Positron movement in a coil-induced magnetic field

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on illustrating the path of a positron in a coil-induced magnetic field, comparing it to an electron's path. It examines two scenarios: when the particle's velocity and the magnetic field are aligned and when they are opposite. Participants clarify that the positron's path will mirror that of the electron but with opposite charge effects. The diagrams provided show the instantaneous forces acting on the particles, emphasizing the need to understand how these forces affect their trajectories. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexities of particle movement in magnetic fields and the importance of visual aids in understanding these concepts.
wgas
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in a microscopy class:
problem is to illustrate the path of a positron on both sides of the axis in a coil produced magnetic field. consider both cases of the particle's velocity and the magnetic field being a)in the same direction & b)in opposite directions.

i have no clue. any help? would it just be the opposite of an electron's path?
 
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Do you know anything about the electron path? You should write something about that, at least.
 
see attached pic.

where A & B are condenser lenses in an EM, so they are fields generated by a coil.
A) the field & the velocity are the same direction
B) they are opposite
(both only shown on one side of the axis).

is this correct , with the electron in blue & the positron in red?
 

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As far as I understand from your diagram, the dotted line represents the axis of the coil, and the e-/p+ is traveling in a st line inside the coil. Just outside the coil the magnetic field has started to diverge away from the axis, and you have drawn the instantaneous force on the e-/p+. The path of the particle inside the coil is above the axis.

In fig A, the B would point slightly upward and remain in the plane of the paper just outside the coil. For a +ve q, the force would be only out of the paper toward you, with no “down” component. Remember, these are just the instantaneous forces on the particles when the field lines are not parallel any more, not the trajectories. After an instant, there will be a “down” component to the force, but I’m not very sure how the full path is going to be. I have to read up on electron microscopes.

The same goes for fig B. The “out” and “in” are correct.
 
ah. thanks for the help.
 
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