Step 1: Drag deceleration model.
For a ballistic entry (no lift guidance), the magnitude of drag deceleration is
\[
\left|\frac{dV}{dt}\right| \;\approx\; \frac{D}{m}
= \frac{1}{2}\,\frac{\rho V^2 C_D A}{m}
= \frac{\rho V^2}{2\,\beta},
\]
where \(\rho(h)\) is air density, \(V\) is speed, and \(\beta=\dfrac{m}{C_D A}\) is the ballistic coefficient (constant for a given vehicle/attitude).
Step 2: Competing trends during entry.
- \(\rho(h)\): increases rapidly as altitude decreases (roughly \(\rho \propto e^{-h/H}\) with scale height \(H\)).
- \(V\): starts very large at high \(h\) and decreases due to drag as the vehicle descends.
Thus \(|dV/dt| \propto \rho V^2\) is the product of an increasing factor \(\rho(h)\) and a decreasing factor \(V^2(h)\).
Step 3: Location of the maximum.
At very high \(h\): \(\rho\) is tiny \(\Rightarrow |dV/dt|\) small despite large \(V\).
As \(h\) decreases: \(\rho\) grows quickly while \(V\) is still high \(\Rightarrow |dV/dt|\) increases.
Deeper down: \(V\) has dropped substantially (large energy already dissipated) even though \(\rho\) is higher \(\Rightarrow\) the product \(\rho V^2\) reaches a maximum (the "max-\(q\)"/max-deceleration region) and then decreases.
Therefore the qualitative curve must be bell-shaped: small at high altitude, increasing to a peak at mid–altitudes, and falling again toward lower altitudes.
Step 4: Eliminate wrong plots.
(A) and (C) show large deceleration at high altitude—contradicts tiny \(\rho\).
(B) shows deceleration growing toward the ground monotonically—ignores the strong reduction in \(V\).
(D) matches the expected peak at an intermediate \(h\).
Final Answer:
\[
\boxed{\text{(D) Bell-shaped }|dV/dt|\text{ vs. }h\text{ with a peak at mid-altitude}}
\]
F and G denote two points on a spacecraft’s orbit around a planet, as indicated in the figure. O is the center of the planet, P is the periapsis, and the angles are as indicated in the figure. If \( OF = 8000 \, {km} \), \( OG = 10000 \, {km} \), \( \theta_F = 0^\circ \), and \( \theta_G = 60^\circ \), the eccentricity of the spacecraft's orbit is ___________ (rounded off to two decimal places).

F and G denote two points on a spacecraft’s orbit around a planet, as indicated in the figure. O is the center of the planet, P is the periapsis, and the angles are as indicated in the figure. If \( OF = 8000 \, {km} \), \( OG = 10000 \, {km} \), \( \theta_F = 0^\circ \), and \( \theta_G = 60^\circ \), the eccentricity of the spacecraft's orbit is ___________ (rounded off to two decimal places).

Courage : Bravery :: Yearning :
Select the most appropriate option to complete the analogy.
We __________ tennis in the lawn when it suddenly started to rain.
Select the most appropriate option to complete the above sentence.
A 4 × 4 digital image has pixel intensities (U) as shown in the figure. The number of pixels with \( U \leq 4 \) is:

In the given figure, the numbers associated with the rectangle, triangle, and ellipse are 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Which one among the given options is the most appropriate combination of \( P \), \( Q \), and \( R \)?

A rectangle has a length \(L\) and a width \(W\), where \(L>W\). If the width, \(W\), is increased by 10%, which one of the following statements is correct for all values of \(L\) and \(W\)?
Select the most appropriate option to complete the above sentence.