Download Cathode ray tubes - The University of Sydney

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Elementary particle wikipedia , lookup

Neutron magnetic moment wikipedia , lookup

Maxwell's equations wikipedia , lookup

Renormalization wikipedia , lookup

Introduction to gauge theory wikipedia , lookup

Magnetic field wikipedia , lookup

History of quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup

Newton's theorem of revolving orbits wikipedia , lookup

Time in physics wikipedia , lookup

Fundamental interaction wikipedia , lookup

Electric charge wikipedia , lookup

Speed of gravity wikipedia , lookup

Anti-gravity wikipedia , lookup

History of subatomic physics wikipedia , lookup

Magnetic monopole wikipedia , lookup

Superconductivity wikipedia , lookup

Electromagnetism wikipedia , lookup

Electrostatics wikipedia , lookup

Field (physics) wikipedia , lookup

Electromagnet wikipedia , lookup

Work (physics) wikipedia , lookup

Aharonov–Bohm effect wikipedia , lookup

Lorentz force wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
The University of Sydney
School of Physics
Ideas to Implementation
Cathode Ray Tubes
Changing the direction of Cathode Rays
There are two ways you can change the direction of a cathode ray
1. F = qE
An electric field can apply a force to a charged particle: where q is the charge of the particle
and E is the strength of the electric field. The force is parallel to the electric field: for a
positive charge the force is in the direction of the field, for a negative charge the force is in
the opposite direction to the field.
Label the diagram with positive and negative charges.
E field
2. F = qvB sin
The force on a particle moving in a magnetic field is in a direction perpendicular to both the
field and the direction of motion of the particle. where q is the charge of the particle, v is its
velocity, B is the magnetic field strength and
is the angle between the direction that the
charge is moving and the direction of the magnetic field. The direction of the force is given by
the right hand rule.
Label the diagram with Force, Velocity, Path of charged particle and Magnetic field.
The University of Sydney
School of Physics
Ideas to Implementation
Measurement of e/m
You can use the apparatus here to measure the ratio e/m. The radius of the circular path the
electrons take in the tube depends on how fast they are going and how strong the magnetic
field is.
Measure the current and voltage from the front of the power supplies. You measure the
electron path radius by seeing where the beam crosses the scale that sits behind the bulb.
Diameter
The current in the coils is:
(This produces the magnetic field)
I = ______________ (A)
The accelerating voltage is:
(This accelerates the electrons out into the bulb)
V = ______________ (V)
The radius of the circular path is:
r = ______________ (m)
Use these measurements to calculate e/m in units of Coulombs/kg
B = 7.80 ×10−4 I (Wb /m 2 )
Which measurement contributes the most uncertainty to this calculation? How have we
adjusted for parallax error in this experiment?