 So the JEEV question paper has been released obviously. What do you think about this paper? So let's start with the topic weightages. So in my analysis I found that there has been an equal weightage to both grade 11 and grade 12 chapters. So there were 14 questions in grade 11, out of grade 11 chapters and 16 questions out of grade 12 chapters which is almost 50-50. But I think last year only has less chapters. So more weightage for the 12th portion. Yes indirectly more weightage for the 12th portions because there are only six or seven chapters and they are also easier. Effectively six or seven chapters and so grade 12 is indirectly more weighted in this paper than grade 11. For example there were three questions from current electricity and three questions from modern physics. That's six questions and more than one-fifth of a paper from two chapters which are actually considered easy compared to the rest of the curriculum especially compared to grade 11. So grade 12 is much more heavy for preparation. And how question paper getting easier has been continued? So I think that the top four different branches will go higher in different disciplines. Since the paper is getting easier, so is there any scope of making silly mistakes? Yes, as we usually see with easier paper, silly mistakes are more common. So the funny coincidence I found that is in two of the papers I realized 27th and 29th January. Both of the papers question 44 are identified as one-on-trap for a common silly mistake. So question 44 is a gravity question where they ask the distance of an object above the surface of the earth. But as you solve the question you would get the distance of the object from the center of the earth in the natural way and you might forget to subtract the radius of the earth to get the distance from the surface of the earth. That is one opportunity. Another interesting question I found was question 44 in the other 29th January session where a charged particle is going along a straight line with constant velocity and for it to do this what kind of fields could be present? And in the options we had e equals to 0 and b equal to 0 or e not equal to 0, b not equal to 0 and different combinations of course. So we are supposed to analyze and think that it's possible that both fields are 0 obviously because there would be no force on the particle. It's possible that electric field is 0 and magnetic field is not 0 and yet there is no force on particle because as we know the magnetic field does not exert a force and it is parallel to the velocity of the particle. Also if magnetic and electric field are both non-zero then the forces due to magnetic and electric field might cancel out perfectly as we see in all effective graduate studies. The forces might cancel out perfectly and still the particle might continue with constant velocity. So people might jump to the conclusion that both fields are 0 and take that option. That is another scope of theory mistake in a paper although it's an easy construction question which might take much time. Yes I agree. I also found that last 12 portion and parameters from day 11 are scored mostly here. Yes in fact I'm expecting that the next session is going to be similar in difficulty because they would not suddenly change the difficulty within the same year and I also feel like the heavier weight to grade 12 will be retained in the next session. Also I feel like there might be more weightage to areas like induction and magneto statics which are usually recorded by question paper sectors but have been kind of less in this question paper compared to what they usually are. So students all the best for the session 2 of the JMAINs.