CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved is a complete solved guide for CSS aspirants who need actual derivations, numerical working and exam-ready explanations. This post solves the subjective section question by question and covers Gauss law in dielectrics, electric field outside a charged spherical shell, induced emf, Faraday law, time-independent Schrodinger equation, particle in a one-dimensional box, ground-state energy of an electron, Bravais lattice, centered cubic cells, Fermi sphere, Fermi-Dirac distribution, Fermi energy of copper, alpha beta gamma decay, uranium alpha decay, binding energy and mass defect, nuclear fission, elementary and composite particles, and controlled fusion.
Central Argument: A solved CSS Physics paper should not only provide short hints. It should define the principle, show the mathematical law, derive the expression, solve the numerical part with units and close with the physical meaning. This CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved post is therefore written as a full study document for serious CSS Physics revision.
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CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved Study Scope
This guide reconstructs the major subjective questions of the paper and provides complete answers in a structured format. Each question includes the printed question, part-wise explanation, derivation, formula work, numerical calculation and final answer wherever numerical data is provided.
The post avoids an H1 inside the body so your WordPress post title can remain the only H1. The internal structure begins with H2 and continues through H3 and H4 headings.
Show Table of Contents
- Overview
- Study Scope
- Important Formula Sheet
- Question Map
- Question 2: Gauss Law in Dielectrics and Charged Spherical Shell
- Question 3: Induced EMF and Faraday Law
- Question 4: Schrodinger Equation and One-Dimensional Potential Well
- Question 5: Bravais Lattice, Centered Cubic Cells and Unit Cell Volume
- Question 6: Fermi Sphere, Fermi-Dirac Function and Copper Fermi Energy
- Question 7: Alpha, Beta, Gamma Decay and Binding Energy
- Question 8: Fission, Elementary Particles, Composite Particles and Fusion
- Revision Plan
- Internal and External Resources
- FAQs
Important Formula Sheet for CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved
Electrostatics and Induction
∮D·dA = Qfree
D = ε0E + P
E = (1/4πε0)(q/r²)
ε = -N dΦ/dt
Quantum Mechanics
Hψ = Eψ
-(ℏ²/2m)d²ψ/dx² + Vψ = Eψ
En = n²h²/(8mL²)
E1 = h²/(8mL²)
Solid State Physics
R = n1a1 + n2a2 + n3a3
Vcell = a³
f(E,T)=1/[exp((E-EF)/kBT)+1]
EF = h²/(2m)(3n/8π)^(2/3)
Nuclear Physics
Q = Δmc²
BE = Δmc²
²³⁸₉₂U → ²³⁴₉₀Th + ⁴₂He + Q
Mass = constituent mass - BE/c²
Question Map of CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved
| Question | Main Area | What Is Fully Solved |
|---|---|---|
| Q2 | Electrostatics | Gauss law in dielectrics, significance of displacement field, electric field outside charged spherical shell and numerical field calculation. |
| Q3 | Electromagnetic induction | Meaning of induced emf, why it is called induced, Faraday law derivation and numerical induced emf in a coil. |
| Q4 | Quantum mechanics | Time-independent Schrodinger equation, reason for time independence, infinite potential well solution and ground-state energy numerical. |
| Q5 | Solid-state physics | Bravais lattice, unit-cell volume, base-centered and face-centered cells, and important clarification about cubic Bravais lattices. |
| Q6 | Fermi gas and metals | Fermi sphere, Fermi-Dirac distribution, Fermi energy formula and copper Fermi energy numerical. |
| Q7 | Nuclear physics | Scientific difference between alpha, beta and gamma decay, uranium alpha decay equation and binding energy versus mass. |
| Q8 | Nuclear and particle physics | Nuclear fission, practical application, elementary particles, composite particles and controlled fusion difficulty on Earth. |
Question 2: Gauss Law in Dielectrics and Charged Spherical Shell
Full Question
Q.2. (a) State and explain Gauss’s law in dielectrics. Also give its significance.
