[ad_1]
The National Testing Agency, NTA has concluded the JEE Main Examination 2025 Day 5 on 8 April 2025. The examination was conducted in the same shift for Paper 1 (BE/B.Tech) from 3 pm to 6 pm.
The examination consisted of three sections- Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. The examination offered a well -round challenge, recording an overall medium difficulty level. The examination was cuisted by thinking, influencing a commendable balance between all three subjects. Chemistry emerged as the easiest, physics presented a mixture of easy and moderately complex questions, while mathematics proved to be the most sought-by-time-it is mainly timing and due to calculation-intensive nature.
Engineering Aacash Educational Services Limited, National Academic Director Ajay Sharma shared a full section-wise analysis here.
Physics
The physics leaned to the easy end of the spectrum, but did not have its part of the medium-century problems. Paper laid great emphasis on numerical and formula-centered questions, which demands rapid accuracy and quick ideological memory. Major subjects included mechanics, units and measurements, electrostatics and optics. In particular, the electromagnetic induction (EMI) was absent, and chapters such as oscillations, waves, magnetism and thermodynamics appeared only with restraint. While some problems required a little more time to calculate, they were not extremely difficult.
chemistry
Chemistry stood out as the most student -friendly section. A significant part of the paper was made up of direct, statement-based questions, making it quick and less stressful to navigate. Organic chemistry dominated the segment, followed by inorganic chemistry. Physical chemistry was at least represented, touching topics such as chemical kinetics and solutions with only a handful of questions. Most of the theoretical material was straight from NCERT, and even numerical questions more bends towards ideological understanding than complex calculations.
Mathematics
Mathematics was mentally and in terms of time, both were the most tax segments. While the questions were well distributed in the syllabus, areas such as 3D geometry, vectors and coniferous classes gained more emphasis. On the other hand, subjects such as Matriss and Calculus were comparatively less represented. Most of the problems were loaded with calculations, which used to test the management skills of the students. For many candidates, this section looked like a marathon of endurance.
[ad_2]


