How Does Zero Total Energy Affect the Motion of a Charged Particle?

nicktacik
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In one dimension, the motion of a charged particle (q1) will be [assume q2 is stationary]

\frac{d^2 x}{d t^2} =\frac{Kq_1q_2}{m x^2}

Is there a solution to this differential equation?
 
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How about
(At+B)^{\frac{2}{3}}
where
\frac{-2A^2}{9}=\frac{Kq_1q_2}{m}
and
B
is anything you want.
 
Thanks, that seems to work. I wonder why maple couldn't give me that answer.
 
well... it's a pretty particular solution I gave you... it only works when the "total energy" is zero, i.e., when
\frac{1}{2}mv^2 + \frac{Kq1q2}{x} = 0.

If you rewrite A and B in terms of x(0) and v(0) you will see that the condition on A means that
1/2mv(0)^2+Kq1q2/x(0)=0... but it is also easy to show that 1/2mv^2 + Kq1q2/x is a constant in time thus it is always zero.

In general the solution is hard, but using the constants of the motion we can write
\int_{x(0)}^{x}dy\frac{\sqrt{m}}{\sqrt{2E-2Kq_1q_2/y}}=t
to find t(x) and then invert to find x(t)...
 
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