How Do You Calculate the Electric Field in a Capacitor from Electron Deflection?

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the electric field in a parallel-plate capacitor based on the deflection of an electron. The scenario includes an electron entering the capacitor with a specified speed and being deflected by a certain distance as it exits.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to determine the force acting on the electron due to the electric field, questioning how to derive this force from the given displacement and speed. Some participants suggest using concepts from dynamics and projectile motion to relate acceleration, time, and displacement.

Discussion Status

Participants are exploring the relationship between the electron's motion and the forces acting on it within the capacitor. Guidance has been provided regarding the uniform nature of the electric field and the application of Newton's laws to analyze the motion. However, there is no explicit consensus on the final answer or method.

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes assumptions about neglecting gravitational forces and focuses on the parameters provided, such as the length of the capacitor and the properties of the electron.

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Homework Statement


The figure shows an electron entering a parallel-plate capacitor with a speed of 5.4×106m/s. The electric field of the capacitor has deflected the electron downward by a distance of 0.618cm at the point where the electron exits the capacitor.

Find the magnitude of the electric field in the capacitor.

Homework Equations


f=ma
f=k(q/r2)

The Attempt at a Solution



I'm trying to figure out how to gauge the force applied from the field, which I'm assuming can be taken from the displacement & speed traveled. I'm also assuming that gravity isn't a factor here, so if E=f/q0 where am I getting my f from?

Relevant data:
length of capacitor: 2.25E-2m
e-m: 9.11E-31kg
e-q: 1.60E-19C
e-v: 5.4E6m/s
\theta:15.36\circ
 
Last edited:
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You're getting your f from basic dynamics (Newton's laws of motion). In a parallel plate capacitor, the electric field is uniform (constant in magnitude and direction). So, throughout its journey across the capacitor plates, the electron has a constant vertical force applied to it. Therefore, it experiences a constant vertical acceleration (vertical meaning perpendicular to its direction of motion). You know how long it takes it to traverse the plates, because you know its horizontal speed (which won't change) and you know the length of the plates. Call this time interval "t". So, the question reduces to: a particle undergoes a displacement d in a time t when moving with constant acceleration a. What must "a" have been in order for it to have traveled that far in that amount of time? Once you know a, you know f.

This is no different from a projectile motion problem. Only the nature of the force (electrostatic vs. gravitational) has changed.
 
Great, that's exactly the kick I needed. Thank you.
 
so what is exactly the answer?
 

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