Q.2. (b) Derive a mathematical expression for an electric field at a point lying outside a uniformly charged spherical shell.
Q.2. (c) A spherical shell has total charge q=4 μC and radius 0.3 m. Calculate the electric field at a distance of 0.5 m from the center of the shell.
Q2(a): Gauss Law in Dielectrics
Gauss law relates electric flux through a closed surface to the charge enclosed by that surface. In vacuum, it is written as:
∮E·dA = Qenc/ε0
In differential form:
∇·E = ρ/ε0
In a dielectric material, charges are of two types: free charges and bound charges. Bound charges appear because molecules become polarized. To handle this conveniently, we introduce electric displacement field D.
D = ε0E + P
Here P is polarization vector. Gauss law in dielectrics is written as:
∮D·dA = Qfree
In differential form:
∇·D = ρfree
For a linear, homogeneous and isotropic dielectric:
D = εE
where:
ε = εrε0
Significance of Gauss Law in Dielectrics
- It separates free charge from bound polarization charge.
- It simplifies electric-field calculations inside dielectric materials.
- It is useful in capacitors filled with dielectric medium.
- It explains why capacitance increases when a dielectric is inserted.
- It provides the foundation for macroscopic electrostatics in materials.
∮D·dA=Qfree or ∇·D=ρfree, where D=ε0E+P. It is significant because it handles free charge separately from bound polarization charge.Q2(b): Electric Field Outside a Uniformly Charged Spherical Shell
Consider a uniformly charged spherical shell of radius R and total charge q. We need the electric field at a point outside the shell at distance r from the center, where:
r > R
Because of spherical symmetry, the electric field is radial and has the same magnitude at every point on a spherical Gaussian surface of radius r.
Choose a spherical Gaussian surface of radius r. Its area is:
A = 4πr²
Gauss law gives:
∮E·dA = q/ε0
Since E is constant over the Gaussian surface and parallel to dA:
E∮dA = q/ε0
So:
E(4πr²) = q/ε0
Therefore:
E = q/(4πε0r²)
Using Coulomb constant:
k = 1/(4πε0)
we get:
E = kq/r²
This means that outside a uniformly charged spherical shell, the field is the same as if all charge were concentrated at the center.
r>R, the electric field outside a uniformly charged spherical shell is E=q/(4πε0r²)=kq/r².Q2(c): Electric Field Numerical
Given:
q = 4 μC = 4×10⁻⁶ C
R = 0.3 m
r = 0.5 m
Since r=0.5 m is greater than the shell radius R=0.3 m, the point is outside the shell. Therefore:
E = kq/r²
Use:
k = 8.99×10⁹ N m²/C²
Substitute:
E = (8.99×10⁹)(4×10⁻⁶)/(0.5)²
E = (35.96×10³)/0.25
E = 1.4384×10⁵ N/C
Rounded answer:
E ≈ 1.44×10⁵ N/C
0.5 m from the center is approximately 1.44×10⁵ N/C, directed radially outward for a positive charge.Question 3: Induced EMF and Faraday Law
Full Question
Q.3. (a) What is meant by induced emf? Why is it called induced?
Q.3. (b) Derive an expression for induced emf in a coil with N turns due to changing magnetic flux.
Q.3. (c) Magnetic flux through a 20-turn coil changes from 0.5 Wb to 0.1 Wb in 0.2 s. How much emf is induced in the coil?
Q3(a): Meaning of Induced EMF
Induced emf is the electromotive force produced in a circuit when the magnetic flux linked with the circuit changes. It is called “induced” because it is not produced by an ordinary battery or chemical source. It appears due to electromagnetic induction.
Magnetic flux through a surface is:
Φ = B·A = BA cosθ
Induced emf can be produced by:
- Changing the magnetic field through a coil.
- Changing the area of the coil.
- Changing the angle between magnetic field and area vector.
- Moving a conductor in a magnetic field.
Q3(b): Derivation of Induced EMF in a Coil
Faraday’s law states that the induced emf in a circuit is equal to the negative rate of change of magnetic flux linked with the circuit.
