University Physics Volume 2
18th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168161
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax
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Chapter 11, Problem 50P
The magnitudes of the electric and magnetic fields in a velocity selector are
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University Physics Volume 2
Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding Repeat the previous...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding A uniform magnetic field...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding A straight, flexible...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding In what orientation would...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding A Hall people consists of...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding A cyclotron is to be...Ch. 11 - Discuss the similarities and differences between...Ch. 11 - (a) Is it possible for the magnetic force on a...Ch. 11 - At a given instant, an electron and a proton are...Ch. 11 - Does increasing the magnitude of a uniform...
Ch. 11 - An electron passes through a magnetic field...Ch. 11 - If a charged particle moves in a straight line,...Ch. 11 - How could you determine which pole of an...Ch. 11 - Describe the error that results from accidently...Ch. 11 - Considering the magnetic force law, are the...Ch. 11 - Why can a nearby magnet distort a cathode ray tube...Ch. 11 - A magnetic field exerts a force on the moving...Ch. 11 - There are regions where the magnetic field of...Ch. 11 - Hall potentials are much larger for poor...Ch. 11 - Describe the primary function of the electric...Ch. 11 - What is the direction of the magnetic force on a...Ch. 11 - Repeat previous exercise for a negative charge.Ch. 11 - What is the direction of the velocity of a...Ch. 11 - Repeat previous exercise for a positive charge.Ch. 11 - What is the direction of the magnetic field that...Ch. 11 - Repeat previous exercise for a negative charge.Ch. 11 - (a) Aircraft sometimes acquire small static...Ch. 11 - (a) A cosmic ray proton moving toward Earth at...Ch. 11 - An electron moving at 4.00103 m/s in a 1.25-T...Ch. 11 - (a) A physicist performing a sensitive measurement...Ch. 11 - A cosmic-ray electron moves at 7.5 × 106 m/sinches...Ch. 11 - (a) Viewers of Star Trek have heard of an...Ch. 11 - (a) An oxygen-16 ion with a mass of 2.661026 kg...Ch. 11 - An electron in a TV CRT moves with a speed of...Ch. 11 - (a) At what speed will a proton move in a circular...Ch. 11 - (a) What voltage will accelerate electrons to a...Ch. 11 - An alpha-particle ( m=6.641027kg , q=3.21019C )...Ch. 11 - A particle of charge q and mass m is accelerated...Ch. 11 - What is the direction of the magnetic force on the...Ch. 11 - What is the direction of a current that...Ch. 11 - What is the direction of the magnetic field that...Ch. 11 - (a) What is the force per meter on a lightning...Ch. 11 - (a) A dc power line for a light-rail system caries...Ch. 11 - A wire carrying a 30.0-A current passes between...Ch. 11 - (a) By how many percent is the torque of a motor...Ch. 11 - (a) What is the maximum torque on a 150-tum square...Ch. 11 - Find the current through a loop needed to create a...Ch. 11 - Calculate the magnetic field strength needed on a...Ch. 11 - Since the equation for torque on a...Ch. 11 - , (a) At what angle 0 is tlie torque on a current...Ch. 11 - A proton has a magnetic field due to its spin. The...Ch. 11 - (a) A 200-turn circular loop of radius SO.0 cm is...Ch. 11 - Repeat the previous problem, but with the loop...Ch. 11 - A strip of copper is placed in a uniform magnetic...Ch. 11 - The cross-sectional dimensions of the copper strip...Ch. 11 - The magnitudes of the electric and magnetic fields...Ch. 11 - A charged particle moves through a velocity...Ch. 11 - A Hall probe gives a reading of 1.5V for a current...Ch. 11 - A physicist is designing a cyclotron to accelerate...Ch. 11 - The strengths of the fields in the velocity...Ch. 11 - The magnetic field in a cyclotron is 1.25 T, and...Ch. 11 - A mass spectrometer is being used to separate...Ch. 11 - (a) Triply charged uranium-235 and uranium-238...Ch. 11 - Calculate the magnetic force on a hypothetical...Ch. 11 - Repeat the previous problem with a new magnetic...Ch. 11 - An electron is projected into a uniform magnetic...Ch. 11 - The mass and chaise of a water droplet are 1.0104g...Ch. 11 - Four different proton velocities are given. For...Ch. 11 - An electron of kinetic energy 2000 eV passes...Ch. 11 - An alpha-particle (m=6.641027kg,q=3.21019C) moving...Ch. 11 - An electron moving with a velocity...Ch. 11 - At a particular instant an electron is traveling...Ch. 11 - Repeat the calculations of the previous problem...Ch. 11 - What magnetic field is required in order to...Ch. 11 - An electron and a proton move with the same speed...Ch. 11 - A proton and an alpha-particle have the same...Ch. 11 - A singly charged ion takes 2.0 × 10-3 s to...Ch. 11 - A particle moving downward at a speed of 6.0106...Ch. 11 - , A proton, deuteron, and an alpha-particle ae all...Ch. 11 - A singly charged ion is moving in a uniform...Ch. 11 - Two particles have the same linear momentum, but...Ch. 11 - A uniform magnetic field of magnitude is directed...Ch. 11 - An electron moving along the +x -axis at 5.0106m/s...Ch. 11 - (a) A 0.750-m-long section of