Determining the Mass of the Pi^- Particle Using the Elementary Charge

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the mass of the pi^- particle using its charge-to-mass ratio and comparing it to the mass of the electron. Participants are exploring the relationship between charge and mass in the context of elementary particles.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the charge-to-mass ratio of the pi^- particle and the electron, questioning how to apply these ratios to find the mass of the pi^- particle. There is uncertainty about the relevance of the electron's mass in this context and whether additional information from a lesson example should be used.

Discussion Status

Some participants are attempting calculations based on the charge-to-mass ratio provided, while others are seeking clarification on the problem's requirements and the connections between the particles. There is a mix of interpretations regarding the use of the charge-to-mass ratio for the pi^- particle and the necessity of additional details.

Contextual Notes

Participants note a lack of clarity regarding the relationship between the electron and the pi^- particle, as well as the absence of an example in the lesson that directly relates to the question posed. There is also mention of a specific charge-to-mass ratio for the pi^- particle that may be relevant to the calculations.

rojasharma
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Elementary particle(ANYONE PLZ HELP ME WITH THIS Q)

The charge-to mass ratio of the pi^- particle was determined. The charge-to-mas ratio of the electron is 1.76x10^11C/kg. a) predict which particle has a greater mass-the electron, or the particle. b) use the value of the elmentary charge to calculate the mass of the pi^- particle in kg. Compare the mass of the particle to the mass of the electron.
for a) i think charge has greater mass... b) i think i have to use q/m=c/r...
 
Last edited:
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More detail, please …

Hi rojasharma!

You started an identical thread yesterday:

(a) If no-one replies, you can always "bump" the thread up to the top of the list by adding a second post yourself - something like "Anybody? Please help!"

A lot of people do that, and it saves duplication of threads.

(b) I didn't reply to the original thread because there wasn't enough information in it (I suspect the other 25 people who saw it felt the same).

In particular, I have no idea what the electron has to do with the π-.

Can you provide more detail? :smile:
 
well...this is it...this is what the exact question is in the book. What i was thinking was q/m is the ratio which is 1.76x10^C/kg, i can use this to find m by pluging into q/m=the ratio, therefore q/ratio = m...but i m confused...is this m what the part b wants?
 
Sorry, rojasharma, I still don't understand what the electron has to do with the π-. :confused:

is this question a sequel to some other question?
 
The charge to-mass ratio of the pi^- particle was determined in the example above.The charge-to mass ratio of the pi^- particle was determined. The charge-to-mas ratio of the electron is 1.76x10^11C/kg. a) predict which particle has a greater mass-the electron, or the particle. b) use the value of the elmentary charge to calculate the mass of the pi^- particle in kg. Compare the mass of the particle to the mass of the electron.
this is the exact question...and above this question there is no example given however...in the lesson there is an example that gives the charge-to mass ratio of the pi^- particle...i am not sure if i am supposed to use that value? should i post the charge-to mass ratio for pi^- from the example in the lesson?
 
rojasharma said:
in the lesson there is an example that gives the charge-to mass ratio of the pi^- particle...i am not sure if i am supposed to use that value? should i post the charge-to mass ratio for pi^- from the example in the lesson?

Yes, I think that must be what is intended. :smile:

(btw, if you type alt-p and -, it prints π- for you!)
 
the charge-to-mass ratio for alt-p- is 8.6x10*C/kg
 
so for b...q/m=ratio of pi-, do i sud in 1.6x10^-19 for q??...so 1.6x10^-19/8.6x10^8C/kg which gives me m=1.86x10^-28kg...doesn;t seem right to me:(...HELP!
 
Can someone tell me if the answer above is correct...please...
 
  • #10
… looks ok to me …

rojasharma said:
so for b...q/m=ratio of pi-, do i sud in 1.6x10^-19 for q??...so 1.6x10^-19/8.6x10^8C/kg which gives me m=1.86x10^-28kg...doesn;t seem right to me:(...HELP!

Hi rojasharma! :smile:

Let's see …

charge = charge/mass x mass;

so mass = charge/(charge/mass)

= 1.6x10^-19 / 8.6x10^8C/kg

= 1.86x10^-28kg.

Looks ok to me - the mass of the pion is about 10^-28kg. :smile:
 

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