Mass spectometer and relativity

  • Thread starter Thread starter evelyncanarvon
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Mass Relativity
AI Thread Summary
The design of a mass spectrometer for measuring electrons at speeds close to the speed of light remains similar to a standard spectrometer, but adjustments must be made to account for relativistic effects. The mass of the electron should be adjusted using the Lorentz factor to determine its rest mass, while the radius of its path may also need to be divided by the Lorentz factor due to length contraction. The Lorentz force from the magnetic field remains unchanged, but the setup of the magnetic and electric fields must accommodate the altered parameters. The equations of motion will involve using the momentum equation, with the Lorentz factor treated as a constant during calculations. Understanding these adjustments is crucial for accurately modeling the behavior of electrons in a relativistic context.
evelyncanarvon
Messages
13
Reaction score
0
Hi, I had a homework question in my physics class that I'm not totally sure about. We're supposed to design (not actually build, just explain on paper) a mass spectrometer that can measure the speed of electrons going at .998c, so taking into account special relativity. Here are my questions:

Would it basically be the same as a normal spectrometer, same design?

How would you account for relativity? I think you would assume that the mass would get bigger in your reference frame, so you would have to divide by that lorentz factor to get the object's rest mass. Is this right? What about length contraction? Do you just multiply r by the lorentz factor?

Also, how would you actually set up the magnetic field and the electric field?

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Your mass spectrometer would basically still have the same design. I think the problem has to do with where the electrons will land after their partial orbit of the magnetic field so the only change necessary is in the equation of motion for the electron. So instead of "mass times acceleration" you will use
\frac{d\vec p}{dt}.

The Lorentz force (due to the magnetic field) should remain unchanged. You will also have to consider how large to make the device and what the magnetic field strength will be to accommodate that size.
 
Thanks for your prompt reply! So the distance they travel would change? Would it just be multiplied by the lorentz factor? I'm still a little confused.
 
evelyncanarvon said:
Thanks for your prompt reply! So the distance they travel would change? Would it just be multiplied by the lorentz factor? I'm still a little confused.

Remember

\vec p = \gamma m_0 \vec v
 
Hmmm... I still don't totally understand. Here's what I have so far.

Not taking into account relativity, the mass of the electron measured by the spectrometer will equal

B^2*e*R/E

where B is the magnetic field, e is the charge of the electron, R is the radius of the circle it travels in (one-half the distance from the end of the velocity filter to the plate that catches the electrons at the end), and E is the electric field.

How do I adjust this for relativity?

There would be length contraction for the electron, so would I have to divide R by the lorentz factor? Or would I just assume that the M measured would be too large and divide the entire thing by the lorentz factor?

Sorry, but I don't understand what I can do with your previous statement.
 
Okay, Tide, I kinda get what you're saying.

dp/dt = qvB

p= mv/(1-v^2/c^2)^1/2

but how do you translate these to make them equal each other?

How do you transform the second equation to become a variation of mv^2/r ?

If you have to take its derivative, it'll get really ugly... unless you don't need to take the derivative of the lorentz part. Is that just a constant?
 
Last edited:
evelyncanarvon said:
Okay, Tide, I kinda get what you're saying.

dp/dt = qvB

p= mv/(1-v^2/c^2)^1/2

but how do you translate these to make them equal each other?

How do you transform the second equation to become a variation of mv^2/r ?

If you have to take its derivative, it'll get really ugly... unless you don't need to take the derivative of the lorentz part. Is that just a constant?

Make sure you recognize that the differential equation is a VECTOR equation! Namely,
\frac {d \vec p}{dt} = q \vec v \times \vec B

You should have no trouble deducing that p^2 is a constant which means that v^2 is a constant and, therefore, so is \gamma.

You end up with (after a little rearranging)
\frac {d \vec v}{dt} = \frac {q}{\gamma m} \vec v \times \vec B

Now, remember \gamma is a constant so you can solve the differential equations it just like you did for the nonrelativistic case.
 
Thanks for your help! :smile:
 
Back
Top