Acceleration of a proton in an electric field

AI Thread Summary
A proton accelerates from rest in a uniform electric field of 640 N/C, achieving a speed of 1.20 x 10^6 m/s. The calculated acceleration is 6.13 x 10^10 m/s^2, derived from the equations F = ma and F = qE. There was confusion regarding the notation "+e," which simply indicates the proton's positive charge, not the presence of an electron. Concerns were raised about the high acceleration potentially leading to speeds exceeding light, but it was clarified that the speed mentioned is a small fraction of light speed. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding charge notation and relativistic effects in high-speed scenarios.
Walley1
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Homework Statement


A proton (+e) accelerates from rest in a uniform electric field of 640 N/C. At some later time, the proton's speed is 1.20 x 10^6 m/s. Find the acceleration of the proton. The mass of a proton is 1.67x10^-27 kg. Charge on a proton is +1.6x10^-19C.


Homework Equations


F=ma
F=qE


The Attempt at a Solution


F=qE
F=ma
ma=qE
(1.6x10^-19)(640)=(1.67x10^-27)(a)
a=6.13x10^10m/s^2

I don't think this is correct. I ignored the (+e) because I didn't know what to do with it. Wouldn't an electron and a proton mean a net neutral charge? Also, the acceleration is just way too high. The particle would have to travel faster than the speed of light for a short time.
 
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Walley1 said:
I don't think this is correct.
Looks fine to me.
I ignored the (+e) because I didn't know what to do with it.
+e is just the proton's charge, which you used just fine. e is the elementary charge; the charge on an electron is -e, on a proton it's +e.

Wouldn't an electron and a proton mean a net neutral charge?
There's no electron in this problem.

Also, the acceleration is just way too high. The particle would have to travel faster than the speed of light for a short time.
The acceleration is high. Once the speed gets too high, Newton's laws must be modified using relativity. Note that the speed they quote is only a small fraction of light speed.
 
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Okay. I thought that by +e the problem meant that the electron and the proton were a pair (as in a hydrogen atom). They just meant that the charge on a proton is the same as the charge on an electron, but positive. Thanks for clearing that up.
 
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