquid and the vapour states of the substance co-exist is called boiling point.
The heat requires to covert one unit mass of a substance completely from the liquid to gaseous state is called latent heat of vaporisation (Lv).
 
Convection and Radiation
Heat transfer by actual motion of matter from one region to another is known as thermal convection.
Convectional is possible only in fluids.
Thermal convection can be either natural of forced. 
The steady surface winds blowing from the north- east and the south- east, towards the equator are called the trade winds.
The electromagnetic waves emitted by a body by virtue of its temperature is called is called thermal radiation.
Heat energy received from the sun is in the form of radiation.
Heat is transmitted through vacuum in the form of electromagnetic waves.
Black bodies have a greater capacity of absorbing radiant energy.
Heat is an invisible form of energy that causes the sensation of hotness or coldness.
Heat energy can be defined as the sum of the potential energy and kinetic energy of all the molecules of a substance. The total amount of heat energy is called enthalpy.
Heat energy always flows from a body at higher temperature to a body at lower temperature, till their temperatures are equal, which called equilibrium temperature.
The branch of physics that deals with the measurement of heat energy is called colorimetry.
The SI unit for heat is joule.
 
Specific Heat
 
The amount of heat energy supplied to a substance directly proportional to the change in its temperature.
The amount of heat energy required to increase the temperature of a given mass of substance by 1°C is called its heat capacity (C).C = Q/ Δt
The SI unit of heat capacity is Jk-1 
 
Specific heat capacity is defined as the amount of heat energy required per unit mass of a substance to change its temperature by one unit Specific heat capacity, s = 1/mQΔt)
The SI unit of specific heat capacity is J kg-1 K-1
The specific heat capacity of water is cal g-1°C-1, which is equal to 4200 Jkg-1 K-1

I. Give one word for the following.

1) The degree of hotness or coldness of a body.

2) Metal used in thermometers.

3) Instrument used to measure temperature of a body.

4) Materials that allow heat to pass through them easily.

5) Materials that do not allow heat to pass through them.

I. Fill in the blanks.

1) Air is a ________ conductor of heat.

2) Solids ________ on cooling.

3) Heat is a form of energy that travels from a _______ object to a _______ object.

4) A spoon kept in a cup of hot tea gets heated by _________

5) The normal body temperature is _______ oC or _____o F.

6) ________ is the best conductor of heat.

7) Ice melts at ______ oC or ______ oF.

8) Water boils at _______oC or ______oF.

9) Black bodies ________ and emit ________ heat the best.

10) The another name of clinical thermometer is __________ thermometer.

II. State true or false.

1) Heat cannot travel in vacuum.

2) Gases expand the most while solids expand the least on heating.

3) Room heaters warm the rooms by conduction.

4) Blankets keep us warm at night in winters.

5) The wooden handle of a pressure cooker prevents conduction of heat to the hand.

III. Match the following.

              A                              B

1) Conduction                 a) day

2) Radiation                    b) solids

3) Heat                           c) night

4) Sea Breeze                d) energy

5) Land Breeze              e) vacuum

IV. Define.

i) Energy

ii) Temperature

iii) Conduction

iv) Convection

v) Radiation

V. Give reasons

i) Evaporation of sweat causes cooling.

ii) Ventilators are provided near the ceiling of a room.

iii) Clinical thermometers have a kink in the capillary tube

VI. Draw the diagram of the following:

i) Sea Breeze

ii) Land Breeze

1.What is the range of laboratory thermometer?

2.The capillary tube of a clinical thermometer has kink-
(A) To increase the expansion of mercury.
(B) So that the level of mercury does not fall as soon as the thermometer is taken out of the mouth.
(C) To use less mercury.
(D) To help us see it better.

3.Radiation
(A) Does not require a material medium.
(B) Is the process of the transfer of heat in liquids.
(C) Is the process of the transfer of heat in which heat travels in one direction.
(D) Occurs in solids.

4.Human body temperature is normally-
(A) 32°F.
(B) 0°F.
(C) 100.4°F.
(D) 98.6°F

5.The range of a clinical thermometer is-
(A) 0-100°C.
(B) 32-212°F.
(C) 0-273°C.
(D) 35-42°C.

6.The measure of degree of hotness or coldness of body is called-
(A) Heat energy.
(B) Celsius.
(C) Kelvin.
(D) Temperature.

7.The capacity to do work is called-
(A) Force.
(B) Movement.
(C) Energy.
(D) Momentum.

8.How can we measure the temperature of our body?

9.What is the temperature of a normal human body?

10.What is the use of the kink in clinical thermometer?

11.What is the range of the clinical thermometer?

12.Name a thermometer which does not use mercury as one of it's component?

13.Name the process by which heat is transferred from hotter object to the colder object.

14.What is the process by which heat of sun is able to reach us?

15.What is temperature?

16.Can we measure the temperature of 45°C from a clinical thermometer?
(A) No.
(B) Yes.
(C) Sometimes.
(D) From some clinical thermometers.

17.Heat of the Sun reaches to us by-
(A) Reflection.
(B) Condensation.
(C) Radiation.
(D) Sunlight.