cable carrying...Ch. 11 - (a)What is the angle between a wire carrying an...Ch. 11 - A 1.0-rn-long segment of wire lies along the...Ch. 11 - A 5.0-m section of a long, straight wire carries a...Ch. 11 - An electromagnet produces a magnetic field of...Ch. 11 - The current loop shown in the accompanying figure...Ch. 11 - A circular coil of radius 5.0 cm is wound with...Ch. 11 - Acircularcoiofwireofradius5.Ocmhas2Otums and...Ch. 11 - A current-carrying coil in a magnetic field...Ch. 11 - A 40-cm by 6.0-cm rectangular current loop carries...Ch. 11 - A circular coil with 200 turns Las a radius of 2.0...Ch. 11 - The current through a circular wire loop of radius...Ch. 11 - A wire of length 1.0 m is wound into a single-turn...Ch. 11 - Consider an electron rotating in a circular orbit...Ch. 11 - The Hall effect is to be used to find the sign of...Ch. 11 - The density of charge carriers far copper is...Ch. 11 - The Hall effect is to be used to find the density...Ch. 11 - Show tliat the Hall voltage across wires made of...Ch. 11 - A velocity selector in a mass spectrometer uses a...Ch. 11 - Find the radius of curvature of the path of a...Ch. 11 - Unreasonable results To construct a non-mechanical...Ch. 11 - Unreasonable results A charged particle having...Ch. 11 - Unreasonable results An inventor wants to generate...Ch. 11 - Unreasonable results Frustrated by the small Hall...Ch. 11 - A particle of charge +q and mass m moves with...Ch. 11 - A proton of speed v=6105m/s enters a region of...Ch. 11 - A particle’s path is bent when it passes through a...Ch. 11 - In a region a non-uniform magnetic field exists...Ch. 11 - A copper rod of mass in and length L is hung from...Ch. 11 - The accompanied figure shows an arrangement for...Ch. 11 - A wire ismade into a circular shape of radius R...Ch. 11 - A long-rigid wire lies along the x-axis and cairns...Ch. 11 - A circular loop of wire of area 10 cm2 carries a...
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- Check Your Understanding Repeat the previous problem with the magnetic field in the x-direction rather than in the z-direction. Check your answers with RHR-1.arrow_forwardConsider the mass spectrometer shown schematically in Active Figure 22.12. The magnitude of the electric field between the plates of the velocity selector is 2.50 103 V/m, and the magnetic field in both the velocity selector and the deflection chamber has a magnitude of 0.035 0 T. Calculate the radius of the path for a singly charged ion having a mass m = 2.18 1026 kg.arrow_forwardA mass spectrometer (Fig. 30.40, page 956) operates with a uniform magnetic field of 20.0 mT and an electric field of 4.00 103 V/m in the velocity selector. What is the radius of the semicircular path of a doubly ionized alpha particle (ma = 6.64 1027 kg)?arrow_forward
- , A proton, deuteron, and an alpha-particle ae all accelerated from rest through the same potential difference. They then enter the same magnetic field, moving perpendicular to it. Compute the ratios of the radii of their circular paths. Assume that md= 2wmp and ma= 4mp.arrow_forwardAn electron of kinetic energy 2000 eV passes between parallel plates that are 1.0 an apart and kept at a potential difference of 300 V. What is the strength of the uniform magnetic field B that will allow the electron to travel undeflected through the plates? Assume E and B are perpendicular.arrow_forwardThe strengths of the fields in the velocity selector of a Bainbridge mass spectrometer are B = 0.500 T and E=1.2105 Van, and tire strength of the magnetic field that separates the ions is Bo=0.750 T. A stream of singly charged Li ions is found to bend in a circular arc of radius 2.32 cm. What is the mass of the Li ions?arrow_forward
- Is B constant in magnitude for points that lie on a magnetic field line?arrow_forwardA cosmic-ray proton in interstellar space has an energy of 10.0 MeV and executes a circular orbit having a radius equal to that of Mercury’s orbit around the Sun (5.80 × 1010 m). What is the magnetic field in that region of space?arrow_forwardDoes increasing the magnitude of a uniform magnetic field through which a charge is traveling necessarily mean increasing the magnetic force on the charge? Does changing the direction of the field necessarily mean a change in the force on the charge?arrow_forward
- Assume the region to the right of a certain plane contains a uniform magnetic field of magnitude 1.00 mT and the field is zero in the region to the left of the plane as shown in Figure P22.71. An electron, originally traveling perpendicular to the boundary plane, passes into the region of the field. (a) Determine the time interval required for the electron to leave the field-filled region, noting that the electrons path is a semicircle. (b) Assuming the maximum depth of penetration into the field is 2.00 cm, find the kinetic energy of the electron.arrow_forwardA long, straight, horizontal wire carries a left-to-right current of 20 A. If the wire is placed in a uniform magnetic field of magnitude 4.0105 T that is directed vertically downward, what is tire resultant magnitude of the magnetic field 20 cm above the wire? 20 cm below the wire?arrow_forwardShow that the magnetic field at a distance r from the axis of two circular parallel plates, produced by placing charge Q(t) on the plates is Bind=02rdQ(t)dtarrow_forward
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