How do electrons behave in a vacuum?

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Electrons can be injected into a vacuum, which is typically an excellent insulator due to the absence of particles. When a voltage is applied across two metal contacts in a vacuum, no current flows unless free electrons are present. The behavior of electrons in a vacuum can lead to conduction if a sufficient number are introduced, and their movement can be influenced by external electric or magnetic fields. Techniques such as thermal, field, or photo emission can generate these electrons, and they can be directed towards a positively charged plate. Understanding these principles is essential for applications like electron microscopy and cathode ray tubes.
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Good day, from what I read we can make a vacuum in an enclosed space and we can inject or keep electrons in that vacuum , I hope that far I am right.Vacuum is a good , the book says the best insulator of electrical current, since it has basically no particles or medium for the current to run through,

so if I have a box with enclosed vacuum inside and two metal contacts at each side , when applying a voltage across them no current flows , now I wonder what would happen if i had the vacuum box but this time with a certain amount of electrons in that box , would it then act as a conductor depending on the amount of electrons in that space or no? I know a metal conducts because of free electrons in it's lattice atoms and air conducts when ionized when electrons are stripped off of neutral atoms but how do the electrons act in vacuum would they form a current path ?
also if a current path would form between the contacts in the sides of my box , could i disrupt the current by pushing the electron beam or path away from the contacts with a magnetic field or by electrosatic means , like adding a positive plate outside the box away from the contacts so dragging the electrons close to a side with no contacts on it ?
 
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sondreL said:
so if I have a box with enclosed vacuum inside and two metal contacts at each side , when applying a voltage across them no current flows , now I wonder what would happen if i had the vacuum box but this time with a certain amount of electrons in that box , would it then act as a conductor depending on the amount of electrons in that space or no?

You need something to replace the electrons. The electrons will all be swept to the positive plate, but then current stops unless you can produce free electrons at the negative plate, for example by a heated cathode as in a vacuum tube, or by using really high voltage (field emission)
 
sondreL said:
Good day, from what I read we can make a vacuum in an enclosed space and we can inject or keep electrons in that vacuum , I hope that far I am right.Vacuum is a good , the book says the best insulator of electrical current, since it has basically no particles or medium for the current to run through,

so if I have a box with enclosed vacuum inside and two metal contacts at each side , when applying a voltage across them no current flows , now I wonder what would happen if i had the vacuum box but this time with a certain amount of electrons in that box , would it then act as a conductor depending on the amount of electrons in that space or no? I know a metal conducts because of free electrons in it's lattice atoms and air conducts when ionized when electrons are stripped off of neutral atoms but how do the electrons act in vacuum would they form a current path ?
also if a current path would form between the contacts in the sides of my box , could i disrupt the current by pushing the electron beam or path away from the contacts with a magnetic field or by electrosatic means , like adding a positive plate outside the box away from the contacts so dragging the electrons close to a side with no contacts on it ?

Sure ... I do this all the time. For example, you can generate electrons via thermal emission (boil them off of a point), field emission (apply a high voltage to a point), or photo emission (strike the metal cathode with an energy above the work function, eg, UV for many metals); there are also RF techniques, but let's stick to DC.

The source of the electrons will usually have a negative DC voltage supply attached to it; any electrons lost will be replaced by the power supply, and the negative voltage will push the emitted electrons away. They will then be drawn towards a positively charged plate, though ground is "positive" enough if they start from a negative voltage.

The electron pulses or beam can be steered via electric fields, or with magnetic fields.

For more details look into the design and operating principles of the transmission electron microscope:
http://www.nobelprize.org/educational/physics/microscopes/tem/

Or the CRT/TV tube:
http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/tv4.htm
 
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