Acceleration of an electron held at 1m from the nucleus of an Uranium atom.

AI Thread Summary
To determine the initial acceleration of an electron held 1 meter from a uranium nucleus, Coulomb's law is the relevant principle, as it describes the electrostatic force between charged particles. The electron experiences a significant attraction due to the positive charge of the uranium nucleus, which can be calculated using Coulomb's law. The initial acceleration can then be derived from the force acting on the electron divided by its mass. The expected answer for the acceleration is approximately 23,300 m/s². Understanding the application of Coulomb's law is crucial for solving this dynamics problem effectively.
mxdrk
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Homework Statement



An electron is held fixed at a distance of 1 m from the nucleus of a uranium atom (Z = 92). If the electron is then released, what is the magnitude of its initial acceleration?


Homework Equations



I am not sure which kinematic equation that I should use.

The Attempt at a Solution



This is the only problem on my physics final review that I do not know how to do. I know that the answer is 23,300 m/s^2, but I do not know how to get this answer. I would really love it if someone could explain how to solve this to me.
 
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This is a dynamics problem, not a kinematics one. Hint: What force acts on the electron?
 
I was thinking the strong nuclear force, but I believe at 1m it is too far for that to have an effect. The only other thing I could think of would be gravity?
 
mxdrk said:
I was thinking the strong nuclear force, but I believe at 1m it is too far for that to have an effect. The only other thing I could think of would be gravity?
Neither of those forces would be significant. What other force acts?
 
The only other thing I could think of would be Coulomb's law. This is the only problem out of 100 that I just have no clue about. I keep rereading my notes but can't seem to find out what I'm missing on.

Thanks for the help though, I appreciate you trying to lead me to the answer.
 
mxdrk said:
The only other thing I could think of would be Coulomb's law.
That's the one.

The positively charged nucleus attracts the electron with an electrical force given by Coulomb's law. Figure out that force.
 
Thanks! Here, it was an incredibly easy problem.
 
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