For one turn:
ε = -dΦ/dt
For a coil of N turns, total flux linkage is:
NΦ
Therefore, induced emf is:
ε = -d(NΦ)/dt
If N is constant:
ε = -N dΦ/dt
For a finite change in flux:
εavg = -N ΔΦ/Δt
The negative sign represents Lenz’s law. It shows that the induced emf opposes the change in magnetic flux that produces it.
N-turn coil is ε=-N dΦ/dt. For finite change, εavg=-NΔΦ/Δt.Q3(c): Numerical Calculation of Induced EMF
Given:
N = 20
Φi = 0.5 Wb
Φf = 0.1 Wb
Δt = 0.2 s
Change in flux:
ΔΦ = Φf - Φi
ΔΦ = 0.1 - 0.5 = -0.4 Wb
Magnitude of induced emf:
|ε| = N|ΔΦ|/Δt
Substitute values:
|ε| = 20(0.4)/0.2
|ε| = 8/0.2
|ε| = 40 V
40 V.Question 4: Schrodinger Equation and One-Dimensional Potential Well
Full Question
Q.4. (a) Discuss the time-independent Schrodinger wave equation. Why is it called time independent?
Q.4. (b) Solve the time-independent Schrodinger equation for a particle in a one-dimensional potential well of width L.
Q.4. (c) Find the ground-state energy of an electron in a one-dimensional potential well with L=1 nm and electron mass m=9.11×10⁻³¹ kg.
Q4(a): Time-Independent Schrodinger Wave Equation
The time-independent Schrodinger equation is an energy eigenvalue equation. It is used when the potential energy does not explicitly depend on time.
In one dimension, the equation is:
-(ℏ²/2m)d²ψ/dx² + V(x)ψ = Eψ
In operator form:
Hψ = Eψ
Here H is the Hamiltonian operator, ψ is the spatial wave function and E is the energy eigenvalue.
Why It Is Called Time Independent
The full wave function can be separated as:
Ψ(x,t) = ψ(x)e^(-iEt/ℏ)
The time-dependent factor is separated from the spatial part. The equation for ψ(x) contains no explicit time variable, so it is called time independent.
Hψ=Eψ. It is called time independent because the potential is not explicitly time-dependent and the time factor separates from the spatial wave function.Q4(b): Particle in One-Dimensional Infinite Potential Well
Consider a particle of mass m confined in an infinite potential well from x=0 to x=L.
The potential is:
V(x)=0, 0<x<L
V(x)=∞, x≤0 and x≥L
Inside the well, the Schrodinger equation becomes:
-(ℏ²/2m)d²ψ/dx² = Eψ
Rearrange:
d²ψ/dx² + (2mE/ℏ²)ψ = 0
Let:
k² = 2mE/ℏ²
Then:
d²ψ/dx² + k²ψ = 0
The general solution is:
ψ(x) = A sin(kx) + B cos(kx)
Boundary condition at x=0:
ψ(0)=0
This gives:
B=0
So:
ψ(x)=A sin(kx)
Boundary condition at x=L:
ψ(L)=0
Therefore:
A sin(kL)=0
For non-zero A:
sin(kL)=0
Thus:
kL = nπ
k = nπ/L, where n=1,2,3,...
Energy is:
E = ℏ²k²/(2m)
Substitute k=nπ/L:
En = n²π²ℏ²/(2mL²)
Using ℏ=h/(2π):
En = n²h²/(8mL²)
En=n²h²/(8mL²), where n=1,2,3,....Q4(c): Ground-State Energy Numerical
Given:
L = 1 nm = 1×10⁻⁹ m
m = 9.11×10⁻³¹ kg
h = 6.626×10⁻³⁴ J s
For ground state:
n = 1
Energy is:
E1 = h²/(8mL²)
Substitute:
E1 = (6.626×10⁻³⁴)²/[8(9.11×10⁻³¹)(1×10⁻⁹)²]
E1 ≈ 6.03×10⁻²⁰ J
Convert to electron-volts:
1 eV = 1.602×10⁻¹⁹ J
E1 = (6.03×10⁻²⁰)/(1.602×10⁻¹⁹) eV
E1 ≈ 0.376 eV
1 nm wide infinite well is approximately 6.03×10⁻²⁰ J, or 0.376 eV.Question 5: Bravais Lattice, Centered Cubic Cells and Unit Cell Volume
Full Question
Q.5. (a) What is meant by Bravais lattice?