18.Define conduction.

19.How does heat flow?

20.What will happen to a clinical thermometer if we keep it in the Sun or near a flame?
(A) It will measure the temperature.
(B) It will break.
(C) It will melt.
(D) Nothing will happen.

21.What is temperature ?

22.Name the mode of heat transfer in which heat energy flows from one body to another only if they are in contact with each other ?

23.Name the mode of heat transfer in which heat is transferred even in the absence of a medium ?

24.Temperature is the degree of or …………………..of a body.

25.The hotness of a body is determined by its…………………

26.A clinical thermometer can measure a temperature between ... °C and……………°C.

27.No medium is required for transfer of heat by the process of

28.A cold steel spoon is dipped in a cup of hot milk. It transfers heat to its other end by the process of ……………………..

29. is the process of transmission of heat in which heat travels directly from one place to another without the agency of any intervening medium.

30.The cold air blowing from the sea towards the land during the day is called ………………

31.The cold air blowing from the land towards the sea during night is called ………………..

32.Clothes of light colours are better………………….of heat than clothes of dark colour.

33.What is the value of the normal body temperature ?

<2M>

34.In places of hot climate, it is advised that the outer walls of houses should be painted white. Explain.

35.Explain why wearing more layers of clothing during winter keeps us warmer than wearing just one thick piece of cloth?

36.How does the heat travel in air? In which direction does the smoke go?

37.What are the 2 conditions for conduction to take place?

38.What is temperature? Name the device used to measure it.

39.Name the two common scales in which temperatures are usually measured ?

40.Why a clinical thermometer should not be washed in hot water ?

41.Why in places of hot climate it is advised that the outer walls of houses be painted white.

42.Why wearing more layers of clothing during winter keeps us warmer than wearing just one thick piece of clothing.

43.Why do we wear woollen clothes in winter ?

44.What kind of clothes will keep us comfortable in summer ? Why ?

45.Describe the construction of a clinical thermometer

<3M>

46.What are conductors and insulators of heat? Give examples.

47.Write any three similarities between laboratory thermometer and the clinical thermometer.

48.What do you understand by clinical thermometer and laboratory thermometer?

49.differentiate between heat and temperature

<5M>

50.Suggest an activity to explain the term convection. >

51.Explain the process of conduction with the help of activity and neat labeled diagram

52.How will you read a thermometer?

53.What are the precautions to be take while reading a clinical thermometer?

54.Write short notes on :-
(a) Sea breeze .
(b) Land breeze.

55.What precautions will you observe while using a clinical thermometer ?

56.write the differences between a clinical thermometer and a laboratory thermometer ?

57.write the differences between a clinical thermometer and a laboratory thermometer ?

Q.1 Multiple choice Question

1. The clinical thermometer’s bulb consists of

a. lead

b. mercury

c. Zinc

d. None of these

2. Which of the following materials are good conductors of heat?

a. Iron

b. Copper

c. Silver

d. None of these

3. Water is a _____________ conductor of heat.

a. good

b. bad

c. both

d. None of these.

4. The process of transfer of heat in which the heated molecules of a liquid themselves carry heat from the hot to the cold region?

a. Conduction

b. Convection

c. Radiation

d. None of these

5. Sea breeze and land breezes are actually

a. Currents

b. Water currents

c. waves

d. Convection currents

Q.2 Answer the following questions

a. Why are cloudy nights warmer than clear nights?

b .How do the feathers of a bird protect it from cold ?

Q1. Fill ups:

a) ____________ is the degree of relative hotness or coldness.

b) Cooking vessels should be made up of __________ conductors.

c) Heat is a form of ___________.

d) Mercury level falls easily in a _____________thermometer.

e) S.I unit of heat is __________________.

f) Range of clinical thermometer is from __________̊C to ________̊C.

g) A kink is not provided in a ___________ thermometer.

Q2. Choose the correct option:

1) Conduction takes place in:
a) Solids only
b) Liquids only
c) Gases only
d) in solids, liquids & Gases

2) In which method of transfer of heat do the molecules travel from hot to cold portion?
a) Conduction
b) Convection
c) Radiation
d) All of the above

3) A thermos flask prevent loss or gain of heat by
a) Conduction
b) Convection
c) Radiation
d) All of the above

4) Convection occur only in
a) Solids
b) Liquids
c) Gases
d) Liquids & Gases

5) Ventilation in the room is due to:
a) Conduction
b) Convection
c) Radiation
d) All of the above

6) The method of heat transfer in a steel rod is by:
a) Conduction
b) Convection
c) Radiation
d) All of the above

Q3. Why is underside of cooking vessels painted black?

Q4. Why do we feel cold when our body sweats?

Q5. Why only mercury is used in thermometer?

Q6. Explain three modes of transmission of heat i.e. conduction, convection & radiation, with the help of their applications.

Q7. Name the following:

a) Fastest mode of transfer of heat._____________

b) Mode of transfer of heat where the medium does not get heated.___________

c) Mode of transfer of heat where no medium is required.______________

d) The metal used in the bulb of thermometer.___________________

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