Charged Particle in Magnetic field calculation

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the radius of curvature for an alpha particle in a magnetic field, using the formula r = mv/qB. The calculated radius is significantly larger than the expected 1 cm, yielding a result of around 79 cm, raising concerns about potential errors in data or unit conversion. Participants suggest verifying the values for the alpha particle's velocity and magnetic field strength, as these are not intrinsic properties of the particle. The complexity of the velocity calculation and the source of the data are also questioned, indicating that the magnetic field strength may need to be much higher to achieve the desired trajectory radius. The conversation emphasizes the importance of accurate data sourcing and unit consistency in physics calculations.
Matthew Clisby
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Homework Statement



Basically having a problem when trying to theoretically calculate the mass of alpha particle in a charged field.

r is the unknown radius of curvature
m = mass of an alpha particle (6.646 *10^-27 kg)
v = velocity of an alpha particle immediatly after decay (1.381 *10^7 m/s)
q = charge of an alpha particle (3.2 *10^-19 C)
B = magnetic field strength (0.005 Tesla)

Homework Equations



r=mv/qB

The Attempt at a Solution


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Answer should be around 1cm but instead value is around 79cm. What's going wrong, am I forgetting something obvious. 1cm is published everywhere and was similar to my experimental results.

Thanks
 
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What is r? Circular orbit? State more accuratelly all data and unknown ...
 
+ check the equation and in the proper unit system ...
 
Stavros Kiri said:
+ check the equation and in the proper unit system ...
Stavros Kiri said:
What is r? Circular orbit? State more accuratelly all data and unknown ...
Thanks Stavros I've updated it would and it checks out fully with the SI unit of equations, is there any value I've used that seems blindingly wrong to you?
 
Matthew Clisby said:
Thanks Stavros I've updated it would and it checks out fully with the SI unit of equations, is there any value I've used that seems blindingly wrong to you?
Seems ok now. Values also seem ok and the equation is correct (comes from Lorentz force and circular motion). Did you convert cm to m properly (for SI units - not CGS)? Perhaps 79cm is 0.79 or something ... (I didn't do the calculation). You check it first, all units converted properly in SI ...
 
Stavros Kiri said:
Seems ok now. Values also seem ok and the equation is correct (comes from Lorentz force and circular motion). Did you convert cm to m properly (for SI units - not CGS)? Perhaps 79cm is 0.79 or something ... (I didn't do the calculation). You check it first, all units converted properly in SI ...
Yeah, annoying thing is that I've done exactly that but the answer just comes out wrong..., even then 79cm is quite a way off of 1cm
 
What is the source of your data for the velocity of the alpha particle and the strength of the magnetic field? Those two would appear to be the only things in your scenario that are not intrinsic properties of the particle.
 
gneill said:
What is the source of your data for the velocity of the alpha particle and the strength of the magnetic field? Those two would appear to be the only things in your scenario that are not intrinsic properties of the particle.

The field is just an exemplar of a lowly induced field and the velocity calculation is considerably more complex: (see picture)

This value is also similar to one found on Wikipedia (I know the source is awful I couldn't find it anywhere else)
 

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The depicted velocity calculation is a bit overly detailed for the present purpose, but gives a value that seems reasonable to me. It essentially apportions the energy released according to the masses of the daughter particles (radium nucleus and alpha particle). That just leaves the magnetic field to wonder about.

For the velocity attributed to the alpha particle, what magnetic field strength would result in a trajectory radius of about 1 cm? It would have to be much larger than 0.005 T.

Matthew Clisby said:
1cm is published everywhere and was similar to my experimental results.
Can you point us to an example of this published value?
 
  • #10
I agree. Your data can be the only source of the inconsistency.
 
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