Q.5. (b) Calculate the volume of a base-centered cubic structure of side length 0.4 nm. The volume needs to be in cubic units.
Q.5. (c) Clearly elaborate the difference between base-centered and face-centered cubic lattices. Also discuss types of base-centered cubic cell.
Q5(a): Bravais Lattice
A Bravais lattice is an infinite periodic arrangement of points in space such that every lattice point has the same surroundings. The whole lattice can be generated by translating a point through primitive vectors.
In three dimensions, a lattice point is represented by:
R = n1a1 + n2a2 + n3a3
where a1, a2 and a3 are primitive translation vectors, and n1, n2, n3 are integers.
Important Features
- It describes translational symmetry of a crystal.
- Every lattice point is equivalent.
- A crystal structure is formed by attaching a basis to each lattice point.
- There are 14 Bravais lattices in three dimensions.
Q5(b): Volume of Centered Cubic Unit Cell
The side length is:
a = 0.4 nm
Volume of a cubic unit cell is:
V = a³
Substitute:
V = (0.4 nm)³
V = 0.064 nm³
Since:
1 nm = 10 Å
therefore:
0.4 nm = 4 Å
So, in cubic angstroms:
V = (4 Å)³
V = 64 ų
In cubic metres:
0.4 nm = 0.4×10⁻⁹ m
V = (0.4×10⁻⁹)³ m³
V = 6.4×10⁻²⁹ m³
0.064 nm³, equal to 64 ų or 6.4×10⁻²⁹ m³.Q5(c): Base-Centered and Face-Centered Cubic Cells
Crystallography Note: In the standard list of 14 Bravais lattices, the cubic system has simple cubic, body-centered cubic and face-centered cubic lattices. A “base-centered cubic” cell is not normally listed as a separate cubic Bravais lattice because it can be transformed into a more conventional lattice description. However, if the exam statement uses the term, it can be explained as a conventional cell with extra lattice points on two opposite faces.
Base-Centered Cell
A base-centered cell has lattice points at all eight corners and at the centers of two opposite faces. If the centered faces are top and bottom faces, it is called C-centered or base-centered.
Effective number of lattice points:
8 corners × 1/8 = 1
2 face centers × 1/2 = 1
Total = 2 lattice points per conventional cell
Face-Centered Cubic Cell
A face-centered cubic cell has lattice points at all eight corners and at the centers of all six faces.
Effective number of lattice points:
8 corners × 1/8 = 1
6 face centers × 1/2 = 3
Total = 4 lattice points per conventional cell
| Feature | Base-Centered Cell | Face-Centered Cubic Cell |
|---|---|---|
| Extra points | Centers of two opposite faces | Centers of all six faces |
| Effective lattice points | 2 | 4 |
| Standard cubic Bravais lattice? | Not a separate standard cubic Bravais lattice | Yes |
| Common notation | A-, B- or C-centered depending on centered faces | F-centered cubic |
Types of Base-Centered Cells
Base-centered cells are usually named according to the pair of faces that contain extra lattice points:
- A-centered: Centering on faces perpendicular to the a-axis.
- B-centered: Centering on faces perpendicular to the b-axis.
- C-centered: Centering on faces perpendicular to the c-axis.
Question 6: Fermi Sphere, Fermi-Dirac Function and Copper Fermi Energy
Full Question
Q.6. (a) Define Fermi sphere. Is this an energy state? Explain.
Q.6. (b) Deduce the Fermi-Dirac distribution function f(E,T)=1/[exp((E-EF)/kBT)+1].
