aaj92
- 23
- 0
Homework Statement
Consider an electron (charge -e and mass m) in a circular orbit of radius r around a fixed proton (charge+e). Remembering that the inward Coulomb force ( ke^{2}/r^{2}) is what gives the electron its centripetal acceleration, prove that the electron's KE is equal to -\frac{1}{2} times it's PE; that is, T = -\frac{1}{2}U and hence E = \frac{1}{2}U. (This result is a consequence of the so called virial theorem. Now consider the following inelastic collision of an electron with a hydrogen atom: Electron number 1 is in a circular orbit of radius r around a fixed proton. Electron 2 approaches from afar with kinetic energy T_{2}. When the second electron hits the atom, the first electron is knocked free and the second is captured in a circular orbit of radius r'.
Homework Equations
coulomb force : ke^{2}/r^{2}
virial theorem T = nU/2
The Attempt at a Solution
I'm not really worried about the second part of this problem quite yet. Right now I'm not really sure how to go about proving that the kinetic energy is -\frac{1}{2} times the potential energy... can someone get me started on the right track?