Calculating Recoil Momentum in Two-Dimensional Nuclear Decay

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the momentum of a recoiling nucleus after a radioactive decay event where an electron and a neutrino are emitted at right angles. Participants express confusion about the angles involved and the conservation of momentum equations. Clarification is provided that the angles for the emitted particles are not necessarily 45 degrees, as they are emitted at right angles. The velocity of the electron is calculated using its momentum, leading to further questions about the velocity of the nucleus. The conversation emphasizes the need to correctly interpret the problem and apply the conservation laws accurately.
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Homework Statement



A radioactive nucleus at rest decays into a second nucleus, an electron and a neutrino.The electron and neutrino are emitted at right angles and have momenta of 9.3x10^23kg*m/s and 5.40x10^23kg*m/s, respectively. What are the magnitude and direction of the momentum of the second (recoiling) nucleus?

Homework Equations


px conserved: mAvA=mAv'ACosΘ'A+mBv'BCosΘ'B
py conserved: mAvA=mAv'AsinΘ'A+mBv'BSinΘ'B



The Attempt at a Solution


Really confused on how to approach this one? Tried to draw a picture first of what's going on but not really working...please help
 
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How big is vA?
How are the trig functions of θA and θB related?
 
I think the angles are both 45degrees...and maybe vA= v'A Cos (45degrees)+v'B Cos(45degrees)= 2v'A Cos(45degrees)??
 
rvnt said:
I think the angles are both 45degrees...
There is nothing in the problem that says that they are. The problem says that the neutrino and the electron are emitted at right angles. Let

θn = neutrino angle
θe = electron angle

then θn + θe = 90o

in which case
cos(θn) = cos(90o - θe) = ______ ?
sin(θn) = sin(90o - θe) = ______ ?
and maybe vA= v'A Cos (45degrees)+v'B Cos(45degrees)= 2v'A Cos(45degrees)??
What does vA represent? The velocity of what? Does it have a value that you can ascertain?
 
vA is the velocity of the electron before the collsion. p=mv the mass of an electron is 9.11*10^-31kg so v=(9.30*10^-23)/(9.11*10^-31)=1.0208*10^8m/s so I think va= 2(1.0208*10^8m/s) CosΘ?
 
rvnt said:
vA is the velocity of the electron before the collsion.
You mean the nucleus. There is no "electron" before the collision. What is a number for that? Read the problem.
 
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