Q.6. (c) Calculate the Fermi energy for copper in eV with number density n=8.49×10²⁸ atoms/m³. Use EF=h²/(2m)(3n/8π)^(2/3), m=9.11×10⁻³¹ kg and h=6.62×10⁻³⁴ J s.
Q6(a): Fermi Sphere
The Fermi sphere is the filled region in momentum space or k-space for a gas of fermions at absolute zero temperature. Electrons fill all available quantum states from the lowest energy upward until the highest occupied energy is reached.
The boundary of this filled region is called the Fermi surface. For free electrons in a metal, this surface is spherical in k-space, so it is called the Fermi sphere.
Is Fermi Sphere an Energy State?
No. The Fermi sphere is not a single energy state. It is a collection of occupied quantum states in k-space up to the Fermi energy.
At absolute zero:
- All states with
E<EFare filled. - All states with
E>EFare empty. EFis the highest occupied energy at0 K.
0 K. It is not one energy state; it is a set of occupied states.Q6(b): Fermi-Dirac Distribution Function
Fermi-Dirac distribution gives the probability that an energy state E is occupied by a fermion at temperature T.
The distribution function is:
f(E,T)=1/[exp((E-EF)/kBT)+1]
Here:
f(E,T)is occupancy probability.Eis energy of the state.EFis Fermi energy.kBis Boltzmann constant.Tis absolute temperature.
Physical Interpretation
At T=0 K, the distribution becomes a step function. All states below EF are occupied and all states above EF are empty.
At finite temperature, the sharp edge becomes smooth. Some electrons occupy states above EF, and some states below EF become empty.
At E=EF:
f(EF,T)=1/[exp(0)+1]
f(EF,T)=1/2
f(E,T)=1/[exp((E-EF)/kBT)+1]. It gives the probability that a fermion state of energy E is occupied.Q6(c): Fermi Energy of Copper
Given:
n = 8.49×10²⁸ m⁻³
m = 9.11×10⁻³¹ kg
h = 6.62×10⁻³⁴ J s
Formula given in the question:
EF = h²/(2m)(3n/8π)^(2/3)
Substitute values:
EF = (6.62×10⁻³⁴)²/[2(9.11×10⁻³¹)] × [3(8.49×10²⁸)/(8π)]^(2/3)
First:
h²/(2m) = (6.62×10⁻³⁴)²/[2(9.11×10⁻³¹)]
h²/(2m) ≈ 2.405×10⁻³⁷
Next:
[3n/(8π)]^(2/3) = [3(8.49×10²⁸)/(8π)]^(2/3)
[3n/(8π)]^(2/3) ≈ 4.684×10¹⁸
Therefore:
EF ≈ (2.405×10⁻³⁷)(4.684×10¹⁸)
EF ≈ 1.126×10⁻¹⁸ J
Convert to electron-volts:
1 eV = 1.602×10⁻¹⁹ J
EF = (1.126×10⁻¹⁸)/(1.602×10⁻¹⁹) eV
EF ≈ 7.03 eV
7.03 eV, commonly written as about 7.0 eV.Question 7: Alpha, Beta, Gamma Decay and Binding Energy
Full Question
Q.7. (a) Explain on scientific grounds the difference between alpha, beta and gamma decay.
Q.7. (b) Write the decay equation for alpha decay of uranium.
Q.7. (c) The charge number and mass number of two nuclei A and B are the same, but their binding energies are such that (B.E.)A > (B.E.)B. Which nucleus will have more mass and why?
