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20 October, 01:33

How long does it take an electron to complete a circular orbit perpendicular to a 1.4 g magnetic field?

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Answers (2)
  1. 20 October, 02:13
    0
    Answer;

    =255 ns

    Explanation and solution;

    The centripetal force of circular motion must be equal to the magnetic force:

    qvB = mv^2/r

    => v/r = Bq/m

    Remember angular speed is:

    ω = v/r = 2π/T

    Where T is the period of a single orbit.

    Thus:

    2π/T = B (q/m)

    => T = 2π / (B (q/m))

    q/m = 1.76x10^11 C/kg for an electron, and

    B = 1.4 G = 1.4 (1x10^-4) T = 1.4x10^-4 T (T in this case is obviously the SI unit Tesla, unrelated to the period T, sorry 'bout that).

    So we have the period:

    T = 2π / (1.4x10^-4 x 1.76x10^11)

    = 2.55 x10^-7 s

    = 255 ns.

    Therefore period is 255 ns
  2. 20 October, 05:17
    0
    Answer

    T = 2π / (1.4x10^-4 x 1.76x10^11) = 2.55x10^-7 s

    Explanation

    1. The centripetal force must be equal.

    The centripetal force of circular motion must be equal to the magnetic force hence:

    qvB = mv^2/r

    v = (qBr) / m

    Since angular speed is: ω = v/r = 2π/T

    2. v = 2πr/T

    Where T is the period of a single orbit. Thus substituting equation 2 in equation 1 and making T the subject:

    3. T = 2π / (B (q/m))

    Substituting B = 1.4 G = > 1.4 x 10^-4 T

    and q/m = 1.76x10^11 C/kg in equation 3

    T = 2π / (1.4x10^-4 x 1.76x10^11) = 2.55x10^-7 s
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