Q7(a): Difference Between Alpha, Beta and Gamma Decay
Radioactive decay is the spontaneous transformation of an unstable nucleus into a more stable state. The three common types are alpha decay, beta decay and gamma decay.
| Type | Emission | Change in Mass Number | Change in Atomic Number | Penetrating Power |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alpha decay | ⁴₂He nucleus |
A decreases by 4 |
Z decreases by 2 |
Low |
| Beta-minus decay | Electron and antineutrino | No significant change | Z increases by 1 |
Medium |
| Beta-plus decay | Positron and neutrino | No significant change | Z decreases by 1 |
Medium |
| Gamma decay | High-energy photon | No change | No change | High |
Alpha Decay
Alpha decay occurs mostly in heavy nuclei. A helium nucleus is emitted:
ᴬ_ZX → ᴬ⁻⁴_{Z-2}Y + ⁴₂He + Q
Beta Decay
In beta-minus decay, a neutron changes into a proton:
n → p + e⁻ + ν̄
In beta-plus decay, a proton changes into a neutron:
p → n + e⁺ + ν
Gamma Decay
Gamma decay occurs when an excited nucleus emits a high-energy photon and reaches a lower energy state:
X* → X + γ
A or Z.Q7(b): Alpha Decay of Uranium
A common alpha decay example is uranium-238 decay:
²³⁸₉₂U → ²³⁴₉₀Th + ⁴₂He + Q
Check mass number conservation:
238 = 234 + 4
Check atomic number conservation:
92 = 90 + 2
So the equation is balanced.
²³⁸₉₂U → ²³⁴₉₀Th + ⁴₂He + Q.Q7(c): Binding Energy and Nuclear Mass
Binding energy is the energy required to separate a nucleus completely into its individual protons and neutrons. A nucleus with greater binding energy is more tightly bound and more stable.
Mass-energy relation is:
E = mc²
Binding energy is related to mass defect:
BE = Δmc²
The mass of a bound nucleus is less than the sum of masses of its separate nucleons because some mass is converted into binding energy.
If two nuclei have the same mass number and charge number, they have the same number of protons and neutrons. But if:
(B.E.)A > (B.E.)B
then nucleus A has a larger mass defect. Therefore, its actual mass is smaller.
So nucleus B has more mass.
B will have more mass because nucleus A has greater binding energy, greater mass defect and therefore smaller actual mass.Question 8: Fission, Elementary Particles, Composite Particles and Fusion
Full Question
Q.8. (a) Explain nuclear fission with the help of one practical application.
Q.8. (b) What are elementary and composite particles? Give two examples from each family of elementary particles.
Q.8. (c) What is controlled fusion? Why is it hard to achieve on Earth?
Q8(a): Nuclear Fission and Practical Application
Nuclear fission is the splitting of a heavy nucleus into two medium-mass nuclei with the release of energy and neutrons. It usually occurs when a heavy nucleus such as uranium-235 absorbs a neutron.
A typical fission reaction is:
²³⁵U + ¹n → fission fragments + 2 or 3 neutrons + energy
The released neutrons can cause further fission events. This produces a chain reaction.
Practical Application: Nuclear Reactor
In a nuclear reactor, fission is controlled to produce heat. This heat converts water into steam, and steam drives turbines to generate electricity.
| Reactor Part | Function |
|---|---|
| Fuel | Contains fissile material such as uranium-235. |
| Moderator | Slows down fast neutrons. |
| Control rods | Absorb excess neutrons and control chain reaction. |
| Coolant | Removes heat from the reactor core. |
| Shielding | Protects surroundings from radiation. |
Q8(b): Elementary and Composite Particles
Elementary particles are particles that have no known internal structure. In the Standard Model, quarks, leptons and gauge bosons are elementary particles.
Composite particles are made of smaller particles. Protons and neutrons are composite because they are made of quarks.
| Category | Meaning | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Elementary particles | No known substructure | Electron, quarks, neutrino, photon |
| Composite particles | Made of smaller particles | Proton, neutron, mesons, atomic nuclei |
Families of Elementary Particles
| Family | Examples | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Leptons | Electron, neutrino | Do not participate in strong interaction. |
| Quarks | Up quark, down quark | Combine to form hadrons such as protons and neutrons. |
| Gauge bosons | Photon, gluon | Force-carrier particles. |
Q8(c): Controlled Fusion and Why It Is Hard on Earth
Controlled fusion is the process of combining light nuclei under controlled conditions so that energy is released steadily and safely. The most commonly discussed fusion reaction for energy production is deuterium-tritium fusion:
²H + ³H → ⁴He + n + energy
Fusion releases energy because the final products have less mass than the initial nuclei. The mass difference appears as energy:
E = Δmc²
Why Fusion Is Difficult on Earth
- Light nuclei repel each other due to Coulomb repulsion.
- Extremely high temperature is needed to overcome this repulsion.
- The fuel becomes plasma and must be confined.
- Plasma must remain hot and dense for enough time.
- Material walls cannot directly touch the hot plasma.
- Energy losses through radiation and instabilities must be controlled.
- Neutron damage and heat extraction are major engineering challenges.
Main Confinement Methods
| Method | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Magnetic confinement | Uses magnetic fields to hold plasma, as in tokamak and stellarator designs. |
| Inertial confinement | Uses powerful lasers or beams to compress fusion fuel for a very short time. |
Revision Plan for CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved
After reading this CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved guide, revise it in three rounds. First, memorize the definitions and formulas. Second, reproduce each derivation without looking. Third, solve the numerical questions again with units and compare your results.
| Question | Revision Task |
|---|---|
| Q2 | Write Gauss law in dielectrics, derive shell field and recalculate 1.44×10⁵ N/C. |
| Q3 | Define induced emf, derive ε=-N dΦ/dt and solve the 40 V numerical. |
| Q4 | Derive particle-in-box energy levels and recalculate electron ground-state energy 0.376 eV. |
| Q5 | Define Bravais lattice, compute 64 ų and compare base-centered and face-centered cells. |
| Q6 | Explain Fermi sphere, write Fermi-Dirac distribution and calculate copper Fermi energy 7.03 eV. |
| Q7 | Compare alpha, beta and gamma decay; write uranium alpha decay and explain binding energy versus mass. |
| Q8 | Prepare nuclear fission, particle classification and controlled fusion as separate 10-mark notes. |
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Exam Note: For CSS Physics Paper-II, avoid writing only final formulas. Define the concept, write the governing law, show the mathematical route and end with a final answer plus unit. This is especially important in electromagnetism, quantum mechanics, solid-state physics and nuclear physics questions.
FAQs About CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved
What does CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved include?
CSS Physics Paper-II 2026 Solved includes complete solved answers for Q2 to Q8 with definitions, derivations, numerical calculations, clean equations, final answers and exam-ready notes.
What is Gauss law in dielectrics?
Gauss law in dielectrics is ∮D·dA=Qfree or ∇·D=ρfree, where D=ε0E+P.
What is the electric field outside the charged spherical shell?
For a point outside the shell, E=q/(4πε0r²)=kq/r². For the given values, the field is approximately 1.44×10⁵ N/C.
What is the induced emf in Question 3?
The magnetic flux changes from 0.5 Wb to 0.1 Wb in 0.2 s through 20 turns, so the induced emf magnitude is 40 V.
What is the ground-state energy of electron in a 1 nm box?
The ground-state energy is approximately 6.03×10⁻²⁰ J, or 0.376 eV.
What is the volume of a cubic unit cell with side 0.4 nm?
The volume is 0.064 nm³, equal to 64 ų or 6.4×10⁻²⁹ m³.
What is Fermi sphere?
Fermi sphere is the filled region of momentum or k-space up to the Fermi energy at 0 K. It is not a single energy state.
What is the Fermi energy of copper in Question 6?
Using the given formula and number density, the Fermi energy of copper is approximately 7.03 eV.
Which nucleus has more mass if two nuclei have the same A and Z but different binding energies?
The nucleus with smaller binding energy has more mass. If (B.E.)A>(B.E.)B, then nucleus B has more mass.
Can I paste this HTML into WordPress?
Yes. This HTML avoids an H1 inside the body, uses clean H2/H3/H4 structure, includes FAQ/schema, and keeps equations visible without dark formula boxes.
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The Indus Odyssey from Debal to Islamabad
The Ultimate Guide to Pakistan Affairs (711-2025). A focused Kindle guide for CSS, PMS, PCS, PPSC and FPSC Pakistan Affairs preparation.

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